• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

SingleRoots

You're more than your dating life

  • Conversations
    • Christian Singles and Life
    • Christian Singles and Sexuality
    • Christian Singles and The Church
    • Christian Singles and Online Dating
  • Resources
    • Resources for Christian Singles
    • Christian Singles Humor
    • Online Dating Tips
  • Dating Site Reviews
    • Best Christian Dating Sites in 2025
    • eharmony Review (Editor’s Choice)
    • Zoosk Review
    • Christian Mingle Review
    • Christian Cafe Review
  • About
  • Online Dating Deals

The (Constant) Ache of Childlessness

Erin Steelman

Latest

Erin Steelman

For the second time in less than 24 hours, I came home, shut the door behind me, and cried.

A quick pass down the rice and bean aisle at the grocery store had unraveled me. I had run into a friend I hadn’t seen in a while, and over the course of our chatter she casually mentioned that she was pregnant. Her second. She beamed.

The (Constant) Ache of Childlessness

I tried to ignore the familiar wrench in the pit of my stomach. You know that feeling, when you just want to throw that can of pintos you’re holding at the heavens, toward God, screaming, “What are you doing?!” at the top of your lungs? Well. Only because I knew what society dictated in this situation (and in public) did I manage to refrain from throwing beans at the ceiling.

Instead, I conjured up a smile and offered my congratulations. I blathered and babbled about her little boy having a brother or sister to play with. I asked about her due date. And, simultaneously, I mentally hurled my question—“What are you doing?!”—at the Creator of the universe.

The question had been lurking in the back of my mind since the previous evening, when a different friend had shared her happy news with me after church. Her third. Again, I had smiled. I had congratulated. I had babbled. I had also briefly wondered whether the song lyrics I had just sung—“There is no one else for me, none but Jesus”—were meant to be taken literally in my case. And then I had gone home and cried.

It’s true. I cry when my friends tell me they’re pregnant. Never in front of them, and never because I begrudge them their joy. I love my friends. My earnest prayer is that their little ones will grow up to love Jesus. But there’s a knot of pain somewhere deep in my gut that tightens in these situations.

I’m 35 years old, I’ve never been married, and I’m childless. Childless. Sometimes I feel it only as a mild ache that can be brushed aside, but at other times it flares with an intensity that threatens to undo me.  I don’t dwell on it, I don’t wallow in it, I do not try to explain it to many people. But it is constant, nonetheless.

In this hurt I feel a unique connection to my married friends who have struggled with infertility. They understand, as one friend put it, the “open-ended” nature of this sort of pain. They recognize better than most that I am a woman who longs to be a mother just as much as any wife might, and they empathize with the frustration that stems from my unfulfilled desire, in a way that validates that desire rather than ignoring or condemning it.

Unrealized desire causes pain. We understand this. We all live it, every day. Harder to accept, though, is the fact that as much as such open-ended pain hurts, it’s part of what it means to be human. Right? Waiting? Wanting more than this life has to offer? Didn’t the apostle Paul himself say it?

“For who hopes for what he already sees?  But if we hope for what we do not see, with perseverance we wait eagerly for it.” (Romans 8:24-25)

In my mind’s eye, I can easily “see” what my life might look like with a husband, three toddling children at my side, a baby in my arms. I think it looks pretty great, in fact. I wouldn’t say no if God suddenly handed this life to me on a silver platter. But my perspective is limited, and I must keep remembering that God can see infinitely more. I need to train myself to hope for the things that I’d never in a million years be able to imagine for myself—eternal things. God has so often proven his faithfulness in doing “far more abundantly beyond all that [I could] ask or think,” and his plan is always good.

In the meantime—because we do live in the meantime moments—does knowing these truths make the pain less painful? Not really. Not for me, at least. But I’m learning that the more open-ended the pain, the more open-ended the hope. The greater the expectation. God will bring about a result that glorifies himself, and I can cooperate with him as he accomplishes that result.

“What are you doing?!”

As it turns out, maybe my knee-jerk question in the bean aisle was not exactly the wrong question. At the very least, it’s an age-old query with an answer just as ancient. It could be (couldn’t it?) that God is answering me the way he answered the prophet Habakkuk, thousands of years ago, when Habakkuk couldn’t make sense of his world, either. “Observe!” God said. “Be astonished! Wonder! Because I am doing something in your days—You would not believe if you were told.”

I look forward to being astonished.

Do you struggle with the ache of childlessness?

 

 

Photo credit: Stephen Brace

Filed Under: Desires and Longings, SingleRoots, Relationships Tagged With: childlessness, expectations, hope, parenting, pregnancy, singleness, waiting

Erin Steelman

Erin Steelman is a Southern transplant to Ohio, where she teaches
English Language Arts 8th grade students. She believes that cooking
for company, hugging basset hounds, drinking leisurely cups of coffee
on weekend mornings, and reading Dickens novels are among life’s
greatest joys; she also is firmly convinced that the temperature in
heaven will never drop below 73 degrees (because, above all, she hates
being cold). While still hopeful that she’ll be happily married
someday, she’s thankful to be able to look back and see God at work in
her singleness. It turns out that 1 Corinthians 7 stuff is actually
true!

Primary Sidebar

Dating Articles :: Trending Now

How to Get an eharmony Free Trial
Best Christian Dating Sites in 2025
eharmony Review
Christian Mingle Review
eharmony vs Christian Mingle?

See All 2025 Dating Site Rankings

eH high reseHarmony Special Offer stars
Read Review Visit eharmony
Zoosk stars
Read Review Visit Zoosk
Christian Mingle Logo high res stars
Read Review Visit ChristianMingle
christian cafe stars
Read Review Visit ChristianCafe
 

See All 2025 Dating Site Rankings

Recent Posts in Online Dating

  • Best Christian Dating Sites in 2025 :: Pick the Right One for You

    Best Christian Dating Sites in 2025 :: Pick the Right One for You

    6 years ago
  • Christian Mingle Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    Christian Mingle Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    7 years ago
  • Match.com Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    Match.com Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    7 years ago
  • eharmony Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    eharmony Review in 2025 :: Christian Singles Tell It Like It Is

    7 years ago
  • How to Get an eharmony Free Trial

    How to Get an eharmony Free Trial

    7 years ago

Join the singles conversation!

We won't spam your inbox with endless amounts of emails, but we will send you updates of the latest discussions taking place within the SingleRoots community.

Footer

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

About

About Us

Write for Us

Contact Us

Disclosure

From time to time we will offer products through affiliate links. If you purchase an item through that link, SingleRoots will receive an affiliate commission. Just keeping it real. Gotta pay the bills, yo.

Looking for a post on a specific topic?

Copyright © 2025 · Showcase Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in