God Laughs

Growing up has a lot of hard lessons. One of them for me has been learning that God’s timing and plans for me are usually very different than what I think and intend on doing. This has developed into me saying: “God laughs at me.” I do not mean that God is pointing at me and mocking me as I am tripping over myself and face planting into the mud. What I do mean is the laugh that a Sunday school teacher has when a small child bursts out an answer that she has no idea from where it came. I just mean that as soon as I think I figured out what I am supposed to be doing, something unexpected happens and flips everything on its head for better or for worse.

I could point out a lot of different smaller examples of where and when I had to learn this lesson. I will say that after having a sister very unexpectedly passing away of brain cancer, I did begin to realize that there is no guarantee of stability in plans. Another way of putting it would be that the words of the Apostle James were hitting a little closer to home.

“Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.””
‭‭James‬ ‭4:13-15‬ ‭ESV‬‬

Plans are not a bad thing. I was just learning that you cannot cling onto them too tightly.

Not to say that loosing a sister wasn’t hard, it still remains the hardest thing I have had to live through. Just this particular lesson of learning to let go of my timing and trusting God’s timing, hit really hard shortly after my husband and I got married.

Baby Fever

We started trying for a baby almost immediately. I was currently working a full time job at Walmart and feeling very trapped in it when all I wanted to do with my life was to raise little humans. We both wanted lots of kids and had come from big families so we thought that it would be quick and easy.

Like I said though, God has other plans.

Six months went by and nothing happened. I was confused and sad, but I mean, it was just the first six months. The average American couple takes about six to twelve months to conceive a child at least according to my best friend, Google.

Another six months went by, and that’s when the worries really started rocking me. What was wrong? We were both in our early twenties and relatively healthy people. Granted, we were not running marathons and eating organically, but it wasn’t like we were eating McDonalds every single meal while sitting on our butts all day.

I was scared to go to the clinic because I didn’t want them to tell me: “Yup, you can never have your own children because of the following fifty things we found wrong with you.” However, I did schedule an appointment in October, but I cancelled it last minute. I made myself stop taking pregnancy tests because every time I got a negative it just devastated me for two or three days. I tried to figure it all out on my own, but as I have said in my dog posts, Google is not ever a helpful place for me.

Stats on infertility in the US specifically

OBGYNs and Friends

I really struggled with trying to be happy and content where I was especially when the 18 month mark hit. I knew that I needed to trust God and his timing because it would be best. That little nagging worry would not stop haunting me though. What if I could not have my own biological children? What if we could never afford adoption? Then what? What was I supposed to do?

I wanted to just be able to grin and bear it with joy in trusting the Lord and his providence. The anxiety weighed me down heavily, and I could not seem to shut out the despair that was eating away at me. I was frustrated with myself. I had a lot to be grateful and happy for. I have a relatively easy life, it was just this one thing. Why could I not let it go?

Some days were better than others. I would have my good days, and then there were others where I was struggling to function. It reminded me somewhat of grief. Where it smacks in the face one day, and the next it’s like nothing ever happened.

Most people told me that everything would be fine. We were still really young, it was all going to be okay. I would often look at Josh and ask him: “do you really think that we will be able to have our own kids?” He would always say: “Yes, but even if we don’t, we will adopt.”

During this time period, Josh bought two books: “The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment” by Jeremiah Burroughs for him and “Learning Contentment” by Nancy Wilson for me. He told me that he bought one for himself so it was not like he was trying to remove the speck out of my eye while a log was in his own. I was happy about it. I love getting new books, and Nancy Wilson’s words were very helpful for me in realizing that I needed to change my mindset to a much more grateful one. You can find Jeremiah Burroughs book here and Nancy Wilson’s here.

I finally went into the clinic. I left feeling both with some hope and frustration. On the one hand, I was getting help, on the other they told me a lot of things that I already knew. What was really helpful was when both of us got some labs done and I did some at home ovulation tests.

When it comes to infertility, statistically speaking, 30% of the time it’s the woman, 30% it’s the man, 30% it’s both, and 10% it’s unknown. We got the results back to find out that we had dodged the scary unknown category, but we had unfortunately landed in the fun category of both. My OBGYN told us that we needed to see a specialist at a fertility clinic because of being in the fun both category. We simply could not afford that. We also would have had some serious ethical concerns with that specific clinic in general.

On the one hand, I liked knowing that I was not crazy. We both had issues and that was all in God’s plan before we were even born. In my mind, God was teaching me both patience and contentment. I always thought of myself as a pretty content person up until this point. It really started to hit me how much I needed to work on trusting God to meet my needs. Not my wants and desires, but what I actually needed, God would always provide.

“But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? Therefore do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.”
‭‭Matthew‬ ‭6:30-32‬ ‭ESV‬‬

The problem with any fruit of the Spirit is that it takes time and discipline. No matter how badly I wanted it to be as simple as an on or off switch.

I tried to reorient my focus on getting a house rather than trying to conceive a baby, but that did not provide any peace and bred more discontent and dislike for our current living space. Patience and contentment were what I needed to focus on in that moment. Hence why the books on contentment came in so handy. We could not do anything more about the problem at hand except pray and trust God.

Breaking My Own Rules

About a month and half later, I was two days late so I took a pregnancy test just in case even though I knew it was a bad idea. As I expected, it came back negative. No surprise, my period had been super late before and no baby.

My period kept at bay the next day…

The next week…

I prayed, “Lord, please if this is not a pregnancy please bring my period back sooner so I’m not just sitting here in limbo.”Limbo was just the worst. The last time I was in limbo was when we were six months married, and I had been so sure that I was pregnant. It landed super close to Christmas time, and I thought that it would be a super fun little Christmas present, but nope, no baby.

This time reminded me of it all over again. Mother’s Day was right around the corner. Even though I could have taken a pregnancy test then, because my period was the latest it had ever been. I knew that if it had come back negative on Mother’s Day that I would not be able to function for the rest of the day, and I really did not want to do that to myself so I waited a few more days.

Then finally on May 11th, I took another one and just walked out of the bathroom immediately without taking another glance at it. I did not want to sit there and just watch only one line form. The timer counted down the minutes on my phone while I continued on with my morning routine praying for a miracle, and if not that, strength to stomach another disappointment.

The timer went off, and I walked back into the bathroom expecting the worst, praying for the better. No matter what I took I always got one line. Ovulation tests and pregnancy tests were no different. It always was one singular line mocking me. In a way, my period just stopping for no reason was to be expected. My OB told me that it made no sense that I even had a period in the first place. Since I had been to see her, it had been acting funky.

God Laughs

Whenever I think I have figured out exactly what God wants for me in that time, something almost always happens to contradict my perception. This time was no exception.

There was not just one line. There were two lines. Not one very dark line and a faded line, two very dark lines.

Stunned, I had to look up and make sure that two lines meant pregnant. Obviously it did, but I had to be absolutely 100% sure before I could let myself get super excited.

I looked at my phone screen. I looked at the test. Yup, two lines meant pregnant.

Poor Josh was sound asleep at the time, and I could not wait. I rushed over to the bed and started pulling him to get up. Confused he started to ask me what was going on thinking that he had slept too long. I just told him that he needed to come and see.

I dragged him into the bathroom where I had my phone still with the Google page open and the pregnancy test on the sink. I pointed it to him and waited. It took him a minute, but once he did get it, he turned to me with a big smile on his face and said, “told you so.”

Editors Note

I add this part because I feel as though it needs to be said for those of you out there who might still be in the struggle and trial of waiting for a baby. I cannot promise you that a baby will happen for you. I don’t have any secret magic cure that will make a baby happen for you today. That was not the point of this post.

I did not deserve this baby. This baby did not come because of anything me or my husband tried or did differently than the rest of humanity. We did not radically change our eating habits and lifestyles so as to super boost our fertility. God was simply gracious to us in his timing and his purposes which are always best even though they really do not feel like it in the moment. He heard our prayers and the prayers of those around us. I know though that sometimes God says no. Trusting him is the hardest thing in the world sometimes, but the greatest peace can only come from trusting him.

I know some of you have been trying for much longer than we have. I have heard the stories of couples where it took anywhere between three years to ten to never being able to conceive. I can not imagine being in that place for so long, but if you’re a Christian, your Heavenly Father knows. Jesus knows your pain. All I can tell you is to cling onto Him always, and He will hold you fast. Does not mean that He will ultimately give you what you want, but it does mean that He will always be there in the midst of the trial and the eye of the storm.

“Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.”
‭‭Psalm‬ ‭23:4‬ ‭ESV‬‬

How the Bible Reading Challenged Changed My Daily Devotions

I was raised in a very solid Christian home. I saw my mom reading her Bible very often in the morning. My dad was a pastor and would talk about what he was studying in Bible very often in casual conversation (still does). When I reached my early teens, I acquired an interest in learning all things theology and about the Bible. I would say though that my daily Bible reading, however, was a huge struggle for me.

The constant pattern would go something like this: I would resolve to do better in my Bible reading. I would read a chapter a day for about a week, maybe a month, and then something would throw the whole pattern off. Suddenly three months of not reading my Bible later, in would set the guilt. Where did I go wrong and why couldn’t I get myself motivated to jump back in?

I would try to justify my guilt by saying that I just wasn’t being legalistic in my Bible reading. Legalism was also the excuse I used to avoid any Bible reading plans. Every youth group leader or Bible study leader would say: “now don’t just read your Bible to get that check mark on your list.” Honestly, I wish that I had never heard anyone ever say that. I did not need any extra ideas for justifying my laziness in daily devotions.

As a quick note, I am not saying that the youth group leader or Bible study leader is wrong and that there is no danger of pride setting in because “you checked all the days in your Bible reading plan.” Pride is a whole other subject, and I do not think that there should be any pride in taking the time to feed your soul. What I am arguing is that I think the problem of just getting people into the Word is the more widespread issue than Christians sticking their noses in the clouds because they read their Bible more than their brother in Christ. Again, note: if you are that Christian with their nose in the sky, come off your high horse and help some brothers out who are struggling.

Anyways, I had avoided Bible reading plans for a long time since they had the connotation of being legalistic in my mind. I still had the guilt of not being in the word regularly. Two things happened that turned this around for me.

First, when I was in Bible college, they set me up with a mentor who lived very close to the school. She was a dear young mom who helped me out majorly during that overwhelming time of my life. She told me about how she listened to the Bible being read to her via her phone. Now for most of you that might not be a revolutionary idea at all. For me though, this was huge. I had never ever thought to do that before. I had the Bible App on my phone which I used very randomly and usually for verse memorization when I realized that finals were coming up. The whole idea of the Bible being read to me really left me with no easy excuse to not be in the Word because I listen to music and podcasts almost non-stop in my everyday life. (My husband and family members can attest to the truthfulness of this statement.)

The second thing was when my mom asked me to join the “Same Page Summer” Bible Reading Challenge last year. Between my mom asking me to do it, and the Bible Reading Challenge being created by one of my favorite women authors, Rachel Jankovic, I couldn’t really say no. I started the reading plan, and I joined the “Bible Reading Challenge” Facebook group. I watched some of Rachel’s videos, and it completely changed how I looked at reading the Bible. The way she talked about coming the Bible like a meal and how when you miss a meal, you don’t eat extra to make up for it, helped me massively in dealing with my guilt for missing a day. I did not have to drag this massive weight of being a terrible Christian because I forgot a day or two. The important thing was to repent and then get right back into the Word.

A year later, I am still doing their Bible Reading challenge. I am currently doing their Same Page Summer Challenge which I highly encourage you to jump in if you aren’t already doing another Bible reading challenge. You can find the challenge here. I have to say that the guilt I always carried when I came to the Word is finally gone, and I am constantly noticing little details that I never noticed in the Scriptures. Maybe I just forgot them. Either way, it has been refreshing for my soul. I know I don’t do it perfectly, and I do miss days especially when my schedule gets wack. But, I have to say that this past year has been one of the most consistent years that I have spent in the Word for personal devotions.