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Infertility ~ Miscarriage
Stillbirth ~ Early
Infant Death
EARLY INFANT DEATH:
Scriptures for you ~ Prayer
for you ~ Real
Life Stories Tips
for Grieving Hearts ~ Caleb
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Scriptures
for you:
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean
not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge
him, and he
will make your paths straight.” (Proverbs 3:5-6)
“Listen to my cry for help, my King and my God, for
to you I pray. Morning by morning, O Lord, you hear my voice;
morning
my morning I lay my requests before you and wait in expectation.” (Psalm
5:2-3)
"In my distress I called to the Lord; I cried to my
God for help. From His temple He heard my voice; my cry came
before
Him, into His ears." (Ps. 18:6)
"The eyes of the Lord are on the righteous and His
ears are attentive to their cry." (Psalm 34:15)
"The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves
those who are crushed in spirit." (Psalm 34:18)
“If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously
to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.
But when he asks, be must believe and not doubt, because he
who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the
wind.” (James 1:5-6)
(All Scripture is taken from the New International Version
of the Bible)
Prayer for you:
prayer@calebministries.org
~ Back to Top ~
Real Life Stories:
When
There Are No Answers
by Jill Thigpen
(Taken from "Morning
Will Come")
Sometimes
in this world things happen and there are no answers to the
question "why?" I
know because I began looking for that answer in 1988 when
our
daughter Haley was stillborn.
Her death was totally unexpected. Her movement stopped
and an ultrasound confirmed our biggest fear. Our baby
had died
in utero. After twelve and a half hours of difficult
labor our baby was delivered. She looked perfect and
beautiful,
like a little angel. My husband named her Haley, taken
from an angel's
halo. Our doctors and nurses were gentle and sensitive.
They gave us privacy to hold our daughter and begin to
make plans.
Because she was delivered late in the night, none of
our family was able to see or hold her. Then we went
home with
empty arms
and heavy hearts. We buried our daughter in a special
part of a cemetery set aside just for infants. Her marker
says "In
Jesus’ Arms," which is how we feel. She went
from our arms to our Savior's arms.
I thought I could not live to see another day. I felt
an indescribable loneliness and hurt. The hardest part
was trying to understand
why God allowed this to happen.
The autopsy found no cause of death and our doctors encouraged
us, so I became pregnant again almost right away. Looking
back I think it helped me deal with the loss of our first
child,
but I also became very fearful. I visited Haley's grave
each week; then as I got further along in this second
pregnancy,
my visits became less frequent. I was afraid to face
death, and I thought if I didn't go to the cemetery,
death would seem
less real.
From the time I found out I was pregnant the second time,
everyone I knew, and many people I didn't know, were
praying for us
and this unborn child. Through the death of our daughter
we discovered that my blood and my husband's blood were
incompatible.
Although the autopsy report did not say this was the
cause of our daughter's death, the doctors then knew
how to treat
this second pregnancy. My husband and I began weekly
trips to Chapel Hill, N.C., to see a specialist. Through
a procedure
called fetal blood sampling, whereby a needle passes
through the mother's stomach and amniotic sac and into
the umbilical
cord to withdraw a sampling of the baby's blood, it was
discovered that my blood and the baby's blood were different.
My blood
was unable to give the baby proper nourishment and therefore
was causing the baby to become anemic.
Dr. John Seed at Chapel Hill treated this condition with
bi monthly in utero blood transfusions - blood compatible
with
the baby's was slowly passed into the umbilical cord.
Each transfusion would supply the baby with enough nourishment
until
the next transfusion. I dreaded our trips to Chapel Hill
because the procedure was very painful and also put the
baby at risk.
But each visit brought us closer to the time our baby
would be born.
I was so afraid to hope for the future, but I honestly
thought that God was working a miracle in our lives and
for our baby.
I felt God was trying to teach us something through the
death of Haley and whatever the lesson was, I would learn
it without
having to suffer another loss. In my mind I justified
Haley's death because through it the doctors learned
how to treat
our next baby. We were praying so hard, as were our friends
and
family. I felt sure we would get to bring this second
baby home. An ultrasound revealed our baby was a boy,
so we
named him Garrett Ezekiel, which means "our brave warrior whom
the Lord strengthens." As we watched him fight for
his life every day, the name seemed to fit our son perfectly.
During our last transfusion, our baby's heart rate dropped.
Though I could not see what was going on, I instinctively
knew something was wrong. My husband, who stayed by my
head, held
my hand, and talked to me throughout each operation,
told me one of the doctors had left the room. Then I
knew something
was terribly wrong. Dr. Seed told me that in order to
try to
save our baby, they would have to do an emergency C-section.
Within seconds the operating room was filled with doctors
and nurses. My husband was pushed out of the operating
room and
a nurse began hooking me up to all sorts of machines.
I was so afraid. I remember telling the nurse, "Please don't
let my baby die!" Within six minutes our son, Garrett
Ezekiel, was born. The doctors were able to stabilize him
and move him to the neonatal intensive care unit. As soon
as I
came out of recovery, the nurses took my husband and me
into the ICU to see our son for the first time. He was
under warm
lights and had tubes running in and out of him. But as
I looked at his tiny, helpless body I was filled with such
love and
peace. He was such a miracle. The nurses carefully laid
him
in my arms. He was so beautiful absolutely perfect. I don't
know how long I held him, but I have every detail etched
in my mind. The doctors told us he was a very sick little
boy,
but they would do everything they could to help him.
I was taken to my room where I began to doze due to the
anesthesia. I awoke with a start when the neonatal doctor
came into my
room. He didn't have to say a word; we knew that Garrett
had died. Our beautiful little boy, for whom we had fought
so hard,
lived four short hours before joining his sister in heaven.
Another part of me died that day, too.
Not long after the doctor told us our son had died, the
nurse brought Garrett into the room, and we held him
for a long time.
My brother and his wife, who live in Chapel Hill, came.
They held Garrett and held us as we cried over our second
loss.
Why? Why did the Lord find it necessary to allow our
second child to die? I struggled to find an answer.
Because no one else in our family had seen our daughter,
it was extremely important to me that my mom and dad
see their
grandson. Early the next morning my parents and our ten-year-old
son, Ricky (my husband's natural son, whom I had adopted),
came to the hospital. The social worker at the hospital
brought Garrett back to us. His little body was cold,
but he still
looked so pretty and sweet. It was important to us for
our family to see Garrett; I think Ricky needed to be
a part of
this to help him understand that he had a brother. Not
having seen Haley, it was easy to pretend she never existed.
But both
Haley and Garrett were real; they were members of our
family, and I wanted everyone to remember them.
I stayed in the hospital in Chapel Hill for five days.
During this time the nurses and doctors were wonderful.
They cried
with us, they helped us make arrangements to take Garrett
back to Charlotte, and they listened. They gave us the
support we
needed to get us through those first awful days.
Garrett was buried near his sister. Those who had prayed
for him attended the graveside service. Then I went home
to recuperate
from the surgery and begin healing emotionally. It wasn't
easy. Physically, I felt better in a few weeks, but emotionally
and
spiritually, I was empty. The pieces did not fit together
to make sense out of the past year.
Did any of my questions have answers? Some did, but most
did not. I knew my children were in heaven and that given
a choice,
they wouldn't come back to live on this earth. I knew
that one day I would be reunited with my children in
heaven. Yet
I wanted them here and now, and I just plain hurt. My
heart was broken and I felt an endless emptiness. Without
my family,
friends, and a God who promised to take care of me, I
know I could never have made it through those long days,
weeks,
and months.
Through these experiences I have learned a lot about
life, death, and myself. Life is so precious and each
child is a
miracle. I have learned that no matter what a person
has been through before, he/she cannot be prepared to
lose a loved one.
Yet the Lord promises to be with us, and He strengthened
me and upheld me during the many times I felt alone and
lonely.
Do I still have questions? Everyday. There will never
be a good enough answer to why both of my children died.
No one
on this earth can answer these questions. Only God can,
and I know He'll answer them when I meet Him face to
face.
I still miss my children, and I think of them every day.
Nothing will ever take away the pain of losing them;
besides, I don't
think I want it to. The pain brings memories of my daughter
and my son, and that's all I have of them. I want to
remember their movement within my womb and their tiny
faces when I first
laid eyes on them. Recalling these things, reminds me
of how precious and perfect we are in God's sight.
For My Precious Children
I wondered who you'd look like
Maybe me, perhaps Dad;
I wondered what your future held,
A future you never had.
I never looked into your eyes
Or held your tiny hand;
Now you play on streets of gold
In God's heavenly land.
Why you're no longer here
I just can't understand,
But I know I'll recognize you
In God's heavenly land.
I'll know your precious voice,
I'll hug you, oh, so near;
My heart will be complete again -
I'll thank God He brought you here.
God kept us close to Him and continued to give us a strong
desire for another child. Our doctors advised us not to try
again because we would face the same problems. So we began
to look into adoption.
Through our minister we were made aware of a young woman who
was seeking adoptive parents for her unborn child. We prayerfully
submitted a profile of our family and waited. On June 5, 1990,
we received a phone call from our minister.
The woman wanted
us to have her baby. She said she wanted to help ease our pain
with the loss of our two babies by giving us her child. Her
due date was seven days away. We began to prepare the nursery
for the third time. We were excited, scared, and filled with
anticipation. There was always the chance that the woman would
change her mind even up to ninety days after the birth of the
baby. Deciding to put these fears behind us, we placed our
trust in God and waited for the baby's birth. On June 9, 1990,
our son, Addison Robert, was born. When the young woman was
in labor, we were called to the hospital. We saw Addison when
he was ten minutes old and was being weighed and measured.
I could not have been more joyful and thankful than when I
held him for the first time. We were so grateful to this birth
mother and conveyed our thanks through her counselor, since
we did not meet her. What a special woman she is. We continue
to thank God for her daily. No one could have given us a gift
greater than the gift of this child.
We brought Addison home when he was two days old. Those first
weeks were a blur. I still couldn't believe this tiny child
was mine. He felt so good in my arms, and I began to feel the
rawness of my pain start to mellow. The nursery was no longer
a sad room, but my favorite room in the house. It was filled
with love and life.
As I watch Addison grow and develop each day, I marvel at what
a miracle he is. What a blessing he is to every member of my
family. He makes me realize each day how much God loves us
to have sent us this little miracle.
Yes, God is faithful and He answers our prayers, although not
always the way we think He will. Looking back, I can see God's
hand in every detail surrounding the deaths of Haley and Garrett
and the adoption of Addison. He has given me strength and peace.
He has led me to new friends and made me more sensitive to
the needs of others. Because of Haley and Garrett I look forward
to the second coming of Christ with greater anticipation. I
have two very special little children waiting for me. When
that day comes, I know I will feel whole again.
Those
who are hurting every day.
by Jill Thigpen
Keep me strong, help me to stand
Support me with your loving hand
Hold me tight, oh Lord, I pray
Guide me through another day.
Heal my heart and wipe my tears
Take away my pain and fears
Give me peace, oh Lord, I pray
Guide me through another day.
Show me how to share a smile
Push me to go the extra mile
Let me love, oh Lord, I pray
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God’s
Love, Mercy, and Grace
By Jennifer McConnell
For
as long as I can remember my desire was to be a wife and
a mother. I did not go to college for
a degree, but for
a husband so I could become a mother. Of course the first
year my dreams were dashed time and time again, but it was
through
this heartbreak that the Lord revealed Himself to me.
I had grown up going to church every Sunday. I even prayed
a prayer and was baptized, but there was no life change.
It wasn’t until my second year
of college that God changed my heart. He showed me that I was living for the
world and not for Him. I submitted my life totally to Him and at that time
I became a Christian.
Shortly after that He blessed me with my husband, Patrick. We both wanted
children right away, and I definitely was ready to be a mom. I had endometriosis
so
we knew it may take a while to get pregnant. We tried for a year and a half,
and I was starting to get very discouraged. Didn’t God want me to be
a mom?
Then it happened. I was late. Could this be it? We were overseas in the military
so I went in for a blood test, and you had to call the next day with a number
to get the results. When I called, the nurse said it was positive. Are you
sure? I couldn’t believe it. I immediately started having cravings and
walking around with a water bottle. All the things that I had heard and seen
other pregnant women do. I was so excited that I was telling everyone even
though “they” tell you to wait 3 months “to make sure”.
It was a Tuesday that I found out I was pregnant. Friday night I started
bleeding. Okay, I had read that this could be normal. I called the hospital.
They said
we needed to come to the ER because OBGYN was closed for the weekend. They
asked me a lot of questions and then put me in a room to wait. They did blood
work and examined me. They seemed hopeful because the numbers were good.
They sent me home on bed rest and told me to come back if I had more pain
or passed
tissue.
I didn’t understand what all of that meant but to me I heard that everything
was fine. My husband and I rented movies and bought a pizza and went home to
rest. I went to bed that night feeling fine but woke up with a backache. I
decided to go take a warm bath to relax. When I got out I realized I was bleeding
more, and it looked more like tissue. I woke my husband, and we went back to
the hospital. They examined the tissue and did more blood work to confirm that
I was losing my baby.
I felt so lost and alone. Why did this happen? What did I do wrong? Nobody
seemed to know what to say or how to comfort me. Someone told me if I had
prayed hard enough or wanted the baby badly enough I wouldn’t have lost the
baby. After I miscarried, people would say it’s for the best, or there
was probably something wrong with it. My poor husband didn’t know how
to console me so he busied himself with work.
However, when I was the most alone God was faithful, and He consoled me and
He strengthened me. I was a young, immature believer. I clung to Philippians.
4:4-9 especially verse 7. He guarded my heart, and He helped to heal me.
He strengthened my marriage by showing my husband what I was feeling. He
showed
us how to communicate and to become stronger. He also brought us to a strong
Bible teaching church in Spokane, WA.
Two years later, I became pregnant again, and all of the fears resurfaced.
God sustained me though and gave me total dependence on Him. It was a rough
pregnancy, and I went on bed rest at 31 weeks because of pre-term labor.
Emma Ruth was born at 38 weeks healthy and beautiful. We felt so blessed
and so
thankful. She was a wonderful testimony of answered prayers. Her sister,
Makayla Grace, arrived just 14 months later. Again I went on bed rest at
21 weeks,
but she also was born healthy and beautiful.
Patrick and I truly felt blessed. We wanted a big family, but with the hard
pregnancies we weren’t sure about another pregnancy. We prayed to seek
God’s will in this decision. We were starting to lean towards adoption,
but I became pregnant. We were surprised but oh so pleased.
I was under very strict doctor supervision, so my ultrasounds started early.
I received one at 11 weeks right before Christmas 2001. We were going to
Georgia for the holidays, and the day before we were to leave, we got a phone
call
from my doctor. She wanted us to meet with a genetic counselor because they
saw something in the ultrasound. There was fluid behind the baby’s neck,
which could be a sign of Down’s syndrome. We didn’t want to do
any further tests to confirm or deny because it would put the baby at risk,
and we saw this baby as a gift from God no matter what he/she was born with.
I had several more ultrasounds to monitor my pre-term labor, and they kept
coming back with something whether it was fluid around the heart or a little
build-up in the brain but nothing conclusive. We just kept trusting the Lord.
I ended up on bed rest again at 18 weeks this time. I was hospitalized on
my 7th wedding anniversary with a partial placenta abruption at 26 weeks.
The
bleeding stopped but the risk was still there so they kept me in the hospital.
It was a great time for me just to meditate on God’s Word and one of
the verses was Ps. 34:4, “I sought the Lord, and He heard me, and delivered
me from all my fears.” On April 12th at 29 weeks the baby’s heart
rate dropped and that verse was tested. I needed an emergency C-section, and
as they wheeled me into the room, I prayed that verse and God gave me a peace
that only He could give. Abigail Shea was born that day weighing 3lb 4oz and
151/4in long. I briefly saw her before they rushed her to the NICU.
Abby truly seemed to be our miracle baby. She survived the critical 48 hours
after birth, and she didn’t seem to have any of the problems they thought
she was going to be born with. She just needed to grow and get bigger and stronger.
For the next 2 months in the hospital, Abby seemed to be the typical preemie.
It was so hard not having her home with us and only getting to see her and
hold her at the appropriate times. I was trying to nurse her, but she just
wasn’t getting it. The nurses kept telling me it was normal. However,
after awhile they were starting to question the normal.
Abby, was starting to concern the doctors, but they couldn’t place
what it was. She hardly ever cried, she didn’t eat well by mouth because
she would choke, and she was extremely puffy and swollen. They did genetic
tests
that came back with a trans located chromosome, but when they tested Patrick
and me, I had the same thing so since I was normal they ruled it out.
After 3 months in the hospital we had an option of taking Abby home, but
it would have to be on a feeding tube. Of course we wanted her home so she
had
the feeding tube put in and after 96 days in the NICU Abby came home.
Abby had a list of doctors and therapists to see to try and figure out what
was wrong with her. She went back in the hospital after being out for one
month with a high fever caused by a urinary trace infection. She continued
to have
the recurrent infections along with asthma, scoliosis, edema, lazy eye, hearing
problems, stiff joints- you name it she seemed to have it.
When she was 6 months old, the genetic doctor decided to test her for a metabolic
disease. She made it sound low key, but when I went home to research it I
found that rarely do kids live past 10 years old. My husband and I prayed.
We said
okay Lord you are in control. What do you want us to learn from this? How
do we handle this?
The test came back 2 months later right before Christmas of
2002. She had a type of disease called oligosaccharidosis
and the doctor thought the type she had was gangliosidosis.
We went for counseling of this disease, and I remember hearing
Patrick ask what the life expectancy is. The doctor said 2
years. I couldn’t breathe. She just said my baby was
going to die soon. We went home numb.
That night I could not sleep. I kept jumping up with every noise Abby made.
I was terrified I would go to sleep and wake up, and she would be gone. The
next day someone from our church kept the 2 other girls so Patrick and I
could spend time together. We read and prayed and cried and talked. God was
giving
us peace, helping us for that day and the days to come. That night I clung
to Proverbs 3:5-6 saying it over and over. A friend of mine had lost her
baby 3 years earlier, and I had heard her say she would say verses over and
over
again until she believed them in her heart. It worked for me and for the
first time in 5 months Abby and I slept the whole night. He gave me a peace
only
He could give.
We had some hard decisions to make regarding Abby’s life. There was no
cure and no treatment for this rare disease. Her pediatrician, bless his heart,
called us in to talk to us about the options and to give us a Do Not Resuscitate
order to have at home. We had to decide what measures we would take to keep
Abby alive.
Christmas was a blur. My parents and my grandmother were there from Georgia,
and it was hard seeing them try to be strong for us when they were hurting
also.
January 2003 Abby got pneumonia. She responded well to the
antibiotics and recovered quickly. We had had a skin graft
done at Christmas to find the specific type of disease she
had. It came back that she had galactosialidosis, only 20
cases ever reported in the world. She was missing 2 enzymes
instead of one, life expectancy average 7 months. She was
9 months old.
February 3, 2003 Abby woke up from her nap with a high fever. She was put
in the hospital. She was struggling so much to breath and the antibiotics
weren’t
working. We almost lost her Feb. 6th. We called the grandparents, and they
hopped on a plane immediately. I was not ready to say goodbye to my little
girl. I begged God, not now. He answered my prayer for that night. The grandparents
got there, and Patrick’s dad held her for the first time. Over the
weekend friends from church came to see her and pray with us. I saw my little
girl
continue to struggle, and God gave me a peace only He can give. I was ready
to say goodbye.
Monday night Feb. 10th I was able to sleep only with a promise they would
wake me. They woke me at 3am, and I was calm only by God’s grace and
faithfulness. Her O2 lever had dropped to 50s with 100% oxygen. We called
the grand parents
and my dear friends. I held my little girl and rocked her and told her I
loved her and kissed her goodbye. At 4:21am Abigail Shea McConnell went to
be with
the Lord.
As I left the hospital with empty arms, I felt numb and so empty. I remember
thinking it shouldn’t hurt this much but hurt it did. However, even in
the hurt we were able to see God’s love and His grace and mercy in Abby’s
death. He had prepared us in so many ways. He showed us so many lives that
Abby had touched while she was alive. He gave us 8 months with our daughter
of not knowing and 2 months to help prepare us. He allowed the grandparents
to get there in time. He answered my prayer of Abby being surrounded with people
who loved her before she died. He protected her from the pain she would have
had with this disease if she had lived longer. He also answered my prayer that
she would know us before she died. The whole week she had been out of it with
the high fever but before she died she looked up at me with those beautiful
eyes, and I knew she knew it was me.
God’s grace and love surrounded us in so many ways. His protection and
healing started so many years ago with my miscarriage. I was so full of anger
and “why” question’s after my miscarriage. From that time
God strengthened me and showed me His character. He taught me how to hold onto
His Word as truth. God is good (Psalm 119:68). He strengthens my heart (Psalm
27:13-14, Ps. 28:7). He forgives, heals, redeems, satisfies, is merciful and
gracious (Psalm 103).
Some days are harder than other days but on those really hard days God has
given me such an urgency to be in His Word and be before Him in prayer. There
are some days that the only comfort I have is knowing my two little ones
are up in heaven waiting for me. This can only come from knowing Jesus Christ
and
the hope that we have to spend all eternity in heaven.
“Wait little Abby
and little Joshua. Mommy will see you soon.”
Through
the Lord’s
mercies, we are not consumed
Because His compassions fail not
They are new every morning
Great is Your faithfulness.
(Lamentations 3:22-23)
Update: Patrick and Jennifer are living in Spokane,
WA, where Patrick is a Junior High Pastor at Faith Bible Church.
Emma
Ruth is 4 years old now, and Makayla is 3 years old. They
continue to heal from their loss trusting God to sustain them
in all
they do.
~ Back to Top ~
Tips for Grieving Hearts:
• Write down three things a day you are thankful for
• Cry freely - it is emotional release
• Exercise at least three times a week
• Send a card to someone else who is hurting
• Take time for rest and relaxation.
• Take a long walk in the sunshine.
• Read some helpful books. (any from our recommended reading
list)
~ Back to Top ~
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