Our family

Since it is Sanctity of Life Sunday, I thought this post was appropriate for today.  I love that God has a purpose and a plan for every life…there are no accidents.

I have been reminded often of late that I no longer have a “baby”.  No longer do I need to buy the infant Tylenol.  No longer do I have a child in a crib (as of this week).  I got pregnant with Lincoln when Ava was Lincoln’s age and that realization made me a little sad.  All that said, I LOVE the ages that my kids are at right now.  I’ve said this at every age, but I think these are my favorites 🙂  I LOVE that I have a child for each hand and I LOVE that I can still fit them both on my lap.  I’m so thankful for my little family and because of that I wanted to share a little more about how it came to be.

When Josiah and I began our love story and started talking about having a family one day, we always said we wanted a bunch of kids.  A bunch meaning 4-6.  He came from a family of four siblings and I came from a family of five and we both loved that.  From the time I was a very little girl I always knew I wanted to be a stay at home mom and I never wavered from that.  Thankfully, we never had issues getting pregnant (looking back I am incredibly thankful for that…we had so little time), and after we had been married 6 months and decided that we would be thrilled to have a baby, I got pregnant.  We were SO excited and pleasantly surprised 🙂  After Ava was born with her heart defect, I was petrified of having another baby.  We talked to different doctors and we knew that our chances of having another heart baby were higher now that we had one.  But God placed in me this deep deep desire for another baby around Ava’s 1st birthday.  Because of her on-going health issues I knew it wasn’t the right time for another child, but I was grateful for that desire in my heart.  We got pregnant later that year after getting some huge answers to prayer regarding Ava’s heart and even though she was still facing issues, I was ready for the challenge of having another baby.  God took that baby home just a couple of weeks later and I was so confused by that.  Why would God place that deep desire in my heart and bring me to a place of trusting Him with another child only to snatch her away so soon.  I still don’t know the answer to those questions but I trust that it was for our good.  Josiah and I learned a lot through that process.  We had already learned so much about how each of us handled sorrow when dealing with everything with Ava, and losing Grace was just another lesson.

We got pregnant again right around Ava’s 2nd birthday and we were cautiously excited.  We both loved that new life with all of our hearts, but because of our last pregnancy, it was different and I eventually became OK with that.  Getting past each milestone helped and the day Lincoln was born brought such healing to our hearts.  No drama.  Just a healthy, beautiful baby boy.  We reveled in that “normalcy”.  Of course, in the weeks to come when Lincoln showed his true colors, we began to talk about maybe having two kids was enough 🙂  We had a boy and a girl and with our current financial status, maybe two would be just fine.  We were both too sleep deprived to make an informed decision, so it was just talk.  I assumed that eventually we would have more children.  I started thinking of us as being a “normal” family.  No longer did I see us as the family with the child with special needs…we were just “normal” and I really thought it would stay that way.  Until right after Ava’s 3rd birthday when the bomb hit and my whole “normal” world was completely turned upside down and inside out.  My husband was diagnosed with cancer.  And not a “normal” cancer…a rare cancer.  Because of the treatments he would have to endure we were told that the likelihood of us ever being able to conceive children again was slim.  We were told our options.  We talked and prayed about our options.  But we had very limited time to make a decision because Josiah’s life was at stake.  We seriously considered using a bank that would freeze what we would need to make babies (I know what it’s called, I just don’t want any weird google searches), but the night before Josiah was supposed to go to said “bank”, we talked and neither of us felt comfortable with it.  For one, it was going to be a big expense…although, how do you put a price on your unborn children?  But we decided that was just not how God wanted to plan our family.  So, I died to ever having any more biological children.  That was not easy for me.  But I figured we could use the money that we would have put into the “bank” and use it to adopt.  I always wanted to adopt.  And who knows, maybe the chemo wouldn’t harm Josiah in that way…we were trusting the Lord with that one.

Then that summer we got the news that the chemo treatments were not succesful and Josiah had a limited time on this earth.  And one of the many things I had to come to terms with was being content with the two beautiful blessings that I had.  That was not easy.  I was twenty-five years old and having to put down the yearnings of my heart.  But God gave peace and while the yearnings for more babies didn’t go away, I was content.  Then later that summer I thought I was pregnant and I really freaked out for soooo many reasons.  I kept it to myself for a while and then I couldn’t help but spill it to my husband.  And you know what?  He responded like he had with every other pregnancy, with peace in his heart and love in his eyes.  And I was yet again amazed and fell more in love with him.  His unwavering faith that it was going to be OK caused me to embrace this potential new life.  Then a couple of days later it was confirmed that I was indeed NOT pregnant nor had I been and I was relieved and crushed at the same time.  Just when I had gotten to a good place of contentment then my heart was opened anew, only to have to deal with that pain all over again.  While I don’t understand why God allowed all those details to take place, and while my heart still doesn’t feel completely “done” having children, I am content…and beyond grateful that I have the two children that I have.  Most days, they run me ragged and every day I am so thankful for them.  They are my treasures.  They are my gifts both from their Heavenly Father and their earthly Daddy.

All this to say, I know that my family definitely does not look like I had planned…you know, with my six children running around me and my husband by my side.  And I have NO idea what God has planned for our future…but I do know it’s God’s plan for me right here and right now and while that knowledge is so painful at times…I trust Him.

8 thoughts on “Our family

  1. Well, you’ve done it again girl 🙂 You’ve shared such special moments and feelings straight from your heart and brought me to tears…so many pregnancy/parenting memories! Children are truely such a blessing and you are truely such an AMAZING Mama! Ava and Lincoln will definitely rise up and call you blessed! Love you sister!

  2. Jessica,
    Your posts are written with such unwavering faith and love. You are so real and inspiring. Thank you for sharing your heart with so many.
    Rachel

  3. Oh, Jess, thanks for sharing your heart so openly. Posts like these I find words hard to describe my thoughts. If you had shared this in person, I would have gave you a big hug, let my tears slide down my cheeks, and whispered,”I am with you on that, I know this is how God planned it for me, and it does hurt. Yet I trust Him too.”
    Big Hugs to you, girl!

  4. Ken and I went through the sadness of miscarriage in 2007. We went on to have two amazing, once-in-a-lifetime trips just by ourselves that same year. In the next three years, we had a few more getaways, which we had not done before with nursing children all the time. I had another miscarriage in July 2010. I see now that I would have been about 6 months pregnant with my 9th child when Ken died. So God knew, and there can be a family reunion for him and the babies in the presence of Jesus. Ken and I also had a rough emotional time when our second son, age 21, moved out this year so that he could switch churches (I hasten to add that the new one is also conservative and Bible-believing). I am actually thankful for the chance I had to see how Ken would handle something unpleasant. He did not cry, but I could see the hurt he was going through. Men hurt in a different way. But then he shared that he thought it was like the time that Israel rejected God. Samuel told them how hard it would be for them once they had made their choice. Then Samuel said he would not cease to pray for them.

  5. Thank you so much for sharing. I had wondered how you dealt with the idea of not just losing a husband, but losing the chance to have more children with him, too. It’s a huge loss, but seeing the way you trust our Lord is so GOOD.

  6. Thanks for sharing all of that detail with us, Jess. Sometimes it is beautiful to just step back and get a glimpse of God’s huge and amazing plan throughout our lives.

  7. Your two blessings, are amazing and wonderful and I am grateful for them also! As are my girls. Cora still brings up Ava about twice a week.

Leave a reply to Amy Elizabeth Cancel reply