Hidden heartbreak of miscarriages and how firms should support staff – Laura Collins

IT was just a routine day at work on The Yorkshire Post’s newsdesk. On the surface I looked cool, calm and collected.
Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.
Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.

As I directed a team of journalists – in my previous role as Head of Content for The Yorkshire Post and its sister title the Yorkshire Evening Post – to report on the big stories of the day, I had to remain composed.

After all, there is a huge responsibility weighing on my shoulders to keep focused to make sure that we hit our deadlines. I couldn’t falter at the heart of the news operation for two big daily newspapers. I simply had to keep going.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But, deep down, I was falling apart as I grieved for the little life I knew I was never going to meet.

Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.
Firms are being encouraged to show more understanding about pregnancy loss - and its impact on their staff.

What nobody in my office knew at the time was that I was going through the incredibly raw heartache of a miscarriage.

Just earlier that day, my dreams for what could be were literally flushed down the toilet. I had dared to let myself get excited about what could be, but it was cruelly taken out of my hands.

For me, in that moment it hit me – it was a fight or flight response.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

After an incredibly emotional phone call with my husband outside the office, I just wiped the tears away from my face as there was absolutely nothing I could do. I felt completely helpless about what was happening to my body and I couldn’t stop it.

Laura Collins is editor of the Yorkshire Evening Post.Laura Collins is editor of the Yorkshire Evening Post.
Laura Collins is editor of the Yorkshire Evening Post.

Instead, I took the feeling of helplessness and submerged myself into the world of local news to block out the pain. Having a busy job was a huge blessing as I just threw myself in with both feet.

I felt guilty about not telling my boss at the time, but I didn’t even know how to approach the conversation. Where do you begin?

By the way, I was pregnant but now I’m not. It all just sounds so wrong, doesn’t it? I hadn’t even told my family about what had happened and I had absolutely no idea where to begin to tell those who I was working with.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

I didn’t want to be judged and, ultimately, I didn’t want to be seen as a failure. This was my secret and I didn’t want anybody else to know.

Sadly this wasn’t to be my first miscarriage. It happened again – and my body had let me down once more.

I’ve always thought of myself as a tough nut to crack with a rod of iron running through me. But I struggled. Picking up the pieces the first time around was incredibly tough but for me the second time around was even tougher.

Every baby announcement from my family, friends or colleagues was like a punch in the stomach. Their joy was nothing but another reminder of my failure.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

On the surface I’d smile and wish the biggest of congratulations but deep down I was still mourning twice over. Over the course of time I’ve come to realise, after finding myself in the situation again, is that opening up and speaking about miscarriage isn’t a dirty secret.

It is a bereavement, a grief and a sense of loss that has to be recognised and, more importantly, acknowledged. And it is only very recently that I’ve felt as though I can finally open up more broadly about what has happened.

It has taken me a long time to reach that point.

After I spoke openly about my experiences earlier this year in my role as editor of the Yorkshire Evening Post, I was so incredibly touched by the response of readers. Finally, I realised that I was no longer on my own.

So many people have been through this but we just don’t talk about it. That is why today I am proud that our sister title is able to back the call by the Miscarriage Association to support the Pregnancy Loss Pledge.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It encourages a supportive work environment where people feel able to discuss and disclose pregnancy and/or loss without fear of being disadvantaged or discriminated against.

The campaign also urges firms to implement a pregnancy loss policy to ensure that it is included in sickness, bereavement or other workplace policies – while also being mindful of the needs of partners, too

Now we are calling on businesses to follow in our footsteps and commit to supporting their own employees through what can be an extremely difficult and distressing time – JPIMedia, the publisher of TYP and YEP, is fully throwing its support behind this campaign.

There are often feelings of guilt and shame around miscarriage and encouraging people to open up in the workplace instead, and seek support, is a great step in the right direction

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

And that is why more businesses need to shift the focus of their own internal HR policies to support those, like me, during one of the toughest times imaginable.

I know that I am not alone in this, but for so many other couples out there who are going through this hidden heartache on their own, the silence speaks volumes.

Laura Collins is editor of 
the Yorkshire Evening Post.

Support The Yorkshire Post and become a subscriber today. Your subscription will help us to continue to bring quality news to the people of Yorkshire. In return, you’ll see fewer ads on site, get free access to our app, receive exclusive members-only offers and access to all premium content and columns. Click here to subscribe.

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.