When Your Loss Doesn't Come with a Casserole

Some losses come with a casserole and a card. Others you carry alone because the world doesn't have a name for them. In this episode, discover what Psalm 34:18 says about which broken hearts God draws close to.
Ryan Cole and his wife Kelsi had the nursery ready and the bags packed when they lost their son Whitson at 36 weeks. After he died, the support poured in for Kelsi. Meals arrived and messages filled the mailbox. People sat with her through the worst days. That's what the community of faith does when a mother loses a baby, and the people around them did it well.
Nobody called Ryan.
He said later that men are the overlooked partners in pregnancy loss. The grief is present, the loss is his, but nobody has built a category for it. The world doesn't have a script for that conversation, so most men carry it in silence. By the time Ryan started talking publicly about what he and Kelsi had been through, they had lost five pregnancies. He co-founded Foreknown Ministries so other fathers wouldn't have to carry what he carried alone.
Ryan's story opens an episode about something most of us have experienced but rarely have a name for: the loss that doesn't come with a casserole.
Some grief the world knows how to receive. Someone dies after a long illness, the church brings food, the cards arrive. People ask how you're doing for weeks. But there's another category that comes with none of that. The miscarriage early enough that nobody knew you were pregnant. The friendship that ended without explanation and the dream you let go of without telling anyone. The loss is yours, and the world doesn't have a name for it, so you carry it alone.
Psalm 34:18 says the LORD is close to the brokenhearted. It leaves the category blank. Your name is already on that list, regardless of whether anyone else knew to bring a casserole.
Katharine and I lost a granddaughter at full term. Our daughter and son-in-law named her Hope. I held her lifeless little body, and I wasn't ashamed to cry. That loss didn't fit a neat category either. Grandparents aren't always who people think to call. But the grief was there, and it was ours.
Through Ryan's story and Psalm 34:18, this episode stays close to that grief and names it before asking anything of the person carrying it.
BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER:
- Why unrecognized grief tends to go underground when there's no one to bring it to, and what it does when it stays there
- What Psalm 34:18 says about which kind of broken heart God draws close to, and why the category doesn't matter
- One specific thing you can do today with the loss you've been carrying without a name
The size of your loss is not determined by whether the people around you recognized it. God sees it. And He is close.
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Ryan Cole and his wife Kelsey were days away from
Speak:bringing their son, Whitson, home when they lost him. The
Speak:nursery was ready and the bags were packed, with the car seat
Speak:already waiting in the back. At 36 weeks, everything stopped.
Speak:Whitson never came home. It wasn't their only loss. By the
Speak:time Ryan started talking publicly about what they had
Speak:been through, he and Kelsey had walked through five pregnancies
Speak:that ended nearly the same way. After each one, the support
Speak:showed up for Kelsey. Meals arrived at the door, messages
Speak:filled the mailbox, and people called to check on her and sat
Speak:with her through the hardest days. That's what you do when a
Speak:mother loses a baby, and the people around them did it well.
Speak:But nobody called Ryan. He said later that men are the
Speak:overlooked partners in pregnancy loss. The grief is present, and
Speak:the loss is his, and it's something felt strongly, but
Speak:nobody has built a category for it. Nobody shows up with a
Speak:casserole for the father, and the world doesn't have a script
Speak:for that conversation. So most men carry what they're carrying
Speak:in silence, assuming that what they feel doesn't count the same
Speak:way. Ryan eventually co-founded Four Known Ministries to make
Speak:sure other fathers didn't have to do what he had done. We'll
Speak:come back to what he said about that. But
Speak:first, welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm
Speak:Bart Leger. Catherine and I lost a granddaughter at full term.
Speak:Our daughter and son-in-law named her Hope. And I'm glad I
Speak:got to hold her. I held a lifeless little body that should
Speak:have come home with them, and I wasn't ashamed to cry, I'll tell
Speak:you. That loss didn't come with so much of a category either.
Speak:Grandparents are always who people think to call, but the
Speak:grief was there, and we felt it very strongly. I tell you that
Speak:because today's episode is about the losses that don't come with
Speak:a casserole. Some grief the world knows how to receive.
Speak:Someone dies after a long illness, and the church brings
Speak:food and the cards arrive. People ask how you're doing for
Speak:weeks afterward, and that's a good thing. The community of
Speak:faith doing what it's supposed to do. But there's another
Speak:category of grief that doesn't always come with any of that.
Speak:The miscarriage early enough that nobody knows you were
Speak:pregnant. The friendship that ended without explanation. And
Speak:the dream you let go without telling anyone. It's a real loss,
Speak:and the world doesn't necessarily have a name or a
Speak:category for it, so you carry it alone. Here's what Psalm 34, 18
Speak:says.
Speak:Grief doesn't sort it out itself by who noticed. Because the loss
Speak:is the loss. What you felt when that friendship ended was grief.
Speak:What you felt when the pregnancy was over before anyone else knew
Speak:was grief. And God sees it as such, whether or not the people
Speak:around you did. I've sat with people who couldn't explain why
Speak:they were grieving at all, because the loss didn't fit any
Speak:category the world would understand. A woman who mourned
Speak:the end of a season of ministry that nobody else had noticed. A
Speak:man who carried the weight of a miscarriage. Some told him to
Speak:just move past. Someone who grieved a version of their life
Speak:they had given up so long ago, They felt foolish bringing it up.
Speak:Every one of those losses counted. God was close to every
Speak:one of those people, too. Unrecognized grief has a way of
Speak:going underground when there's no one to bring it to. And it
Speak:doesn't stay there. I will tell you that. It comes out as
Speak:sometimes distance from others or maybe as a bitterness that
Speak:surprises you. Bring it to God specifically. And even say it
Speak:out loud. And sometimes we can't find the words for it. That's
Speak:what the Holy Spirit's for. He brings prayers that we can't
Speak:even put into words. He brings it to God. And sometimes, even
Speak:when we feel foolish saying it, just tell God what you're
Speak:feeling. Because he already knows. And he's already close to
Speak:you if you're one of his. Psalm 34 says so. Now, let's get back
Speak:to Ryan. Ryan described the experience of grieving a child
Speak:as a father this way. The loss is yours, and it's also
Speak:invisible to almost everyone around you. He was grateful for
Speak:the people who brought the casseroles. But he noticed that
Speak:when the door closed at the end of the night and everyone went
Speak:home, he was standing in the same house with the same loss,
Speak:and nobody had asked him a single question how he was doing.
Speak:God doesn't do that to us. Psalm 34, 18 says he's close to the
Speak:brokenhearted. And it doesn't add a footnote about what kind
Speak:of broken heart qualifies. Because Ryan's grief counted. It
Speak:qualified. And so does yours, whatever shape it comes in. Ryan
Speak:helped build foreknown ministries out of that
Speak:experience so that other fathers in pregnancy loss would find
Speak:someone who understood in a language for what they were
Speak:carrying. He took the thing nobody had a name for, and he
Speak:built a language for others. Sometimes the unrecognized loss
Speak:stays private, and you just need God to hold it with you. And
Speak:that's enough. Bring it to him today, whatever it is. Here's
Speak:today's challenge. Name the loss you've been carrying without a
Speak:category. Say it to God specifically today. And tell him
Speak:what it was and what it cost you.
Speak:Lord, you see the losses the world doesn't give a name to,
Speak:and you see the grief nobody brought a casserole for. Please
Speak:draw close to the ones carrying those things today. Let them
Speak:trust that your closeness doesn't depend on whether anyone
Speak:else noticed. You see every broken and you're already near.
Speak:In Jesus' name, amen. If this episode touched you or has
Speak:encouraged you, I'd love to hear from you. You can leave me a
Speak:voicemail at dailydevotionsforbusylives.com
Speak:slash voicemail, and it would be an honor to pray for you by name.
Speak:Thanks for joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives.
Speak:Remember, the size of your loss is not determined by whether the
Speak:people around you recognize it, because God sees it, and He's
Speak:close to you. Come back next time for more encouragement to
Speak:help you live grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless,
Speak:and have a great day.




