Please Note: This is a personal blog
post about how Chris and I came to the decision of when to announce our
pregnancy. Someone else could observe the same principles that we did and come
to a different conclusion. This is a very personal decision, and each couple
needs to decide what they are both comfortable with. While I would love to eradicate
the fear and shame surrounding pregnancy loss, I understand that many people
have strong reasons for not sharing their pregnancies or their losses.
"Aren’t
you announcing your pregnancy a little early?" This is the silent (and sometimes
not so silent) question that has surrounded me over the past several months.
And I cannot tell you how many times this thought has popped into my head over
the years. As soon as someone shared their due date, I’d automatically do a
mental count to see how far along they were. If they were in the first 12
weeks, I’d think to myself, “Wow, that’s pretty early. What if something
happens? Won’t they regret telling people? I mean, aaaawkward!”
When
I became pregnant for the first time, I was hit with a mix of emotions. Thrilled,
excited, thankful…I wanted to shout the news from the rooftop as soon as I saw
that little positive on the pregnancy test! Yet, I was also a bit nervous, knowing
that miscarriages do happen. What if we told everyone, only to lose the baby a
few days or weeks later? Would people think us presumptuous if we shared our
joyful news, only to “take it back”?
When
I told Chris that I wanted to wait awhile before announcing the pregnancy, his
response rocked my world: “If you want to wait for the doctor to confirm that
you are actually pregnant, that’s fine. But if we’re sure that you’re pregnant,
I think we should tell people. Even if we end up losing the baby before we’ve
had a chance to announce it, I don’t think we should keep that a secret.” What?!?
The whole point of waiting was in case of a miscarriage. There was no point in
waiting to announce the pregnancy if we were gonna share our loss either way.
Thus began a discussion that forever changed the way I saw pregnancy.
Really,
in my mind, a pregnancy announcement was somewhere along the lines of a dating
announcement. When I was single, I never wanted to share that I was dating
someone too soon; because if it didn’t work out, that would be awkward and
embarrassing. I looked at a dating relationship as the possibility of a future marriage
and therefore worthless if it didn’t end in marriage. And I was looking at
pregnancy the same way – it was the possibility of a baby but worthless if it
didn’t actually end in a baby. However, this reasoning had one fatal flaw. If life
begins at conception, then a pregnancy is not the mere possibility of a baby – a pregnancy means that we already have a baby. Even if the Lord takes that baby
home before we get to hold it in our arms, nothing can change the fact that our
baby was alive for a time.
Then
it hit me: If we had a 6 month-old who died, we wouldn’t try to pretend like
our child never existed. We wouldn’t go through our facebook pages and remove
any and all evidence of that baby’s life, nor would we regret that we had
“told” people about our baby. Instead, we would grieve and share the loss with
others. We would have a memorial service and honor the life that the Lord had
created. True, in that scenario, the choice of keeping our baby a secret would
have been removed from our hands. Yet why would we think any differently of our
unborn child? Would we not grieve that child and honor the life that God had
created and entrusted to us, even for so short a time?
As
Chris and I wrestled with this issue, I had to ask myself some questions: Do I
want to hide my joy and pretend like everything’s normal? (Would that even be
possible if I’m sitting in church, eating soda crackers and grinning like the
Cheshire Cat?) Do I want to go through the first trimester of my pregnancy,
worried and fearful, refusing to rejoice in case something goes wrong? Do I
want to rob others of the chance to rejoice with us? Would I want to go through
the grief of a miscarriage alone? Would I want to hide my tears and put on a
happy face so no one suspects that we’ve suffered a loss? For me, the answer to
these questions was a resounding “No!” (I understand that other women might
have different answers to the same questions. Again, this is a very personal
choice.)
So
we went ahead and announced our pregnancy at 5 ½ weeks. We lost our sweet baby
just a few weeks later, right at the close of the fateful “8 week window”. Yet
we had those precious weeks of rejoicing with family and friends…of planning
and hoping and praying. When we found out our baby was gone, my first thought
was, “I’m so glad we told. I wish we’d found out sooner so we could’ve shared
it sooner.” Looking back, I wish we had relished every day even more than we
did. And we’ve had many weeks and months of weeping with others, surrounded by
a community of believers who have prayed and cried with us and for us.
We
chose to name our unborn baby “Jesse” which means “gift.” We don’t know whether
our baby was a boy or girl, but we do know that we were blessed with a gift
from the Lord. Chris and I are convinced that God created our baby for a
purpose, although we may never fully understand it this side of heaven. We know
that God planned our baby before the foundation of the world and that Jesse
lived all the days that God had intended for him (Psalm139).
The
Lord has given us a ministry that no one ever asks for – we now have a unique
understanding of grieving parents. While we prayed for a child and not for a
ministry, we do not want to waste it. I have joined a secret club that I never wanted
to join – that of mothers who have suffered miscarriages. It is a club shrouded
in silence and oftentimes shame, with women left feeling that they cannot share
their loss. This ought not to be so, especially for Christians. If we believe
that life begins at conception, that should radically impact how we see
pregnancy and the loss of our unborn children. We should not feel bound by the conventions
of secular society, which views a miscarriage as a “minimal loss” or an awkward
situation to be hidden away. Why should we hold to the principles of those who
refer to our unborn babies as “fetuses” and “tissue”? These terms are
disturbingly similar to those used by abortionists. Instead, we need to see our
babies’ lives as God sees them – precious, made in His image, knitted together
with a specific number of days allotted to them. When those days come to an end
sooner than we expect, it is right and good to grieve. We should acknowledge
that life and praise God for the gift of a child that we will one day meet in
heaven.
In
the months since losing Jesse, our family and friends have steadfastly prayed
that God would bless us with another child. On October 27th, we
discovered that those prayers had been answered. When I saw that positive on
the pregnancy test for the second time in my life, I wept with joy. Again, I
felt that fear and hesitation: what if something goes wrong? What if people
think we’re foolish for sharing our joy, especially after what happened the
first time? Yet, so many have prayed for us – would we deny them the privilege
of rejoicing over God’s answer to our prayers? We are not sure what the future
holds, but we do know that we have received an immeasurable blessing. So we
announced our pregnancy “early” once more, knowing that the Lord has again
blessed us with a child, even if we don’t know for how long.
2 comments:
what a great encouragement Boggys!!!!! love and miss you guys!
How GLAD I am that we got to share in your excitement about Jesse, and how glad I am that we get to rejoice with you both in the gift of this baby! You are remaining in our prayers!
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