Photobucket Today’s guest post is by Reachel Bagley. After searching for their children for over 5 years, Reachel and her husband finally found their daughter Coco through adoption.  They will be adding a son to their clan this December.  She encourages women everywhere to continue searching for those in need of mothers everywhere.  When not writing or teaching about fashion (see Cardigan Empire), Reachel enjoys any combination of travel, vegetarian cooking, modern art, French cinema, Italian opera, poetry, gardening, and especially her husband.

I am not a mother. After 63 months, hundreds of pregnancy tests, a five-digit sum for a ten-syllable label, and two counts of attempted adoption, I’ m reasonably positive.  Andrew’ s seed is essentially flawless, and I’ ve seen live footage of the inside of my uterine soil. Personally, I think it looks lovely. Soft, squishy pink walls with minimal endometrial fluff, floating around like perfect little baby pillows. And the overly chipper doctor performing the exam agreed. (By the way, it is my personal opinion that gynecological doctors specializing in infertility should be shrouded and discreet when performing their service. I do not appreciate small talk during examinations or any emotional discharge whatsoever during our time together. I prefer services be rendered quietly, efficiently, and a treat be dispensed upon completion. I really do think I should get a treat.)

Anyways, like I said, it’ s been a five-year sojourn spanning Western and Eastern medicine, including Clomid, Novarel, hormone therapy, acupuncture, blue lasers, hypnosis, to name a few.

And I can’ t complain.

Well, I do complain, but I shouldn’ t. I seek to celebrate infertility eating sushi in hot tubs with soft cheeses whenever possible. I do realize that I can go out to dinner on a whim and travel internationally without finding a sitter. I have to admit, it is a little glamorous.

But I still ache with emptiness when I allow myself to recognize the absence. I have heavily acronymed diplomas, drive a two-door car, wear dry clean only items at least three times a week. But I would swap it all for one little muffin.

Some days I point out little children to my husband, and ask him how far down in Mexico he thinks we could get before their parents realized an absence. I usually favor the odds of large families with a visually similar gene pool. Andrew typically opts for toddlers, just bordering on verbal skills. But I don’t really want those kids, even the remarkably cute, well-behaved ones. Because I want my kids. I don’t want any of your kids. I want my kids.

My kids.

They don’ t need hazel eyes, or a propensity for turn-of-the century literature. They don’ t even need to fancy candied ginger. I just want to know that when I hold them, they were given to me. That God entrusted them to me.

In the Old Testament Jacob’ s wife Rachel declared, “ Give me children, or else I die.” Her sister Leah was in a procreating frenzy and every other verse, handmaids Bilhah and Zilpah are pregnant, but it seemed Rachel’ s womb was fixed shut. Then when you least expect it in verse 22 of Genesis 30, there’ s the one line I cling to: “ And God remembered Rachel.”

God remembers me too. And someday, I know I’ll hold a child that looks to me for all-inclusive support. But for now, I don’ t know if the world needs more children or more mothers.

There are hungry father-in-laws, and overwhelmed sisters; there are friends suffering from too little clean laundry, and husbands who need foot rubs. People need to be prayed for, listened to, and looked after. People are sometimes hurt, lonely, and exhausted, and regardless of whether they are minors, they need mothers. Even mothers need mothers. And for now, that’s what I look for: opportunities to mother. You don’t need to possess someone to love them. Loving is not synonymous with possessing; and possessing is not necessarily loving. But loving and nurturing is mothering.

I believe that makes me a mother, regardless of whether I’ m capable of creating double lines on a pregnancy test.

Related posts:

  1. A Living Sacrifice, part V: Adoption
  2. Absence and Fond Hearts
  3. Travel Tips–help!


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