Hi:
Thanks for your post. In thinking on your dilemma, I wondered if the comparatively (smaller) country size and flexibility of the EU might mean you can do fertility work in one country and start adoption in a nearby state (say, Spain and France, or Germany and Poland, or something?) Or are medical records linked all across member states? I do not know how far European integration is going, but as I feel the Euro project was doomed from the start, you may start to see (as it unravels over the next decade) member states leaving the union, and thus (potentially) offering free areas to pursue these resources.
In the meantime, I hope your diet brings success, and I’ll keep praying for you. I think I prefer your usage of the term “like a blessing”, because if it really is a blessing, I sure wouldn’t wish it on anyone! I find Catholic doctrine on suffering, frankly, rather idealistic…I don’t really think it adequately addresses the devastating losses some people experience. Pope John Paul II wrote an interesting letter of human suffering called Salvifici Doloris in 1984, it is here:
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/apost_letters/documents/hf_jp-ii_apl_11021984_salvifici-doloris_en.html
The argument seems to be that by suffering we unite ourselves to Christ, and that the reason suffering exists is "to release love, in order to give birth to works of love towards neighbour, in order to transform the whole of human civilization into a “civilization of love”. Again, this is a very noble sentiment, but I wonder how often this really happens when someone experiences deep loss (such as the loss of our unborn children). I can speak of my own case. The deaths of our children led to my wife’s mental breakdown, and entry to a psychiatric hospital…it literally drove her mad.
I suppose it did draw us closer together as a couple by the end of it all, but after thinking on it a long time, I can’t really see any way it helped my neighbour, or contributed to love in the world. If anything, it made me more pessimistic, I think; less charitable, less optimistic, less helpful. To this day, I feel like an outsider in the Church…every week at Mass we are surrounded by families with children, and everything…and I mean everything…is couched in the model of father and son, mother and child. We are “matter out of place”, but we have to endure, because there’s nowhere else to go.
If this view of suffering and pain is true, then the more suffering you endure, the more love you will give to your neighbour, and the more you will build a loving civilization. So I thought about those that endure epic collective suffering…the Jews of the Holocaust, say, or the Irish Great Hunger, the Medieval Black Death, or the Ukrainian Holdomor. I can’t imagine applying such a “civilization of love” model to their cases; it seems too horrible to even contemplate. I think the true test is to say to ourselves, would we tell them their suffering was worthwhile or noble, because it helped them to become more loving, or gave them grace, or brought them together, or contributed love to the world? And if not, why not?
It may well be that John Paul II is writing an ideal treatise for an ideal world. But the experience of my senses tell me that I live in a Hobbesian world where life is frequently solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short, and frankly, I could use a more practical guide for the real world we have no choice but to live in. Maybe it has been already written, I just haven’t seen it yet. I hope adoption works for you; it’s impossible for me.
Jacques