I Was Told My Baby Was ‘Incompatible With Life’ & Would Be ‘Scary’ Looking — They Were Wrong

"Trisomy 18." "Incompatible with life." "Why would anyone want a baby like that?"

I think back to the day those words shook my pregnant body to the core and crushed the deepest parts of my soul. I quickly went to Google searching for hope. Instead, I found none. I closed my web browser feeling worse than when I opened it. I didn’t understand how the baby so full of life within me could be THAT sick. I didn’t understand how she was so beautiful in her ultrasounds, yet the doctors would only tell me about how "scary" she would look.

At 27 weeks gestation we went in for an elective 3D ultrasound.

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Alivia Kraft

I was so excited to see Lillian’s chubby cheeks and her sweet face; after all, this was going to be the very first time we got to see her in 3D. All of her prior ultrasounds deemed her perfectly healthy, so we had no worries, right? I remember my biggest fear being that the last ultrasound would be wrong and we would find out she was actually a boy. I had desired a daughter since I was a little girl. I already had a perfectly healthy little boy, despite being born at 33 weeks gestation, and now I was getting my little girl. What a perfect family!

Our ultrasound technician kept looking at Lillian’s heart. I knew something was wrong.

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Alivia Kraft

Fear fell over me like a giant black drape. My brain started getting foggy and my heart was racing. "Jeanette, what’s wrong?" I said. "Well, I’m just seeing some things. I’m going to run a diagnostic and send it over to your midwife. I see some things with the baby’s heart and stomach. I’m concerned she may have Down Syndrome."

I honestly don’t remember much after that. I was hysterical. One of my biggest fears is losing a child, and the odds weren’t sounding good for Lillian. We went home that day and got a call from my midwife telling me she wanted me to go to a specialist for a level II ultrasound the next day. The urgency had me very concerned. I had been reading up on Trisomy 21, trying to learn everything I could about Lillian’s possible condition. We went to see the specialist, and after a very long ultrasound, she rattled of a bunch of things they found wrong with my baby girl. 

"So, you think she has Down Syndrome? Oh, you’ll be lucky if it’s that. I’m thinking more along the lines of Trisomy 18 or 13."

I can’t even describe the feeling I felt. It was just an indescribable emptiness surrounded by fear. And then anger. How could God allow me to think my baby girl was healthy and then take her away? How could He do that to me? It’s hard for me to even type that, let alone think back to when those emotions and thoughts were so raw and real.

Over the next few months, I went through the waves of emotion. Denial, fear, anger, hope.

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Alivia Kraft

My husband and I found a hospital that would be willing to treat Lillian after birth. We moved two hours from home to be closer to the hospital while juggling a high-risk pregnancy, appointments, a lively 2-year-old son, and the waves. It was hard. Life was so hard in those moments.

My prayers changed as we went through the motions: 

"Please, let her be healthy."

"Even if she’s not healthy, let it just be a heart defect and not Trisomy 18."

"God, just let me hear her cry."

We did our best to survive those days. And then I blinked, and it was delivery day!

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Alivia Kraft

We hoped to have another all-natural birth like we did with our son but knew a C-section was very possible due to Lillian’s fragile state. My doula and husband were there supporting me through an epidural-free labor. We had the lights dimmed, music, it was peaceful. I remember the nurses being amazed by the environment we had created. The day was long and the emotions were strong but I tried so hard to be happy and excited to meet my girl. I had faith that she would be born alive and do amazing things.

At 12:58 a.m. on August 3, a baby girl was born silently into the world.

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Alivia Kraft

She was rushed over to a stabilization area and bagged. I remember the room being so quiet that you could hear a pin needle drop. We were all waiting. And then, she cried! It was music to all of our ears! You know those movie scenes were life is almost paused, and then something happens and it just gets loud and busy again? That’s what happened that day. They swaddled my 4lb baby girl, and brought her to me. I was in awe of how beautiful she was. I remember just being totally amazed by her. Her weight on my chest melted all of the fear away and I knew she was going to live.

When I was pregnant with her, my view of Trisomy 18 was so different than it is now.

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Alivia Kraft

Now, my view of Trisomy 18 is this gorgeous TODDLER. It’s her long auburn hair. It’s her blue eyes. Her perfect little hands and her crooked pointer fingers that reach up and touch my face. It’s her button nose that scoops up on the end and has the most perfect curve to kiss. It’s the curls that fall at the end of her hair. Trisomy 18 to me is night time snuggles, telling her I love her a million times every day, making sure I give her a lifetime of kisses, and showing the world how perfect she really is.

When people think of Trisomy 18, I want them to think of this picture.

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Alivia Kraft

I want them to think of Lillian. I want them to see how beautiful Trisomy 18 is. I want them to look past that label and see children like my daughter for who they really are– perfect.

Lillian is a sassy, strong warrior that has overcome more in 2 years than most people do in 90.

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Alivia Kraft

She still has daily struggles and health complications, but we take life one day at a time and do our best to live it to the fullest. I spent the majority of Lillian’s first year in constant fear of her death. Around the time of her first birthday, I realized we are all going to die. Lillian has surpassed her life expectancy ten-fold, why was I so afraid? Tragedy could strike at any moment for any of us.

And in those moments, I chose to live. I chose life for Lillian, again. I chose life for my family. We still go out and have dinner or shop. It’s not every week, but it’s as often as possible. We make the most of our situation. We laugh through hospital admissions. We sing through the storm. And we love more fiercely than we ever have. All because of one extra chromosome.

This post was written by Alivia Kraft and reprinted with permission.