Malin Andersson writes emotional poem to late baby girl Consy ahead of Mother’s Day
MALIN Andersson has penned an emotional poem to her late baby daughter Consy ahead of Mother's Day.
The Love Island star, 26, said that Consy - who died at four weeks old last January - was "up in heaven smiling and floating free".
Malin posted the devastating homage to her daughter on Instagram and thanked TFL's All On The Board for sharing the poem on their underground board.
Alongside a photo of the board, she wrote: "This ones for the mumma’s that think they aren’t. Thank you @allontheboard for putting my poem up for this Sunday".
Her moving poem reads: "I'll always be your mum baby girl, no-one will ever take that away from me.
"I'll always be your mum baby girl, I know you're up in heaven smiling and floating free."
It goes on: "I'll always be your mum baby girl, never forgetting the kicking in my stomach, and the way you used to spin.
"I'll always be your mum baby girl, always staying strong. For whoever says I'm not a mum... is completely wrong".
Consy was born seven weeks premature in December 2018.
She was treated at Great Ormond Street hospital but tragically passed away on January 22, 2019.
Consy-Gloria was named after Malin's late mother, who died from stomach cancer in November 2017.
The tot was born with a rare heart condition and Malin previously said her death left her feeling "empty".
She OK! Magazine: "We went to see her body in the morgue and she looked so peaceful but I still couldn’t hold her. "I’d carried a baby for seven months and then nothing. I felt empty, I have a scar where my baby has been taken out of me but there is no baby.
"I am a mum without a baby. I couldn’t stop thinking, 'why me?'"
Malin recently posted about how she got through her grief by changing her mentality.
Sharing a throwback snap of herself pregnant, she told followers: "First of all, I didn’t care about time when Consy first passed, in fact I thought it would be best that time didn’t exist anymore. That I didn’t exist.
"But I knew that would be the easy way out. I suffered in my own pain, my victim mentality for a few months. I cried, I drank, I grieved, I was happy, I erupted. I didn’t really know who or where I was going anymore.
"One day I woke up. I decided that I should change my mentality. I knew that one year from then my pain could be eased if I changed my mind and my thought process. I knew it wouldn’t be easy, but I thought of my future and that happiness would eventually exist."
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