Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Taboo Or Not, Things Are About To Get Real...

First, let me apologize for the month long hiatus I’ve taken from posting.  It wasn’t really an intended break, but more a combination of life getting really busy and not quite being able to find the words to express this next part of the story.  The next part is probably the hardest to talk about, but as I mentioned in one of my earlier posts, it’s the hardest parts of our stories that often have the most meaning and the biggest impact.  I’m going to attempt to tell our story to the best of my abilities and pray that God uses them to help someone else that may be going through something similar. 

Before we get to the tough stuff, I want to give everyone a quick update on Lauren and our precious little baby. 
 It’s a Boy!
Lauren is finally feeling much better and back to being more of herself again.  She still has some residual blurriness in her eye, but it is significantly better and to the point now that she doesn’t really notice it most of the time.  Praise God for this healing!  Lauren is still taking the blood thinner shots twice a day, but with no side effects and minimal bruising.  We are now at 23 weeks and little Graham has passed every test so far with flying colors.  We had the full anatomy scan a couple of weeks ago as well as an echo of Graham’s heart, both of which came back completely normal.  We appreciate your continued prayers for health for both Lauren and Graham!  Now for the main event.

When it comes to couples having a baby, there is one word above almost any other that for some reason is absolutely taboo to talk about, but that’s exactly what we’re going to do today.  Why?  Because it needs to be talked about…that and I kind of like to push boundaries. 

So what’s this incredibly awkward topic?  Infertility.  It’s not a four letter word, but it is often treated as such, if not worse.  You want to make someone uncomfortable at a dinner party?  Just comment that you and your spouse are struggling with infertility and you will have people running for the doors faster than if you started to do an interpretive dance to a Sarah McLachlan song.  But seriously, it is amazing how quickly people, regardless of how well they know you, will start to squirm and look for their exit when this conversation comes up.

I’m really not sure why infertility has become such of a taboo subject in our culture, but that’s probably not surprising to those of you who know me well because I really don’t shy away from talking about much.  I might not bring the topic up, but I’m rarely going to change it.  I’m also sure that the fact that I am a guy plays very heavily into my inability to understand.  As you’ll see through the next series of posts, I learned the hard way that issues of infertility attack and affect guys in an incredibly different way than they do you ladies.  I’m sure many of you are thinking to yourself, “Men and women are different!?!  Amazing conclusion Captain Obvious!” and you’re right, but you’ll just have to bear with me because I can be a little dense at times.

Approximately 1 out of every 8 couples of reproductive age will be diagnosed with infertility, so it is not at all uncommon, just rarely spoken about.  Infertility can take many forms and affects every couple differently.  About 40% of infertility cases can be attributed to male factors, 30% to female factors, and the remaining percentage to a combination of problems in both partners or other unexplained causes. The average couple, ages 29-33, only has  a 20-25% chance in any given month to conceive.  After 6 months, 60% of couples will have been able to successfully become pregnant without any form of medical assistance.  After one year of trying (or 6 months if the woman is over 35), a couple will officially be given the diagnosis of “infertility” and doctors, depending on their opinion on varying philosophies, will begin to start the process of running tests and/or prescribing medications. Source 

Notice that I always use the term “couple”.  I do so because infertility does not only affect one individual, but rather the couple as a whole.  Not only because it “Takes two to tango” if you catch my drift, but because that diagnosis formalizes a fear that has gradually been growing for several months and signals the beginning of an often long and torturous physical and emotional battle.  It will manifest itself differently, but it will affect you both, and if you let it, drive a wedge between you.  

After receiving the diagnosis, the coming days are a whirlwind of decisions and emotions, not to mention much doubt and fear.  Over the next few days and weeks, I’ll walk you through our journey, step-by-step, and let you have an inside view of what our struggle looked like.  As you read this, Lauren & I ask that you do two things.  First, say a little prayer for Lauren & I because telling our story makes us vulnerable and many of our wounds are still very fresh.  Secondly, please say a prayer for those couples that are battling infertility because it is so often a long, lonely journey that you probably will have no idea that they are on.  They likely won’t understand why things are working out the way that they are, so pray that God give them strength, peace, and patience.  Until next time…

In Him,

Chad

If you are wanting to know more about support for infertility, check out Focus On The Family, the Waiting in Hope ministry at our church, or you can watch a sermon covering the topic from Pastor Gregg Matte HERE

Thursday, September 17, 2015

You know what the news is -- in a minute, you're going to know the rest of the story...


Growing up, one of my favorite things to hear on the radio when I was riding around with my parents was Paul Harvey's, "The Rest of The Story".  I was always loved hearing the back story to famous events or how some common household item was actually invented by mistake.  I was always fascinated to learn the "why" behind the "what".  This post is going to attempt to start to tell our "Rest of the Story".

For more about the "Rest of the Story" including some audio of Paul Harvey's more famous segments, click here.

Over the last few days Lauren & I have used this blog to tell you about what has been going on in our lives recently, both the joys and some of the struggles.  We decided to do so in order to first and foremost, show God's faithfulness and provision, but also to hopefully provide some strength for others that are going through some of the same things we did and maybe tackle a couple topics that for some reason seem to be taboo in today's society. 

There's no way that I can tell the entire story today, so I'm going to try to start at what I believe to be the beginning, the real reason "why" 2015 has proven to be, in many ways, our toughest year of yet. 

When Lauren and I moved to Houston, one of our first priorities was to find a new church home. After visiting several great churches, we really felt called to join Houston's First Baptist Church.  We were a little worried at first about joining a church of that size, but we very quickly got involved in a Life Bible Study (it will always be "Sunday School" to me) and small group which helped make us feel at home.  We feel absolutely blessed to be apart of such an amazing church body, one that is incredibly externally focused (more than 60% of its' budget goes outside the walls of the church) and dedicated to living out the Gospel.  I could go own for days about how God is moving in that church, but let me move on to how it affects this part of our story. 

We were approached in late 2014 by the directors of our Life Bible Study and asked if we would be willing to step into a leadership positions and fill in for them while they were out after the birth of their first child.  Lauren and I excitedly agreed and began preparing to take on the new responsibilities. (Well, maybe I was a little more gung ho about it because part of the job required me to get in front of the entire class each week to speak and everyone knows how much I just HATE to be in front of a crowd!) 

We felt that God was calling us to serve and so we wanted to be faithful in answering that call.  Little did we know that this decision was going to have a much greater impact on our lives than we ever could have dreamed. Many may disagree, and that's OK, but I am a firm believer that when you make a decision to step out and lead, you are going to face challenges and attacks because of it.  This applies in every facet of life, but no more so than when you choose to lead others spiritually.  I believe with all of my heart that if you are working to see the advance of the Kingdom, Satan will actively work against you to prevent you from being successful.  This is not a blanket statement that covers the entirety of "bad things" that happen to people in an effort to relieve ourselves of blame or responsibility for our sin, but simply an observation made over time and one that I believe is Biblical. I can't say that everything that has happened to Lauren and I over the last two years is directly related to this decision, because in truth it is probably not, but I do believe that it had an impact.  

More on this and the other crazy events that we went through tomorrow...

In Him,
Chad