Showing posts with label pro-life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pro-life. Show all posts

October 19, 2015

Financial Hardships & Surprise Pregnancies: An Introduction

This week I will be running a very small series responding to several people’s request that I write about having a large family while not having a lot of money.

The Series:
Introduction
Crosses & Chai Tea
How We Make It Work

and a follow up post:
God Works Differently in All Our Lives: Sex, Money, Suffering, and Grace


I know that sharing specifics about personal budgets and finance is considered bad form but, after discussing it with my husband, I’m going to share some of those personal details. Some of what I’ll be sharing is, for me, very personal and I know we are opening ourselves up to judgement and critique and possibly ridicule by sharing these things.


However, I’m doing this in the hope that it may help a couple who is struggling with the decision of whether or not to expand their family, or one who has been surprised to learn that their family is expanding. I’m also hoping that it may be helpful for a family who is struggling financially; maybe part of our family’s system will help them. Or at least I always think it is nice to know I’m not alone in my particular hardship.

Because I am writing the coming posts from a place of great vulnerability I don’t want to fill the posts with clarifications and asides, I just want to share about my specific family and our specific situation.  

I hope it is understood by everyone that I do not believe (nor does the Church teach) that large families are “more Catholic” than small families. And I wholeheartedly believe that not everyone is called to have a big family - there are legitimate reasons to space or be completely done having children. I also know there’s a big difference between having zero, one, or two kids and having nice things and having zero, one, or two kids so you can have nice things. Again, I am talking about my family and our ways - not commenting on anyone else’s.

I also hope no one will make comments about my husband’s and my decision to follow the teachings of the Catholic Church and not contracept. We firmly believe, and think science makes obvious, that life begins at conception, that we were wonderfully and fearfully made, and that God asks sex to be open to life. (You can read more about those teachings here if you’d like.)

Finally, I want to say that Yes, we are living this life because it’s the life we’ve chosen. We chose to take out student loans. We chose to pay for things with a credit card. We chose to not contracept or abort any of our babies. Travis chose to go into teaching and I chose to be a stay at home mom (Although daycare for five kids? It wouldn’t even be worth it for me to work!) We have chosen to follow the teachings of the Catholic Church. We have chosen to make these sacrifices because we believe that in the end, no matter how hard things may be now (and how hard it is for even us to see it), it is worth it.

It’s worth it to choose life. It is worthwhile to choose life over death, over the impossibility of more life,  or over things and experiences. And it is worth it because life is worth living.




Bloglovin' -- Feedly -- Instagram -- Pinterest -- Facebook

January 23, 2015

7QT- Links about prayers, podcasts, pro-life posts, and planning (the natural family kind)

Yeah for Kelly for hosting!


1 - Vance Joy's Mess Is Mine 



2 - I was praying for Paul. I was praying so, so hard throughout the night and day. I was praying for a miracle and that he would live. I do not understand the ways of God, but I know that if I could He would not be much of a god.

I am praying for his family and his soul (just in case) but I also know that he was granted an Apostolic Pardon on his deathbed and I can't help but wonder if his suffering was his purification. In short, I'm pretty sure he's a saint.

If you haven't yet, I encourage you to read Mary's post and Heather's post. They are both so beautiful. And if you'd like to support Paul's widow and children please consider donating here.



3 - Just in case you are wondering what I'm talking about with some of that super Catholic stuff up above you can learn more about praying for souls if you listen to this. To learn more about the Apostolic Pardon listen to this. And then just listen to everything else because the Catholic Stuff You Should Know podcast is fabulous.



4 - My friend Jamie is planning a new moms' group for her parish and is looking for ideas about what makes a great one. Can you share with her the things you love (and also maybe the things that don't work so well) about your moms' group? Thank you!



5 - The Sheenazing Awards will end later today. If you haven't voted this is your last chance but just once vote per person, please.

Also, can I just say that I so appreciate how many people really get that this is not just about a popularity contest but is a way to raise awareness of Fulton Sheen - who he is, what he did, and how great he is. To all the bloggers who shared about him while the shared about the awards: thank you! To all the bloggers who posted his face on their Facebook wall: thank you!

And, for all those super great, wonderful blogs that weren't nominated this year, Erica at Saint Affairs is hosting a link-up "Blogs you may not be reading but you should." Please join her in sharing your favorite "under-appreciated" blogs.



6 - My blog and Facebook feeds have been filled with a lot of posts about the Pope's comments on rabbits and the dignity of life / the March for Life / the pro-life movement. Here's a few of my favorites I've read lately.

An older but really beautiful one from Svellerella: I Chose Life: And His Name is Lexington Anthony
Jenny writing about something I've wondered as I look up from my Little House reading binge and look around my house: On Debt and Openness to Life
Jenny again: Why We Don't Let the Neighbors Tell Us How to Raise the Kids
A woman with a completely different background than me writes about the rabbits: It's Not About Rabbits, But Maybe It's Not About You Either
Sarah eloquently writes: When Generosity Looks Like Selfishness




7 - Please let me tell you about my friend Emily. She's a former high school teacher, she's a farm girl, her big sister is one of my best friends, her husband is a 1LT in the Army (I don't know what that means but it's what her Facebook wall told me), and she wants to be a Creighton instructor. Now, if any of you have read my blog long enough you know that I have had some poor experiences with Creighton so when I share this with you please understand that this is how much I believe in Emily and the importance of natural family planning!

Creighton is a fantastic method of natural family planning (nfp) and has helped many, many women I know to learn about their bodies, become healthy, treat underlying issues, avoid pregnancy when needed, and achieve pregnancy when possible. Emily is funny, smart, compassionate, and kind. She has a true heart for army wives and wants to help cultivate a thriving Catholic culture no matter what base she and her family are living on.

Here's the catch: She has 8 weeks to raise almost $4,000 to cover her tuition, books, and travel expenses. Would you be willing to give alms or a portion of your tithe to Emily to help her? I made a donation by clicking on the PayPal button on her site. Please consider doing the same. Thanks.



September 18, 2014

A little of this and a little of that - 7QT

Okay, so I know I said earlier this week that I would post the Pirate Party pictures. That post is about 75% done but I hurt my back mid week and then spent Thursday night at the emergency room again with JF again because he ingested milk again. I hate milk. Also, any dairy that drips. Or is hidden in other foods. blerg. I hate allergies. 

This post was originally going to be something that is not a 7QT but with all the crap of the week it has become...what it is. Thank you, Jennifer Fulwiler, for saving me with your ole faithful link up.

Pre Script: here's your song. A little bit of a throwback but such a nice one, no?


First
Did you hear about the next Edel? Jen and Hallie announced it today: Charleston, South Carolina in July 2015. You should see the pictures of the hotel! It's gorgeous! I'm wondering who I can rope into rooming with me so I can cut costs. Kendra? Blythe? Kathryn? Jenny? Any of you lovely ladies?

I snore, but supposedly not so badly if I'm on my stomach. 


Second
Right now Project YM is hosting the annual "Support a Catholic Speaker" voting. This is a great way for event planners to learn about popular and up-and-coming Catholic speakers. Please go vote for your favorites, and if you want you can even vote for me. 




Third
Speaking of speaking, I have a few upcoming events on the books for this fall. I'm so glad that, even with the pause in the cause*, I am still able to go around and share JF's story with people. When I speak I am able to tell people about the miracle that happened and about Venerable Fulton Sheen. It is a privilege and honor to do it... and it pays for Ben's school tuition. 

If you are interested in bringing me in to speak at your parish, youth group, moms' group, gala, conference, or other event please let me know. I feel like it is even more important now for me to help spread the word about Venerable Sheen's cause.

*Kelly Mantoan totally needs to get credit for coming up with "pause in the cause."


Fourth
English muffins: I've tried a recipe from King Arthur Flour and one from Country Living. Both were okay, though I much preferred King Arthur's recipe. If you try CL's use less salt, I say. I'm still on a quest for the best recipe. If you've got one I'd love to hear. The major problem so far has been that both recipes have lacked the nooks in the muffins. 
But they still made some great egg sandwiches!


Fifth
I recently learned about a new (to me) site called Catholic365. From their website:
Catholic365.com is a Catholic-focused article and information portal from Catholic writers and bloggers who write about things Catholics are interested in, with 3 main categories - Faith, Life and What's Going On, from a perspective consistent with the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.
So that's pretty cool. Another one to add to my list.



Sixth
I just learned that the Women's Care Center that opened in Peoria, Illinois a year ago has helped mothers choose life over 200 times! There have been 23% fewer abortions in 2014 compared to last year! How wonderful is that?!


Seventh
Have you been reading the devotionals from Blessed Is She? Oh man! So good! Sign up if you haven't yet!

June 16, 2014

Judging the Mom of Many - a guest post by Mandi Richards

Hey, you! Yeah, you - the mother of five young children close in age.  I see families like yours everywhere.  In the pews before us at Mass.  At the grocery store.  In the park.  I always try to meet your eyes, but when you see me looking, you usually look away.  I can’t be sure why, but I imagine that it’s because you’ve seen one too many disapproving looks.

Your large family is counter-cultural.  You make people uncomfortable because you embrace the very things that society teaches us to fear: children.  Life.  People wonder if you’re crazy.  Or you’re Catholic.  Or if you own a television.  I don’t.  Your children are beautiful blessings.  It seems perfectly sane that you would welcome more of them. 

Let me tell exactly what I see when I see your family:
I see love.
I see joy.
I see the goodness of God.
I see five little people with endless possibility who will in some way, big or small, change the world.
I see parents who have blessed the world with their “yes” to life.
I see your courage in choosing that yes.

Really, it’s true. I don’t think you’re crazy.  I don’t think you’re stupid.  I don’t think you’re irresponsible.  I don’t think, “Better her than me!” or relish at the comfy life I have with my only child.   I don’t see any of the negative things you worry I see. 

And so, in some ways, I’m better than those people who think you have too many children.  I will never fault you for your family size.  I’ll never think you imprudent.  I’ll never see your children as anything less than precious blessings.  I’ll always support your decision for more children and congratulate on a new pregnancy.  (And I’ll never ask you if you own a television.) 

But in some ways, I’m just as bad.  Because, just like those naysayers, I see your family through my own biases and with my own scars.  I know that mothering a large family is difficult.  That it’s not all hugs and smiles.  That it’s a lot of lost sleep and breaking up fights and cleaning up messes and heartache and tantrums and…  I know, but when I see your family, I don’t see any of that. 

I’m so sorry, I know that I should be able to sympathize with you and support you through the hardships of mothering a large family.  But - right now anyway - I can’t see past my own pain and desires.  I get easily frustrated when moms of large families mention the hardships they face because all I can see is how blessed they are with children.  “Why can’t they see how blessed they are?” I think. “Why can’t they just be happy for what they have!”

And that’s not fair to you.  I reduce you to this rosy caricature of the mother of a big family, instead of a woman who has blessings and crosses.  You deserve to be seen as a whole person.  You deserve to be able to rejoice in your blessings and seek support for your struggles. 

You see, I always wanted to be that mother with five children close in age.  And I’m not.  I have one beautiful daughter who is approaching three and lost two other children to miscarriage over the past year.  And so I have baby tunnel vision.  I only see the babies.  The blessings.

So I ask: Will you forgive me?  Will you be patient with me?  Will you pray for me.  Be assured, I am already praying for you.



Mandi is a Catholic wife of (almost) four years and the mother of a sweet and spicy two-year-old, Lucia.  She loves the sound of a train whistle at night time, a cheap bottle of red wine, and jalapeños on her popcorn. She stays up way past her bedtime updating her blog, Messy Wife, Blessed Life.


June 3, 2014

I Saved a Baby - a guest post by Annie Tillberg

My family doesn't look the way I dreamed it would.  Fostering wasn't something I had always planned on.  It all started when I didn't get what I wanted.

As the third in a family of nine, a cradle-Catholic, and a newlywed, I was prepared for a large family.  We were married 15 months when we welcomed our oldest daughter into the world via c-section.


After she was born, we spent years trying for a second child.  During that time, I suffered and struggled a lot.  It was a time of joy with a young daughter, but sorrow tinged the edges of everything.  Suddenly, everything I felt I had been made for was not working.  After five years of trying to conceive, I experienced a pregnancy loss.

That time was filled with such great sorrow.  When I started to come back to life, I started to feel God was calling us to foster.  We hoped to adopt through fostering, but I really felt God was asking us to step outside of our own biology and find our child in the foster care system.  I had such a strong knowing and certainty.  None of my typical anxiety filled this decision.  I knew she (with a two bedroom house and one daughter, we were licensed to take an additional girl) was out there.

We found her on July 18, 2011.  At 12:30, I had taken a break from painting my bathroom to fix lunch.  As I was picking up the lunch dishes, the phone rang.  There was a newborn at the hospital who had to be checked out at 2:30 that day.

I cleaned up, pulled the bassinet out of storage and headed to the hospital.  That night, for the first time in six years, a newborn "slept" in our home.  She had been born premature and had some sensory processing issues, so she slept about an hour at a time for the first six months.  We walked the halls with her each night, in turns frustrated and in awe of our blessing.

For two years, the case limped away from reunification and it seemed the parental rights would be terminated.  For a year, we were told adoption was going to become possible.  Our life was perfect.

Having that sweet little one in the house had caused another miracle as well.  I delivered my youngest daughter on June 6, 2012.  After seven years of trying, I now had two infants.  Just 10.5 months separated the babies.

Life was busy and full and amazing.  I was exhausted and a little cranky on more than one evening in a normal week, but I felt like everything I had been waiting for had finally arrived.

Everywhere I went, people commented on my children, "you've got your hands full!" To which you should always reply, "thank God".  It is the kindest way I have learned to stop people in their tracks and simultaneously let them know that whether they're jumping off the side of the cart, screaming their way through a field trip (above), or smiling angelically, you're thankful.

In June 2013, we made an offer on a big, beautiful farm house.  It was on an acre in the country, had four bedrooms, and the kind of attic that you could relive all your Anne of Green Gables stories in.

The week we made the offer, I had a court date for our foster case.  I went in and my whole world changed that day.  A biological father had been identified, and he would be taking her.  Later that week, inspections showed a number of problems with foundation and other systems in the new house, so we walked away from the deal.

In the space of 10 days, we went from having everything we'd ever dreamed of on the horizons to losing one of our children.  Because whatever the state might have to say, once you've raised a baby from birth to two, they very much feel like your own.

The next six months proved to be a heart-wrenching series of "last-times".  Our last family vacation, our last Mother's Day, our last Father's Day, our last birthday with her, every time I turned around, I seemed to be saying goodbye to another piece of our lives.

On December 20, 2013, the transition was official.  She left our care for the last time and our case was finalized.  She was marked down as a "success story" and a "return home" in the books, and we were left with a gaping hole in our lives.


The next four months would prove to be the hardest of my life.  Visits with her were sporadic, then cut off completely, then back on.  I walked around in a near-daze, missing that firecracker personality and sweet snuggler, my only snuggler thus far.

Little by little, I came back to life.  Seeing her is still difficult and unpredictable.  God knows what the future holds for us, but we do see her on occasion now.  She still alternates between calling me "aunt" and "Mommy", she still cries when I tell her our visit is done and it's time for her to go home, happy though she is to see her dad.

It has been an incredibly difficult journey, one that I prayed would end differently.  I read about the people who have adopted from foster care, and I think, "why not me?" "why not my baby?".  But, mine is not a story of failure, of sacrifice in vain.

When the balance is weighed, she was a gift.  She is a treasure.  She was worth it.

Mine should not be the cautionary tale of foster care woes.  Things that should have been done by authorities weren't, mistakes were made on many fronts, by many people.  A government worker forgetting to file a form was the difference between us adopting and her being returned home.  There are many things for which I could be angry, for which I have been angry.  I ate about 20lbs worth of cookies over losing her.  Still, she makes my heart fuller and richer to this day.

Loving her made me a better mom to my other children.  Losing her made me appreciate the gift of my girls all the more.

I am not a story of why you shouldn't step out where God leads; I am a story showing God does not abandon those He leads.  I have not been promised an easy life, that's not the center of being a Christian.  But I saved a baby.  I gave everything I could to a medically fragile infant and helped her transform into a beautiful, healthy toddler.

Do not be afraid.  You do not walk alone, no matter how insurmountable your calling may feel.
I am a story telling you it is hard.  I am also a story telling you, it is worth it.
May God bless you abundantly wherever He leads you.


Annie Tillberg is a wife, mother, blogger, and Instructional Designer.  When she's not homeschooling or attempting to execute a home improvement project she found on Pinterest, she works from home writing training for businesses.
You can find her writing about faith, fertility, family, and homeschooling at AnneryatHome.blogspot.com.  She would be ecstatic if you looked her up on Facebook at Annery at Home.

Thank you, Annie! 



May 30, 2014

Six Quick and One Long Quick Takes


1 - Travis and I watched The Secret Life of Walter Mitty the other night. (It was sweet and cute and good.) I liked most of the soundtrack and this song especially caught my attention. Super mellow and delicious.

Yes, I just described music as delicious. It's lush too. How about that?!


2 - Maya Angelou died on Wednesday. May she rest in peace.
Someone shared this article of hers on FB and it was so beautiful and I wanted to share it here. She writes about being a teen mom and her relationship with her son. Please read it; it's so lovely.


3 - You've probably already read Jenny's brilliant post on vasectomies. If you haven't read Dennis' comment please go back and do so! I love that he spoke the Truth!


4 - Hey! Did you know that my blog has a Facebook page? I am 14 fans away from hitting 500 so I thought we could just go ahead and make. it. happen! It's a silly goal but it would make me happy if I hit it. So go ahead, make my day.


5 - If you live in the Peoria, IL area I hope you and your family can attend the Sheen Family Day on July 12th.

My friend Katie and I have been working with the Sheen Foundation on this and we're so excited about it. There will be snacks, age-appropriate crafts, family-friendly guided tours of the Sheen Museum, and Sheenazing tours of the Cathedral where Venerable Sheen was an altar server and later ordained. There's a suggested donation of $1 per family member - which means even my family could afford to attend! It's an open house style event so you can start at the Cathedral or the Museum or with the crafts and just move at your family's own pace. And everyone's welcome to stay for the Vigil Mass at St. Mary's Cathedral.


6 - Today we paint, tomorrow we move, Sunday we clean carpets, Monday we close. I am an odd mix of sad, excited, nostalgic, and stress paralyzed.


7 - When I published my post on not burying statues of St. Joseph I knew that I would ruffle some feathers. I didn't write anything in that post that I wouldn't or haven't said to people, including people who have buried St. Joseph. So I was more than a little surprised when it led to some people making hurtful comments about me as a person instead of just critiquing the work.

After talking to several people about it and thinking it over I've learned a few things:
- Leave any attempts at humor to others.
- When writing for the masses, remember that one sentence is just not enough to explain to people "If you don't do it this way I'm not talking to or about you."
- People are sentimental and emotional about the way they practice their faith. That's a good thing and should be respected.
- People will read "I did it this way and it was a great experience" type posts as "I did it this way and you should too because I'm holier than you" unless you word things very carefully.

I'm thinking of rewriting the post in the future to build off the lessons I learned. I still stand by what I wrote and I don't like the practice but I think a rewrite would be a good exercise in writing and humility.

May 13, 2014

On starving babies, orphans, and natural family planning

Hopefully you have seen Blythe's fantastic post about how the Catholic Church's teachings on sex were incredibly important to her conversion to the faith. It's a gracious, intelligent post and it sparked some good comments. One of the questions really stood out to me and so I wanted to respond in my own way and in my own space. 

Anonymous wrote:
As a Christian who is searching to make sense of the faith I grew up with, I find this incredibly confusing (Disclaimer- I was raised Protestant). I do not mean to contentious but I have a few questions, all coming from a heart of love... I am wrestling through a crisis of faith and the foundation of faith I had built up can't sustain the questions keeping me awake at night. What is the point of this life? Why are we here? Who is God? Really BIG picture stuff. 

What does the Bible teach on the topic? 
What about women living in third world countries whose babies are starving? I would assume you would suggest they use NFP but that again raises questions for me... What is the difference, big picture, between NFP and and using a condom- preventing a pregnancy. My husband and I have lived and worked in Africa and seen these mamas face to face. The last thing they need is another baby... 
What about all the orphans? How can we make space in our families for these children when we keep creating babies of our own? My husband and I are blessed with two amazing little girls who we love endlessly but I feel done having babies, mostly because I believe we are called to love one another, above all this is the big picture for me. We have room for more children and want a bigger family but we feel like we should be adopting sweet babes and kids who don't have a mama and daddy. What are your thoughts on this? 

Again, please understand these questions are not meant to be malicious. I so appreciate women of faith being able to have open dialogue about our beliefs and values.



Anon, of course your questions aren't malicious! And I know you didn't ask me - you asked our lovely friend Blythe - but your questions are really dear to my heart and so I wanted to respond. I hope you don't mind me butting in. Thank you for being so genuinely interested and respectful. 

The first thing I want to say is that the point of life, why we are here, is to know, love, and serve God. That is the meaning of life, that is what will make us happy, that is what this is all about. The bottom line: to know, love, and serve God. To know Him through His Church, His Sacred Scripture. To love Him through prayer, adoration, worship, and fellowship - a true, deep relationship. To serve Him by discerning His will for your life and then joyfully living it out as a parent, spouse, priest, religious sister, doctor, teacher, volunteer, friend.

God is the Creator of everything visible and invisible. God *is* love. God is a Trinity, three in one, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God is our redeemer, our savior, our lover, our Lord. He is almighty and He cares about you. He loves you. I also believe firmly that Jesus Christ established the Catholic Church and that the Holy Spirit continues to guide it - despite the knuckleheads and sinners who make it up - so that through the Church we can have the fullness of the Christian faith, the graces needed to live a heroically virtuous life, and the Sacraments through which God gives us Himself (literally in the Eucharist).

Those are the most important things: who is God and why are we here? If we don't have the answers to those then nothing else matters. But on to your questions on NFP. 

Well, the Bible doesn't say, "Thou shalt use natural family planning under these circumstances to avoid and under these circumstances to achieve and..." The Bible does tell us the children are a blessing and God tells us to go forth and multiply. I would think based solely on Scripture that every Christian should have a quiverful of kids, but that's not what the Catholic Church says. The Catholic Church, guided by the Holy Spirit, wants us to practice responsible parenthood, to only have the children we can care for which may be seven or may be two. 

About those babies in Africa: if those moms shouldn't be having another baby then they should not be trusting a condom which could break. If someone really should not be having a child then they really should not be having sex. With natural family planning there are three phases. Phase I is a woman's period. Phase II is when she's fertile; it's the time leading up to ovulation and the approximately four days following ovulation. Phase III is the naturally infertile time after ovulation has happened. 

Speaking from personal experience I will tell you that those African mothers are capable of doing the exact same thing I've been doing: abstaining. After my last baby was born my husband and I needed a break from being pregnant. So for seven months we abstained until I had signs of fertility return so I could begin charting. Over the last three months (my baby is now ten months old) we have abstained throughout Phase I and II until my charted signs show that my fertility has passed. During Phase III we can have sex and know that we will not get pregnant. 

Is it hard to abstain? Absolutely. Does God use that time when we are abstaining to help us grow in virtues like selflessness, self control, and compassion while he also gives us the graces to persevere? Absolutely.

Finally, about the orphans. I think it is beautiful that God has placed such a call and conviction on your heart and your husband's heart. If He is asking you to adopt then He is probably also asking you to abstain during times of fertility and He will probably be using that time to strengthen other virtues, like obedience, patience, and generosity. It is also possible that He may have you adopt your next child and then bless you with another baby from your womb. Of course, I don't know exactly what God wants of you and how He's hoping to mold you and I hope you understand that I'm guessing a little bit and also projecting from my own life and experiences.

I think that part of the reason natural family planning seems so impossible is because we've been raised in a culture that has told us we can have sex whenever we want. And like Blythe said, some churches have even told their women that they needed to have sex with their husbands whenever the men wanted. To finally have a Church and it's joyful, faithful members say, "Sometimes you just shouldn't have sex," well, how do we wrap our minds around that? Is it even possible? Since middle school people have been telling me it's pretty much not possible, so make sure you have protection. So of course it seems like it's not possible. But it is. Abstinence is possible and it is worthwhile.

Finally, I want to stress something that wasn't brought up by you but I think it needs to be said. Babies are gifts. They are only gifts and they are always gifts. Sometimes they don't feel like the gift you wanted just then, but it does not change the basic fact that they are gifts. Only and always.


"Mary Comforts Eve"

May 9, 2014

There's More Than One Way to Be a Mom: A teenage mother

The author of my last guest post in the Mother's Day series has chosen to write anonymously but I still want to introduce you to this friend of mine. She is the mother to five children and has been happily married for sixteen years. A Catholic convert, she just celebrated her 15th anniversary of joining the church. YEAH!!! I will also add that she is incredibly wise, kind, and compassionate.


“Loneliness and the feeling of being unwanted is the most terrible poverty.”
 Mother Teresa

As a teenager, my life was turned upside down when I became pregnant. I was a 'straight A' student from a Christian home (a good girl) and I was in trouble.   For four months, I hid my pregnancy from my family and my friends. I lived in denial, puked alone in my bathroom, cried myself to sleep every night, and tried to pretend like nothing was different about me.  I begged and pleaded that God would somehow make "this" all go away. I was alone and scared.

Outward appearances can be deceiving, I seemed to be a girl who had it all, but on the inside I was lonely, lacked confidence, and had very little self-worth. I believe that my parents were well intentioned in their parenting, but tired. My father worked nights and family finances were tight.  My mother often parented alone.  Life had been rough for them and their girls.  Quite often, I was allowed to do what I wanted, when I wanted, and with very little questioning as to whom I was with or what we were doing. This became the perfect recipe for a terrible crisis.

I will never forget the moment when my mother confronted me and I confirmed all of her suspicions.  Her little girl, the baby of the family, was having a baby of her own. I had bought into the lies of a young man who told me that my worth was in what I could give him- mainly sex. It shouldn't have been shocking when he suggested that I just have an abortion.  For my family and me, this was never an option. Regardless of the terrible mess I was in, my family and I held onto one sacred truth.  All life comes from God and is beautiful.

The first course of action was for my physical well-being and that of my baby.  My parents immediately made sure I was given proper medical care and attention so I could have a healthy pregnancy from that moment on.  There was a lot of discussion about how we would handle my pregnancy.  My mother wanted to send me away to a home for unwed mothers.  My father wanted me to stay home.  There was discussion about giving my baby up for adoption or me choosing to parent my child. We weighed the options carefully and I chose to stay home with my family and keep my child.

After the difficult decision was made, I became isolated from my school and my friends.  Actually, I no longer had friends. People laughed and stared, made rude comments, treated me like I was nothing but another statistic. I was ashamed and humiliated. I felt like a dirty failure and a poor excuse for a young woman.  I was sent to a special school for unwed, pregnant girls through the city's public school system.  It happened to be the same school where they sent the delinquent and problematic high school students - just separated by a floor. The girls there were often uneducated, unloved, and lived in poverty. These girls were not college bound, didn't know God, and had very little hope for a positive outcome or a hopeful future. I considered myself fortunate for the gift of my family, for the tutors who came to teach my accelerated learning classes, and for the women there who taught me basic mothering skills. I stayed at that school for my pregnancy and continued to attend there with my daughter until she was four months old.

My shame and humiliation didn't end when my pregnancy ended or when I left that school.  There was very little joy (outside of my immediate family) for the birth of my daughter. There were no baby showers and very few people visited me in the hospital. It wasn't a life celebrated.  If I dwell on this, it causes me a lot of pain.  I choose not to. I understand that no one wants to condone teenage pregnancy, but all I needed was a little joy.  I needed someone to celebrate with me because she was my baby.  I loved her.  I was proud of her.  I wanted to beam.  I wanted to show her off.   She was precious and cherished, regardless of the circumstances. 

I faced many challenges as a young mother.  I had a lot of broken relationships and a lot of emotional and spiritual wounds. People never stopped staring.  People never stopped the rude comments.  People still treated me poorly. Even to this day when I meet new people, some guffaw and proceed to tell me that I couldn't possibly have a daughter who is that old.  Throughout the years, I diligently took care of my daughter.  I finished school and graduated at the top of my class.  I went to college.  I made our lives better, but only with the help of God and his special graces. 

As I grew into womanhood, there were women and friends I encountered in my life who brought me closer to Jesus.  They loved me for who I am - a child of God.  They taught me that I am not defined by my failures.  Recently during a homily our priest asked two questions.  The first was, “Can you find joy in the unexpected?” The second was, “How can you bring the “living water” to those around you.  After reflecting, I realized that these women and friends had the courage to bring me the "living water" and to find joy. So I challenge you to ask yourselves, Can you bring the 'living water' to girls who are broken and in a crisis pregnancy? Can you help her find joy in the unexpected?

Some simple ways to do this....
            * Smile at her and look her in the eyes. Notice her for who she is, not for her failures and weaknesses.
            * Keep your comments to yourself.  Even the least offensive questions and curiosities can be hurtful. I've never met a young woman in a crisis pregnancy that didn't already feel enough shame and humiliation.
            * Ask her if she wants someone to go with her to doctor's appointments or pre-natal/birthing classes. Girls in crisis pregnancies are often lonely and afraid.
            * Celebrate the baby's life with a small gift; a baby blanket, a knit hat, assurance of your prayers for her, or a mother's prayer book.
            * Show her how to be a good mother.  You can do this by how you mother your own children.  If she is keeping her baby, she is watching and learning and really wants to be a good mom.  Show her virtuous parenting.
            * Offer to baby sit.  It can be very difficult for a young teenage mom to keep up with school work or participate in normal high school activities like playing an instrument, being in a choir, or playing sports.
            * Remind her that God is always good and she is always loved.



May 8, 2014

There's More Than One Way to Be a Mom - A Birth Mother's Story

Melissa and I became friends through various Bible studies and activities at our parish. She and her husband are both wonderful, hilarious people with three wonderful children, age 8, 6, and 3. Melissa writes:

My husband and I have also lost three children to miscarriages (two last year) and struggle with that loss continually. I am currently a stay-at-home Mom and love it. I have a degree in Zoology and enjoy birding, running, family vacations, hiking, and singing in our church choir. We also garden and can or freeze as much of our food as possible and I enjoy baking. I am a survivor of thyroid cancer and have been without a thyroid for 5 years now.



I am a birth mom to an adopted child. 

I have never been ashamed to speak of my experience but sometimes, I feel as if I am speaking about someone else’s life. Maybe the only way my mind has been able to deal with the pain of giving up my first child was to treat it like a story I am telling, rather than my own past.

I was eighteen and starting my second year of college when I discovered I was pregnant. My boyfriend of three years was the father and he was my first real boyfriend and the only other man I have been with besides my husband. I thought he was “the one” and that we were “meant for each other”…boy was I naive.
It was overwhelming news to find out that I was pregnant and unmarried. I was ashamed and scared. I know this will sound terrible, but in all honesty, I just wished (at that time) I would have a miscarriage. I felt trapped and knew it was only a matter of time before EVERYONE would know. I was also accepted to SIUC (Southern Illinois University - Carbondale) the next fall and my boyfriend was going to be attending a culinary school in Chicago. How were we going to raise a child from the opposite ends of the state while going to college?!

My Mom started having suspicions as my belly started to swell slightly - I was already 6 months along by that time. She scheduled my first appointment with an OB-GYN thinking I had endometriosis like my older sister. I think she suspected I was pregnant, but didn't want to admit to herself that her daughter was living in sin. When they took me to the exam room, the nurse came in and said I tested positive for pregnancy. I burst into tears and blurted out that I already knew and that I didn't know how to tell my Mom. The nurse was comforting and arranged for the doctor to meet with my Mom and myself in her office and break the news. My Mom seemed relieved to finally have it out in the open but my Dad didn't speak to me for days. My boyfriend’s parents weren't too thrilled either.

One thing that came to my mind immediately after that appointment (and seemed to be the only concrete thing to hold onto) was the decision to give this child up for adoption. This decision gave me peace. I really feel that it was God helping to make something good from something so bad. It was like that part of the poem “Footprints” where there is only one set of footprints in the sand, because God was carrying me. I also have three adopted cousins and knowing how much my aunts and uncles wanted those children and love them as if they were their own helped me to feel even more certain that this was the right thing to do.

My parents accepted and supported this decision but my boyfriend’s mother was against it. She wanted to raise the baby for me while I went to SIUC and if I insisted on going through with the adoption she said that no one in their family would ever know that I was pregnant. So, I didn't see his family for the next four months and basically felt like a “dirty little secret” and a whore. My boyfriend’s brothers kept asking why I wasn't coming to any holiday celebrations and we had to lie and say the roads were bad, etc. As if the situation wasn't bad enough, she had found a way to make it worse.

We met with a Catholic lawyer that was a friend of my Grandparents. I asked that the parents be Roman Catholic and that I receive pictures and updates at least once a year. We decided on a closed adoption because one of my aunts had been afraid for a long time that the birth Mom would try to come and take her baby back. I didn't want this couple to ever feel that way. I wanted them to be able to just give him all of their love and never have those fears or worries. The lawyer then took our family medical history and arranged all the details.

I had an easy pregnancy and I think it was God’s pity for me, knowing what I faced. I went into labor the night before I was going to be induced and gave birth to a healthy baby boy on February 2nd, 1999. The labor and delivery nurse was really rude to me when we first arrived. I think she just saw me as another teen mom. When she found out I was giving him up for adoption she really softened towards me and she told me that she herself was unable to have children and had adopted her child. Looking back, it is obvious that God puts certain people together to help each other through a tough situation.

They gave me a private room because I was in OSF (a Catholic hospital) and I was giving my baby up for adoption, perhaps a non-religious hospital would do the same. I spent the next two days just trying to memorize everything about him. We had his infant pictures taken and named him Timothy Jason.

Then on the third day the lawyer and his wife came to take him. They stayed for a little while, as if they weren't sure when the right time to take him was. It was like torture…I just wanted to scream “Just Do It Already!!! I Can’t Hold On Any Longer!” I waited until they left the room and the door closed before I collapsed sobbing. I didn't want to do this in front of them, knowing already that they felt terrible about taking him, being parents themselves. I collected my stuff and we left the hospital. I felt hollow. I felt like I was drowning.

The next day as I was sitting on the couch crying and looking at pictures we had taken in the hospital, my Dad sat down and put his arm around me and told me it was going to be alright. If you knew my Dad, you would know that this is totally uncharacteristic of him, but it was just what I needed. A few days later I went to the Peoria courthouse and stood before a judge declaring that I was giving up my parental rights to Timothy.

It was incredibly difficult to be around anyone who was pregnant or had a new baby for the first year or so. I felt so jealous of all of them. This was my first experience with motherhood. I felt robbed. Those feelings eased as time went by and my boyfriend and I grew apart and broke up. Our breakup was hard after being together for 5 ½ years and I had started to resent him for what I had gone through. We never spoke again and went our separate ways. As time passed and the pain subsided, talking about the adoption became much easier.

I received pictures and updates in the form of letters from his birth parents every year and learned that they had changed his name (I will continue to refer to him as Timothy for his privacy). I would send Timothy a birthday card each year and as my life changed (marriage, thyroid cancer, three half-siblings) I would send these updates along as well.

For the first fifteen years we continued to exchange information through the lawyer, but about a year ago we decided both families felt comfortable enough to exchange addresses and phone numbers to send things directly. Then one day last summer I answered an unexpected phone call from Timothy’s Mother saying that he was interested in meeting me. I was really surprised that it happened so quickly; I guess I had this idea he would wait until he was an adult and on his own to try to find me. We chatted for about fifteen minutes on the phone and exchanged a few emails working out the details of the meeting.

I was nervous, anxious, scared, relieved that he wanted to meet…you get the idea...a bundle of crazy emotions! I was also worried that I would disappoint him or he would become angry with me. Something else that happened unexpectedly was that all of those feelings I had buried, resurfaced with a vengeance and I have struggled with them off and on since. In fact, in the hours before that first meeting I experienced a horrible anxiety attack. All of that said, the meeting went very well and I couldn't have picked any better parents for Timothy! He asked me many questions and I apologized for my decision, but I also told him I know that it was the best thing I could have done for him, that I was not ready to be a mother at the time I had him, and how different his life would be if I had decided to keep him.

Timothy is now in his freshman year of High School at my alma mater! One other thing I should talk about is how difficult it has been to feel a connection with a 16 year old son, since the last time I saw him and held him he was only a few days old! I know that I received pictures all these years, but I still felt this strong connection to that newborn I had given birth to and held in my arms, and I have had a difficult time jumping from that to a teenager. He also closely resembles his birth father (with some of my features mixed in). This is something that I struggle with, due to the rocky breakup his birth father and I went through and the resentment I felt toward him. I now know I probably should have gotten some therapy to get past some of these emotions or to learn how to handle them better. 

We met again on his birthday in February of this year. It is a struggle for me, but I want to do this for Timothy and to help myself heal as well. I want him to know that he is where he should be and that he has a really great Mom and Dad! I hope that he has forgiven me for the decision I had to make and not feel some kind of an emptiness or void from all of this.

One last hurdle in all of this is telling my three kids about their half-sibling. I have waited to tell them until they were old enough to understand and I think the older two are now old enough. I am terrified of how this will change their view of me and their trust in me. I also don’t want this to affect how they feel about their future relationships. I don’t want them to think it is OK to participate in sinful acts because “Mom did it”.

I have also learned that with each lost child the pain is different. Even after going through the loss of Timothy to adoption, I had a hard time truly empathizing with someone who had lost a child to miscarriage until I had felt that pain first hand myself. Sadly, I have experienced this first hand through comments said to me when talking about my past. Some examples of things people said to me are: “I could NEVER give my child up for adoption!” (gee thanks) and “You never know WHAT (don’t you mean “WHO”?!) you are going to get.” (when referring to possibly adopting a child). Yes, these are exact comments that were said to me by friends or family. In fact, most of the most hurtful things that have been said, were said by people that are close to me and I think that is what has hurt the most. Therefore, I deeply regret any callousness I may have shown towards others who lost a child to miscarriage or adoption before me.

I didn't realize those 16 long years ago how this would affect the rest of my life. I was only able to see the short term outcome, the “solution” to my dilemma and I really couldn't imagine what this was going to feel like as a mother of three young kids. Now I can begin to see how far the ripples of my past have traveled and how many people it has/will effect…whether good or bad. I know that I gave someone a precious gift and it changed me forever. There is good and bad in everything and I am trying to find a balance again in all of this.

May 6, 2014

There's More Than One Way to Be a Mom: Adoption through foster care

Today's "There's More Than One Way to Be a Mom" post was written by my friend and high school youth group leader Sarah Hedman. Sarah and her husband Darrel are both from central Illinois and have been wonderfully, happily married since December 1999. She writes:

 I have a BA in Art and have had various creative part-time jobs over the years such as photographer, book-making instructor, and florist.  Primarily though, I have been a stay at home Mom.  My kids are Josie (13), Eliza (10), Evangeline (6), and Abraham (4).   They are all stunningly beautiful and delightfully interesting.  Last August, we sold half our stuff and moved to an apartment in Chicago because of a job change for my husband.  We absolutely LOVE it and have never looked back.  As the years roll by, I am continually amazed as I get to know myself and Jesus more and more.  And, really, isn't that what it's all about anyway??

Thank you so much, Sarah, for sharing your family's story with us!


Our adoption story began in April of 2001. 

My husband, Darrel, and I had been married about a year and a half and we were living in Dekalb, IL  and were about to graduate college.  We were planning on trying to get pregnant later that year.  Adoption had never occurred to me.  I never wanted it to be a part of my story.  It seemed scary and unknown - way too out of my comfort zone.  I’m sure God chuckled the day that He COMPLETELY changed my heart from seeking a “safe” and “normal” road to parenthood via pregnancy (oh I was so young and naive) and instead put us on a road of radical love for a baby we had never met.  

On April 30, 2001 my Mom called me from their home near Peoria, IL with some crazy news.  She and my step-dad, Paul, were foster parents but had never had a full-time foster child before. They had gotten a call that day for a newborn baby girl who had been born on April 28th.  They were heading to the hospital that afternoon to pick her up. 

I remember hanging up the phone and just weeping.  Weeping for this little person who was waiting at the hospital for someone to come get her.  A precious little girl who had no idea what heartache and chaos she had been born out of.  My heart was immediately and supernaturally moved and I could not get her out of my mind.  I shared the news with Darrel who, unlike me, had always been attracted to the idea of adopting, and we both were drawn to this little girl from the beginning. 

We thought maybe the feelings would go away.  Maybe we were just being emotional.  We started seeking God HARD.  We prayed for a forever family for this baby.  My parents were in their 50s and had raised 7 children between them.  They were not wanting to adopt.  

We surrendered her future to Him.  We asked Him if we could be her parents.  We prayed that she would not be shuffled around in the foster care system - that she would never be unloved or unwanted.  We asked if WE could be the answer to her future.  

Over the next few months, our family loved and doted on this smiley, sweet bundle of chubby joy.  We visited her often at my parents’ house and continued to pray about what our role in her future would be.  By that July, it was evident that she would indeed be adoptable.  Her birth mother and father had done none of the requirements needed to keep their parental rights and earn custody of her.   

My parents and the case workers knew of our interest in adopting her and so they brought us to a point of decision.  If we really were serious about adopting this child, we needed to move back home to Peoria and get our foster care license.  In three days, we had gotten out of our lease in Dekalb and packed up our things to move to Peoria.  We immediately entered a 3 month licensing course and by Oct 26, 2001 we were fully licensed.  I will never forget that night - moving all of her things from my parent’s house into our little apartment.  We were so happy.  We had been spending time with her constantly since moving back to Peoria, but now it was official.  She lived with us.  

But the story was not over.  Her adoption would not be final for another 18 months.  Those next months were hard.  There were still required visits with her parents.  Her birth father started working towards getting custody of her and every moment was raw with the threat of losing her to a violent and addicted man.  

During this time I memorized Psalm 23 and felt led to pray that God would bind Satan from influencing her birth father.  There was a darkness and oppression surrounding this man.  Immediately after I started praying that, he stopped coming to the visits consistently.  Within a couple months, he stopped coming altogether.  

An adoption date was finally set - May 7, 2003.  Oh what a glorious day that was!  Our daughter, Josephine, was officially and forever ours.  We were amazed at all God had done to put her in our family.  Little did we know, that He was about to rock our world again.  Three months later, on Aug 6, 2003 we got a call at noon from our case worker.  Josie’s birth mother had had another baby girl. She needed picked up at 4pm that day from the hospital.  Did we want her?  Did they even have to ask??  

So that afternoon we went to pick up our second daughter, Eliza Jane.  A beautiful perfect 5 lb 3 oz bundle with dark, clever eyes.  That night as we lay in bed trying to go to sleep, we couldn’t believe we had TWO kids.  A toddler sleeping down the hall and a teeny tiny newborn squeaking in the bassinet at the foot of our bed.  It was a moment we will never forget.  

Eliza’s adoption went smoothly and easily and she became legally our daughter on Dec 22, 2004. Once again, the hand of God orchestrated every detail.  God loves adoption!!

***************

Adoption through foster care is an option I don’t feel gets considered enough.  There are some cons.  It takes time.  Often, the child will still have visitation with family members up until adoption.  The system’s goal IS to reunite children with their birth parents, so birth parents do get a chance to earn back custody.  However there are SO MANY great kids whose parents have already lost their rights and they are totally free and clear to be adopted.  In these cases, the process would be much faster.  

There are some great pros to fostering to adopt also.  It is completely FREE.  Yes, I said free.  My husband and I were young,  newly married and dirt poor.  Because this process was completely free to us, we were able to provide a safe and loving home for two little girls.  

Many people think they can’t afford to adopt but that’s not true!  If finances are an obstacle, then maybe fostering is something you should look into. Another thing I love about fostering to adopt is that we were able to provide a home for two kids from Peoria.  I like the idea of directly impacting the lives of people IN MY community.


Josie and Eliza will turn 13 and 11 this year and we are continually blessed by their presence in our family.  We also have two birth children, Evangeline (6), and Abraham (4).   We live in Chicago nowadays (in an apartment that was NOT built for 6 people) and we couldn't be happier or more content with how God wrote our story.  

Thank you for the opportunity to share it with you!  We still love adoption and any chance we get to encourage others to trust God on the adoption journey is a real pleasure for us.