I found four pregnancy tests in my bathroom cabinet last week and I felt great joy and great sadness. Joy that three of those pregnancies resulted in three amazing and healthy children and sadness that one didn't. Recently, as I approach what would have been my due date, I realized how much shame and sadness and confusion I still felt about having a miscarriage, and I have learned over this past week just how much God wants to shine His light into this area of my life...and if you've experienced a miscarriage too, just know that God wants to shine His light into your life too. May you be as open to His Healing Light as I was.
Yes, I know it's weird to have saved all four pregnancy tests for all these years, but if you have experienced infertility, I know you understand! |
And I will give you treasures hidden in the darkness--secret riches. I will do this so you may know that I am the LORD, the God of Israel, the one who calls you by name.
Isaiah 45:3
I call you miscarriage when I talk about you, but why? You had a heartbeat. You lived inside of me for 42 days. We celebrated and jumped for joy the day we found out about you! It was a miracle. After nearly 4 years of negative pregnancy tests, you were the first positive pregnancy test I had ever seen! It was such a beautiful moment in my life, and yet, I ignored the fact that you were my first baby. Instead I label you as a painful miscarriage.
You were a living being...a being who was stolen from my womb by death. I knew instantly. The minute I saw spotting, I knew you were gone. I was devastated. I cried all day. Tears that no one saw. Tears that only occurred between the fake smile I put on for my students. Tears that streamed down my face in the storage room during my four minute break between classes. Tears that I choked back into my throat until it hurt while I pretended to be excited about launching rockets that my students had built. Throughout the day, the tears only got harder to hold in and the bleeding only got heavier.
After my last class, I raced out of the building. I couldn't hold back the tears any longer. I had to let them go, but not until I got into my car and slammed the door closed. I was angry. How could God do this to me? After all that I had been through waiting to get pregnant, how could He take this baby from me? It wasn't fair! I screamed. I cried. Once I allowed the tears to flow, they wouldn't stop. I began to sob uncontrollably. I cried so hard that I couldn't see the road but somehow the car drove closer and closer to the doctor's office. It was a pointless appointment. I knew in my heart that you were gone, but yet strangely I hoped that I would be the rare case of bleeding heavy during pregnancy with nothing being wrong. I guess that's just what comes from years of negative pregnancy tests where I would constantly make excuses..."But maybe it's just too early." "But maybe the pregnancy test is defective." "But maybe this spotting isn't my period but just the result of implantation." "But maybe if I take it again in a couple of days it will be positive."
But still I foolishly hoped.
I cried in the waiting room. I cried in my appointment room sitting naked and cold in that horrid hospital gown. I cried in the ultrasound room as the doctor searched only to find that nothing was there. No heartbeat.
"Maybe it's just too early." she says. "Go home. Get rest and if the bleeding and the cramping gets worse, go to the emergency room."
Is it actually possible? Could I still be pregnant? Please, God, please! Even though I pleaded and I prayed, I knew deep down you were gone, and yet I let myself hope...just a little.
Sure enough the bleeding got heavier. The cramping was excruciating. I never knew I had so many tears. I never knew that my heart could hurt so deeply. Huge clots came out and fell into the toilet. This can't be happening. My husband raced me to the ER just for them to tell me something I already knew. You were gone.
Hunched over in pain and in shame, I walked out of the ER with my husband by my side with nothing more than a "See ya!" from the ER staff. I was expecting something...anything. "So sorry for your loss." "Praying for you!" Anything. I'm sure they see this every day, but I had never had a miscarriage before. I had never experienced so much pain in my body or in my heart. Having a miscarriage doesn't happen to me everyday. But there was no sympathy.
It was after midnight before we got home. I couldn't sleep. I didn't want to sleep. I didn't want to sleep because I didn't want to wake up and be hit with the reality of losing you. When my eyes opened in the morning, they were sore. I was sore. My heart sank. It wasn't a dream. I didn't want to get up. I didn't want to get out of bed...ever! I wanted to put my covers over my head and never see or talk to or be around anyone ever again.
Like a zombie, I got up, got dressed, drove to school, greeted each student, took attendance, and went about my day, launching rockets. It was like nothing ever happened. For everyone else, it was just another day. But for me, it was the day that I lost you. It was the day that I failed you. It was the day that I reached a new level of failure. I was no longer the woman who couldn't get pregnant, now I was a woman who couldn't take care of her baby well enough to stay pregnant. I was the woman whose womb was unfit for a child to grow in. I hated myself even more than I already did. I fell deep into a depression like I've never known. I felt helpless and completely hopeless.
I felt guilty. I felt full of shame. I felt that God hated me. What could I have done differently to care for you? How could I have protected you better? I'm so sorry. I'm sorry that I didn't name you. I'm sorry that I flushed you down the toilet. Was I supposed to do something else with you? I'm sorry I didn't know what to do. I'm sorry that I let the enemy make me feel ashamed of you. I'm sorry that the enemy made me look at you and the miscarriage as the same thing, but that's not right. You were just as much as a victim as I was. You were part of the enemy's plans to steal, kill, and destroy. He killed you. He stole my joy. He destroyed my hope...or at least I thought he did.
Over this past week as I stared at that fourth pregnancy test and as I've questioned God about the miscarriage again, He has shown me just how important you were in my journey. He showed me what a gift you were to me without me ever realizing it because you were a symbol of hope. In the midst of all of my disappointments...all of my negative pregnancy tests...all of my sadness, you were the glimpse of hope. You showed me that I could get pregnant. After thinking that I was never going to be a mom, you came. Thank you for allowing me to see that my body could do it! Thank you for giving me hope.
I thank God for allowing me to see you differently today. You are not just a miscarriage. You are not just a tragedy, a sadness, or an awful thing that happened to me once. You are a miracle. You are the bearer of hope. You are my first baby. You are my daughter. (I just know it!)
Now, instead of crying tears of sadness over you, I can cry tears of joy. It's been nearly seven years since I lost you and God has finally healed my heart. He has also shown me that now that I've acknowledged you, my family can be complete which is something I've really been wrestling with lately. I am blessed to have two boys and not just one, but two girls!
Today, as I dance with my daughter, your little sister, here on earth, I know that you are dancing in Heaven with Jesus. Thank you for allowing me to be your mom. I can't wait to meet you some day...Marion Hope Leeb.
Father-thank You for finally shining Your Light into this area of my life...this dark corner of my soul...this pain that I have suppressed for so long. Thank You for continuing to reveal places in my heart that need Your light and Your love. Thank You for redeeming this sadness. Thank You for showing me the treasures in this darkness by revealing the hope that I was given through this child. Thank You for bringing me joy over the daughter that I never had an opportunity to meet. Thank You for taking something that the enemy meant to rob from me and breathing new life into the purpose of this pain.
Be near all my fellow sisters who have experienced the agony of a miscarriage. Bring healing to their hearts. Embrace them in Your loving and comforting Arms. Free all of us from any feelings of guilt or shame or blame. Allow us to feel Your presence and bring us all peace knowing that You are with each and every child that has been lost through miscarriage hugging them, holding them, and dancing with them in Heaven. Bring hope to all! In Jesus' precious name. Amen!
Oh YES, and I am so happy to see you named your precious girl. Marion Hope - (((xo)))
ReplyDeleteYes. Marion is after my grandma and Hope because of the hope that she gave me without even realizing it!
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Christine
This brought tears to my eyes. I never understood the magnitude of loosing a baby to miscarriage until I became pregnant. The moment I got that positive pregnancy test and knew there was a baby inside me I felt this deep attachment immediately and didn't know what I would do if I lost him. I have never had to go through that trial personally, but I have several friends who have. It's God's grace that carries us through and I am glad to see the healing that has taken place for you and you now feel released just to embrace that child's life no matter how small or how short it was. What a beautiful picture of hope that you have shared with us.
ReplyDeleteAmen, Natalie. It has been such an interesting journey and the fact that all of this happened the month that she would have been born seven years ago is so cool. And that's what I love the most is that God has shown me how much love that He has for this child even though her life with me was so short, but her life with Him is for eternity. I can't wait to meet her one day!
DeleteI'm in awe of God's grace and love for each of us!
Blessings-
Christine
I love this post! I'm sharing with a drae friend approaching her what was to be her son's due date too. She needs these words. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteOh thank you so much, Bethany. I'm so glad that my words can encourage another women who has faced this agonizing moment in life. I pray that God's love will shine upon her and bring her freedom!
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Christine
Christine, thank you for allowing us this tender view into the most vulnerable and precious places in your heart. I have watched my sister and close friends walk through the pain of losing babies, and while I know every woman's experience is different, I also know every woman needs to know that she is not alone. That she is a mom. That she lost a child. That others see her and are grieving with her. ...Praising God with you over the healing He is accomplished in your life and the glorious hope and promise of holding your first daughter one day. <3
ReplyDeleteAwww. Thank you so much, Becky. God has been so patient and understanding. Honestly I can't believe the freedom that He's brought to me after seven years!!! He loves us so much and His love is more and more evident to me the more I get to know Him. And this amazing love that He has for these little souls overwhelms me. There are so many of these precious children with Him in Heaven and I know that He has used my story to give other women who have experienced a miscarriage an incredible new view of the child that they lost. He is so good and loves us so much no matter how long we lived here on earth. I can't wait to meet her in Heaven!
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Christine
To those that have tried and tried without success, you are still loved by whomever you chose to he your maker. Being unable to have children does NOT make you less than (although society might want you to think this way).
ReplyDeleteDear Johna. I actually think of you often. Honestly, I'm in awe of you. I know part of what you went through, and I can't imagine. All I know is that you are so strong and courageous! And you are SO right that women who are unable to have children are no less and still GREATLY loved and valued. I admire you and I always have!
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Christine (Christy) :-)
What a wonderful story of pain, healing, joy, and a new perspective. I love that you gave your "miscarriage" a name. Yes, she was/is a person!!!
ReplyDeleteAmen! Such healing and joy and a whole new perspective that I never expected. God is so good!
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Christine