A Gift for Mom! 🤍

We were on our very first walk around the neighborhood when I was first asked the question that would follow me around forever. Our newborn son was barely a week old, and we decided to take advantage of the beautiful weather that day. We were only going around the block, and I remember loading up the bottom of the stroller with diapers and supplies just in case. The overpacked stroller gave me away as a brand-new mom, I am sure of that.

She crossed the street toward us hoping to get a glimpse of the new baby in the neighborhood. She gushed over his little nose and chubby cheeks as I smiled proudly. Then the question came, “When is the next one?”

RELATED: Before You Ask When I’m Having Another Baby, Consider This

I remember thinking how crazy this question was, I mean his umbilical stump hadn’t even fallen off yet, and I was still recovering from a 25-hour long labor. I laughed and shrugged as we said our goodbyes.

Little did I know that question would be asked on repeat like Baby Shark on a toddler’s playlist.

The tone, however, began to change the older my son got. Now the question was met with concerned glares and judgment. I noticed that the taller my child became the question transformed from, “When is the next one?” to “Do you JUST have one?” or “Is he your ONLY one?” or even simply “JUST him?”

Most of the time, I answer the questions superficially because I am usually asked these questions when I am trying to get out of Target quickly before I get sucked into the vortex known as the Hearth & Hand section yet again. Half of the time, my yes is sufficient and the conversation ends, but every once in a while, I get the follow-up responses of, “That’s a shame.” “Don’t you want to give him a brother?” “Only children have a hard time in life.” And once, “Only children are weird.”

You see there is nothing superficial about the truth behind my yes.

It has layers that would cause discomfort if I were to choose to drop the truth bomb on a person as they stood in line waiting to pay for kitty litter and TV dinners. So, I smile. I even smiled, through gritted teeth, when a friend told me, “You are not a REAL mom until you have your second.”

RELATED: God Chose Me to Raise an Only Child

I smile, but the truth is my son is more than JUST an only child. He is an answered prayer after devastating losses. He is the younger sibling of two babies in Heaven, whom he often talks about. He makes friends wherever we go. He is wise beyond his years from spending so much time at the grownup table. He is compassionate and absolutely hysterical. He is not JUST an only child.

I smile because I am a mother of three, even if you only see one. I stay up late and wake up early, I hold a bucket to catch vomit in the middle of the night, I make mistakes, I say I love you.

I am just as much of a mother as the next.

While having one child was not our plan, we have learned to embrace the positives. It is easier to travel, easier to find a babysitter for date nights, less money to save for college, we have more free time and more time to give him. Of course, with all positives there comes challenges, too.

RELATED: Is Having An Only Child Such a Sin?

During the pandemic as we all self-quarantined, we witnessed absolute strength in our son as he fought loneliness. While his days had always been surrounded by other children, despite not having siblings, he was now secluded. There were no afterschool activities, recess, or sports practices to attend anymore. He felt that and it worried us. Luckily, we live in a world with WiFi and FaceTime, but it is not the same. Prior to the pandemic, my husband and I would joke that it was as if we had our own quirky third wheel friend, like Cameron from Ferris Buller, who sits in between us on the couch during movie night stealing all our popcorn.

Our “only children” are more than “just” their birth order, and we are very much real mothers.

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Christina  Zambrano

Christina Zambrano is a wife, mom, and full-time worker who balances her busy life while maintaining a mini homestead, complete with a garden and chickens. Passionate about self-sustainability and faith, Christina loves sharing her journey toward living a more independent lifestyle (while relying on Jesus). She also opens up about real-life challenges, such as addiction and loss, offering support and hope to those facing similar struggles. Her writing has been published on Her View From Home, Girl Defined, and more.

I Lost My Daughter on Mother’s Day: 3 Truths I’m Believing Today

In: Grief, Loss, Motherhood
Woman and young daughter smiling

Editor’s note: This post discusses child loss Child loss changes Mother’s Day. My 19-month-old, Julia, died suddenly on Mother’s Day in 2024. Three months later, her autopsy revealed she had B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (B-ALL, also known as SUDNIC). Julia died a week after we did an embryo transfer at an IVF clinic in an attempt to have a second child. We found out three days after Julia’s death that the embryo did not make it either. Six months later, we did another embryo transfer that succeeded, and I now have an 8-month-old daughter, Lucy Mei (“Mei Mei” means “little...

Keep Reading

You Carried An Angel

In: Loss
Ultrasound image on journal

I felt Greyson kicking away in my tummy while I was eating my dish of mint chocolate chip ice cream. He was just as feisty as his three siblings had been in utero, and it was great to watch his little feet and elbows (or whatever body part it was) pushing out in response to me poking him, as we all do. Like, “Hey, wake up, Baby! But remember to sleep in a little bit when I want to sleep!” And shortly after, I did go to sleep. When I woke up the next morning at 6, I knew I...

Keep Reading

The Ache of Losing a Child Never Really Leaves

In: Loss
Parents releasing a red balloon

Every year, without fail, my body feels February. I’m not talking about the drop in temperature, or the way the snow piling up on the ground seeps through my boots every day on my walk into work. It’s the way my heart starts to ache a little more frequently. The way my eyes tear up unexpectedly at any given moment. The turning of a calendar to a month that marked the most unimaginable loss in my life so far: the loss of our firstborn child. It’s been 20 years since our very first dream of becoming a parent was reshaped...

Keep Reading

Dear Rainbow Baby on Your First Birthday

In: Loss, Motherhood
Rainbow baby lying in bassinet

The days before we knew you seemed to drag on. Our hearts had been broken and beaten, and we felt like we would never get to you. But here we are. Three hundred sixty-five days have passed since you took your first precious breath earthside. Three hundred sixty-five days since our hearts grew bigger than we ever imagined possible. Three hundred sixty-five days since you made our first baby a big sister and gave us the absolute privilege of watching her blossom as one. Three hundred sixty-five days since we finally found our missing piece. Looking back, it is so...

Keep Reading

To My Angel Babies

In: Baby, Loss
Photo frame with ultrasound image

To my three angel babies, From the moment I saw that first positive pregnancy test, you became a part of me. You were never just an idea, a hope, or a dream—you were my babies. I loved you from the very beginning, and I still do. Not a day passes that I don’t think of you or pray for you. I dreamt of watching you grow up with your big brother, dreamt of who you would become, and all the memories we’d make. You may have been tiny, but the dreams I had for you were not. To some, you...

Keep Reading

You Don’t Have To be Fearless To be Strong

In: Loss, Motherhood
Woman sitting on bench by water

I never imagined my story would look like this. I started out as a single, divorced mother, doing my best to hold life together with whatever scraps of strength I could find. Years later, I remarried into a happy, supportive relationship, but our path to growing our family wasn’t simple. Male factor infertility forced us into the world of IVF and ICSI. We were blessed with twins and, eventually, our miracle girl in 2009. I thought the hardest part of my motherhood journey might be behind me. But then came a season of heartbreak, with pregnancy after pregnancy ending in...

Keep Reading

The Love Was Real for the Baby I Never Got To Meet—and So Is the Grief

In: Loss
Woman hugging knees with her arms

Grief is supposed to follow rules. A beginning, a middle, an end. A reason. A name. But what happens when the grief arrives before a heartbeat is strong enough to echo? When the world doesn’t see the loss because it was too early, too quiet, too… invisible? I lost a child I never got to meet. And the world didn’t pause. My inbox still filled with unread emails. The neighbor still waved. The barista asked if I wanted oat milk again. Life moved forward as if nothing had shifted. But inside me, everything had. It wasn’t just the pain of...

Keep Reading

12 Weeks Was Long Enough to Dream

In: Grief, Loss, Motherhood
View from hospital bed with curtain pulled across doorway

You weren’t planned. The surprise of all surprises, to say the least. But this is not how your story was supposed to end. There was always something in the back of my mind . . . a quiet wondering if maybe we weren’t quite done. And your dad, he was giddy. He joked that he had willed you into existence, grinning like he knew all along you were coming. When those two pink lines showed up at three weeks, I didn’t know if I felt panic or joy. We were past this stage. I worried constantly—what would people say? Another...

Keep Reading

Faith after Loss Doesn’t Look Like It Used to

In: Loss, Motherhood
Woman sitting by water

After my daughter passed, I had to make an impossible decision. While still bleeding and physically recovering, I was asked to choose how her tiny body would be preserved: cremation or burial. I could barely breathe, let alone process what was being asked of me. We chose cremation, but that moment? That weight? It still lives with me. What no one tells you is that grief doesn’t wait until your body has healed. And neither does guilt. Especially when you were raised around faith, the kind of faith that sometimes sounds more like pressure than peace. I remember being pregnant...

Keep Reading

When “God, Hold Me” Is All You Can Pray

In: Faith, Grief, Loss
Mother and child resting together in a bed, black and white photo

Watching my child suffer while dying is not something I can even describe. The trauma of having an unmarked white van pull into the driveway of our home wrecked this mama’s heart and psyche. Seeing my children weep over their sister’s body is not something I can unsee. Watching my husband carry her spent body down the stairs her feet had struggled to climb is forever embedded in my memory. Taylor had fought for each day of her entire life and died the same way, giving it her all. She gasped for breath for four days, and I could barely...

Keep Reading