
They actually composed a song simply for ValJean to sing in the movie that was not in the Musical. It was to express this "sudden" way of becoming a father. When I saw it in the theaters, I cried because I know this was how so many adoptive parents felt, but it was also how I felt when I had not only my birth son, but my own two (soon-to-be-three) children with my husband.
Suddenly I see
Suddenly it starts
Can two anxious hearts beat as one?
Yesterday I was alone
Today you walk beside me
Something still unclear
Something not yet here has begun.
Suddenly the world
Seems a different place
Somehow full of grace and delight.
How was I to know that so much hope was held inside me?
What has passed is gone
Now we journey on through the night
How was I to know at last that happiness can come so fast?
Trusting me the way you do
I’m so afraid of failing you
Just a child who cannot know that danger follows where I go
There are shadows everywhere
And memories I cannot share
Nevermore alone
Nevermore apart
You have warmed my heart like the sun.
You have brought the gift of life
And love so long denied me.
Suddenly I see
What I could not see
Something suddenly
Has begun.
Isn't it just beautiful? It just makes me have goosebumps every time I hear it. Its beautiful! I know that personally, as a birth mother, the line that hit me the most was "Trusting me the way you do, I'm so afraid of failing you". While pregnant, and not sure what I would decide - adoption or parenting - I always felt that way, that I was so afraid of failing my unborn child. Any parent can tell you that they feel the same way about the children they parent (especially first time parents and I know I constantly feel that way even now), but it was even worse while pregnant and alone and deciding the fate of my child. I could not fail him. He trusted me to do the right thing, and I could not fail him. I can imagine how a lot of adoptive parents must feel, having a child entrusted to them, how they must feel about "not failing" their birth mothers and their adoptive children. What a huge weight to bear that must be.
And The R House definitely hits it right on the nail when they said
"But, I was not prepared for Eponine’s line, “He was never mine to lose.”That line hit me like a ton of bricks and I thought about that baby we held for 3 days before we went home with his mama."
Yes, you guys have got that right. It hit me hard in the theaters too. Being a birth mother, I held my son for 1.5 days before he went home with his adoptive parents. But he was never mine to lose - he always belonged with them and I believe that with all my heart. It doesn't mean it doesn't hurt though, and I still feel like a part of him will always be mine in my heart. But he is theirs and I have no doubt about that. "He was never mine to lose". He was always theirs.
Ps. I LOVE Hugh Jackman hehe. And listening to him sing is awesome for me!
Beautiful post! Although I have never been directly affected by adoption I am always amazed at the generosity and love that is involved with placing a child for both the birthmother and the adoptive family. Raising a child is truly an act of service and love.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the shout out!!! xoxoxoxoxox
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