When Life Fractures Your Faith



Can I tell you all about something?

It’s not pretty. It’s hard. And it’s hard to talk about. I think I am needing to write my way through it, and, for some reason, I feel compelled to share it. Maybe someone out there needs to hear this or at least know they aren’t the only one. Or maybe it is that I’m the one that needs to hear something from one of you who has been here before.

(On that note, I also need to kindly ask you to refrain from offering medical advice or family planning opinions. I am talking with my doctor about it. And I am just not sure I am comfortable with that dialogue or ready to have it here.)

In the span of two months, I have had two miscarriages.

Two.

Both times, my husband and I were practicing the method of birth control that has worked for us for years.

Both times, I tested before my missed period. (Perhaps I am just far too in tune with my body, but I seem to have “spidey senses” when it comes to pregnancy.)

Both times, I miscarried within two days of my discovery.

I have been wanting more babies but sensing it wasn’t time (It kind of helps sensing it when your husband tells you he is not at all ready). 

Each time I saw that extra line on the stick, I thought God was blessing us with a surprise.
Maybe I am alone on this. But I love surprises.

I have a brother who is almost fourteen years younger than me, my parents' later-in-life surprise blessing. I have two dear friends who got pregnant after thinking they had permanently shut off the possibility of pregnancy. I’ve seen the miracle. I’ve seen the way that the family stretched with joy and love. I’ve seen the abundance of blessing in the unexpected.  

I am not quite sure how to put this into words, but I have been so angry over the miscarriages. There is white hot rage underneath this skin. How and why? And just why?! I felt the darkness of depression pulling at me. I’ve felt my faith rock.

It feels like some kind of cruel joke.

I don’t understand the point. I don’t even understand exactly what happened.  Did life happen? Did I lose something? What is wrong with me? Surely this isn’t normal?

It’s isolating. It’s really hard to talk about.

It’s also really hard to process.

I want to grieve, but it feels like I haven’t “earned the right,” like I didn’t lose enough. Like it was a second-rate miscarriage.

I am learning that while I might want to pick up my broken heart and set it next to someone’s heart like my dear friend’s who miscarried a very wanted and tried-for baby in her 11th week and had complications that dragged out the whole ordeal for weeks. Grief is not a substance that it can be compared. Broken is broken. And while my rational mind might want to say that I am less deserving, that I can’t cry as much or as hard. My heart is broken. I need to heal. I need to grieve.

I remember breaking my arm when I was in the third grade. I had gotten this great idea to show my older, cooler friend that I could swing with “no hands.” It took about two seconds to discover how not bright that idea was. I flipped backwards, arm meeting the ground first. My right ulna was broken all the way through.

I remember the healing process for that break. The emergency room. The overnight sling. The two different casts and the three months of wearing them. I remember doing homework with my left hand and taking my baths with my arm above water, wrapped in plastic.

I also remember the pain of having my arm set back into place. My mom remembers the scream of her quiet, keep-it-all-together child ringing through the waiting room. Setting was by far the most painful part in the process, even more painful than the break itself.

I think grieving can be like that. It is a process. Life, trials, people collide with our plans, our hopes, our dreams and just leave us reeling. Sometimes our ideas and beliefs get fractured in the aftermath of loss and need to be set back into place. 

Setting is that painful place, that place that is full of why’s. It’s that place of broken plans and dreams. It’s that place where you can walk away from God’s promises and live fractured or you can chose to live by faith rather than by what you see. It’s that place of re-realizing that God’s ways are higher and sometimes we just don’t get to understand this side of heaven. It’s a place of letting go, of surrender, of trust. It’s a place of realigning with what the Word of God says.

I can tell you I have gone through “the setting” in this process. I may have even yelled out in pain and frustration at God. But I am walking through it. I have reached out to some friends. I have chosen to fight that darkness instead of allowing it to fill my life.


I just want to leave you with the two things that seemed to minister to my heart.
Psalm 126:5-6 "Those who sow in tears shall reap with joyful shouting. He who goes to and fro weeping, carrying his bag of seed, shall indeed come again with a shout of joy, bringing his sheaves with him."

I am clinging to this promise, reminding God of it. I am sowing my tears, I’m not holding them in. And I am waiting to see what God will do.


I went to Women of Faith in the midst of this and heard this song by Mercy Me. I can’t even tell you how much it ministered or how much it felt like I could have written this song from my own life. If you have ever experienced deep pain and loss, just. listen. to. this. song.



Thank you for letting me share here. Seriously, thank you!


By Grace,

Amanda Conquers



Psst… I should be back this week with a story that involves a fishing line, two dogs, and the reason I do not fish. It may even leave you rolling with laughter ;)