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Browsing Tag: healing

The Obvious Omission – No More Kids

“Do you have kids?”

It’s a simple enough question, one asked occasionally and innocuously.  But my answer is not so simple.

The answer is yes and no.

Yes, I became a parent the day I got married, but no, I’m not a mom.  I wasn’t able to have kids of my own because I didn’t get married until I was nearly 35 – the critical number that marks a decline in fertility – and once married, I was diagnosed with cancer.  And my husband didn’t want adoption.    

So, my response when asked this question is to smile and nod and give the most straightforward answer I can: “I have a teenage stepson.”

But that’s the end of that sentence.  I don’t elaborate by listing other kids.  No other names are mentioned.  My answer is short and to the painful point.  But the obvious omission is there.

I always feel bad for the other person.  In these conversations, I’m always more focused on their feelings than on mine.  I don’t want them to feel bad about what they had no way of knowing.  I don’t want them to feel like they’re pouring lemon juice on the wound of infertility. 

gray double bell clock
Photo by Moose Photos on Pexels.com

And I always feel an explanation is warranted, but I never know how much to share.  They were just making conversation, not asking for my life story!  But I can just see the wheels turning, the unspoken question in their eyes when my answer ends abruptly at one.  And I want to preempt the dreaded “well, there’s still time,” a wholly inaccurate assessment in my case.  Even though people tend to think I’m a good ten years younger than I am, my biological clock knows the truth: there is not still time.

The motherhood ship has sailed, and I’m not on board.  I’m on the shore watching it from a distance as it gets farther and farther away.

I watch happy mothers all around me without being one myself.  I listen to the constant stories of, “When I was pregnant with…” without being able to contribute my own.  And sometimes I can’t help but feel like the odd one out, like I did recently when I volunteered with my church’s Vacation Bible School. 

It seemed like a good idea.  We just joined this church, and I wanted to get to know people.  They needed help, and I had the time.

So, I decided to take a chance even though this was the exact situation I have carefully avoided for the past few years.  Once I realized motherhood was not going to happen for me, I took a break from volunteering in nursery and Children’s Church, a place I’ve served for years.  And I’ve quietly opted out of going to church on Mother’s Day. 

This was my first time doing something like this after taking time to grieve and to heal.  This was my first time rubbing up against motherhood so closely. 

And it was… okay.  The sight of the mom with the infant strapped to her chest didn’t send me to the bathroom in tears, like it would have a few years ago.  The sight of a mom wheeling in her stroller dropping off her toddler didn’t make me wince.

Instead, I just handled it.  I was able to do it, and I got through the week in one piece.   

What was challenging were the conversations with the other volunteers, all of whom were moms.  Being asked if I have kids and not being able to answer as I would have liked.  Being in a room full of moms and not being one myself. Feeling a spotlight on my situation, feeling like I must stick out like a sore thumb.

But somehow I managed. I prayed and processed it in the car driving home, and I showed up the next day.  I got through those conversations, and I got through the week.  Overall, I was glad I signed up, and I enjoyed talking with the other volunteers.  They were all great!  But the week was not without its moments.

This showed me two things:

  1. I’ve come a long way in the process of healing.  Having a toddler sit in my lap didn’t make me ache for the toddler I never had.  Things that used to be triggers for me are no longer an issue.  I can handle them now. 
  2. Infertility’s effects are long reaching.  I shouldn’t be surprised if it hits me differently in different seasons, if new triggers arise.  This doesn’t necessarily mean I’m not processing it well or that I’m not as far along as I should be.  It just means that the situation is hard.  It just means I’m human. 

“Do you have kids?”

In my answer, the words not spoken speak volumes.  They speak of a fierce, lifelong desire for children, a desire that did not come to fruition as I had hoped.  They speak of a miscarriage, of fertility expired.  They speak of pain.  But they also speak of healing.  They speak of the faithfulness of the God who comforts me, provides for me, loves me.  The words not spoken are as much a part of my story as the ones that are.

joyful diverse students giving high five in park
Photo by Zen Chung on Pexels.com

I will continue to be asked this question, and I will get better at it.  And the next time I’m surrounded by moms, I will be ready.  I will be okay.  I can watch motherhood as a supportive spectator and not an active participant.  I can cheer my new friends on, and during next summer’s VBS, I can watch their kids again.

I will be okay.  Because healing happens.  It may be slow and incremental, it may be messy – but it does happen.    

I’m living proof.

My View of Home: Taking Another Look

My view from here is a wistful one.  Through the window of my home office, I see my neighbor walk by with her toddler and her newborn in the stroller.  The little girl is practically prancing down the street in her princess dress.  It’s not Halloween anymore, and it doesn’t look like they’re having a birthday party.  It’s just Thursday.  And I guess that’s as good a reason as any to go full princess mode. 

The whole thing made me smile as much as it made me cry.  To see young mothers with their young daughters can’t help but grip my heart.  I was never a young mother.  I’ll never have a daughter.  I’ll never have what I always wanted, and scenes like this are a vivid reminder of that loss. 

I always wanted to be that young mother taking her kids outside for a mid-morning walk.  I wanted to have a house full of kids, but I don’t.  Instead, I have a household where the number of pets outweighs the number of children (two fur babies, one stepson). 

But I take another look…

My view outside the home, my view inside the home – wherever I look I see evidence of God’s faithfulness, His goodness, His sovereign hand guiding me every step of the way.  There’s so much I do have: a husband who loves me and is committed to me, a child in my home to love, friends, health, resources. I have things to look forward to. I have hope.

My view from home is not what I thought it would be, and I deal with the grief as it ebbs and flows.  But regardless of what the view looks like, this is my home.  This is my household.  I choose to be thankful for all I do have and to steward it well. 

So I pray…

“Regardless of what I have, regardless of what I don’t have, regardless of the circumstances and emotions, You are Lord, and You are good.  You are worthy of my unwavering trust and undying devotion.  I give all of me – the mess, the sadness, the things that I wish were different, the things that don’t come easily for me, the things I’m thankful for, the potential in me – I give it all freely to You.  I’m Yours, Lord. 

In the gap between what I always wanted and what I actually have, between hopeful expectation and bittersweet reality, I find You.  And You give me the healing that is only found in You.” 

That healing enables me to be surrounded by scenes of happy mothers and babies – like the one I witnessed today – but not be overcome by them.  So, the next time my neighbors go for a walk, whether as princesses or fairies or superheroes, I can smile through my tears.  I can rest in the knowledge that my view from home is something God sees, too.  I am living my story, not somebody else’s, and He is with me as it unfolds.

As I look at my life, as I view my home, I look through the viewfinder of faith and see God, and that is enough for me.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”

Psalm 34:18 NIV
orange cat in the sunshine
Fur baby #1

black dog on sofa at home
Fur baby #2