E.B.
I don't have any great advice here...I'd have been upset too. I miscarried at 11 weeks, and after a hellish 12 hours of bleeding, we finally went to the ER with low, low BP and they did a D and C. My husband was with me the whole time, and that was wonderful...but, we had also wanted a baby and the loss was completely a surprise. My best friend also miscarried, and her husband went to work the day she found out she was losing the baby and worked until 1 am. (He's normally home by 5.) She had his belongings set out that night and told him to go away. He did, but they had big-time marriage counseling after that, and things are fine now; it only took a little work. Anyway--your emotions ARE all out of whack--my milk even came in after I miscarried!--and, if I recall correctly, what I wanted from day to day changed. I wanted my husband close, but not too close; he didn't know how it FELT to carry a baby and then not...and I think men are a lot more ambivalent about pregnancy in general--they are not puking, they are not feeling the baby move, they are not tired, cranky, hormonal, or joyous the way we are. So...I think the loss of something they haven't yet come to love (I say this from MY experience...hopefully I'm not offending you...I think my husband loves the baby in my belly, but it's a lot more abstract than how I feel--I'm obviously PHYSICALLY attached to baby from day 1) is weirder for them than for us. I felt pregnant, then I had this major physical trauma, and he didn't have to deal with much of it except driving me to the hospital. Especially if you did the D and C at the clinic without him, it quite possibly doesn't feel like much has changed, to him, and it's hard for him to know how to react. I would also say that the fact that you didn't know whether you wanted another child probably plays into things...that's harsh; I'm sorry, but I know I had second thoughts about our second about two weeks prior to losing it, and I think those thoughts really made ME realize we weren't ready for baby 2 yet, and it helped me come to peace with teh loss. Anyway--talk to your husband. You experienced that baby, the loss of the baby, and the loss of the potential for more babies, in a way that he can't possibly experience. It is all very physical (and hormonal) for women, but I sometimes think that allows men to ignore what has happened--and for many, many men, that means absorbing themselves in something else that is NOT their wife, even though she needs support more than ever. I'm so sorry for your loss, and for the trauma you're going through. I hope you can come to some peace with it.