Skip to main content

... of being "that pregnant girl".

Quinn and I visited Pepperdine a few weekends ago when we were in California for a wedding. That campus is really beautiful and I didn't think about it enough when I was there. So we decided that it was small enough and beautiful enough to warrant doing a walking tour rather than a driving one. Luckily, the students were a few days away from being able to be on campus for move in, etc. but there were still a small amount who were looking around with their parents or had been working on campus. As I was walking down lower dorm road on this gorgeous day with my wonderful husband, we passed by two girls who gave me a brief startled glance before overting their eyes. "What the heck?" I thought. "Do I look that old? Is there something on my face? Am I dressed wierd?" And then I realized: I was a college-aged looking person, with nothing on my face, dressed completely normal, who was also definitely 6 months pregnant.

I taught high school for 3 years and taught/saw more pregnant girls that I can count. While high school pregnancy is (sadly) becoming much more frequent, college pregnancy is something you just don't see very often. I surmise that this is because having a high school diploma is a benchmark; you reach it and you can get much better jobs; Public education is free and if the girls can phyisically make it through before and after the baby is born, there is nothing else to inhibit them. College, however, is expensive, it is not mandatory, and it is demanding. This is especially true of a private, Christian university like Pepperdine. I never saw a pregnant student at Pepperdine.

So the startled stares from these girls made sense and it also made me completely self conscious.

Then, this week, I visited a past student of mine on her small, private, religious college campus... still definitely 6 month pregnant, still college-aged looking, and still very self-conscious. I voiced this to Chelsea as we walked on the populated sidewalks. I wanted to make a sign that I could wear that said: "I am 27." Since I couldn't do that, Chelsea and I just walked from one building to the next saying: "I can't believe I'm 27!" and "Too bad you're 27!" and the like as loudly as possible. I glanced behind me at the girl who had been walking behind us for a bit, who was grinning as she turned toward her destination. Well, if nothing else, at least the situation made me mildly entertaining.

This has prompted a change in my pregnancy dressing decisions. Up until that point, I had been purposefully wearing tight shirts so that my little ball of Abram was obvious and whether or not I was just "putting on weight" was never a consideration for onlookers. I now realize that if I am going to be on a college campus (as I did send the costume shop my resume)... I'll wear the ambigous, long, flowy shirts and hopefully reduce the amount of stares at my little ball of Abram and assumptions as to what kind of girl I must be to be pregnant at a Christian university.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

... of the tipping point

 I haven't blogged in so very long, I can't remember when and I'm not going to stop this thought train to go and check. Suffice it to say, it's been awhile. But I showed up here to share (and document) a major event in the life of our family.  Before Moses came home, I would see adoptive families posting about their kiddos' "Tipping Point Days". I recently heard it called something else as well, but I'm too tired to think of it right now. Basically, it is the day when your adopted child has been with you for as long as they were not  with you. For kids that were adopted at 1 or 2 or 3, that seems to come quickly and maybe feels eventful, but not monumental. Well, when we got custody of Moses he was about 4 years and 9 months old. I remember coming back to America and seeing someone in my adoption group post about their 2 or 3 year old's Tipping Point Day and thinking I should figure out when Moses's would be. So I did. I sat down and figured ou...

... of a gracious gift from God

As we have resettled and felt a calmness and stability in Austin that we knew was from the Lord, we started praying about and considering adding another child to our family. We felt like we had room in our heart and our home and so, with a lot of peace and excitement from us and the kids, we found out in September that we were expecting a baby in June 2016! We have held off telling more than close friends and family until we made it through the 12 week ultrasound appointment when we would make sure everything was looking normal. That appointment was a few weeks ago. We saw our new little squirrel wiggling around and measuring right on schedule. But after the ultrasound, at my nurse's visit, they told me that the baby's nuchal translucency (a space at the back of the neck, used for indicating a possibly chromosomal abnormality) was a little big. Not too much, but enough to cause some concern. They suggested a non-invasive blood test that could detect an abnormality wit...

... of the big wait.

It awaiting the birth of the baby, there were a few events that we were hoping we would get to attend before he came. I have to admit that there were times I wished that he would come early and we just wouldn't be able to make it. However, we have passed that final event and I am glad that he has waited to grace us with his presence. The final event was the wedding of one of Quinn's best friends. Akintunde Omitowoju is a Nigerian who grew up in between Nigerian and America and became a computer programmer. Akin moved to Japan for 5 years from 2003 to 2008 and in that time, he came to realize how much he loved Japan and will now tell anyone that he feels Japanese at heart. So how appropriate that he would meet and befriend a Japanese girl at his church in Japan who he began to date after he had moved back to Austin and started working with Quinn at Retro. Masami Nishida moved to America just a few weeks ago and their wedding was Saturday night! We were all praying that Ab...