
ยทS1 E3
Pseudocyesis, Psychosis, & Social Media
Episode Transcript
Jared spent hours trying to get someone from the hospital on the phone.
He was angry, convinced his wife had no right to decide what should happen to their children's remains without any input from him.
Speaker 2He was ready to give them a piece of his mind.
Speaker 1When a hospital administrator finally called him back, he began to tell her exactly what he thought, and to his surprise, she agreed with him except for one thing.
There were no children to claim or to bury because his wife was never pregnant.
Speaker 3After the AOC had called me on the hospital line and told me, your wife was never pregnant.
There were no children that were born or died about, I would say.
Forty five minutes later, call from a cell phone number.
Speaker 1It was the same hospital administrator who Jared spoke to, calling a second time to check on him and make sure he understood the information she provided.
Speaker 3Can you just say that again?
She is, Yes, your wife was never pregnant.
There were no children born nor die ons that day.
She called it.
I don't know the scientific term the.
Speaker 1Term Jared is referring to is pseudoscisis.
Pseudoscisis, or false pregnancy is when a person believes they're pregnant when they're not.
It's also called a phantom pregnancy.
They may have all of the physical science and symptoms of being pregnant, but there is no fetus in the uterus, and.
Speaker 3She kind of went into it's a rare case when it happens, when it is possible where a woman's bay can believe that she is with child, look, act, and feel the whole nine yard.
Speaker 1Jared had never heard of this before.
In fact, most people haven't.
Speaker 3Doctors don't know why.
I did ask some technical questions, like why does it happen?
Is it something I did that?
They're like, now, there's nothing that you could have seen or known to a tea acts like a pregnant moment.
Speaker 4They're not.
Speaker 1Christy initially told Jared that she was attained by the hospital police and escorted out in handcuffs because of a warrant issued in her name due to an unpaid speeding ticket, but that wasn't true.
Christy may have had a warrant for an unpaid speeding ticket, but that wasn't the reason she was detained.
Speaker 3So, from what I learned, was basically the reason she was escorted out to the hospital by the two police officers was that she was hanging around the maternity ward and the nurses suspected her that she may try to take a kid like kidnap a baby.
Speaker 2I'm Tricia la Fog.
Speaker 5I'm a writer, director, actor at the Federal Criminal Defense Attorney.
I'm going to tell you a story that's all too real about love, lies and the lens people will go to for attention.
It's a story that will leave you questioning everything you thought you knew about truth, about reality, and about what happens when the two collide in the most unimaginable way.
From audio up and just sweet Press productions, this is unborn.
Speaker 2Pseudosiesis is rare.
Speaker 1It affects approximately for women in every twenty two thousand pregnancies.
Speaker 3From the research that I've done and talked to the nurses and things like that, they say it can't happen, but once they have to see an ultrasound and there's nothing there, that's when it kind of breaks and they're like, okay.
Speaker 1But what is extremely rare is when a woman like Christy goes full term with a false pregnancy.
In fact, we spoke to multiple medical health professionals, emergency room doctors, obstetricians, nurses, psychologists, social workers, and none of them had ever seen a woman go to full term.
Speaker 3Rarely do they go full thermoe.
That doctor had not seen another one of those.
You know, I'm still thinking back, like why does this happen to me?
I mean, I didn't do anyone any wrong, and here we are.
Speaker 6A doctor could practice their entire career.
In fact, they could practice ten careers and never see one of these.
That's how rare the condition is.
My name is Richard Farnham.
I'm a medical doctor, board certified OBGUI n and subspecialist in eurogynecology with a practice in El Paso, Texas up with an academic affiliation at Texas Tech.
Pseudocysis.
This is where someone believes they're pregnant and in fact they have physiologic changes that would accompany the normal signs of pregnancy.
They can get abdominal bloating, they can have fatigue, they can have nipple discharge, they have the sense that there are fetal movements.
To the casual observer, they appear pregnant, they have a distended abdomen like they're carrying a baby.
They truly believe that they're pregnant, and it can actually be very difficult for them even when they're confronted with the medical evidence that shows that they're actually not pregnant.
Speaker 1We wanted to present a clinical perspective of what someone suffering from pseudocyesis may be experiencing, so we spoke to doctor Julia Baird, who is a clinical psychologist in Los Angeles.
Speaker 2She did not treat Christie.
Speaker 1She's never met Christie, but she specializes in the treatment of psychosomatic disorders like pseudocyesis and has treated women suffering from pseudocisis in the course of her practice.
Doctor Baird's approach to treating patients has an emphasis on healing the whole person mind, body, and spirit.
Speaker 7I think the mind is a very powerful thing, and I think we don't usually focus enough on a more holistic approach of integrating mental health into just even just primary care general medical treatments.
Speaker 5Pseudoscisis is a psychosomatic disorder, meaning it has a heavy mind component, but it manifests physically in the body the false belief that there's a pregnancy, and you actually manifest the symptoms and signs of pregnancy.
Speaker 7So these people will actually feel nauseous, have mourning sickness.
The periods will see, lactation will happen, All the symptoms of pregnancy can develop, but there is no actual pregnancy that's ever confirmed.
So the ultrasound shows no pregnancy.
Pregnancy tests are false.
But yet they look pregnant and they're having all kinds of symptoms as if they're pregnant.
Speaker 1It's one thing to understand something clinically, but what was actually going through Christie's mind and body.
To understand, we spoke to Carla, a woman who experienced pseudosysis directly.
Speaker 4Carla Jenkins, I am someone who has experienced pseudoscyesis.
Speaker 2Much like Jared and Christy.
Speaker 1Carla and her partner had only been together for a few months when they found out they were pregnant.
Speaker 8Alex and I didn't think that we could have kids.
Speaker 4He's been through like some chemo years ago, so we were really really surprised that we even got pregnant.
It wasn't purposeful, It just kind of happened.
It was a very big deal to us because of the fact that, you know, we were both kind of in shock about it.
Speaker 1Carla had already missed two periods when they made the appointment with an OB.
So on her first visit she was given an ultrasound.
Speaker 8Got an appointment with my OB.
We were at already like nine weeks.
We meet with OROB.
Speaker 4Before we go in to meet with him, they do like an internal ultrasound, which is what they would do typically at that time, just to see if there's a heartbeat, and they couldn't find.
Speaker 5Carla was experiencing a phantom pregnancy and she didn't know why.
Speaker 8She still doesn't.
Speaker 5There aren't a lot of answers, partly because the condition is so rare in this country, a fact confirmed by doctor Baird.
Speaker 7Yes, yeah, it's very rare in the US.
It's actually more common in developing countries where a woman's fertility is really an important part of like her value as a woman.
Speaker 9So you see a lot more of this in.
Speaker 7More developing countries where they are not able to get pregnant and produce children, they feel that they're not valuable and maybe perhaps like their partner would not stay with them otherwise.
Speaker 1Making things more complicated is the fact that even the doctors who treat pseudocyesis aren't entirely sure what causes.
Speaker 7It's a number of different kind of theories about what causes pseudocysis.
I think what's important to note is that typically you have to look at the individual and kind of think, what is this serving for this particular patient.
So a lot of times it's women that struggle with infertility, or women that are coming to the end of their fertility window and are realized, why I never had a child and I really want a child.
There's some kind of underlying reason that they need to believe that they're pregnant.
Also, you know, looking at the research about pseudocisis and there's not a lot.
By the way, this association with sometimes trauma, particularly loss, so not just loss of fertility, but like loss of a child or even loss of a relationship, loss of a parent.
There is this need sometimes to when you lose somebody that you're close to, wanting to recreate a relationship or be close to somebody or have some kind of you know, relationship to replace that one.
So there is this association with trauma.
Speaker 1So since pseudosysis is caused by trauma, I assume Carla's doctors would offer her resources to support her.
Speaker 4Yeah, in terms of the emotional support piece of it, it seemed like that wasn't the focus at that time, and obviously I was, like, you know, started crying really hard and was super emotional about the whole thing.
And so as my partner, he made it very scientific, which was upsetting for me.
I think there's a little bit of I guess like resentment, but he was he wasn't as warm as I would expect like an obe to be in a situation like that.
Speaker 1Carla immediately accepted in her mind that she was not pregnant, and her body, in her own words, had just not caught up.
Speaker 4It was just very shocking that my body like didn't flu into the fact that there was no baby farming, Like, why wouldn't our bodies recognize that?
Speaker 1Carla believed the doctors that there was no fetus in her uterus.
But that's not always true for everyone, Doctor Barrett, Again, I think.
Speaker 7It depends on how much insight awareness the individual has, Like can they look at the reasons why they developed this disorder and what purpose it was serving for them?
Are they able to talk about and process whatever trauma or loss or underlying reason that they developed this type of disorder.
I think that's really what matters some people that don't have as much insight and can't really acknowledge what's going on, and that would be a much more difficult patient to treat.
But someone that can really process and look at the underlying kind of, you know, motivations for developing this disorder, that's a treatable individual.
Speaker 1Additionally, pseudosiesis doesn't function in a vacuum.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean, I think from that perspective of realizing that there was I definitely understood that there was a disconnect, and I was very disappointed in my body, Like I was very upset with my body because of the fact that my brain understood that there was no fetus, but my body just kept like there was no.
Speaker 8Connection to the two, which is insane.
Speaker 1For some women, even after it's unequivocally clear that they are not pregnant, it's still hard for them to accept that they never were.
Speaker 7Because I think if you get to the point of like, there's somebody that can't acknowledge that this is not real, that's almost more of this psychotic kind of delusional disorder.
Speaker 1Much like other mental health disorders, exists on a spectrum with other mood and personality disorders.
Speaker 7Definitely depression, anxiety, borderline personality for sure.
I think once again, if we look at what's the theme with borderline personality is the fear of abandonment or loss.
So somebody with borderline is definitely more likely to develop something like pseudocysis as a way to maybe cope with loss and not feel a loss or abandonment.
Speaker 1Can you explain briefly the difference between bipolar disorder and borderline disorder.
Speaker 7Yeah, so bipolar is a mood liability disorder, somebody that experiences likeiods of mania and then severe depressed and they need a mood stabilizer to really be able and orderline is more of a it's a personality disorder.
They are kind of see the world in black and white, all good, all bad.
Everything split the idealization, Like they have this fear of losing that person that they've idealized, the object of relationship, the individual that's so ideal that they feel they can't live without.
But then eventually that person disappoints them and then they become devalued, so they go from being on a pedestal to being shit.
Speaker 1It was at this point that I shared with doctor Baird the specifics about Christie's case.
Speaker 2Prior to now.
I had not shared with.
Speaker 1Her the specific details, including that Christie went to the hospital to give birth.
Speaker 2She was shocked, to say the least.
Speaker 9I mean this, Yeah, this.
Speaker 7I think it's interesting though, because she knew what she was doing.
Then almost borders on more of like a factitious disorder, perhaps because she knows that she's deceiving.
Unless there's this split off part of her that that's possible.
Speaker 8Yeah, it is.
Speaker 9I think with somebody who's very borderline.
Speaker 7So the split there's a split off part of her that is acting and doing these things, that part of her is so split from the other part of her that's believing she's pregnant and carrying these children, and so those parts of her don't live in this integrated whole person.
They're split into almost two separate people.
Speaker 1Factitious disorder is when a patient intentionally falsifies medical or psychiatric symptoms, similar to Munchausen or Munchausen by proxy.
But doctor Baird is also posing the possibility that Christy is severely bifurcated or split, which would mean that only part of her is intentionally deceptive while the other part believes she's actually pregnant.
Speaker 7Yes, I need to like, that's another aspect of her that's not integrated into the part of her that's posting online.
So these are two split parts really of her.
I mean, that's that's a severe border line for you.
Speaker 9Who's that fragmented?
Speaker 7Who?
Speaker 9Yeah, it's split off.
Speaker 7We all do this to some degree, Like we have different parts of ourselves, right, but we're not so split that they don't exist when there's one part that you know, like, we all have different aspects of our personality, but usually we're more integrated, so that like the part of us that acts a certain way at the grocery store while in line is the same as the part of you that's like.
Speaker 9A professional in the office.
Speaker 7I mean that to me seems like I was going because I'm like, if it's factitious, then what's her point?
You know, what's the point of just like, you know, deceiving everybody.
Speaker 9Somebody that splits.
Speaker 7So much and splits off parts of you, they never have to be confronted in a way, right, And if you bring it to her, she'll be like, what, No, that's not I don't know what you're talking about, you know, Yeah, And the body goes along with it.
Speaker 1Christie's body carried her phantom pregnancy to the schedule due date nine months of a powerful mind body connection.
Was there anything that could have given away that she wasn't pregnant?
Speaker 2In spite of my in depth quizzing, Jared didn't think so.
Speaker 1Did she get a period, not that I know of.
Did she have breast tenderness or breast enlargement?
Speaker 3She complained about it probably in the last three months.
Speaker 1How about abdominal enlargement like a beach ball.
How about nausea.
Speaker 3It was terrible the first trimester, run to the bathroom every five minutes.
Speaker 2How about weight game?
Speaker 3It was quick in the face at first, was what I noticed was her face got very round, But then it started going to the abdomen and that was kind of all I noticed.
Speaker 2How about having to pee frequently.
Speaker 3All the time?
It was even more constantly being sick, really pull on a record to go to the bathroom, find the next gas station, and I mean we would only go fifteen minute trips.
We had to stop to go to the bathroom.
I'm like, I've never seen anyone else have to go to the bathroom.
Speaker 2Then, well, how about food cravings?
Speaker 3Ice cream, dairy queen?
I don't know how many times I'd got Dairy Queen at ten o'clock at night.
She always wanted to get one of those Snickerdodle blizzards' it's a I don't know, it's just to have a priced ice cream with candy in It.
Speaker 1Was Christie complaining about pain in her asiatic nerve during her pregnancy.
Speaker 3Yes, I mean it was so bad that she had to go to a specialist massage lady for pregnant ladies twice a week.
Speaker 2Christy checked off each box.
Speaker 8Her breasts were even leaking milk.
Speaker 10It was everything was crazy of how it was happening.
Speaker 1Jenny, Christie's former best friend, also witnessed the ways that pseudo sayesis affected Christie physically.
Speaker 8Whenever Jerry's mom said, you're probably dropped.
Speaker 11Oh, when I tell you, it literally looked like it dropped.
Speaker 8It dropped.
Speaker 1The hospital staff was so concerned about Christy's behavior on the ward that they decided to check her Facebook page, and they agree with Jared and Jenny and everyone else we talked to.
Speaker 2Christy looked pregnant.
Speaker 3So the AOC.
While we were on the phone, she also told me that they had looked at her Facebook.
They saw that I tagged her in that.
They saw the pictures.
They had seen the picture of the placard with the McGee what are they called onesies?
They saw that it was posted by me, tagged her in it.
All these people saw it.
They had saw that she looked pregnant, all these pictures like those maternity pictures.
Yes, yes, And she informed me that.
And she didn't look like the same person when she walked out of that hospital.
Speaker 1Christy didn't look like the same person when she was escorted out of the hospital in handcuffs.
Speaker 3Bagon's gone.
It was like you pump up the beach ball and it gets a whole one and it's just empty.
Speaker 1Jenny also noticed after the births, Christie's pregnant belly disappeared.
Speaker 8Whenever we were at the rental house.
Speaker 4There was no sign the up a belly, just her regular body act.
Speaker 1This piece of information was shocking to me, even though I have no idea why it would be after everything else Jared has told me, but it was.
Speaker 2I had questions.
Speaker 1Did Christie's belly deflate because she believed she gave birth, or did her belly deflate as a result of the confrontation she had in the hospital that led to her being escorted out in handcuffs by two police officers.
Speaker 3I mean, when you're looking at these pictures we have in front of us, I mean it's like, where does that go?
Speaker 1Hospital administration checked Christy's Facebook page and learned that she had spent the last nine months living as a pregnant woman.
Here's some of the posts they would have seen.
This is me reading Christie's posts to Jared.
Picture of baby clothes and some stuffed animals are two signs.
Speaker 11One reads adding a bit more love, the other reads coming soon.
Speaker 8Comments beneath read congratulations.
Speaker 11Can't wait, so excited, so happy for you too.
Speaker 9We are over the moon.
Speaker 2Christie's aunt writes.
Speaker 9Hello, Christy, I did not know you were pregnant.
Speaker 3Wonderful.
Speaker 9Do you know what you're having on the expected date?
Speaker 3You look beautiful?
Speaker 9Lots of love, Aunt Kelly.
Speaker 11Christie responds, I'm pregnant with twins, a boy and a girl.
My due date is December seventh, but they won't let me go past November twenty.
First, it's been a long time since seeing you.
Miss you.
Speaker 1Here's a post of Christie's from June tenth, twenty a picture of Christie's pregnant belly and a chalkboard reading.
Speaker 11Akron Babies ten weeks measuring three point two centimeters and two point nine centimeters size of kumquats.
Speaker 2It doesn't stop there.
Speaker 5June twenty seventh.
Speaker 2A picture of Christie's pregnant belly and a chalkboard.
Speaker 11Reading Akron Babies thirteen weeks size of plums.
Speaker 1Another picture of Christie's pregnant belly, with the caption.
Speaker 11Big growing stage for the babies.
Babies have popped off mom's siatic nerve finally.
Speaker 1In all caps, and have moved so much better.
Jared was clearly uncomfortable with hearing.
Speaker 3Some of this anger.
I mean lots of it, just hearing her when you're saying it.
All I hear is her voice, remembering taking all those pictures, the time wasted.
It lies the sequel.
Speaker 1Finally, we have a picture of a very pregnant Christie sitting on the floor of a super ador rible nursery, looking at her watch with her mouth agape.
Speaker 11Sign reads me, I'm exhausted, Apple watch.
You have taken nine steps a day hashtag almost done all caps.
Speaker 2Did you build this nursery?
Speaker 3Yes, I'd probably have to say that it was that I know that all that time in my life is wasted.
Nothing was what was genuine and true.
And then that's looking back on it, I feel like I wasted that time, and I know I'm not going to get it back.
But just hearing that again kind of threw me for a card fall, because I haven't thought of those words until you read them up.
Speaker 1Jared talked to me about the last photoshoot they did in the nursery that did not go particularly smoothly.
Speaker 3That was a disaster.
I bet you.
We had a half hour wrapped up and taking that picture, fixing a peg board.
Oh I don't like the lighting.
Oh my belly looks weird.
I'm like, it's a picture.
It's yes, you have them forever.
But if you're that worried about what other people perceive and oh it's not a perfect picture.
Are you looking for that picturesque life?
But there had to be every bit of hundred pictures I'd take.
Yeah, at the end of it, I'm just like, Okay, let me hold the shutter.
So just takes a couple hundred of time.
Speaker 5And there was something about posting to social media that made Christy change.
Speaker 3It was like a flip of a switch.
Okay, let me just stare at my phone for the rest of the day tomorrow, there was no okay, yeah, I posted it for people to see.
Yes, I understand that part, but to obsess over.
Oh look, they like this picture, someone commented.
I'm like, great, I just that doesn't appeal to me.
It's a waste of my time to sit there.
She would fall asleep playing on her phone.
Speaker 1Christy and Jerry did not get the same high off posting on social media, and he believes that the thrills and attention she received from posting as a pregnant woman played a big part in what was going on with her.
Speaker 3Take a picture my belly.
It doesn't look big enough at this point.
I'm just like, all right, I hold the just shutter button where it takes a couple hundred every second.
I'm like, here you go, pick one out.
Because she wanted she was so into that in that chalkboard.
There was a chalkboard.
She wrote like X amount of weeks.
I'm like, you know what, we'll just do it.
Do the shutters, you can take your picture.
Made her happy, but she was she was all into putting it all over social media.
Like wanted that attention one of that Oh look, you're having twins.
You're not just pregnant with one, it's twins.
And I think that goes into kind of feeding that psychosis.
Speaker 1She was in nine months of post after post after post, and then on December tenth, twenty twenty, comes the paramount post.
Christia's Jared post a picture of two babies she was passing off as theirs, and Jared felt complicit.
Speaker 3Well, how did you get that board?
I made that peg board into this picture?
Or did you just pull some picture off the internet, photoshopped this in there, send it to me, make me look like an ass on Facebook?
Craft?
You wrote everything you told me to put.
Speaker 9In there, right, she sent you the caption.
Speaker 3Correct, the entire thing.
I didn't put anything in there.
Speaker 2Copy and paste, copy and paste.
Speaker 1Almost four years later and Jared still has no idea where Christy got the photographs that she asked him to post announcing the arrival of their twins.
Speaker 3I mean, you look at those photos after I find out, Okay, you didn't give birth.
Where in the hell did you get that picture from?
Those were my ghey hospital onesies?
Did you find that on the internet?
Did you take that in person.
Speaker 1Jared was that alone in his quest to find out where Christy found those babies.
His best friend, Molly, was determined to find out.
Speaker 10My dad had called me at work and had told me that this was all a sham, and I was very upset and angry, and so I was convinced that I was going to prove that she was a liar.
I was at work at the time, and I had my two associates with me.
We were on Google for the rest of our four hour shift trying to find the picture of the babies.
Speaker 3We did a reverse image search on those pictures and we could not find it.
We did bing and Google, but we tried to search and reverse search, and we.
Speaker 10Even went to McGee hospital facebook page and went all the way back through all of their labor and delivery posts.
We tried Washington Hospital because they had the similar blankets, and then there was some other place we looked too, but we could I don't know where she got the pictures because they weren't on the internet.
Speaker 3There was hundreds of comments, congratulations, let me know if you need anything.
It was all every place, and that's just the way that kind of goes.
And I just I don't know how you can find that picture, hide it from a reverse image search, get that photoshopped, and send it to someone and pass it off as your own.
I mean, it's just it's tough to understand.
Speaker 1Where did she find those babies and why did she send them to Jared to post to the world when they didn't exist.
Like most things relating to Christy, we were looking for answers, but with each answer, more questions are raised.
Speaker 3Where was Where was her endgame?
Speaker 1We searched a long time to find someone who would talk on record.
Carla was similar to Christy and that she had experienced a phantom pregnancy, but that's where the similarities end.
Speaker 8So that was really shocking.
Speaker 4Obviously, when you're having some pregnancy symptoms and then you know you're it's only nine weeks in, but you're kind of expecting that you would hear a heartbeat.
Speaker 8You don't think anything's gonna go wrong.
Speaker 1For Carla and her partner Alex, the news from the doctor was abrupt but true.
Speaker 4He basically sat down and said, I think I'm trying to remember exactly like how it happened, because my brain has probably blocked it out from like PTSD and so he said, so we're not seeing a fetus.
Speaker 1Carla was told that even though her body is indicating to her that she is pregnant, there is no fetus in her uterus.
Speaker 4Still like looks like I still feel pregnant, look like I'm pregnant.
Speaker 8I'm about I think eleven weeks in.
Speaker 4At that point, again, my body hadn't clued in to the fact that there was no fetus.
Speaker 1Her doctor explained that her pregnancy symptoms should go away now that she knows the truth.
Speaker 4I think the emotional process was difficult, but it was It was something that really like worried me in terms.
Speaker 8Of my future.
Speaker 1Carla felt that this doctor was not as warm as she would have thought he would be given the situation.
She felt resentment towards him for his indifference.
Doctor Barrett explained that, in her opinion, this approach to a psychosomatic disorder is common and part of the problem.
Speaker 7I think we still have a long ways to go as far as Western medicine and these psychosomatic disorders.
I think a lot of people that come in first of all, presenting with a psychosomatic disorder.
They come into like the er with symptoms are misdiagnosed.
This psychological component is missed or it's just the set.
They're told that it's all in their head, they're not really experiencing real symptoms, which they are.
But yeah, there is a psychological aspect, and I think that needs to be acknowledged, but not in a way that's like pejorative, you know, in a way that's like, we look at the holistic picture here the mind and body, like if there's something going on physically, and we don't see the medical kind of underlying origin, and let's look at what's going on psychologically, you know.
Speaker 2Sadly none of that was explained to Carla.
Speaker 4Anyways, it was just very shocking that my body like didn't flew into the fact that there was no baby farming, Like why wouldn't our bodies recognize.
Speaker 1That it wasn't like her body wasn't showing symptoms.
Speaker 2It was real.
Speaker 4So I think I had missed my period and my boobs were pretty like sore, Like I could tell like physically things were kind of weird or off, so physically I noticed that maybe something was like, you know, awry.
Speaker 1This was all clearly a very difficult experience for Carla, but she still finds way to make light of it.
Speaker 4So it was pretty It was funny because I think what we said the whole time, I had this like I joked about it, which was so stuff, but I had this feeling and I kept on joking about how I was like, Oh, there's probably like nothing in my body, like it's probably not even a real thing.
Speaker 8And then we get there and the doctor's.
Speaker 4Like, oh, there's no Like this baby has ghosted you, is what we keep saying, Like it's ghosted us, it's gone.
It never it never like showed up to the party that it was invited to in my uterus, and so I feel like maybe deep down I kind of knew something was off.
Speaker 2And for Carla, there was a light at the end of the tunnel.
Speaker 4I've gotten pregnant since I have a baby, so we have a fifteen month old.
Speaker 8He's very cute.
Speaker 4Just even after the fact, you know, it felt like I was very alone, and I think that's why I wanted to like share with my family, because so many women go through this without any support and it's really disappointing and like hard for us.
Speaker 8It shouldn't be, you.
Speaker 4Know, I mean it should be, but we we should be more open about it.
Speaker 8I would say, so that you don't feel as alone.
Speaker 4And I remember vividly thinking like how hard, how hard this must be for women who don't have partners or like, don't have any support system.
Speaker 1Carla attributes the fact that she understood and accepted that there was no fetus immediately because she works in the medical field and generally trusts doctors.
Speaker 4Yeah, I think that as a as someone who is like kind of science brained, I would say that it was much easier for me to come to terms with it.
I mean, it was shocking.
I did ask questions like, when is my body going to figure this out?
Speaker 8Is it?
You would hope that your body would understand.
Speaker 2Not having any idea what Christy went through.
Speaker 1Carla expressed her opinion that she could understand how some people might not accept what the doctors are saying.
We know that Christie was going to the hospital for doctor's appointments regularly because Jared took her there.
But what we don't know is prior to the birth, how many times was Christie told she was not pregnant.
Speaker 4It's just crazy how that like tie hasn't been made in our bodies, that your body wouldn't pick up on the fact that there's nothing growing in addition to your brain being told that.
Speaker 8So for me, the connection was confusing.
Speaker 4I think I knew that there was nothing to be done, like it was over.
Speaker 8I needed to move on.
I needed to more.
Speaker 4I needed to get as much support as possible from the people around me to be able to do that.
I think for someone who may not have or may not be as like strong of mind or may have like other mental health issues happening, yeah, I could see it definitely being something that would wouldn't at be feasible, like you just wouldn't be able to connect because your body is still pregnant, like you're still feeling hormonal.
Speaker 1I go back to doctor Baird and the possibilities of Christie's mental health issues that her actions paint the portrait of someone with severe borderline personality disorder.
If those issues did exist from a psychoanalytic standpoint, they'd have a strong part to play in Christie carrying a phantom pregnancy for nine months.
If Christy did see a doctor and hear the truth, did part of her mind just stow it away?
Was living the life of a pregnant newlywed posting every pregnancy update for the world to see that important to her.
Speaker 2It's possible.
Doctor Baird has seen similar.
Speaker 7It was a woman who had struggled with infertility for years and finally was able to get pregnant and she gave birth and her child was very so and so she then dedicated her life to taking care of this very sick child that had a number of health problems over the years, and it really destroyed her marriage because she was so busy with the child and the husband was working all the time.
And then she got pregnant again and she was so excited and then come to find out it was a false pregnancy and she ended up going to therapy really working on it, but realized that she had this fantasy of actually having a healthy child and that's what this child was going to be for her, because she did have a child, but that was caused trauma to her too, having a sick child that she had to care for.
So there was this sort of underlying fantasy for her of what that pregnancy was going to.
Speaker 9Be to her.
Speaker 7So I think for each individual that develops pseudosysis, you kind of look at what fantasy they're trying to fulfill.
Speaker 9With the pregnancy.
Speaker 1In addition to trusting the science behind it, Carla says it was the image on the ultrasound that caused her one hundred per sent to accept what the doctor was telling her.
Speaker 4I believed what I saw on the ultrasounds that photo, because you're you're in the room while they're.
Speaker 8Doing an ultrasound and you can see it.
They show you.
Speaker 4That there's you know what it looks like, and so I could.
Speaker 8And now that I've had a baby, I can.
Speaker 4Tell obviously what the differences at like a nine week scan versus you know, it's a little nugget versus the missing baby nine week scan.
Speaker 2Jared's images of his babies too.
Speaker 3There were some pictures of sonograms.
Speaker 1Even at the gender reveal.
According to Jared's friend Sarah, we had.
Speaker 10A gender reveal and she had real sonograms and I remember looking at the sonograms and seeing her name.
Speaker 8And I was like, oh, her name's on it.
Speaker 4Obviously they're real sonograms because her name's on it.
Speaker 8She had one of each baby with her name on it.
Speaker 2The date, but the sonograms that Jared saw were fake.
Speaker 3It's nineteen ninety nine plus shipping.
Speaker 1At this point.
The lines are completely blurred.
Christy experienced pseudocyesis.
But she also faked your pregnancy.
Speaker 3Oh yeah, it's pitch your perfect family, which furthest thing from the truth.
Speaker 1And unfortunately for Jared, we haven't even begun to scratch the surface.
Next time on The Unborn, they called them baby snatchers.
Speaker 10She had planned to kill the one baby off and then since the one baby was said, bring another baby homes.
I think if she went through this whole nine months of tricking everybody, stealing a baby wouldn't be that far off.
Speaker 8I had seen her in person.
Speaker 2And you'd be like, oh, yeah, she's pregnant.
Speaker 8She's definitely got two babies in there.
Speaker 2You would never have known how happen.
Speaker 8It is a full blown psych disorder.
Speaker 12Police warrant her to the hospital when this was reported that grandmother told me a woman posing as the mother's sister came.
He had dressed in scrubs and somehow removed the baby from the nursery as the family was preparing to be discharged.
Today.
Speaker 5The Unborn is a production of iHeart Podcasts, Audio Up and Jesuite Press productions.
Speaker 1Created by Trisila Fotch and Frank Rodriguez mal produced by Alvin.
Speaker 2Cohen and Rachel Foley.
Speaker 1Executive produced by Jimmy Jellinek, David Dwaits, and Jared Gusta.
Edited by Gerard Bauer and Preston Dawson.
Sound design and mixing by Jeremiah Zimmerman.