Friday, September 27, 2013

Putting Family First


This post is from guest contributor David Staples, Co-Founder of Defender Ministries and Stay-At-Home-Dad.

In May of 2009 I changed my career.  My wife started attending medical school at Florida State University, so I became a full-time stay-at-home dad.  You will hear many different opinions about that decision online.  You have the economic arguments of the intelligence of having one parent staying at home.  There are the social debates about the shifting gender-balance in the workforce.  Various churches and pastors have offered up their beliefs on the rightness or wrongness of a man “relinquishing” his position as primary breadwinner.  Even the government has statements regarding employment status for men and women who stay home.  The way I see it, though, is not that I dropped out of the workforce.  I didn’t retire.  I am not unemployed.  My full-time job is now stay-at-home parent.  I still have two other paid jobs that I do in the hours my children are at school, or after my wife gets home.  I help out with the local Baptist university ministry.  I write a lot.  I keep up with the house, the cooking, the bills, the homework, the appointments, and anything else that crosses my path.  And I am more busy, and more tired, than I have ever been in my life.

For our family, this was the right choice.  We prayed countless hours about the choice.  We looked at multiple options.  We consulted Godly, wonderful people we respected.  We examined every possible other choice, to make sure this was not a move out of stubbornness.  Then we acted on it.  The fact of the matter is that I believe that my wife was created and called to be a doctor.  It is not like she woke up one day and said, “I really hate staying home.  I want to be important.  I want to be a doctor.”  This was a dream she had cultivated since she was in elementary school.  She entered college with this as her plan.  Truth be told, the first hesitations she had about this did not come through a Bible study or a prayer meeting.  They came from a discussion with me once we were a couple where I didn’t like her life goal.  She spent many years trying to find another option.  She stayed home with our babies, going to school to finish her degree as she was able. 

The light dawned to me back when our church was going through 40 Days of Purpose.  I was teaching the college class there and working through the material with them.  I prayed a lot that God would give me a purpose, a ministry.  I was an ordained minister who deeply loved college students.  I had run a successful college ministry on church staff for years before leaving the church where it was housed.  From that point, I had not been able to “break back in” to the church ministry world.  I had sold furniture and served as a substitute teacher.  I did freelance graphic design and publication layout.  And I worked at a church as their graphic designer and publication director.  But I wasn’t a minister professionally.  I wanted to get back to that place.  I prayed constantly about that.  During that class, it was a huge burden on me.  After teaching one Sunday, I got in my car.  It felt like God smacked me in the head and said, “So you want Me to give you YOUR purpose while you refuse to let your wife pursue HERS?”  I called her that day and asked what we needed to do for her to move forward.  There were some bumps and diversions - more praying and looking for other ways to meet that purpose without the daunting task of medical school.  But it kept coming back to the fact that Heather was supposed to be a doctor.

She jumped into the challenging world of pre-med with two children.  Her grades were higher than ever, because she was disciplined and committed to the goal.  She routinely put her classmates to shame with her grades.  She studied for the MCAT while nursing our third child.  The day she took her MCAT was the first time that child was ever away from her for more than six hours.  She got accepted to FSU and we moved to Tallahassee.  And she dove into her classes with an even stronger dedication and commitment.  She would help put our kids to bed, especially the youngest, while studying for tests.  Several times we had to stay up all night with a sick or uncooperative child the night before a major exam.  As the schooling continued, it became apparent to everyone that my wife was not just a doctor - she was a freaking good doctor.  She routinely helped her younger classmates (the ones unencumbered by crying toddlers during exam study sessions) with their personal and academic lives.  I counted about a dozen students who at some point came up to me to say the “wouldn’t have made it through med school” without her.  She was inducted into multiple honor societies.  She served as an officer of several organizations.  She organized health fairs, went to conferences, and impressed doctors everywhere.

One doctor told her that she was so good as a third year, he would send his own children to her.  (She still had two years of med school and three years of residency left at that point.)  Another said he would have hired her as a fourth year med student, due to her skill and patient care.  An area pulmonolgist took her under his wing and mentored her, recognizing she had a special talent for that difficult speciality.  As she decided to go into pediatrics, she also kept leaning towards pulmonology.  That meant that the four years and med school and three years of residency also would now include four years of fellowships.  But, that is where she is supposed to be.  It is obvious to everyone. 

Pulmonologists have a tough job.  They deal with kids with asthma and respiratory issues.  But most of their work involves children with Cystic Fibrosis.  I’m not a doctor, so I don’t get all of the details.  But CF is a nasty disease.  There really isn’t a cure.  You can treat it to some extent.  But it requires constant upkeep and vigilance. A person with CF spends a lot of time at the doctor and a lot of time in the hospital.  The life expectancy for a CF patient is 37.  So it is a very hard field to be a part of.  Being able to go to a CF clinic is vital.  These clinics are not abundant.  Patients may have to travel for hours to see a doctor, especially in rural areas.  This field is in a “critical shortage” according to the government.  Choosing pulmonology is not a glamor gig.

But that is where my wife is headed.  It seems like the path continues to open wide in front of her.  Every step of her education has brought her more people who invest in her dream.  Just the other day, two doctors at her residency went above and beyond to offer her training.  She’s going to a CF conference in October, through a CF grant.  She has multiple doctors who have offered to vouch for her when it comes to fellowships.  She is in line to present a study at the national conference next year.  Last night at dinner, she was still stressing about the toll this decision will take on us as a family.  I told her that we will go anywhere to make this work.  I know that she is supposed to do this.  And she is going to make a difference in so many lives.  I said, “What if you discover some kind of treatment that changes the lives of millions of CF kids?  How could we say no to that?”  The lesson about putting other people first has been invaluable when raising our kids.  They know that mommy is doing this because people are that important.
But they also know that daddy is doing what he is doing because THEY are that important.  I am home so that my wife can pursue her calling.  And I am home so my children have a stable home life.  My kids know how important they are.  They see it whenever they look over on the couch and see me working on lesson plans on my laptop instead of in an office.  They know it when I am sitting home with them on a Friday night instead of going to watch a movie with friends.  They recognize it when I turn off a football game so we can watch a video together. 

I changed my career that day in 2009.  I became an investment banker.  Instead of working the stocks, I invest full time in the future of my children, my wife, and the countless thousands of people those four individuals will touch over the years.  When I spent all that time praying for a full-time ministry, I never realized it would be in my own house with my own family.  Sure, I still have the desire to make my own impact on the world - through teaching, writing, something.  But for right now, this is what I am called to do.  A friend asked me a few months back what ministry I would do if I had all the money in the world to do it.  And I honestly answered him, “I can’t even think about that.  Right now, my job is my family.  As long as those kids are in school, that is my ministry.  After that, well, I will figure it out.”  Having worked in various forms of ministry for the last 17 years, I can truthfully say, this one beats all the others hands down.

Join the cause and help Elevate Dads everywhere Facebook.com/ElevateDads




No comments:

Post a Comment