Motherhood (Pt. 6)

I thought of another Bible verse I had memorized:  “I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten.”  God was doing that in my life, giving back the years I had lost because of my sin and rebellion.  He had done it in several areas already.

Having made the choice to have five abortions, I lost the opportunity to ever have children.  Yet God had blessed me with many spiritual offspring—like “my girls,” Kelli, Nicks, Morgan, Nina, and Michelle Murillo.  He’d given me an inner-city family—Margie’s family—complete with a namesake, Little Lori.  READ MORE

Motherhood (Pt. 5)

I couldn’t say anything at first. I simply looked into his adoring eyes, brimming with tenderness, and my eyes began to fill with tears as well. I knew in my heart this was not something Jim had said lightly or on the spur of the moment; it was something he must have thought about a great deal. God had given me a man whose unconditional love for me was almost beyond my comprehension, and his desire to make such a sacrificial gift—to become a father again at the age of sixty and to raise a child that would not even be his biologically—overwhelmed me for a few moments.

“We couldn’t adopt a baby right now,” Jim said, “But we won’t always be on the road. Things are going to settle down soon, and when they do, you can have a little buddy.”

We talked about how much fun I would have dressing up a little girl and taking her places with me and doing things together. “But I know longer need a baby to fill me,” I said. “ My life has been filled with children—my nieces and nephew; my namesake, Little Lori; my “girls,” who are like my own daughters.  Then there’s Armondo, who will always be my foster son. And especially your two children, whom I adore.  I even have two grandkids now!”

But I still longed for a child of my own.

When I reflect on my past, I realize that the number one thing satan tried to rob me of was family and children of my own.

He shouldn’t have done that.

Motherhood – Part 1
Motherhood – Part 2
Motherhood – Part 3
Motherhood – Part 4
Motherhood – Part 6
Motherhood – Part 7

Motherhood (Pt. 4)

Mother’s Day 2000

I gave Jim a quick kiss when I read his cards, and then I opened the package, which he had meticulously wrapped himself. Inside was a darling little doll in a green travel case. The pretty blond had on a frilly dress and tiny little socks and patent leather shoes.

“She’s adorable honey. Thank you.”

“She’s blonde and beautiful, just like you.”

Jim served me lunch, and we chatted about our ministry schedule and upcoming events as we ate. When we finished our meal, I stood up and started to clear the coffee table.

“Leave that for a minute,” He said. “I have another present for you—“

“Jim!”

“No, its not something tangible, so don’t protest.” I sat back down on a small sofa beside him. “Come here, baby.” He put his arm around me and pulled me close.

I studied his face for a minute. He looked very serious and yet very caring. “Tell me about this gift,” I said.

“The doll reminded me of you,” He began, “But it’s real just a symbol of my love. It represents the one thing I’d give anything in the world to be able to give you —-a baby.”

He paused as his eyes grew moist, and his voice was husky with emotion as he continued.

“I know that the greatest dream of your life was to be a mother, but that’s not possible anymore. So my real Mother’s Day gift to you, Lori Beth, is to tell you that if you still cherish that dream of being a mother, we can adopt a baby.”

Motherhood – Part 1
Motherhood – Part 2
Motherhood – Part 3
Motherhood – Part 5
Motherhood – Part 6
Motherhood – Part 7

Motherhood (Pt. 3)

“Empty and Angry”

1980

After my hysterectomy, the anger and resentment I had stuffed down inside of me because of the abortions began to erupt, and I knew then my marriage would never survive my hatred for Jesse.  “It’s me or the baby,” he’d said every time I’d gotten pregnant.  Then he would lead me on.  “Someday we’ll have kids.  There’s plenty of time for that.”  He’d never meant it, and I finally realized that.  And there hadn’t been plenty of time.  Now I was twenty-two years old and going through surgically induced menopause.

I was sick beyond sick, and I didn’t think I would ever get over it. I couldn’t watch a diaper commercial on TV without falling apart.   More than anything in the world I had wanted to be a mother.  Even as a little girl I would stuff a pillow under my baby-doll pajamas and walk around pretending I was pregnant.

God must have intended me to be a mother of many; I was a Fertile Myrtle, and I got pregnant every year from the ages of seventeen to twenty-one.  Except for the first pregnancy, I was using birth control.  But because of my drug use, I would forget and miss taking a pill here and there.  I invariably got pregnant.  Then I had an IUD for a while, but I took it out because it was painful…  So I went back on the pill . . . and still managed to get pregnant.

But not anymore.  The chance for that was gone forever.  And as I began to realize that, I was incredibly angry with Jesse for taking away my dream. I was angry with myself too, because abortion was ultimately my choice.

Motherhood – Part 1
Motherhood – Part 2
Motherhood – Part 4
Motherhood – Part 5
Motherhood – Part 6
Motherhood – Part 7

Motherhood (Pt. 2)

“Empty and Angry”

1980

I stared at the new-patient history form I was filling out in the surgeon’s office.  “Number of pregnancies,” it said.  I couldn’t bring myself to fill in that blank.

Jesse was sitting next to me, thumbing through a magazine.  I looked over at him.  “It asks how many times I’ve been pregnant,” I said.

“So, what’s the problem?”

“I’m embarrassed to say I’ve had five abortions.”

“Why?”

     You really don’t get it, do you?  I thought.  “Never mind,” I told him.

“It’s not that big a deal, Lori.  Just answer the questions so the doctor can find out what’s wrong with you.”

I finished filling out the form, and Jesse took the clipboard back to the receptionist.  Just getting up and down from a chair hurt.  I’d been in pain for almost a year—ever since my last abortion actually, although I had not made a connection between that event and my pain.  My right side hurt all the time and it kept getting worse.  I have a high tolerance for pain, so I put off going to the doctor for a long time.  When I finally couldn’t stand it anymore, I sought help.

The doctor had sent me for an ultrasound—the technology was still fairly new in 1980—and then for a surgical consultation.

“From the ultrasound, it looks like you have a grapefruit-sized cyst on your right ovary,” the surgeon said when I was finally ushered back to his office.  “That’s not uncommon.  I’ll go in and remove the cyst, and hopefully that’s all we’ll have to do.”

“You mean you might have to do more surgery?”

“Possibly.  But the most I’ll have to do is take the one ovary.  That way you’ll still be able to have children—if you want to.”

“Yes, I do.  Very much.”

“I see you’ve had several abortions.”  He was looking at the medical history I’d filled out, and I blushed as I confirmed it for him.

“But, I would like to have children someday,” I said.

“You’re young and otherwise healthy.  Even with one ovary you should be able to get pregnant, and we’ll try to save both ovaries if we can.”

I was so relieved by his answer.  And so ready for an end to the pain.

A few days later, after surgery, I woke up briefly in the recovery room, and a nurse gave me a shot for the pain.  When I awoke again, I was in my hospital room.  Jesse was standing on one side of the bed and my mom on the other.  Dad was pacing around the room.

The pain was excruciating, and no one had to tell me what had happened.  I just knew.  I felt empty.

I looked at Jesse and asked, “They took everything didn’t they?”  My voice was groggy from the medication.

“Don’t worry about anything right now, baby.  Just get some rest,” he said.

I didn’t trust Jesse to tell me the truth, but I knew my mother wouldn’t lie to me, so I asked her the same question.  “They took everything, didn’t they, Mom?”

“They had to, Lori.”  She looked as if she’d been crying.  “They had to save your life.”

“God, no . . .” I was still too sedated to even cry.

“You’re going to be okay, honey.  Just go to sleep and get some rest.”  Mom squeezed my hand as I gave up the struggle to stay awake.

Motherhood – Part 1
Motherhood – Part 3
Motherhood – Part 4
Motherhood – Part 5
Motherhood – Part 6
Motherhood – Part 7

Motherhood (Pt. 1)

“Talking Heart to Heart”

When Jim and I were dating, we often talked on the phone into the night about everything; sharing personal stories, learning all about each other as sweethearts do at the beginning of a relationship.  He described the emotional devastation he had gone through in prison, and I started opening up about my past.  He never pushed me to reveal anything I didn’t want to, never even asked me that many questions.  It was months later, for example, before Jim ever knew my ex-husband’s first name.  What Jim really wanted to get was a glimpse of my heart—to know the real me—and what a priceless gift that was.

One of the things I began to talk about was the crushing loss of my dream of motherhood.  “Ever since I can remember,” I told Jim, “All I wanted to be was a mommy.  In my childhood photographs, I’m always carrying a baby doll—sometimes one under each arm.”

“I can picture that,” Jim said.  “I’ve seen you with kids.  You’re so nurturing.”

“I know that nurturing was born into me.  It was a gift of God, a gift meant to be used for my children.”

“You never had any children after your abortions?”

“No, I couldn’t.”

I acknowledged that my abortions had eventually robbed me of the opportunity to ever bear children, and I told Jim the story of my hysterectomy at the age of twenty-two. . .

Motherhood – Part 2
Motherhood – Part 3
Motherhood – Part 4
Motherhood – Part 5
Motherhood – Part 6
Motherhood – Part 7

Marriage (Pt. 4)

My years of ministry in Master’s Commission had prepared me for whatever might come my way… or so I thought.  When I met Jim and fell in love with him and then married him shortly after, there were many challenges I had to face and overcome.  Some of the challenges had to do with who Jim was, what had happened to him, and Jim’s high-profile life.

I was instantly catapulted into the life of the famous, or in Jim’s case, infamous to many.  I had always had lots of friends but I also had a side of me that was private.  READ MORE

Marriage (Pt. 3)

By the spring of 1989, I was getting my life together.  The ten-year nightmare of my ill-advised marriage was over.  I had recommitted my life to Christ, joined Master’s Commission, and began this wonderful life of living and ministering for Jesus.  I had been in ministry for several years when I met Jim at the Dream Center in L.A.

Shortly after I met Jim and we had our first date, both of us knew that it was far more than a date; we were already falling in love.  And we knew that it was God bringing this love into our lives at the very time both of us had just about given up on ever finding love again. READ MORE

Marriage (Pt. 2)

During all the drama of my first marriage, I can still remember the times when the Spirit of God had wooed me.  He never left me, even in the midst of my rebellion.  There were times I would be high on drugs, and I could feel the Holy Spirit hovering over me, protecting me and shielding me from the agenda of the enemy – to steel, kill and destroy my life.  That may fly in the face of some religious thought out there, but it was true never-the-less. READ MORE

Marriage (Pt. 1)

Part 1

In my book, “More Than I Could Ever Ask”, I tell all the details about my first husband whom I chose for all the wrong reasons, none of which had anything to do with God.  When I met him, I was very young and naïve and my ability to make good decisions was not yet mature.  Add to that the influence of drugs and you have a recipe for disaster and that is what happened.  The choices I made as a young woman led to 10 years of hell and heartache.

Remember the old Frank Sinatra song “I Did It My Way”?  It sounded really great to the generation that was being raised to indulge in the world and all of its pleasure.  We heard things like “go for the gusto” and “you only live once” and we bought it.  We bought the lie that we had a right to sinful lusts and worldly living that the Bible says brings pleasure for a season, but eventually brings death.  We bought the world’s philosophy of “self fulfillment”.    Remember the rock song “I Can’t Get No Satisfaction”?  Boy, did we ever go after self-satisfaction!  When “self” rules in the heart, you will see everything that really means anything turned exactly upside down.  You will see the principles of the Bible destroyed and you will believe that destruction of Christian values is a “good thing” as you enjoy the temporary self-satisfaction.  We exchange the truth for a lie and call good evil, and evil good.

In the fifties, sixties and seventies, the world had begun to turn the Christian values of generations past into a lie, permeating every part of the family and God’s design for the family.  Everything in the world, all of its pleasures and all of its temporal thinking, values, and all of its best efforts to put life into order and to meet the needs and wants of mankind, has only perverted real truth and sent a tidal wave of disastrous proportions throughout our families.

I have often asked why the generation before me did not stand up for what was right.  I’ve wondered why the Christians and religious leaders sat by while prayer was taken out of schools and abortion was legalized and divorce was normalized – and did very little to stop the insanity.  As I look back, I’m almost angry.  But I now understand that each generation bears the responsibility for either honoring God or turning further from Him, and my generation doesn’t get a pass either.

Many times, out of the carnage of lives lived in pursuit of “self”, the eventual pain led us to search for something, anything, that could help!  But we went to the world for answers.   We read “self-help” and “psychology” books written by those who have a measure of understanding – as much as can be understood without spiritual revelation.  We watched television get crazier every day and we pulled our values from writers who do not know God – therefore, every thought is corrupt and gets worse continually.

I now understand that it was the mercy of God, and the prayers of those who went before us in our families, in our churches, in our messed up world, that showed us the way back to Him.

You see, there is no life apart from God.  There is no true fulfillment in relationships without His guidance and direction.  He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

Marriage – Part 2
Marriage – Part 3
Marriage – Part 4