By Carol Jacobson
I said to my friend today, “Hope is like a double edged sword. You know? It carries you through a lot of tough stuff, but at the same time, when you hold it that closely it really hurts later on.”
I think this is applicable to many areas in life: Relationships, for starters.
You want to get married or want your marriage to work. You’re holding on to hope that you can make it work, that things will get better, that you’ve finally found the one…or whatever your situation may be. That hope can pull you through the tough times, or through waiting for the right person to come along. But when the relationship doesn’t work out, or you can’t seem to find the person you’ve been waiting for, and you’ve held hope so closely, your heart is broken. Hope has led you to heartache.
The same is true for babies. I was holding on to hope that I would get pregnant someday. Then I did. Then only a few days later I wasn’t anymore. But I held on…I hoped that it would happen again. With hope we went to the fertility specialist to see if there was an issue. PCOS, they said. And in the midst of testing and hoping, we found out we were pregnant again. So I pulled hope in a little closer and I said this would be it – this would be our take-home baby. And that little one grew and grew, until she didn’t.
My tight grasp on hope cut me like a knife.
It broke me in a million pieces. Pieces I am still cleaning up.
I feel like Joanna was our hope, and I had to let her go. I had to give her back. I had to leave her alone in that hospital – pretty much the hardest thing I ever did, maybe the hardest thing I’ll ever do. I left the hospital feeling hopeless, and helpless. And empty.
As we grieved, we knew we wanted to have more children. Somehow, little by little hope came back. I reeled it in when I discovered it was there. And here I am, holding so tightly it burns. And with each passing month, my heart is getting tired of holding. With each new pregnancy announcement, my heart is losing its grip. With each nightmare, hope fades a little. The tighter I try to grasp it, the more it hurts. It carries me through, but it cuts deep.
Today, I want to let go. Let hope go. I don’t want the pain. But I will grasp it tighter. I will pull it closer. If hope is Joanna, if hope is her sisters and brothers, maybe some pain is worth the holding on.
Carol Jacobson is wife to a wonderful husband, the love of her life, since September 2010. She is a mama to two much-loved and wished-for babies in Heaven, “Bean” – a miscarried little one at 6 weeks and Joanna Rose, a perfect, beautiful girl, who was stillborn at 25w6d on December 29, 2014. She is also a puppy mom, writer/blogger, marketing professional, Dunkin’ Donuts lover and Jesus follower. Carol shares her story — the story of her daughter Joanna, her journey through fertility struggles, miscarriage, stillbirth, grief and healing — on her blog, [Still] Gracious. Carol lives in Northern Virginia, where she enjoys reading, kayaking, visiting the zoo and going to the movies with her husband.
You can find Carol at: blog | twitter | instagram
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Thank you for these words. I hold on to hope too. My therapist and I talk about how hope and fear are the flip sides of a coin and that they work in tandem. Much hope to you.