Sharon Stone lost nine children to miscarriage, opens up on trauma

angel: “Basic Instinct” star Sharon Stone has opened up about losing nine children to miscarriage, and she says women are made to feel that losing a child is “something to bear alone and in secret.

The 64-year-old actress said that women are made to feel that losing a child is “something to bear alone and secretly with some kind of sense of failure”, but the actress says it is difficult to cope with a miscarriage. “Compassion and Empathy Needs and Healing”, reports femalefirst.co.uk.


In an Instagram comment, she wrote: “We, as women, are not a forum to discuss the depth of this loss. I lost nine children to miscarriage. It’s no small matter, physically and not.” Even emotionally yet we are made to feel it alone and secretly is something to bear with some sort of feeling of failure.

“Instead of receiving the much-needed compassion and empathy and healing that we so need. Women’s health and well-being left to the care of male ideology has become at best, truly ignorant, and violently oppressive in the effort.”

Stone commented on People magazine’s Instagram post promoting a joint interview with ‘Dancing With the Stars’ pros Peta Murgatroyd and her husband Max Chmerkovskiy.


In the chat, the 35-year-old star opened up to the publication about suffering a miscarriage while her 42-year-old husband was in Ukraine.

He added: “I’m just here to make sure everything goes well, whatever it may be. I feel like it’s my job. And then when everything goes well, I get used to it.” But it was crazy. It makes you feel helpless. And for a friend like me, all my priorities have completely changed.”

PETA has had two miscarriages before.

Speaking about her first miscarriage, she told the magazine: “I was completely embarrassed, eventually embarrassed. I didn’t even know how to speak the words and this sentence came out of my mouth: I had a miscarriage. went.

“I’m someone who takes pride in health wellness. I exercise every single day. But as I found out, it doesn’t really go hand-in-hand with the reproductive system.”