A Gift for Mom! 🤍

After two kids, two miscarriages, and a journey through postpartum depression, I was afraid to keep trying for the third baby I always knew I wanted. As I looked at the second negative pregnancy test, I felt a familiar range of emotions.

I wasn’t sure whether to be relieved or disappointed. Did I feel relief because for another month I could avoid the daily fear of worrying I might miscarry again and spare the girls, my husband, and me from getting our hopes up just to have them crushed again? Did I feel relief because I was scared of going through the early phases of motherhood again? Maybe I wasn’t ready to take on the emotional rollercoaster I anticipated coming with another baby.

Was I disappointed because I had always imagined myself with three or four kids, and a baby boy eventually, and it just didn’t seem like it was in the cards? Was I disappointed because I imagined myself with more children by now?

Experiencing a full range of conflicting emotions has been my experience of motherhood. It’s never tidy or black and white. I wanted another baby, but I feared having another baby. I was relieved not to be pregnant again, but I also felt disappointed.

Colicky babies, postpartum depression, miscarriages—it all left me terrified of pregnancy and what came after. It was much easier to want a baby when I didn’t know the havoc it wrecked on my emotions. My last miscarriage was particularly devastating, and I didn’t think I could handle a third loss so soon. I also knew a third miscarriage would be the last as it would be the point where I gave up hope of growing our family.

But I remembered how I felt when I became a mother for the first time at age 27. I always wanted a big family, and I imagined experiencing that surreal moment of meeting my baby for the first time at least a few more times. When I welcomed my second baby, I didn’t look at her firsts as my lasts, because I assumed there would be more after her.

Would I be letting myself down if we didn’t have the third child we always thought we’d have? I realized then that fear was holding me back. As a mother of two, I feared motherhood more than I had the first time around. I understood how it could strip you down to your rawest emotions.

Ultimately, I decided it was time to face my fears. We tried again for that third baby. I didn’t want to go through losing another pregnancy. I didn’t want to lose the sense of balance I fought so hard to regain as a working mom with two small children. Though I knew motherhood was harder and more terrifying than my younger self could have imagined, I also knew it was some of the best parts of what my life had become.

When that precious third baby—my first and only boy—was placed in my arms, I knew facing my fears was worth it. Sometimes when I hold him I remember how he was almost the boy I let get away. I almost let fear keep us from ever meeting. Now he’s here and I’m so glad I didn’t let fear hold me back.

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Angela Williams Glenn

Angela Williams Glenn writes about the struggles and joys of motherhood. Her book Moms, Monsters, Media, and Margaritas examines the expectations verse the realities of motherhood in our modern day digital era and her book Letters to a Daughter is an interactive journal for mothers to their daughters. She’s also been published with Chicken Soup for the Soul, TAAVI Village, Bored Teachers, and Filter Free Parents. You can find her humorous and uplifting stories on Facebook page.

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