How I Am Sanctified By My Vocation

by Faith & Life, Family, Pro-Life, Vocation

“I’m going to take a pregnancy test!” 

I shouted across the apartment to my husband as I anxiously walked into our bathroom to find out if I was having phantom pregnancy symptoms or if I was in fact carrying another life inside of me. 

I was bracing myself for the seemingly endless three-minute wait and the uncertainty of a faint second line when within a minute, a very prominent second line appeared. I looked up in the mirror as if my reflection would respond to my disbelief, and then back at the stick. 

A small smile came to my face, accompanied by an overwhelming sense of impending change.

I slowly opened the bathroom door. 

I, very un-eloquently, told my husband, “So, um, I’m pregnant.” 

“What?! Wait, what?!” 

It’s funny how joy can mix so smoothly with disbelief. We had both prepared ourselves for the trials of infertility because my husband had been diagnosed with and beaten, testicular cancer before we had even met. So, one and a half months into our marriage, we were both overjoyed and completely shocked by this blessing. 

As a result, I was unprepared for the complete identity shift that happens the moment you find out you are a mother. It’s often said that with the birth of a child is the birth of a mother, but I disagree with that. 

I think with the conception of every child, is the birth of a mother, for you are no longer the same and deep inside that truth takes root. Over the course of one minute, life goes from your own dreams and plans to a great unknown. 

It is incredible, yet daunting. I was looking forward to what was to come and at the same time letting go of the life I knew. In a very real way, more so than on my wedding day, I realized my life was no longer, and would never again be, my own. Every decision was colored by a new sense of responsibility. 

I always knew that my vocation would sanctify me, but it’s hard to understand exactly how that happens before, well, it happens. 

In finding out I was pregnant, I was faced with my own selfishness and my own false sense of control and power, but it was all colored with such sweetness. Something I’ve found to be consistently true when growing in the spiritual life. 

Motherhood, before the baby even arrives, is a journey that follows the path of self-renunciation, a kind of death, the death of my independence and the life I once had, but this does not leave a sense of sadness, rather it points to new life. For with the conception of a child is the birth of a mother…and endless opportunities to be sanctified.

Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

Keep Searching, Keep Learning

Our Newest Articles:

Fools For Christ: The Strange Joy Of The Saints

Fools For Christ: The Strange Joy Of The Saints

The World Today A missile cuts through the night sky, sending people scrambling across open space and towards safety. Elsewhere, a father scans his grocery list, second-guessing purchases and wondering if he can fit everything within budget. In another part of the...

Easter Sunday Gospel Reflection

Easter Sunday Gospel Reflection

On the first day of the week,  Mary of Magdala came to the tomb early in the morning,  while it was still dark,  and saw the stone removed from the tomb.  So she ran and went to Simon Peter  and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and told...

Eucharistic Miracles And The Real Presence Of Christ

Eucharistic Miracles And The Real Presence Of Christ

We live in a world where secularization and technology have rendered most people detached from organized religion of any sort. Science has, to some extent, been hostile or at least ambivalent to faith, often creating doubt in people’s minds. What better way is there...

Marital Truth Hurts — But Love Rejoices In It

Marital Truth Hurts — But Love Rejoices In It

We live in an age where truth has been softened into preference. “My truth” and “your truth” sound generous, almost enlightened, but beneath the language is a deeper confusion: truth has been reduced to feeling. It has become negotiable, therapeutic, and adjustable....

Subscribe To Our WeeklyEmail!

Subscribe To Our WeeklyEmail!

Join our mailing list to receive the latest articles, updates, and seasonal Catholic content from Catholic-Link.org!

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Pin It on Pinterest