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It starts with a God-given dream nestled in the imagination of a young girl.
Visions wound tight—rarely spoken—tucked away in the crevice of her heart.
She dares not speak, for fear it will never come to pass.
Oh, the hopes a mom carries.
A shooting star crashes to the earth as the sonogram is placed in her hand.
She proudly displays the evidence on her fridge and stows it in her purse for the world to see.
Staring at the profile of her tiny baby, envisioning her daddy’s nose and her grandma’s smile.
Oh, the dreams a mom carries.
Nine months pass and the big day arrives.
The weight of her responsibility is sensed not only in her physical body but in her spirit.
Hours of pain are forgotten the instant her everything is swaddled and laid upon her chest
Oh, the joy a mom carries.
Her entire world strapped into a five-point-harness as the great unknown comes into view.
Panic and doubt are the hosts of her welcome-home party.
Who am I to raise this child? Do I have what it takes?
Oh, the fears a mom carries.
Memorizing the worn-out pages of What to Expect When You’re Expecting.
Her diaper bag busting at the seams with onesies, burp clothes, and pacifiers,
Her google search history filled with parenting questions and concerns.
Oh, the worries a mom carries.
Like a dutiful reporter, she documents and records milestones and memories.
Albums chock-full of first haircuts, first birthdays, and first bike rides.
Treasuring every construction paper creation and pet rock in her hope chest.
Oh, the things a mom carries.
Time speeds up at such a rate, she finds herself suffering from whiplash.
Her purse crammed with tissues, her hands filled with roses.
Dressed in cap and gown, her child walks across the stage as she wipes away the tears.
Oh, the grief a mom carries.
Walking by the empty bedroom, waiting for a visit, a text, a call.
Time and distance hammers a wedge between generations.
With one thing left to do, she busts through the doors of heaven interceding on their behalf.
Hands shaking, she drops the weight of her worries at the feet of Jesus.
Oh, the burdens a mom carries.
“I can’t carry this anymore. It’s too heavy.”
Her shameful gaze meets Jesus’ gracious smile.
“I’ve been waiting 20 years for you to drop this.
You were never meant to CARRY your children but to OFFER them up to me.
Motherhood doesn’t begin the day you CARRY A CHILD.
Motherhood starts the day you RELEASE A CHILD into my hands.
Well done my good and faithful servant.
I’ll take it from here.”