“”

Women's Health, Your Way

January 02, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

BODYTALK / Do You Ever Get Over a Miscarriage?

Do You Ever Get Over a Miscarriage?

November 27, 2025
Do You Ever Get Over a Miscarriage?

Eight years ago today, I got my first positive pregnancy test. After over a year of trying to conceive, I was absolutely ecstatic. And then, when I went in for my first ultrasound and saw an empty gestational sack, I was devastated. 

It was a blighted ovum: A type of missed miscarriage in which an embryo never develops, even though the gestational sack and placenta develop. A few weeks later, I had a D&C and just like that, my pregnancy was over.

For months, I felt like a completely different human. A miscarriage is a pretty invisible loss, and when your baby never even began forming in your womb — when you never even got a look at that gummy bear-like image on the screen — it feels even more so. But to me, the loss was so incredibly real. I felt such a darkness, and even though I knew time would dull the edges of my pain, I wanted to scream every time someone told me I would "get over" my loss when I finally held a baby in my arms. 

To be clear: That's a horrible thing to say to someone who is going through a loss. It's invalidating and insensitive and just plain rude. But after a few months, I began to feel like myself again. 

Do you ever “get over” a miscarriage? Eight years later, with two healthy, beautiful kids, I still don’t know.

My loss doesn't feel like a raw, open wound anymore. But does that mean I’m "over it"? I don't really like to think about a loss and a set of possibilities that were so real to me as a thing to get over. But my miscarriage is not a constant source of pain, and for that I am grateful.

I'm also grateful that my miscarriage is still on my mind, in some ways. I still think about what it would have looked like to have that baby. I still think about the baby I lost. It’s still real to me. 

At the end of the day, that pregnancy is a part of my story, and always will be. 

If you’re going through a loss, it’s okay to feel angry when people tell you to “get over it”. But I’m here to tell you this: It does get better.

More from BODYTALK

2025 was…well, a lot. Especially for women. The manosphere grew. Bodies shrank. Beauty standards became even more exclusive. Speaking of exclusive: DEI programs were rolled back. Women left the traditional... Read more
Immediately after a holiday that involves a woman receiving a gift, the discourse is always the same. Women express frustration over the gift they received from a male partner being... Read more
For so long, women were only celebrated when they got engaged, got married, or had babies. And then, a new narrative started to blossom: People online started saying things like... Read more
The thing about infertility and pregnancy loss is that triggers are absolutely everywhere. They’re in the questions you get when you turn down a drink. The way conversations inevitably shift... Read more
Two things can be true: Women can unilaterally face roadblocks on the path to securing effective health care...and women can also have vastly different levels of access based on privilege.... Read more
An exercise for all the ladies reading this: Think about a time in your life when you felt the most successful — a time you were crushing it professionally and... Read more
One of the defining elements of millennial womanhood is the range of options that lie before us. We’ve normalized the fluidity of timelines and have generally just rewritten the rules... Read more
By now we’ve all heard that women are leaving the traditional workforce in droves. More recently, findings from McKinsey & Co’s Women in the Workplace annual report indicate that for... Read more
I've been loving the "in your 20s" trend that's been all over TikTok recently. If you haven't come across it, here's the gist: Creators are partaking in the trend by... Read more
I know firsthand that when it comes to Alzheimer's, there are more questions than answers. Effective, risk-free treatments are pretty much nonexistent, and there's really no way to stop the... Read more