Posted in Uncategorized

Perspective.

I had finished up with my shower and took a look at myself in the mirror from bottom to top. I had mixed emotions about this. In my previous posts you have journeyed with me to see how I went about jump starting my body to get pregnant and the roller coaster that was. This seems similar but different.

It’s different because now we have our 3 babies and it is  hard for me to say that , the chapter of planning to have more pregnancies is now done. There is so much that went into us having our children that I didn’t realize it would be a journey as well after that chapter closed. For one, even though I just had our baby girl last year, she has been growing up so fast , determined to be independent and keep up with her brothers which I love but I didn’t realize how much I would miss just having a newborn or planning for another baby.

I have also come to the realization that my “snap back body” that I had after our two boys is actually in a “hold up , wait a minute” phase haha! It is taking much longer to shed the pounds this time but after I brought that mirror back up to my face I began to encourage myself. “This body has carried 3 big beautiful babies and is still nursing one. I look good. ”

This doesn’t mean that I wont work towards the health and body goals I do have but it does mean that I give myself grace in the time limit it will take to meet those goals. My hormones are realigning and we are still learning new things about having a family of 5. Even in the midst, I love our little Wilson tribe so much and am so grateful for what we do have! It is so rich.  I have learned more about shifting my perspective but still need to remind myself to actually do it sometimes during the moments I need that affirmation the most. So I am sending this message not only to myself but to anyone else that is reading this.

Can we acknowledge what we feel and then reassess to get back to a place of thankfulness? I feel like once I get to that place of deep gratitude for what is presently going on , it helps to fuel whatever goal I have in a positive way rather than sinking into a depression because of what is lacking.

“It is not joy that makes us grateful, it is gratitude that makes us Joyful” – author unknown

Posted in Uncategorized

New Name. New Season.

For over the past 5 years the original name of the blog was “happily interrupted life”. I poured my heart out in each post ( and so did my husband when he would share from time to time)  and always hoped that the experiences here could bless someone else which is why all of the original content will still remain for any past reference others may need.

2020, wow. It’s been an interesting year thus far, yet I feel so much to share through writing and speaking. My emotions are  full yet I feel inspired in different ways that I want to share with my audience.

Are you still there ? 🙂

I hope you will continue the journey with me through this Mission Filled Life.

I may not always know what will come of each life encounter but I know that it will either refine my character or draw me closer to fulfilling my destiny.

Let’s create a legacy together.

Posted in Uncategorized

5 year anniversary

I cannot believe how much time has gone by since I wrote my last blog post!

To say the least ..SO much has happened!

2 moves, 3 babies, 8 years of marriage, new jobs, new business ventures, new missions…GUYS….there is so much to share with all of you.

Over the course of that time I’ve encountered multiple women struggling with PCOS and have sent them right over to HIL to refer to , pretty much what has been my diary of our journey thus far concerning that part of our life amongst other things.

I say that to say , when I thought about writing again, it was hard to think about doing so apart from this community that I had already created. I actually tried that before and I just didn’t have the same passion that I have when I write through HIL.

When it comes to my husband and I, our life is full of these unexpected moments that have taken us through the valley but has made us strong enough to come out victorious each time. ALL of it has taught us so much.

We will start sharing those moments again with you.

Thank you for still journeying with us ❤

Posted in PREGNANCY/MOTHERHOOD, Uncategorized

Featured Guest: Jasmine’s Story

Where to begin?

I accepted Christ as my Lord and Savior at 4 years old. I was baptized at 9 years old. I enjoyed reading the Word, sharing the Good News, fellowship with other believers, and praise and worship. During this time I did experience a series of traumatic events, but my faith in God and my youth, helped me to just push on forward.

Then when I was 15 I experienced a traumatic event that changed me. My view of God was completely altered, my view of the world changed, and my feelings of self-worth were diminished. I put on a brave face and almost no one even knew the inner turmoil and pain I experienced. Fortunately God allowed me to continue on even when I had no desire to. I continued going to church regularly as not going was not an option in our household. But something was missing. The zeal I had for the Lord had been extinguished.

Fast forward a little over a year. During my entire senior year of high school, I was pregnant with my first son. Considering the “purity” classes and ceremony I had in which been forced to participate, this was definitely perceived as a bad thing. But I held on to Romans 8:28, “And we know that in all things, God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose” (NIV).

Despite the hurt I encountered, I always knew God was there. The considerable ostracism I experienced on numerous fronts caused me to draw as close to the Lord as possible, and refuse to let go. My son is now 16 years old, a gentle giant who loves the Lord. He excels academically, athletically, and possesses a compassionate spirit.

Having my son 2 weeks before completing high school was challenging. It was certainly not part of my master life plan. However I am thankful for him, and his commitment to the Lord. He was recently baptized, and as I hugged my soaking wet son after being immersed I was grateful to the Lord. If not for having my son, I would not be where I am today. I likely would not have served in the Navy, met my husband, or had my other 3 sons (ages 13, 8, and 4). Additionally my son has been an amazing older brother to his siblings, all 3 who live with different degrees of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Posted in MISSIONS

Destiny Walk

Wow, so it has been an interesting and eyeopening 6 months. If you look back at our previous posts about being commissioned out you will see the journey my husband and I have embarked on. Through ups and downs we have felt God’s presence and peace over us. As time was going my husband and I , continued to notice things that we were not too keen on so we continued to pray about whether  we were to stay or leave because in all things we wanted God’s will to be done and as leaders we wanted to make sure we showed the right representation . We didn’t move until we felt the peace  of the Lord to do so and the blessing  from our mentors. God moves right on time not a day early or a day late, timing is everything  and we were getting the okay that the timing was now. We completed the tasks God called us to do and we so feel his favor upon because we were obedient to the call. With that said , my husband and I have resigned from our positions with the organization we were at and his last day is Friday and mines is in about two weeks. We have great peace about this decision, as stated previously ,  a lot factors played into us making this decision but until we heard the Lord’s voice to depart , we would stand firm.

Let’s now discuss the beauty  of God’s divine appointments though. Jason and I were sent here for a reason and season and it surpass those assignments . We have met so many amazing people within the region and they have shown us love and support in so many ways!! As this transition  was coming upon us our prayer was ” God do you want us to stay in this area or go back to Lancaster?” We love Lancaster and all of our friends that are like family to us there but God was starting to pull us in a different  direction. Confirmation after  confirmation  showed we are to start putting down some roots within this region. This is so God because never in a million years would we have thought this is where God would eventually  send us and plant us. We will be moving to a different  area within the region and joiNing a ministry near by. My husband’s been blessed with two new jobs and God continues to send people in our circle  that have great hearts.

So here we go again to another new chapter but what I have learned in these seasons is that running after God is an adventure and when you open  your life to him to have full control  and direction he can do great things  with your life. Sure it can be crazy  and frustrating too  at times but when you are on the right path God truly gives a peace that passes all understanding  🙂 . Stay tuned for updates  in this new journey, we are excited!!!  Continue reading “Destiny Walk”

Posted in PREGNANCY/MOTHERHOOD

Ashley B’s Story: Final Piece, Part 4

The babies lasted a good 3 weeks until I went into labor. It really came out of nowhere. It started in the middle of the day and I felt it the pains get stronger. I remember calling the nurse and telling her she basically thought I was imagining pains because she put the contraction monitor on me and it wasn’t picking anything up so after 5 minutes she removed it but the pains got stronger. It was making me so mad that she wasn’t listening to me. I waited for the next shift of nurses and I was already in tears because it was hurting so bad. I had to wait on the doctor who was in a c-section at that moment. So I waited some more by the time the doctor came I was already at 8 cm they rushed me into the operating room.

I couldn’t  deliver vaginally because they were too tiny and one was head up and the other was head down if they had to go in to turn the one it would have caused a brain hemorrhage. They put me to sleep because they couldn’t get the epidural in and they delivered the babies and rushed them to the NICU. They were so tiny, one was 2lbs 4ozs and the other was 2lbs 10ozs. A miracle, two miracles, after all their bloodwork was taken I was told everything was the same with them. The surgery worked. They spent two months in the hospital gaining weight and learning to do things on their own without machines.

I did have a scare with one of the babies. After two weeks she suddenly stopped urinating and she was swelling from the fluids staying in her body. Two days went by I could not stop crying they couldn’t tell me what was happening. They kept giving her medicine to help her. It worked! She finally urinated and the swelling started to go down. Then her lungs started filling up with fluid they got it out in hopes it wouldn’t come back but it did then they had to put a tube through her mouth to help her breathe. She hated it she would get so worked up whenever they would touch her they would have to give her a little more oxygen. The fluid kept building up so they put a tube in her chest to help drain it. I hated it, I hated everything they were going through because I couldn’t be there every day and I couldn’t take the pain away. The toughest two months I ever had to endure. Eventually the fluid stop building up and she got stronger and right before thanksgiving they came home. I was so happy. The babies are so big now you would never know that they were preemies. My miracle, my life is their life, Ava, Laila and Leah. Crazy where life takes you but I thank God he brought me here and he kept my babies safe and helped them to see a year. Thank you God for all 3 of my angels.

Posted in PREGNANCY/MOTHERHOOD

Ashley B’s Story : Part 3

The next morning was surgery day. I was awake for it, kind of like how they would perform a c-section. The nurse were talking to me while the doctors were performing. There was a camera inserted around my uterus and the nurse told me she could see the babies’ hands moving around and how active they were. They were finished and the doctor said the babies look good and both still breathing. I stayed in the hospital for a week. I asked if the surgery worked and they told me that we wouldn’t know until they were born. It killed me I didn’t know what would be happening.

After two weeks I went back to work and a couple of weeks when I was 25 weeks my water broke but I wasn’t it labor it just popped on its own. None of the local hospitals were prepared for premature babies or my condition, so they shipped me an hour away from my home. What I didn’t know was that I had more than one water sac the second one broke and started a whole rain of blood and it wouldn’t stop. Everyone was in my room after that because if it didn’t stop they would have to take the babies out. They put all these IV’s in me to stop the onset of any labor. Thankfully I didn’t go into labor at 25 weeks. The doctors told me my case was a weird one, since the surgery I had is still so new and there aren’t a lot of studies on it they didn’t know what may happen. They think that the surgery weakened something in there to cause my waters to break. It wasn’t a matter of if I would be going into labor it was when.

Posted in PREGNANCY/MOTHERHOOD

Ashley B’s Story : Part 2

When I was 19 weeks I went for my normal appointment with the specialist to check on them, my worst fear was happening. They were diagnosed with twin to twin transfusion. In the sonogram you can see such a big difference.  The one baby was so small in comparison to the other and the membrane had her pushed in the corner of my uterus. The doctor comes in and asks me if I came alone and I said yes because I came during work, I was set to go back after. He sits down and lays it on me, he said this is what is happening and you have choices. He said you can have surgery to help the babies and what happens is they would split your placenta so each baby has their own part and there are only a few hospitals that do it so you would need to travel in short notice are you able to I said yes right away these are my babies and I don’t want anything to happen. He couldn’t give me many details at the time about the surgery because he did not specialize in it and he did not want to give me wrong information but what he was sure of and what he told me is that I needed to act quickly.

As he’s telling all of this I broke down because of course I’m worried, I don’t know what to expect, I’m scared and everything is still so unclear. He told me all of the hospitals that do this laser surgery which was only about 3 hospitals one was in Long Island, NY, another in Philly and the other was in Baltimore, Maryland. He called all of them for me to find out which could get me the next day. He allowed me to wait in his office while he did and had me call my husband and have him on speaker when he came back. The hospital in Maryland was the only one I could get an appointment the quickest. The University of Maryland is where I went and from what I was told was one the best hospitals that did the surgery and often. I was in Maryland the next day.

My husband and I saw the doctor when we got there. He took a look at the babies himself and just confirmed everything. He gave us insight on the procedure. It was very risky and not a guarantee it would work. The hope was the laser would split the placenta in half and equally so each baby would have its own half. With the procedure could possibly bring on preterm labor and I was only 19 weeks the babies wouldn’t have survived that. The doctor told me that the survival rate for both babies after surgery was 60 % and 80 % for one. My heart dropped those honestly were not the best odds. My husband told the doctor right away they are going to be the 60 %. All I could do was pray and cry. I was so scared. The thought that I could lose any one of my babies or both was terrifying.

Posted in PREGNANCY/MOTHERHOOD

Featured Guest : Ashley B’s Story Part 1

Hi my name is Ashley.  I am a mother of three beautiful little ladies, Ava who is four, Laila and Leah, my twins who will be one in just two short weeks! My story is just like many other mothers, you wake up super early, you go to bed super late all to make sure everyone is taken care of.

Being a mom of 3 is not easy by any means, especially a mom of a toddler and twins. Two babies at once are crazy! All my girls are miracles and all special in their own way! Ava was two weeks early by induction on the 4th of July, just as the fireworks began. Every year I tell her the fireworks are for her. She is a handful all on her own and a true mommy’s girl. I love it but sometimes you know you want at least 5 minutes to yourself and you can’t tell your baby no when they haven’t seen you all day. She is my first love she holds a special part in my heart. Your first are always special you can’t say favorite, I’m not saying favorite but your experiences are different with them as with all of your children if you have more than one every one of them will be different.

Having twins is a whole other ball game.  It’s extremely different.  I remember when I found out I was having twins I cried because I was sitting there telling myself how am I going to do this. How will I be able to take care of 3 financially and emotionally? It’s a scary thought, you want to make sure you’re able to provide for them and that’s the only thought I kept thinking am I going to be able to do this.  You know the saying, “You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have”, has never been more true for me.

I knew my pregnancy with the twins was different from the start even before knowing I was having twins.  My body hurt right away. The simple task of getting out bed was growing increasingly more difficult and I didn’t understand why when I didn’t think I was that far long yet.  When I did go to the doctor I thought I was only 10 weeks, that’s how I timed it thinking about my last period from what I could remember because I am terrible at keeping track.  When I went to my first sonogram I was in for the shock of my life, little did I know I was at the right place for my situation. I ended going to a specialist for my first sonogram because I opted for special testing to check and make sure there were no abnormalities. I remember talking to my husband the night before our sonogram appointment jokingly saying imagine if there were two in there and I laughed it off. So we went the next morning they did the normal vital check. I’m looking at the screen saying wow that’s a really big baby and the tech replies well yes that’s because there are two in there and your 17 weeks not 10 weeks like I thought. I was in such shock I didn’t know what to say, then she says I think we can see the sex of the babies do you want to know right away I saw one girl I knew already from before.  At that point I was crossing my fingers that hopefully the other was a boy, and then she hit me it’s another girl. I wanted a boy because I have girls, either way I was happy that they are healthy and growing. During that appointment I also learned that they are identical and they shared a placenta but not the same sack. They were separated by a little membrane. They said that because they shared a placenta that placed me in the high risk pregnancy category.  With twins your high risk anyway but now that risk was higher for pretty much anything. I had to see the specialist every 2 weeks because they wanted to make sure the babies were growing evenly.  Sharing a placenta the risk of twin to twin transfusion was high that would mean one baby was getting more nutrients that the other.

Posted in ADOPTION

Birthmom : Emily’s Story Part 6 – The Final Piece

I never got my three days. After having Riley on a Thursday evening, I was notified because both he and I were healthy, I would be discharged 11am Saturday. I was losing a whole day. This was NOT IN MY PLAN, and unfortunately the time I did have was spent with a revolving door of people from my side of family and friends who would never get to spend time with Riley.

I spent my time with Jill and Bob, bonding with them, and watching them bond with Riley, and as it warmed my heart to see how far our relationship had come, I felt as if it was breaking at the same time. The last day in the hospital I had Riley swaddled in a blanket and had just finished telling him how much I loved him, and how much he had changed me when the woman from the adoption agency we were going through came in to tell me it was time. Behind her was my mom and dad, and I went from peaceful, to horrifically panicked in one fail swoop. I was to transfer Riley to her, who then would bring Riley to Jill and Bob who were graciously waiting on the other side of the hospital, and I was just supposed to leave.

To be wheeled downstairs, out the door, into the car, and home. Alone.

All of a sudden, every fear, every doubt, every minute piece of pain came rushing into me. I couldn’t do it. What if he cries? What if he needs me? What if he wonders why I left him? What if he doesn’t remember me? I can’t do it. I can’t give him to you. He’s mine. What kind of a woman gives her baby to another woman? What kind of a MOTHER hands her baby off to be raised somewhere else? What kind of a horrible, horrible woman does this to her child? – I’ll tell you who. A woman of strength. A woman of bravery. A woman that cares more about the well being of her child than she does about her own pain. A woman that knew it was Gods will to have this baby placed with this particular family. A woman who knew it was the right thing to do. A woman who had to recognize and accept that this baby, this tiny, innocent, beautiful life- was never meant to be hers. From the second this baby was conceived, he was ALWAYS theirs. A woman who loved this baby so much, that she was willing to allow someone else to be “momma.”

My plan was to hand Riley to this woman, kiss him softly on the head, and watch him go down the hallway, until I couldn’t see him anymore. Instead, what happened was, I became hysterical. Shaking. Unable to loosen my grip on this child. My father had to lean in and say “do you need help, do you want me to give him to her darlin’?” And he did. Because unlike what I had planned, handing this baby over was like handing over my heart, and it was just too much to take. I don’t even remember getting In the wheelchair to be wheeled downstairs, I don’t remember getting into the car. What I do remember is screaming and crying the whole way home that my entire body hurt. That my heart was never going to heal. As soon as we arrived home, and still sore from birth, I limped my way up to my bedroom, sank into my bed, and wept. For days.

When I got tired of weeping upstairs, I would slump my way downstairs. I spent weeks awakening in the middle of the night screaming. My mom would come into my room to find me crying, clutching my pillow like a baby, dreaming that I couldn’t find him and confused as to why he wasn’t there. Despite attempts from friends and family, my pain was swallowing me whole.

I began to struggle at work- which was a daycare. Being around children was horrifically painful. I became so afraid of sleeping that I started to have terrible insomnia. At one point I had been up for five days straight, unable to get off the couch, eat, or even shower. The first few months were a time of darkness, pain, and self pity. But God wasn’t done with me yet. He allowed me my time to grieve, and when it became too much, he began to lift me up. He would remind me what a selfless act I had committed. He reminded me that I was obedient. He reminded me that I wasn’t done yet.

There is so much more to my story, and God was/is constantly working in my life. My life six years later is beyond what I ever imagined. God has blessed me beyond measure with the relationship He has helped to shape between Jill, Bob, and Riley; as well as my own husband and son. To be a birth mother is a label I wear with pride. It represents strength, it represents empathy, it represents a love that most will never understand. Adoption is no easy path. It takes courage and a heart open to possibility. Is adoption worth it? Every second. Is it hard? Every second. But what’s life without a little hardship? I am blessed to say that if I had the opportunity to go back and choose a different path, I would choose the same one. Each and every time.