Sep 16 2010

New Pen-Pal

Grieve Out Loud is always striving to find new ways to help reach friends and families dealing with pregnancy and infant loss. Today we announce a very important Pen-Pal. Someone who has personally helped me through the roughest patches of my own grief. Someone who represents an entire generation of individuals who might not have a voice in grief.

She represents all the Grandparents of pregnancy and infant loss. The loss of a grandchild is just as heartbreaking for grandma and grandpa as it is for mother and father. Their grief is doubled. Seeing their son/daughter in pain along with grieving for their grandchild. They often grieve in silence as not to upset the family. Please take a moment to thank Koko for joining GOL and read a little bit about her experience with losing a grandchild.

“At my senior center, I have encountered several situations that have truly hurt me. For example, some one will announce the birth of their new grand baby and show off pictures, or tell how they were in the delivery room. Most will avoid you like the plague once they know. Like losing a baby is contagious.”

Koko can also help with things such as the subject of explaining death (age appropriately) to living grandchildren, tips on how to interact with living grandchildren without becoming (overly) emotional, or crafting memorial projects with the grandchildren.

If you have any questions, or would like to join Koko as part of the Grandparents Pen-Pals please contact us at grieveoutloud@gmail.com

*Photo Masterfile.com


Sep 2 2010

Join Us!

Join our newly launched Grieve Out Loud Facebook Page! Follow updates from Team Members along with exciting news surrounding the future of GOL.

Hope to see all of you!


Aug 9 2010

Support in a Time of Loss

Nicole Plegge, Lifestyle Blogger for SmartParenting recently wrote an article about Grieve Out Loud. We would like to share the article here. We are honored to have GOL acknowledged and want to keep spreading the word. Many thanks to Plegge for this wonderful piece.

:::::

“Wendy Warren was 24 ½ weeks pregnant with her second child when she was placed on bedrest at St. John’s Mercy Medical Center. 11 ½ weeks later, her son, Elijah, was born, but because of Potter’s Syndrome, a birth defect in which the kidneys fail to develop, the Warrens only had a few precious hours with their child before he passed away.

Each year, thousands of parents across the U.S. leave the maternity ward without a child in their arms to face a world of sadness and isolation. Yet, for individuals like Warren, they’ve also discovered a world of hope and support via the Internet.

“After Elijah was born and then shortly passed away, the women that I found online were the only ones I could turn to,” she said. “No one else in my life had any idea what I was going through.  I could share my feelings freely, and these women knew exactly how I was feeling.”

During Warren’s time at St. John’s and through her relationships on the web, a connection was made with another mother going through a similar loss. A connection that in time would help other grieving parents around the world.

A network of parents, a network of care.

Heather Mohr of Bethalto, Ill., who had also been on bedrest, met Warren in the ultrasound room at St. John’s. Said Mohr, “About a month later, someone pointed her to my blog as a similar story to hers, and we realized the connection!” Like Warren, Mohr lost her daughter, Madelyn, shortly after birth, and the two mothers relied on one another – and other parents they had met on the Internet – to help them during the most difficult times in their lives.

Throughout her pregnancy and loss, Mohr discovered resources online to give her strength, but found the number of choices overwhelming. With help from Warren and other mothers from across the nation, Mohr launched Grieve Out Loud – a comprehensive, one-stop website where parents can locate support resources, share their stories, find keepsakes and most important, speak with a family going through a similar situation thanks to the organization’s Pen-Pal program.

Said Mohr, “The Pen-Pal program is our primary focus at this time, and its main goal is to let parents know they are not alone. Losing a child is very isolating, and being able to connect with others who have been in similar shoes is a huge source of comfort.”

Mohr, Warren and 14 other mothers serve as Pen Pals, lending a helping hand and a shoulder to cry on to the thousands of families facing loss before and after birth. Recently, two dads have also joined the Pen-Pal program to offer a resource for fathers.  “While mothers often find the support they need online, fathers may not reach out in the same way,” remarked Mohr. “They face their own grief – trying to handle the grief of a loss while trying to remain strong for their spouse.”

For parents who are handling stillbirth, miscarriage or fatal genetic disorders, connecting to others through Grieve Out Loud’s Pen-Pal program is as easy as reviewing www.grieveoutloud.org and sending an email, including name, email address, mailing address and description of the loss, to the organization. The parent is then connected to a team member who has experienced a comparable situation, creating a network of support for families.

After experiencing her own loss and helping others through theirs, Warren wants parents who have lost a child to know, “You are not alone, and you will survive! This precious child will always be yours, and it’s okay to tell people about him or her.  There is no moving on, there is only moving forward.  Your life will be forever changed but you will learn how to live in your ‘new normal.’  Don’t be afraid to talk about your loss, you never know who it might positively impact and you will be surprised to find out others who have gone through something similar.”

By Nicole Plegge, Lifestyle Blogger for SmartParenting



Jun 18 2010

Directing Grief – For Dads

Do you have any male Pen-Pals for my husband?” – Jessica W.

Dear Jessica,

Yes! We just added our first Dad to the Grieve Out Loud team! You can either send us an e-mail on behalf of your husband to grieveoutloud@gmail.com or you can supply us with his e-mail and we will make the First Step for you. Dads need someone to talk with just as much as mothers and especially with Father’s Day coming up this weekend, it might be a very difficult time for any dad. Talking with another babylost father would be a great treat for him.

:::::

If you are a father who has experience with pregnancy and infant loss and would like to join the Grieve Out Loud team please contact us today. Being apart of the Pen-Pal Program is a very rewarding experience and is also a wonderful way to honor your lost child(ren). We look forward to hearing from you Daddy-O’s soon. And Happy Early Father’s Day to you all!


May 1 2010

Opening Day

Julie of “The Root of all Evel” and Heather of “In This Storm” along with a dozen other grieving parents have come together to form Grieve Out Loud, an online pregnancy and infant loss support group.

“I didn’t know full-term, healthy babies could die.” Julie admits. “But when my son was born still, I felt like I had died right along with him.” After starting her recovery blog “The Root of all Evel” in honor of her first child Jonny Evel, stillborn on September 18th, 2009, she networked with many other mothers who lost their children as well. “I met Heather online. After reading her blog we found out we shared the same due date which bonded us even tighter. We sent hundreds of e-mails back and forth venting and expressing our grief. We shared so many feelings, and just having someone to talk to was so comforting.” Their conversations were the beginning of the Pen-Pal Program.

After a few months Julie brought up her idea of starting a babyloss project and Heather quickly agreed to help. “We had a lot of support not just from the babyloss community, but others as well. I would post polls on my blog and people would voice their opinions and vote. That’s how the name Grieve Out Loud was chosen – by vote.”

Although the site has been live for a few weeks, May 1st, 2010 is the official launch date. The ladies behind Grieve Out Loud have already been helping several parents through their Pen-Pal Program.

“When we first lost Evel, I couldn’t talk on the phone. So many friends were trying to reach out, but I couldn’t handle talking about it. Instead I wrote, and exchanged e-mails, sometimes soaking my keyboard with tears. I was able to grieve any way I needed to in the privacy of my own home.”

Grieve Out Loud’s Pen-Pal Program is open to anyone, including friends and family. The Team consists of people who have come from all walks of loss. “We have someone representing just about every kind of loss there is. From genetic disorders, to recurring miscarriage, to stillbirth.” Each participant will be matched with a team member that has experienced the same, or similar loss(es). Grieve Out Loud also offers a First Step program in which a friend can supply an e-mail address and a GOL member can contact the parent directly. We urge anyone who is feeling overwhelmed with grief to sign-up.

In addition Grieve Out Loud plans to operates on a monthly schedule which will include some of the following:

- Book reviews
- Stories of lost babies and personal journeys through grief
- Anniversary and announcements honoring lost children
- Added resources, links and current topics and information regarding pregnancy and infant loss

“We just want parents and family to understand they aren’t alone, it’s not their fault, and they shouldn’t keep their grief bottled up. We all share the same pain of losing a child or pregnancy. We speak the same language now. Having a sense of community is so important – and you’ve got it with Grieve Out Loud.”

Please help spread the word of Grieve Out Loud by tweeting (@grieveoutloud, #grieveoutloud), blogging, or by any other means today. Thank you for your time and support.

Contact us at grieveoutloud@gmail.com