Miscarriage | He is with Me all the Way

HE IS WITH ME ALL THE WAY

MiscarriageI delivered our sweet baby at home and we buried him here in our forest. This would have been our 12th precious baby. I have been writing a lot since I lost my baby. Here is a poem I wrote recently.

The sun shines brightly,
The sky is a deep blue,
Fluffy white clouds drift by
And then she looks in the mirror,
Notices how her shirt is not full,
How it gives the impression of a roundness.

Her hand touches that spot,
The roundness of the shirt . . . it flattens,
She imagines what it would've been like by now,
This week would've been 25 weeks,
The kicks and the squirms,
The dreams and excitement--gone with the touch of that spot.
Her breath catches in her throat
And there's that feeling again,
A sinking. A sadness.
Her face reflects it. And she remembers.
He's gone. In the arms of Jesus.
I'm here and I step forward.
He is with me all the way and all the time.

VERA LOUDEN, Canada

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Vera's two sons are pictured on the front cover of Above Rubies # 89.

HE HELD MY HAND

She can't find a heartbeat. "No, Lord, not again," I pleaded in my heart as I lay on the ultrasound table. I couldn't lose another unborn baby. The ultrasound technician left the room with the words, "I'll be right back."  I stared at the ceiling and tried not to cry. Suddenly the Holy Spirit took over and my heart shouted, "Your will be done, Lord." I knew my baby was gone.

Although I was only having a regularly scheduled ultrasound to learn my baby's gender, it turned into something totally unexpected, but all too familiar. Three years before, at a scheduled prenatal check up, my midwife couldn't find a heartbeat. My 15 week old baby had miscarried. Three days later I had an induction delivery and went through eight hours of labor to deliver a baby that I would never hold, hear cry or laugh--at least not in this life.

I remember feeling God's presence like I never had before. That night God kept me from sleep in order to show me He cared. He laid a verse on my heart.  It was Romans 8:35, "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?  Shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword?" Simply put -- God never stops loving us.

I realized that God was not just watching me go through this, but He was going through it with me, I will help thee." He helped me to realize that no matter how alone I may feel that He is with me every step of the way.

Is my God going through this same thing with me all over again? I thought. It was so easy to forget the truths I learned with the first loss.

My mother was with me in the ultrasound room. We were silent. The

ultrasound technician returned about ten minutes later but it felt like hours. I said, "You can't find a heartbeat, can you?" She said, "I have to wait for a call." More time passed in silence. Finally, the call came. She told me I needed to go to a different part of the hospital where my midwife was. My mother and I walked into the room and my fears were confirmed. "I'm sorry. We can't find a heartbeat."

"What was God's plan in all of this?" I asked myself. How could anything good come of this?

The next day I repeated the induction delivery and after nine hours of labor delivered a 7 ½ inch baby boy. I was in the birthing center of a hospital and it was hard for me to hear the cries of the precious newborn babies. I would have rejoiced at hearing my own baby cry! Just to hold it, smell its sweet smell, and feel its soft skin. My hurt was tremendous. I ached to have a healthy, full-term baby whose chest would move up and down as it took its first breaths.

A nurse came in and said we had visitors and my husband went to see who they were. We were all surprised when he came back, after checking the hall and the waiting room, and said, "No one is out there." My midwife said they must have been angels.  Psalms 91:11 says, "For he shall give his angels charge over thee in all thy ways." God was at work, except my eyes were not opened to it yet.

A week later I was still crying at the drop of a hat, wondering what God's plan was. God comforted me with His words in 1 Peter 5:10, "But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, strengthen, settle you." I realized that God, who held my hand three years ago, was comforting and holding my hand again. What an amazing feeling!

A few weeks later I had a follow-up appointment with my midwife. We discussed my health and then to my surprise she mentioned "my angels." I really don't think she'll ever forget them, and neither will I. She believed God sent His angels to watch over me.  Could it be that God was using my situation to strengthen her faith too?

Through all of this He's drawing me closer to Him and giving me the opportunity to minister to someone else who may go through something similar. It's not all about me. God is at work through everything. I still cry when I think of my two babies in heaven but I believe the tenderness is God-given. It gives me compassion for others I come in contact with who also have "heavenly" babies.

If you are facing a trial, open your heart to God. Allow Him to comfort you and hold your hand through them. 1 Peter 5:6-7 says, "Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you." And we are comforted through Romans 8:18, "For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us."

BETHANY CRAIG
Benton, Maine, USA

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TRUST GOD AND DO THE NEXT THING

I was 19 weeks, just starting to look pregnant and feeling overwhelmed. The twenty minute ride to the midwife's office was just what I needed after caring for and homeschooling five children ages seven and under. I put the music on and worshipped the Lord as I drove.

At the office, I expected to be able to sit for a few quiet minutes and read, but Bobbie, my midwife, was not busy, so she took me right away. When she could not find the baby's heartbeat with the fetoscope, I asked her to use the Doppler. She still couldn't find the heartbeat. A sense of foreboding dropped over me when Bobbie said, "You need to go to the hospital and get checked out." As she made the arrangements, I called my husband Chris to find someone to stay with the children. I thought I felt a small movement in my womb when I walked out the door, and I smiled. "Everything is just fine!" I thought to myself.

Unfortunately, everything was not fine. The ultrasound showed a beautiful perfect baby floating in my womb. There was no flicker of a heartbeat, no waving arms, no blinking eyes, no movement.

My husband and I left the hospital in a trance. My heart felt like it had been stabbed and my stomach like it had been punched. As we sat on the sofa, I cried for my baby. I cried that I would never see what color his eyes were, hear his voice or his laughter or see his smile. I would never know what kind of person he would become. I knew he was with Jesus, but I cried because I would miss holding him, nursing him, kissing him. I cried because all my dreams for this child were as useless as dust in the wind.

The next morning Bobbie induced labor. Sixteen hours later, I gave birth to my beautiful baby, a boy weighing barely 6 ounces. We named him Joel Michael. He had perfect, tiny little ears that looked like seashells from the beach. His fingers and toes were fully formed.

As I looked back on my pregnancy, guilt as well as grief filled me. Although I never voiced it to my friends or even to my husband, I had been mad at God for allowing me to get pregnant so soon. Esther was only three months old when Joel was conceived. I complained to Him constantly and worried how I would be able to take care of this new baby, as well as all the others, and still home school.

Although some days the grief overwhelmed me, I had to go on. I still had five children to take care of, two to home school. I couldn't just sit there grieving.

During this time I read a fiction book. The main character was having a discussion with Oswald Chambers, who told her, "Trust God and do the next thing." Those seven words leapt off the page right into my heart. Sitting around replaying everything in my head only made me more upset and angry with God. I finally decided I had to make a choice to trust God, even though I didn't understand and was angry with Him. Like Peter, I reasoned, "Where else do I go? No one else has the words of life."

When my mind started to whirl with the whys of Joel's death, I would say to myself, "Trust God and do the next thing," then get up and do the laundry, wash dishes or cook. I'd do whatever needed to be done around the house to keep me from dwelling on all those questions that would never be answered. I consciously choose to trust Him and believe that His word is true.

After another heartbreaking miscarriage, I became pregnant again. I remember looking at the pregnancy test, then burying my head in my hands, tears overflowing, as I begged God, "Please let me keep this one!"

As the pregnancy progressed, many friends told me they were praying for me, which was a comfort. But still, every day I found myself crying, wondering if the baby would live. I was afraid to get attached to the baby or even plan for its arrival. I prayed constantly that everything would be all right but I couldn't believe that I would actually have a baby to cuddle at the end of the pregnancy.

One day while praying with some friends, a woman leaned over to my belly and said, "Baby King, we can't wait to see you, we love you!" My friend said the things to my baby I could not. The floodgates opened and all the emotion I had held back during my pregnancy poured out. I heard that still, small voice inside say the same words as before, "Trust Me and do the next thing."

When fears rose within me, choking the breath right out of me and stealing my joy, I would say it, and then go wash dishes, or pray, or hug my children, or prepare a lesson. I learned to continually give God my fears and grief and get on with life.

Even today, two years after Joel's death and one year after Izabelle Grace was born, "Trust God and do the next thing" is my life motto. Choosing to trust God by turning my worries over to God and getting on with my life is becoming a habit. My joy has increased and my relationship with God is stronger. If I'm not sure which direction to take, or I'm not hearing clear instructions from the Lord, I trust God will work it out as I move onto the next thing. When I can't see how obedience to the Lord's commands will work out, I close my eyes and say to myself, "Trust God and do the next thing."

If I had to do it all over again, would I choose to have Joel die? No. But I am grateful for the lessons the Lord has shown me through the darkest time in my life.

DAWN KING
Hamilton, New Jersey, USA

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HOLDING US BOTH

My little one, barely formed

I've never seen your face

In this life I'll never hold you close

And yet,

For just a little while my womb was your home

From the moment I knew your life was in me

I loved you

I touched my stomach and knew that you were there

A miracle was being woven

But something was not right

I lost you, my little one

Before I got to know you, hold you close or see your face

My dear little one

My heart cries out for you with such loss and deep sorrow

But I know the LORD will hold you for me

And one day I will see your face

My precious little child

And joy will replace the grief and loss

But until that day the LORD will hold us both.

 

HEATHER  HAMILTON
Wenatchee, Washington,  USA

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WE WILL RE-UNITE

 Little baby fastened in my womb
 
Partaker of my life
 
Though hidden from my view

Changer of my course

 Expander of my waist
 
Enlarger
 
And developer of my faith

Oh little one who rented out my room’

 I never thought our lives would be
 
Untied so soon.

You left in sudden haste

And emptied out my small domain

 Child of ours,
 
What is your name?
 
For though I’ve longed to carry you once more
 
You’ve already been perfected
 
In the presence of the Lord
 
So my goal for you is gained
 
In a place of great delight
 
And soon in glory

We will

Re-unite.

 

Written by Janet Carlton
Emily, Minnesota, USA

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