Human Interest

After years of infertility, couple welcomes two babies a month apart

adoption, infertility, instagram

For Whitley Coxey and her husband Jarod, the path to parenthood was long and heartbreaking. Years of fertility and a miscarriage had led them to consider adoption, but once they let go of the idea of becoming pregnant, that’s when life took an exciting turn.

“[…] I took countless pills, had many procedures, had blood drawn more times than I can remember and doctor visit after doctor visit after doctor visit,” Coxey wrote in an essay for Love What Matters. “None of it worked. I was crushed. I felt like I was letting Jarrod down. I knew how much he wanted kids… and the one thing he wanted more than almost anything; I couldn’t give him.”

After two years of trying to becoming pregnant and losing one baby to miscarriage, the couple decided to adopt and began the process of preparing for a child. On January 1, 2018, they announced their adoption plans to their friends and family, and that’s when someone made a comment that would stick with Whitley.

 

“‘Once you adopt, you’ll get pregnant,'” she said they told her. “‘It happens to everyone.’ I hated that comment.

“Didn’t people realize what we had been through? How long we had tried to have a baby? They had no clue if that would happen. It hurt me so much to hear someone trivialize what we had been through and the decisions we’d had to make.”

READ: Birth mom praises open adoption: ‘All my fears were replaced with joy’

A month later, Coxey decided to stop fertility treatments. She was completely at peace with the decision and to her surprise, her husband supported it. Six months later they got the “biggest shock” of their lives. They were expecting a baby. Two months after that, the learned a birth mother had chosen them to be her son’s parents. The babies were due just three weeks apart.

 

After struggling for YEARS to have a baby, we were going to have TWO!” she wrote.

On March 22, at 36 weeks pregnant, Coxey gave birth to son Jeb after doctors induced labor due to low amniotic fluid. After three and a half weeks in the hospital, Jeb was able to go home. Just one week later, they learned the birth mother of their adoptive son was being induced.

“We thought we had a month to adjust to life with one baby before throwing another newborn into the mix,” wrote Coxey. “It turns out they had her due date wrong. Her due date was the same as mine and she was now a week PAST due. Our minds were blown.”

On April 25, the couple welcomed their second baby boy Porter through adoption.

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

#porterfranklincoxey #jebpaulcoxey #twinblings #hearttwins #adoptionrocks #TheCoxeysAdopt

A post shared by Whitley Coxey (@whitley_coxey) on

“We arrived at the hospital just 30 minutes after he arrived and were able to go back and see his birth mother,” she wrote. “She handed the baby right to us and we met our precious boy, Porter for the first time. So, so many big, happy tears.”

Coxey wants other couples experiencing infertility not to give up on their dreams of having children. She and her husband held onto hope and trusted that God had a bigger plan and she says she knows God has a plan for everyone.

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

At least Porter is asleep! #porterfranklincoxey #jebpaulcoxey #twinblings #adoptionrocks #TheCoxeysAdopt #owletbabymonitor

A post shared by Whitley Coxey (@whitley_coxey) on

Adoption is the real solution for women who feel they are unable to raise their baby, and there is no shortage of parents willing to adopt. In fact, for every baby placed for adoption, there are 36 couples eagerly waiting to adopt.

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