I became pregnant in 2019 for the first time and at my 10 week scan to check on some spotting, the sonographer noticed that the nuchal translucency looked a bit high but wouldn't tell us anything further. At our screening scan 2 weeks later, they confirmed that my baby's NT was over 9mm with a large cystic hygroma and booked me in for a CVS 2 days later. It was then confirmed the following week that my baby had a chromosomal abnormality that meant she very likely wouldn't survive to birth and if she did, would lead an incredibly difficult and short life with many surgeries and life-limiting qualities. Sadly we made the decision to welcome her to the world at 16 weeks gestation.
I read a BBC article yesterday about baby loss/terminations (and actually have read several articles with the same theme in recent months) and people in the comments are so horrible to women who have gone through this. Someone actually wrote that women who choose this have taken the easy way out.
It was not the easy way out. I was induced, went through a painful 8 hour labour with contractions and birthed her. I met her. She had a name. It was not easy.
And anyway, even if someone's baby was going to be severely disabled but still survive, isn't there anything to be said for someone being honest about their capability to take care of a baby/child/adult with those qualities? Women who care for their children with disabilities are incredible, however it doesn't mean that women who decide not to are 'playing with eugenics' or 'being selfish' (words taken from comments section). I would much rather parents be honest about this than bring a baby into the world that they can't commit to caring for (emotionally, physically, financially) and who then may suffer with their quality of life. Children with disabilities can lead very full and happy lives but it can take a lot of hard work and sacrifices from parents to ensure that happens.
I know I'm taking this all very personally and know we made the right decision for her and our family, but it's still just very sad. I miss my daughter.