TRIGGER WARNING: This post contains information about stillbirth and infant loss, which may be triggering to some.
This is to the woman who wondered if a photo of a dead baby was necessary on a Facebook feed.
Yes. That photo of a dead baby was necessary because that dead baby is MY dead baby.
That dead baby — the one you ādidnāt have time to look away fromā — sheās my daughter. Her name is Dorothy and I wish I could see her face right now. But, I canāt because as you so helpfully pointed out — sheās dead.
I canāt see her face every day, so instead I shared my only picture of her. It felt necessary to do so because I miss her.
It was necessary to share her photo because she is one of the millions of babies who are stillborn every year.Ā
She is the face of a silent crisis that is impacting families worldwide. Stillbirth is real and it is scary and sometimes it is necessary to talk about the real and scary things in life.
Your comment proved how necessary it is for me to continue sharing Dorothyās photo.
I will keep sharing her photo, but not because your words hurt. I will keep sharing because Iām afraid another parent who has lost their baby will read your comment and it will scare them from sharing their photos and their memories.Ā
I will keep sharing my dead baby so that they know solidarity if they ever choose to share theirs.
Iām nearly finished with this letter and Iām debating whether it is necessary to share this. I read comments like yours daily and it is exhausting to give time to hurtful words like yours. I should probably just delete this.
However, it feels necessary to put this out there. You will probably never read this, but maybe someone else who makes comments like yours will. Maybe they will realize that those dead babies are the sons and daughters of grieving families.Ā
You can go ahead and turn away from our dead babies. We can not and we will not. They are the loves of our life and their death is a reality that we face every day.
So, yes. I think itās necessary to share a photo of my daughter on social media.
The only thing that seems unnecessary is your comment.
This post originally appeared on An Unexpected Family Outing and was republished with permission.