Why Today is Special: How God Redeemed My Miscarriage Year

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Forgive me if you’ve heard this story before. But, today is a special day in my family. Not only is it FishBoy20’s birthday, but it also marks a good, but painful journey that God took us down so many years ago in teaching us about Himself, His Sovereignty, and His Great Love for us. 

This post was originally published November 9, 2009.

A group of kids sitting near part of Hadrian\'s wall.

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When I grocery shop with my children, I attract a fair amount of attention. My mom would say that it is because I have such beautiful kiddos. Of course she would say that!

But, in reality one of the reasons that we stop traffic is that we somewhat resemble Mrs. Mallard and her babes marching on down to the Public Gardens . Make way for me and my ducklings! When I hit the aisles at Stuff Mart, I am followed by Jack, Kack, Lack, Mack, Nack, and Ouack. You counted right – I have six kids.

The average person who sees me and my brood might assume that infertility is the last of my problems. But, the average person would be wrong.

There was a day when having many children was only a distant, and perhaps illogical, dream.

Overall, the first twenty-five years of my life went in a clockwork fashion. Perfectionist that I am, I earned good grades in high school, got into the schools of my choice, spent a year studying in Europe, met the man of my dreams, and a few years into marriage, had our first baby.

While I wouldn’t describe those years as “easy,” I usually got what I wanted. I usually saw all my plans to fruition.

However, that perfectionist go-getter in me got a real wakeup call in 1999. Our son was about eighteen months when I became pregnant for the second time. We hadn’t “planned” on having another baby just then, but it sounded exciting nonetheless. We shared the news with family and shouted it from the rooftops to anyone who would listen.

Yellow flowers blooming in front of a fence.

About nine weeks into the pregnancy, however, my body showed signs that all was not well in my womb. An ultrasound revealed that our baby had died. We were devastated.

I still remember the look on my mom’s face when we returned home from the doctor’s office. Her face showed what I felt – complete shock.

This cannot be happening to me!

In the process of “untelling” everyone we knew, we heard almost every condolence in the book. From “You can’t afford a baby right now,” to “Well, there must have been something wrong with that baby,” to “You can have other babies,” we heard it all.

I was not always gracious in hearing these platitudes. I really didn’t care what the reason. I wanted my baby!

I reassured myself with statistics that say miscarriage is common. But, I just couldn’t believe it could happen to me! I mourned; I pitied myself; I questioned God’s goodness.

 

Right about that time, I heard a man on the radio whose family had experienced great tragedy. This father said, “We don’t trust in what God will do, because we don’t know what He will do. We trust in who God is.”

That so helped me! God was my Good Shepherd, the Great Physician, Almighty God. I could rest in those things. Unbeknownst to me, those were going to be important thoughts to hold onto over the coming year.

In the following eleven months, I conceived and lost two more babies.

My husband and I experienced the full range of emotions as we journeyed through that year: shock, disbelief, dismay, anger, heartache, and finally resignation. Perhaps we aren’t meant to have more children, we thought. Perhaps our one precious boy really was our “one in a million.”

The doctors could find no medical reason for these losses. Each pregnancy ended at a different time. There were no commonalities. We paid for expensive genetic testing to find out if the odds really were against us. Again, there was no reason. Only God knew why we kept losing these children we so desperately wanted to hold.

A view of a city at sunset

My last miscarriage was complete on November 9, 1999. After twice dealing with it at home alone, once we confirmed that there really was no chance, I had a D&C with a surgeon severely lacking in bedside manner. My midwife who had walked the past year with me, felt it was for the best.

Oh! how I struggled with a hardness of heart! A close friend was due to deliver when I would have. I wanted to be far, far away when she welcomed her little one.

Over the months, however, God did a work in my heart. I realized that I was living so much for tomorrow and the babies that might be, that I was forgetting to enjoy today and the baby, the toddler, the preschooler that I had.

I was mourning my plans that didn’t happen instead of enjoying the ones that did.

I soon was able to embrace the today. I came to realize that God really was the Good Shepherd, and that even though I could not understand why He did what He did, God did have a plan for my life, and it was good.

Even if I didn’t get what I wanted.

I learned to trust Him. I learned to say, “I will trust you with my family size, even if that size is smaller than what I think is best.”

As winter receded, the year 2000 and spring started to green the earth, we were pleased to find out that I was again expecting. Was it too much to hope that this child would make it to birth?

I had identified myself as “the lady that miscarried” for so long, I had become a little jaded. I laughed that the due date was November 9th, exactly one year after my last miscarriage. What a sense of humor the Lord has that He would redeem that day. And He did.

a shot of a scrapbook page with image of dad, boy, and new baby.

Our second son was born exactly on his due date. And God forever redeemed November 9th in my heart.

From that time, the babies kept coming. We had our fourth son shortly after our FishBoy #2 turned three years old. Three babies in three years?! Wow! It was about that time that I read the words in Joel 2:25-26,

I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten, the hopper, the destroyer, and the cutter, my great army, which I sent among you. You shall eat in plenty and be satisfied, and praise the name of the Lord your God.

It hit me that in a short amount of time, God took three babies. But, in a short amount of time, He restored three babies to us. Since then He’s blessed us with two little girls in addition to our four boys. What joy we have! Yes, my heart is as full as my mini-van. We have been blessed in plenty and we do praise His name.

Prissy old me would never have planned so many boys, but I am so very thankful that God did. And in the midst of all that testosterone, I never thought I’d get to dress anyone in pink, but God did.

What a joy this journey has been! I am thankful that things didn’t go according to plan – at least not according to mine.

Blessed be the name of the Lord.

Three boys leaning out of a white minivan with baby in carseat.

If you or someone you know has struggled or is struggling with miscarriage, these posts might be helpful:

A close up of yellow flowers with text overlay: How God Redeemed My Miscarriage Year.

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113 Comments

  1. Thank you so much for sharing your story. I have never experienced a miscarriage – but I have longed for a child as far back as I remember. It took letting go and letting God do his part. I now have a wonderful husband and a very happy, beautiful son who is 3 1/2. It is so hard sometimes to let go and let the Lord do “his” job becuase we want to be in control.

    I turned 41 in October and can’t decide if I want another child or not – so I doing waht I did last time – letting go and letting God take control. If he sees fit for us to have another child, I will be blessed again, if not I am so thankful for the one I have.

    God Bless You and your family

  2. Thank you for sharing your story, and that our lives truly are in God’s hands. I never would have thought I’d ever have a miscarriage after 9 term births with mostly healthy children (we lost one to Trisomy 13, our 4th child). I had 2 miscarriages in quick succession and everyone was at a lost as to why. We had faith, though I started to consider that maybe this was God’s way of telling me that my family was complete… however, here I am, 17 weeks pregnant with everything looking great. Thank you! Enjoy this day.

  3. Thank you for sharing your story! I absolutely LOVE the quote you posted too.

    I became pregnant when our son was 10 months old, because he had been 3 months premature himself he was still physically much younger. 6 months into the pregnancy our little girl was stillborn at the same exact gestation our son had been born. 4 months later I became pregnant again, against medical advice.

    My husband later told me he had been praying and asking the Lord to give us twins since He had taken Kaitlyn. Sure enough at 10 weeks we found out we were expecting twins. The pregnancy became so much more complicated. My husband and I both began praying for two girls. Sure enough our twin girls were born 1 week before what was Kaitlyn’s first birthday in Heaven.

    It is so reassuring to me to know that the Lord has my little girl in His perfect place and to know that I WILL be with her again one day <3

  4. Thank you for sharing something so beautiful & personal! There was a time when I was told I was too scarred from the previous miscarriages to able to carry. When I was pregnant with my oldest – the advice I actually received was that I needed to have an abortion so I wouldn’t be distracted from my priorities at work with another miscarriage (not to mention another cycle of feeling like I was a failure). I turned to God and asked what he would have me do… I am so glad I didn’t listen to my “Mentors”. God Bless you!

  5. I just want you to know that you will meet your babies in heaven, you have 6 kids here and 3 with the Lord. Wow!
    May the Lord bless you always!

  6. Hi there- I’m a total stranger outside of the blogosphere, but I had to comment and say thanks for your transparency. In my world, your story rings as true as it does in yours… thanks for sharing your heart and for sharing the miracle! blessings to you… (found you via your post today on SimpleHomeschool.net)

  7. Beautiful story of God’s redemption. Thank you for sharing your story…I find comfort in your words.

  8. Wow that was powerful, I have 4 beautiful babies 2 girls 2 boys. 4 c sections and 1 miscarriage later the last the doctor told us NO!!! more that it is a miracle baby 4 made it. I am so very thankful for these four blessings and yet as the baby is inching toward 15 mo my heart aches for more. Most days I can push the ache away knowing more is not a possibility. We don’t have the money for the 4 we have so adoption is out of the question or is it maybe I have to trust God and believe he has a perfect plan for our family Thank You for a great reminder and a little ray of hope.

  9. I have 2 healthy children and 3 babies in heaven. I lost a girl at 19w (stillborn), a another girl at 9w (miscarriage) and recently a boy at 15w (stillborn). All this occurred little over one year! Thank you for sharing your journey. This subject is not easy to talk about and we often walk with silent grief. With hope!