Infertility and Adoption

Meant to Be

I lost count of the pregnancy tests when the count exceeded my age… that was around the time that the anxious anticipation which buoyed my first years of hoping turned into desperation and masochism. I knew the outcome, but a plastic stick offered irrefutable evidence. 

For seven years, we tried to start a family. After two years of marriage, my husband and I decided to pursue adoption through foster care. As we started the paperwork, Glenn wrote that “fostering felt like a natural extension of our work as educators.” I loved that explanation, and I clung to it like a lifeline until the reality of our circumstance broke it. We fostered our son with the intention of adoption for nine months before he was removed and eventually returned to his biological parents. I wish I had prepared myself for the grief that is inextricably tangled within the foster care system and within adoption itself.

It took time, but we eventually re-routed. Instead of adoption, I submitted my body to the fluorescent lights, prescription hormones, and a thousand other IVF indignities sheathed by an ill-fitting hospital gown. It is frightening how quickly indecencies are normalized when longing becomes desperation… Yet, I paid for it over and over again. Thousands of dollars paid to defile what I once held as sacred. Any romanticized notions of life’s conception were shed with the undergarments that I neatly folded and hid beneath my purse. Six failed mock trials, and I still could not hold my dreams.

When the fifth mock cycle failed because of a precipitous drop in my iron levels, I started to cave inward. I lost trust in my body, and I eventually lost trust in my mind and my God. 

We spent our spring break that year exploring the coastline between Savannah and Myrtle Beach, and we happened to stop in Beaufort one afternoon. As we walked along the waterfront, I started to cry. I told Glenn that it felt like we had stumbled upon yet another “not right now”– a beautiful place for a potential someday that would never come. Glenn encouraged me to look into teaching jobs.

Two weeks later, I received a job offer at a coveted school in Beaufort. The day after receiving the offer, I had an appointment with my fertility specialist. When the nurse retrieved me from the waiting room, she congratulated me on my pregnancy, and told me that the doctor would be with me momentarily for the ultrasound. I was confused. The doctors had recommended embryo adoption, and we had scheduled and rescheduled the embryo transfer multiple times because of the pandemic, my anemia, getting Covid, and failed mock cycles. I politely tried correcting the nurse who was adamant that she looked at my chart and the bloodwork indicated I was in fact pregnant.

After several awkward minutes of waiting, she came back and apologized profusely for looking at someone else’s chart– I was correct about the purpose for my visit… a blood draw before the prescription of daily hormone injections to replace the oral hormones I had been taking.

Driving home from the appointment, I made the call to accept the teaching position in Beaufort.

While the move from Virginia to South Carolina was abrupt, I was the one who invited this interruption to our plans, rather than being told by doctors or betrayed by my body. With the sale of our home in Virginia, we put aside the money necessary for private adoption. I busied myself for months with the move and then with the home study. The work provided a welcome distraction from my cavernous grief… until I ran out of tasks, and we were told that it could be two years before we were selected by a birth mom.

The precipice of hope crumbled beneath me. Vicious lies echoed as my mind sought to rationalize my grief, rather than feel it. God must know that I would inevitably fail as a mother. God must see something ugly in me. I must be unfit to parent a child. I must be unfit to be around children. The lies spiraled into crippling anxiety. I started having multiple panic attacks each day, and I struggled to leave the house. I took a leave of absence from work.

For nearly three months, I relied on the borrowed faith of my husband and the inherited faith from my parents, as they took turns combatting the lies with the truth of their love for me. After a ten-week leave from work, I was able to return to my classroom. God made himself evident in His provision of grace and understanding through people who barely knew me. 

The worship leader at our church invited me to join her in singing praise, and I encountered the love of Christ in dozens of refrains and harmonies. God met with me over and over and over again, as I prayed and processed my grief and my unmet desire to be a mom.

As I started sharing my experience and the ongoing ache more openly, I could feel the prayers of others shifting the ground within and under me. 

On a Thursday morning in June, my husband’s phone rang.

Seven days later, I held my daughter for the first time.

Suddenly the ache and grief were transformed by the beauty of the promise that this is what God intended– I was made to be Espy Grace’s mother, and she was always meant to be mine.

Austen

Relationships / Sister

This is a story about the impossible becoming possible.

Not the kind that shouts from a stage or writes itself in the clouds.

But the kind that unfolds in a small room, with a pail of water, a rag, and two sisters finding their way back to each other in the final chapters of one of their lives.

This is a story about me and Denise.

We were born seventeen years apart. She was my sister, but early on, she felt more like a second mother. I adored her. She dressed me. Cared for me. Called me her baby. We were close—really close. Until life had its way with us.

We both returned home after divorces, older and more broken than when we’d left. And even though we were under the same roof, we were worlds apart. Denise was angry—rightfully so. And I was self-righteous. Mouthy. A know-it-all, blinded by my own S.H.I.T. The kind that keeps you from seeing someone else’s pain, even when it’s screaming in the same language as yours.

We never talked about what really hurt.

We just acted out the ache.

Clashed more than we connected.

Carried our unspoken trauma like matching scars, never comparing notes.

Honestly, I didn’t think she’d ever like me again.

Didn’t think I’d feel her appreciation.

Didn’t think we’d get another chance.

But last year—God revealed Himself through her sickness.

Not in a dramatic healing.

Not through a long, tearful conversation.

But through the quietest kind of miracle: PRESENCE!

That night, me and Aretha were with her. No machines. No nurses. Just sisters.

Aretha gently shampooed and conditioned Denise’s hair, dipping a rag in a pail of water, rinsing it slowly, with so much tenderness. Her curls started to coil tighter just like moms used too. I stood watching, still, undone.

And Denise let it happen.

She didn’t flinch.

She didn’t fight.

She received it.

Later, we had our sister Sherlyn & Sandra on FaceTime and Sandra asked Denise if she needed anything. Denise smiled and said,

“Nope, I’m okay. I got my two sisters here—Carmelita and Nurse Wills aka Aretha.”  Aretha and I looked up at each other and locked eyes in shock and weirdly smiling in disbelief at her response.

And the room roared with laughter.

Now That Was God!!!

Right there in the laughter.

In the hair rinse.

In the quiet permission to just be sisters again.

He didn’t change the past.

But He met us in the present.

And that was enough.

I didn’t know it would be one of our last nights together.

But now, I carry that moment like treasure. Because in that small act of care, something sacred was restored.

Not fully.

Not perfectly.

But truthfully.

And what I didn’t realize until later was that the same God who was healing us—was also healing me.

See, I wrote this back in 2016, before I could fully live it:

Confidence is the perfume a woman wears.

Confidence is sexy in bed.

Most people underestimate their potential while overestimating their limitations. Train your mind to focus on the possibilities and you’ll see the limitations fall away.

Low self-esteem is the most expensive thing to buy.

I am a cinema all by myself.

Intelligent people hire people who can do the job.

At the time, it was just a declaration. A manifesto-in-progress.

But in that hospital room, with Denise’s curls softening and her spirit yielding, I realized: I had finally become the woman I wrote about.

Confident. Grounded. Present.

Not because I had it all together—but because I showed up when it mattered.

I didn’t let my shame—or our history—silence me.

I stood in love, with her. For her. As me.

That was the moment I knew:

I’m not just a sister.

I am a cinema all by myself.

I’m scenes of conflict and healing.

Of rage and redemption.

Of breakdown and breakthrough.

Of knowing when to speak… and when to simply be present as looked at Aretha wash our sister’s hair with grace.

Denise passed last year.

And while grief still makes my eyes burn and my throat tighten, I can say this with full conviction:

God gave me back my sister before He called her home.

Not for long.

But long enough.

Long enough to laugh again.

To serve her.

To see her.

To be seen

That was the miracle.

Not healing of the body.

But healing of the bond.

I love you, Denise.

And I’ll carry your “thank you,” your curls, your laugh, and your love with me until we meet again.

Sister Chronicles: 4/4/24

To be continued… in eternity.

Carmen Calhoun

Grief, loss of a parent

My father passed away suddenly three years ago. I have been pretty numb since then, having had a very complicated relationship with him. I loved him and miss him, but it’s been difficult to grieve. In looking back over the last year with him, it was amazing to see how the Lord orchestrated our last days with him.

The first thing I noticed in hindsight was that he spent a weekend with my daughter Brittney in Asheville in August of 2022. They had the best time together, so much so that she made a point of telling me how fun it was! My dad could be moody but the entire time he was happy and carefree and she noticed and was so filled in her soul with love for him.

The second marvel was that he spent Christmas with my family in December. We had not had a Christmas alone with him since I was 5 or 6 years old. All our holidays were spent with our stepmother and their children and were not fun to say the least. That Christmas was amazing! He was so grateful to be with us and we were amazed at how wonderful our Christmas was!

In February, one week before he died, my sister had a 50th birthday party for herself in Florida. My dad was not planning on coming but changed his mind at the last minute. The entire weekend was incredible!! There was so much laughter, love and joy!  The whole family was there, except for Brittney, who couldn’t make it because of work. During the weekend, I noticed him talking a lot with my father in law, who is a devout Christian and I learned what they talked about a week later. I also marveled at the connection he made with my great niece, his great granddaughter. As I watched him playing tea party with her and giving her gifts, the love between them was so beautiful that it made me tear up as I took pictures and I had the faintest thought that this was the last time he would see her. On the last day of the weekend, we all went out to breakfast. As we were eating my dad felt overwhelmed with emotion and stood up and gave a speech…it was his goodbye but we didn’t know it. There was not a dry eye when he finished.

One week later my father had two massive strokes and passed away in hospice care on my deceased brother’s birthday.

During that time, my father-in-law told me what they had talked about all weekend. My dad was confessing his sins and Joe was ministering to him about heaven and assuring him that he would be going there when his time came.

I can’t even explain the goodness of God in the chain of events leading up to my father’s passing but it has kept me during this time of grief and it helps greatly to know that God orchestrated it all for one last year of restoration and healing with my dad and for my sister and I to know that he was with Jesus.

Jodi 

God Answers Prayer

Here is one story of gratitude out of many gratitudes that I have in my life.

Both of my kids live out of town. This is my statement thanking God for how He has taken care of them when they left the nest, our home.

My son went to college on a baseball scholarship. He moved to Pennsylvania. I prayed that God provide a family who would love him, nurture him, and watch over him. A coach from Georgia Point University saw him and asked him to come play for his school. Jon ended up moving to GA. It was in this college that he met his wife and his new family. Today, they still love him and call him son-in-law. This Rubin family is the answer to my prayer. Thanks to the influence of this family, Jon became a college pastor, and today he serves his church in this capacity together with his family; his wife Rebecca, two children: Arlo and Luca, also baby to be, my granddaughter, in February. Praise God! So thankful God responded in a permanent way.

In 2020, my daughter, Elaine moved to Virginia. I prayed that she would find direction and a path to stability outside our home. After much prayer and supplication, God allowed her in 2021 to meet a young man, named Enrique. The minute she told me, “Mom, I met someone.” I started praying that this relationship becomes formalized then that they would get officially married. In 2022, he proposed with a formal ring and they also got married. Today they have moved to Washington state. Being that he is in the Army, they have relocated to Washington. 

I am thankful to God that when my kids left our home, God took care of them. Today they are both happily married. Though they live outside of Florida where I reside, I have witnessed God’s tender care and mercy providing them with stable relationships and mapping out a plan that seemed impossible to me. All things are possible with God. If He took care of my kids, God will take care of you.

Elenor Quinones

The Lord Is A Provider

Just celebrated my 32nd anniversary with my wonderful husband. He was an answer to my prayers. I was married at a young age with two children over the next four years. My children’s father decided he didn’t want the responsibility, that the grass was greener on the other side of the fence, and we were divorced.

Being single for ten years with two children is tough, but the Lord always took care of us with all that we needed. A job with benefits came my way, thank you Lord. We were healthy, surrounded by faithful Christian friends, and I can now look back and see so many times the Lord was watching over us. Again, many thanks to our God.

My husband has been a wonderful father figure in our family. He is an answer to my prayers. I have learned to trust in the Lord knowing He will always provide for me.

Sandy Lincoln