SINGAPORE: After more than 30 hours of labour, Ms Christy Liew held her daughter in her arms, but the newborn was silent.
She was wracked with grief and physically exhausted from the labour, but there were many decisions to make which she and her husband had never planned for - and in a very short time, she would never see her firstborn, Amanda, ever again.Some parents choose not to see their deceased child, but Ms Liew said it helped to spend some time with her baby and take photos with her before she reluctantly sent the infant off.
"Next time, if you think of her, you can still look at those photos," she said."It's like she existed in the world." The organisation now liaises with all the public hospitals in Singapore as well as some private hospitals to provide them with the gowns. Like other volunteers, Ms Liew helps to stitch angel gowns in sizes from small and tiny to minuscule for the babies lost.They also sew wraps scarcely larger than an adult palm - for foetuses miscarried while they are barely formed, all from the scraps of donated wedding gowns. Each gown comes with a set of charms - one for the child and one for the mother to remember her baby by.
"Many of these feelings can be frightening … overwhelming. Hence parents need to be gentle and patient with themselves," she said.
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