The internet still thinks I’m pregnant.

The internet still thinks I’m pregnant.

Content type: Health story

This is both a podcast and a print version. Author downloads an app as soon as she finds out she’s pregnant, enters personal information (due date, last menstrual period), and enjoys the pictures and info that come along every week. Then she miscarries and deletes the app, but personal information has been sold to various other companies so she receives marketing as though she’s still pregnant and even a box of formula samples just before her due date. She finds a way to laugh at this and take early miscarriage in stride, but muses on the irony of her pregnancy being such public property when she had told almost no one before she lost it.

Useful for reflecting on the various audiences and media for our health narratives: the story we tell close friends and family interpersonally, but also the “story” that is revealed by apps and purchases.

Although the author ends on a humorous note, the essay does also include details of pregnancy disclosure and health care for miscarriage.

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Promises Like Dolls

Promises Like Dolls

Content type: Health story

“Promises Like Dolls” is a very short story (123 words) about the experience of multiple miscarriages. The story refers to various objects (dolls, books, flowers, t-shirts, stuffed animals) as a way of reflecting on expectations of motherhood (her own and those of others and of society) and on the grief of miscarriage. It also represents the limits of social support for miscarriage.

The story is short enough to be read together in class, both as a reflection on how the experience of medical events is shaped by cultural norms and social experiences and as a prompt for discussing how the author utilizes specific imagery and description to convey (and imply) complex emotions in a very short work.

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