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AdvocacyApril 25, 2014

Send Me a Baby Girl

By Audrey McClelland

This post is part of the Global Moms Relay. Every time you share this post, Johnson & Johnson will donate $1 (per action), up to $250,000, to the Global Moms Relay, to help improve the health and well-being of moms and kids worldwide in support of MAMA, Shot@Life, and Girl Up. Scroll to the bottom to find out more.

When I was a little girl, my Nana used to watch me while my parents went to work. I remember how I loved pulling up to her yellow house and seeing her standing at the door of the home she loved so much. It always made me feel so safe, so secure, so loved. She was genuinely happy to see me every single morning, and that kind of love impacts a child immensely. My Nana had three sons, so I think she secretly loved having a little girl to take care of… lots of dolls, lots of tea parties, lots of pink.

I remember thinking at a very young age just what a wonderful mother my Nana would have been to a little girl. She LOVED her boys more than anything in the world, but she had a very ‘girly girl’ side to her, and I only really saw that side when she was with me. I felt very special. From such a young age, this incredible bond was formed and as I grew, our bond continued to get stronger. When I headed off to college, even though my University was only 20 minutes away, I mailed her cards all the time. When I moved to New York City, I would call her on my way home from work and just gab about everything and anything. When I met the man I would eventually marry, I couldn’t wait for her to meet him and get her “stamp of approval!” I did. My Nana was just always there for me, always loving me.

Nana and Audrey

She was always there for every milestone.

When I became pregnant with my first baby, my Nana was ecstatic. She cried when I told her, tears of joy. When I found out it was a little boy, she was over-the-moon. “Oh, Audrey! A boy! You know I love my boys!”

When I became pregnant with my second son, my Nana was overjoyed for my son William. “Brothers! You’ll have brothers!”

When I became pregnant with my third son, my Nana said, “You’re just like me! A mom to three boys!”

When I became pregnant with my fourth son, my Nana thought it was just incredible. “Four boys, you know they’ll always protect their Mom!”

Nana, Audrey hospital

But I’ll never forget what she told me in the hospital after meeting my Henry, my fourth son. “You’re not ready yet for another, but next time… I think you need a girl.”

I was stunned. My Nana telling me I needed a girl? I remember saying to her, “Oh, Nana… I think we’re done with four!”

Eight weeks later my Nana passed away. August 8th, 2008.

It rocked my world. My Nana was such an important part of my life. And I just loved her so, so, so very much. I’ll never forget visiting her in the hospital a week before she passed away. She had been incredibly confused. She hadn’t been alert or ‘herself’ in a few days. I stood over her hospital bed crying and just wishing she would be OK. Out of nowhere she completely became completely alert, touched my hand and said, “Don’t cry. It’s OK. Everything’s going to be OK.”

I never heard her speak again. But I have cherished those words.

I don’t know what came over me, but in those final days of her life… I asked her, “When the time is right, Nana… send me a baby girl.”

Two weeks after she passed away, my parents called me up to tell me they had found a baby gift in her closet addressed to “Baby McClelland.” Under the tons of boy baby clothes, on the very bottom of the bag, was a pink sleepy-suit.

Fast forward four years later.

I had really given up the idea of having a fifth baby when my Henry turned three years old. I was working a ton. We had a groove going in our house. The boys were getting older. And I dare I say it, life was getting “easy.” Then Matt got sick in January 2012, and it was devastating. He was diagnosed with a GIST tumor in his abdomen, and once it was removed, he was put on a chemo pill for three years (we’re two years in). I prayed to my Nana every single night to make Matt OK. I was terrified for him. I was terrified for our family. I just wanted us all healthy.

It was during this difficult time in our life when I looked at Matt and said, “Let’s celebrate life and have another baby.”

I thought of my Nana and what I asked her before she died. Was the time right?

On October 31, 2012, I found out I was pregnant. On February 13, 2013, I found out our baby was a GIRL.

When the ultrasound technician told me it was a girl, my hands went to my face and I sobbed. Tears of joy. Tears of happiness. Tears that only my Nana understood. I looked to the heavens on that table and said, “Thank you, Nana.”

My daughter arrived on July 9th, 2013 via c-section. I named my daughter after my Nana, whose name was Florence… Victoria Florence Margaret McClelland.

My Victoria… she has a piece of my Nana in her, I know this. It’s in her eyes. It’s in her soul. It’s in her heart. My Nana sent me a beautiful gift.

This is an extract of a post that originally appeared on Mom Generations.

You share, they give: Each time you ‘like’ or share this post via the social media icons on this post or comment below, Johnson & Johnson will donate $1 (per action) up to $250,000, to improve the health and wellbeing of moms and kids worldwide through MAMA, Shot@Life, and Girl Up. Every 20 seconds a child dies from a vaccine preventable disease. $1 provides a measles or polio vaccine for a child through Shot@Life — a campaign to raise awareness, advocacy and funds to get vaccines to the children who need them most. You can also use the Donate A Photo* app and Johnson & Johnson will donate $1 when you upload a photo for Girl Up or Shot@Life, up to $100,000. You can help make a difference in seconds with the click of your mouse or snap of your smart phone. Share this post with the hashtag #GlobalMoms, and visit GlobalMomsRelay.org to learn more.

The United Nations Foundation, Johnson & Johnson, BabyCenter and The Huffington Post created the Global Moms Relay with a goal of improving the lives of women and children around the globe.

Audrey McClelland HSAudrey McClelland, a wife and mother of four boys and one girl and has become a powerful force in social media as a digital influencer, consultant, and brand ambassador/spokesperson. Nielsen Ratings named her as one of the most powerful mom’s online. Her blog, MomGenerations.com, reaches over 300,000 women each month and dishes on the latest trends and styles for all things motherhood.

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