Rachel weeps for her children, refusing to be comforted, for they are dead.
Matthew 2:16-18, New Living Translation
Rachel was an early biblical character who died giving birth to her second son. She was buried by the road to Bethlehem. Bethlehem would later become the birth location for a king, according to Matthew’s gospel.
And Herod, the jealous and frightened ruler at the time, sent his soldiers to kill all the male infants and toddlers near Bethlehem to remove this new threat.
One cannot imagine the kind of imperishable grief such an act would produce on a vulnerable population.
Mothers who grieve
This story is part of the birth narrative of Jesus. When was the last time you heard a preacher talk about this trauma in connection with the nativity story?
It seems to me that mothers who grieve their children appear easily overlooked.
The world is full of Rachels who weep disconsolately for their deceased children. My friend Joan just lost her daughter to diabetes.
Opioid epidemic
With the current opioid epidemic, mothers who are cancer patients need to be wary. I was told in 2011 to “stay ahead of the pain,” and was sent home with a month’s supply of what I now realize were heroin pills.
Recently I talked with a cancer survivor who also had leftover opioids and a teenaged son at home. I urged her to get a digital lockbox or return the pills to a pharmacy.
Even if her son doesn’t find or use them, a friend of his might. Then the treacherous slide into heroin overdose begins.
If I ever doubt myself as a mother…
If I ever doubt myself as a mother fighting for her children, all I have to do is look at this Mother’s Day card my deceased son made for me about ten years ago. I’m seen as firm with my words and my sword… with a kind smile on my face, all centered in a heart glowing with love.
I’m hardly alone. Even my son’s memorial garden was just visited again by Rachel’s weeping.
A mother bird in the sweet gum tree had fought valiantly for her eggs, evidenced by the circle of feathers; but her efforts simply weren’t enough.
The nest fell to the grass and her babies were hungrily consumed.
Mother’s Day
Mother’s Day is approaching. Ugh. For me, and for perhaps hundreds of thousands of mothers, this time on the calendar is a terrible reminder of broken hearts and empty arms.
Despite all we do, sometimes we still lose our children. Some mothers lose their only children—I know two such women who lost theirs to heroin. I have heard of one woman who lost all three of her children to heroin overdoses.
Stigma of death to drugs
Losing your children is bad enough. Add on the stigma of death to drugs and you have an unfathomable nightmare.
I am most fortunate that one of my brothers will be here and we will spend the day making and eating delicious meals our mother made when we were growing up—a time of innocence. My younger son will get to indulge with us. (He loves to tell me there’s no food in my house.) Foods I typically now avoid, yet that give comfort and solace to an empty heart. Corn fritters, hamburger pie, cheesecake, springerle.
I’ll still be weeping for my child, as I do nearly every day, yet with social support I also will have some consolation.
Easing your Grieving:
Mothers fight for their offspring, though not always successfully. Many of these mothers are single. It can be such a lonely time, especially with the isolation that can come from losing a child to drugs.
On Mother’s Day, please pray for or send positive intentions to the Rachels everywhere. Those who have suffered heavy losses need comfort and love—a kind word, a simple text, a card—something to let them know they are not entirely alone.