
Amelie Lens breaks silence on miscarriage in music industry
Amelie Lens has revealed her second miscarriage in an instagram post & urge for more honesty about the grief & isolation that often follows pregnancy loss.
Amelie Lens has always commanded the world’s biggest stages with precision and power — but this week, the Belgian DJ and producer stepped into an entirely different kind of spotlight. In a deeply personal Instagram post, Lens revealed that she has suffered her second miscarriage, using her platform to shed light on a reality that remains shrouded in silence.


The Invisible Grief
When miscarriage happens, she says, "it often feels like you can’t tell anyone — not because it’s private, but because no one knew you were pregnant to begin with. You start dreaming about this little human, make space in your heart, your future changes… and suddenly you are mourning a baby no one else even knew was coming.”
She rejects the notion that miscarriage is something to hide. “I wish it was normal to say it out loud. That if someone asked ‘how are you?’ I could say ‘not well, I might lose my baby’ instead of smiling and saying ‘fine.’”
It’s a call for openness in a world — and an industry — that thrives on image and resilience. Miscarriage, she says, is “invisible grief,” too often compounded by misplaced questions about “why” it happened. Most of the time, there is no why — only nature making an impossible choice.
As she faces the physical process of recovery in the coming days, Lens remains determined to perform. “Music heals me and there is no place I would rather be than in my DJ booth, with my husband by my side.”
In an industry defined by euphoric peaks and relentless pace, her words land as a quiet, unflinching truth: behind the lights and the beats, there are stories we rarely hear — and voices that need to be heard.
You can read her full statement below :


![French DJ & Producer David Guetta during DJ Mag Top 100 2025 ceremony at [UNVRS] Ibiza](https://framerusercontent.com/images/cADaDrzcOf8BMRtHa71MKOv4upU.webp?width=1080&height=1920)







