
""It sounds probably cuckoo, but I just I knew that she was going to be OK," Plemmons tells TODAY.com. "As I would leave these appointments, I was being told, 'We'll probably lose a heartbeat before you're back at the next appointment,'" she shares. "I just kept telling my husband, 'I don't accept that. That's not going to be our story.'" Prayer gave the young mom a sense of peace,"
"Plemmons has shared her story on social media. Her video of the first time she was able to hold Margot has resonated with viewers, receiving more than half a million likes. "Fertility and secondary infertility look so different" for everyone Plemmons says, and many families keep their struggles private. She shares her story online, as difficult as it may be, as "a reminder that you don't know what people have to go through to grow their families.""
Doctors repeatedly warned that the pregnancy would likely end in miscarriage, but Taylor Plemmons maintained faith and refused to accept that outcome. Prayer provided peace during a difficult hospital stay. Baby Margot Louise Plemmons was born at 29 weeks, 1 day, weighing just over 1.7 pounds. Plemmons previously experienced three miscarriages after the birth of her first daughter, Scottie, and extensive testing offered no clear answers. Plemmons shares videos and posts about holding Margot and the emotional journey, aiming to build community and remind others that fertility and secondary infertility affect families differently and often remain private struggles.
Read at TODAY.com
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