{"id":35098,"date":"2024-04-07T14:03:30","date_gmt":"2024-04-07T08:33:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/im-visually-impaired-but-i-got-to-see-my-unborn-baby-blind-photography-exhibition-world-unseen-features-incredible-ultrasound-scan-ents-arts-news\/"},"modified":"2024-04-07T14:03:30","modified_gmt":"2024-04-07T08:33:30","slug":"im-visually-impaired-but-i-got-to-see-my-unborn-baby-blind-photography-exhibition-world-unseen-features-incredible-ultrasound-scan-ents-arts-news","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/im-visually-impaired-but-i-got-to-see-my-unborn-baby-blind-photography-exhibition-world-unseen-features-incredible-ultrasound-scan-ents-arts-news\/","title":{"rendered":"‘I’m visually impaired, but I got to see my unborn baby’: Blind photography exhibition World Unseen features incredible ultrasound scan | Ents & Arts News"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Running her fingers over her scan for the first time, Karen Trippass could feel straight away that her unborn baby had her husband’s nose.<\/p>\n
Born with bilateral coloboma, a rare condition also known as cat-eye syndrome, she never thought she would experience this pregnancy milestone in the same way that sighted expectant mums do, the excitement of seeing the shifting black and white shapes of a growing embryo appearing on screen for the first time.<\/p>\n
It was something she missed out on while pregnant with her eldest daughter, Phoebe, 10 years ago. Questioned by medical staff and social workers on her ability to care for a newborn at that time, Karen says being visually impaired meant she was treated differently and she suffered from depression, finding it difficult to bond with her baby before her birth.<\/p>\n