Lydia Grace

Lydia Grace
Our first child, Lydia Grace

Friday, December 7, 2012

Our third baby

This picture was taken a few months ago and emailed to family to announce my pregnancy with our third child. Wow, three babies! How blessed are we!
I am now going on 18 weeks of pregnancy, everything going smoothly. I am much less anxious this time around, though fear does grip me at times. I am much bigger now than in the above photo--additional 8 pounds will do that.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Friends make a difference

Yesterday one of the women in my MOPS small group invited a group of us into her home for a morning of talking, eating, and letting the kids play. Her warm hospitality, the fellowship with other stay at home moms, and Isaiah's enjoyment playing was such a blessing to me! We have visited both sets of in-laws, but this was the first time I have been welcomed in someone else's home here. The morning was enjoyable and as I drove away, for the first time since we have moved here I felt confident I will make it here. Good things can happen. Invite someone into your home. You might not know how the simple kindness may be a huge blessing to them.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Publications!

I was pleased to see our daughter's birthday tribute in the MEND newsletter last month, page 4.

The piece I submitted for publication was printed in this month's newsletter on page 19.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Odds & Ends

I attended the Houston chapter M.E.N.D. meeting on Thursday evening. I was nervous going, but when the meeting began I felt refreshed. I was able to exhale the emotional breath I had been holding. I’ve said it before, but I have never felt the instant connection with another the way I feel when in a group of women who have also lost babies. On the tense drive to the meeting (Houston traffic and interstates are rough) I thought it interesting I am living down here where I was medically informed my daughter was dead. Have I shared that before? I hadn’t felt Lydia move and knew something was wrong. I knew on Friday when I had waited all day to feel movement, but hadn’t. I couldn’t sleep that night. I read about stillbirth in one of the pregnancy books I had. I knew she was gone; I did not want my fears confirmed. My husband and I drove from north Texas down to Houston the following day. I was attentive to any possible movement in my womb the entire drive. Nothing. When we arrived at my sister-in-law’s house, she and others convinced me to stop at the hospital to make sure all was fine. The next hours were terrible. As I lay in the triage room, monitors were placed across my rounded belly. No heartbeat heard. A sonographer was called. No movement. No heartbeat. I couldn’t look at my husband. The OB-GYN on weekend call came. “As you know, it’s dead,” was his announcement. “You’re young, you can have more kids,” the sonographer offered. In the moment, I could say nothing. Now, I would love to go back and give them both a piece of my mind. My stomach still turns in a knot when I pass the hospital I heard the worst news of my life. Another thing I have thought recently. My daughter was as much in this world as you or I. Yes, it was in my womb while she was living, but she was still present here. And her body did not magically flit from my womb to heaven. She did not disappear when her heart no longer beat. I was in labor for 16 hours and vaginally delivered her. Some of her pictures are posted here. It is important for others to understand she was very much on this earth. She is as real as your living child. I want others to understand, but then again, I don’t want others to understand the loss. No one can understand unless they have also walked the road. I submitted an article to be published in the M.E.N.D. bimonthly newsletter. I am excited! My husband is doing an outreach at a university about stillbirth and miscarriage. Those are two recent ways God is using our daughter’s life and death as a ministry to others. Two years ago I could not have said or believed it. By God’s grace, comfort, and healing we have journeyed to this place.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Second Birthday

My dear Liddybug, Your birthday was not how I envisioned this year. We moved that day, planning to stop at Roselawn Memorial Park where your body is buried. Moving is stressful anytime--add 2 dogs, a toddler, and an 8 hour drive on the most emotionally challenging day of the year and it doesn't make for the most pleasant of birthday remembrances. I had an arrangement of flowers to leave for you, but parched ground did not allow the stake to be pushed in the earth. I poured water to soften the ground, but to no avail. As always, August 1 is miserably hot. We have moved, Lydia. Your physical body is buried in the town your daddy and I met and were married. It is the town where Daddy was baptized. The place you and your younger brother were born. I am homesick for that familiar, dear-to-my-heart place. Big city life is not my cup of tea. I don't like the crowds or traffic. I feel I don't have room to breathe. I am grateful for the place God has provided for us to stay. I am learning to live in this unfamiliar place. We are here because God led us here after doors closed on the direction we thought we were gnoing. I will trust Him in this, too. I selfishly wish you were here. I accept you will not live in this fallen world, praise the Lord for the hope in Him that together we will live in a new heaven and a new earth. Your time here is done. And what an impact that short time gas made. Forever I am changed. As you dance in heaven in the presence of God, I sit on earth and cry. Not tears void of hope, but still tears of sorrow. I miss you. Happy 2 nd birthday, my beautiful daughter. Love, Mama

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Hello, blog

I haven't written here in some time. I was thinking earlier today how it has almost been two years. Two years. It does not seem possible.

On Easter Sunday my husband, son and I went to Lydia's grave and found someone had placed an Easter egg on a stand at the head of her stone. It was a sweet, unexpected and intriguing gesture. Who put it there, we have no idea. It pleased me to see it. It is hard to think about not having her when I am consumed with carrying for Isaiah. I miss her more and less at the same time. I think I am still angry she isn't here. And only those who have or are walking this road understand. 

I miss attending M.E.N.D. meetings. I have not gone to one since around this time last year, I believe. Isaiah would now be fine without me for a couple hours, but my husband's busy schedule prevents my attendance to any support group. Support. It is what I need right now and feel in great lack.

***edited*** Thanks for the responses!

Friday, January 27, 2012

I have never walked alone

 Several weeks ago we sang this Matt Redman song in church. I felt it was my testimony since Lydia's stillbirth. I'm sure many others can relate to God's faithfulness in their lives. It brought tears to my eyes to sing this truth while reflecting on the events of the past year and a half.



Standing on this mountaintop
Looking just how far we've come
Knowing that for every step
You were with us


Kneeling on this battleground
Seeing just how much you've done
Knowing every victory
Was your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way
But with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say

Never once
did we ever walk alone
Never once
did you leave us on our own
You are faithful
 God, You are faithful

Kneeling on this battleground
Seeing just how much
you've done
Knowing every victory
was your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way
But with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say






Never once
did we ever walk alone
Never once
did you leave us on our own
You are faithful
 God, You are faithful

Carried by your constant grace
Held within your perfect peace
Never once
No we never walk alone







Every step
we are breathing in your grace
Evermore we'll be
breathing out Your praise
You are faithful
God, You are faithful


I have never walked alone. God is faithful.