Bella's Gift

Read Bella's Gift Online

Authors: Rick Santorum

Tags: #ebook

PRAISE FOR
Bella’s Gift

“Life takes sudden turns. The horizon brings unexpected storms. The road we walk is prone to go from smooth to rocky in a matter of steps. No one is spared the difficult path. Rick and Karen Santorum weren’t. The birth of their daughter Bella was a birth into a life they never asked to enter. Their faith was tested, their futures were rerouted. And, as a result of it all, they are different people. You know the Santorums as public figures in the halls of Congress and on the trails of a presidential campaign. You are about to know them as parents of a special girl. Their struggles, fears, faith, and fortitude—it’s all in these pages. I urge you to read this book. Life takes sudden turns for all of us. And we need wisdom from a family who has kept their balance and stayed on the road.”

— Max Lucado, pastor and bestselling author of
Before Amen

“We love the Santorum family and the way they love children like God loves children. Rick championed the bill to end partial birth abortion in America. The Santorum family has tirelessly fought to return our nation back to the Christian values our country was founded upon.
Bella’s Gift
will inspire families and marriages to draw close to God through the joys and the hard times of life.”

— Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, parents on TLC’s
19 Kids & Counting

“I have gotten to know Rick, Karen, and their family really, really well over the years. This book is a love story from two parents who walk the walk as husband and wife, father and mother. In typical Santorum style, they pull no punches, but they will also pull at your heart and your soul.”

— Sean Hannity, television and radio host, author, and political commentator

“One of the joys of being alive is to see love in action and the indelible mark it leaves on the world. Karen and Rick Santorum have written the kind of extraordinary book about their daughter with special needs that moves the heart and stays in the memory.”

— Archbishop Charles Chaput

“The radiant truth about special-needs children, such as the Santorums’ Bella, is that they give to those around them something that we all need. This gift, that suffuses every page of this marvelous book, is the reminder that every life is sanctified by the capacity to receive and respond to love.”

— George F. Will, syndicated columnist

“Bella’s father was a Fox News Contributor so I have known about this little child since the day she was born. She is nothing short of amazing—she has beaten all odds! This book is a touching love story about how this very challenged child enriched her family . . . and anyone who meets her. You will be enriched—and inspired—by reading her story.”

— Greta Van Susteren, Fox News Channel personality


Bella’s Gift
is a must read. I’ve had the privilege of enjoying family dinners at the Santorum’s home with the entire family, including Bella. I’ve witnessed the love that she has for her family and they for her. Bella’s story reminds us that love requires sacrifice, an idea that is becoming increasingly lost in our selfish society. Read it. You’ll be moved, inspired, and encouraged by the story of this little girl and her heroic family.”

— Mark Levin, lawyer, author, and host of
The Mark Levin Show

“Bella Santorum’s story is one that all medical professionals should read and profit from. Her and her family’s struggle, besides being inspiring, is also medically enlightening. Too many members of her medical team assumed that her situation was hopeless. This was not so much from a lack of caring as it was a lack of knowing. A detailed, careful reading of the medical literature on children with Trisomy 18 reveals that these children do not have the dismal outcomes that some so-called experts claim. In rare disorders like Bella’s, there really are no experts. The ideal professional will yearn to become the expert, seek the truth, know the facts, and assess the entire situation. He or she needs to know in detail all about the child, the medical condition, and the family situation. Only then is one able to really offer good care. Unfortunately, the tendency to ‘write off’ children like Bella is all too common in modern American medicine with its bottom line, dollars and cents, mentality. Hopefully this book will help to change some of that.”

— Michael G. Lamb M.D. and Kathleen G. Lamb M.D.

 

 

© 2015 by Rick Santorum and Karen Santorum

All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Nelson Books, an imprint of Thomas Nelson. Nelson Books and Thomas Nelson are registered trademarks of HarperCollins Christian Publishing, Inc.

Thomas Nelson titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].

Scripture quotations are taken from REVISED STANDARD VERSION Bible, Catholic Edition. © 1965 and 1966 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission.

“Welcome to Holland” ©1987 by Emily Perl Kingsley. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of the author.

Interior page design by Walter Petrie.

Photo insert: Photos on opening and closing pages are courtesy “Timeless Portraits by Liz,” Sewickley, PA.

ISBN 978-0-7180-2196-2 (eBook)

Library of Congress Control Number: 2014947431

ISBN 978-0-7180-2195-5

15 16 17 18 19 RRD 6 5 4 3 2 1

To Bella’s siblings Elizabeth, John, Daniel, Sarah Maria, Peter, and Patrick: Thank you for making Bella’s life so beautiful, joyful, and miraculous. We love you all! Thank you for making our lives complete.
To all the parents raising special-needs children. You are a light in the world and your love inspires us. We pray for you every day.
To Bella’s doctors, the ones who never referred to her as having a diagnosis that was “lethal” or “incompatible with life”: Thank you for giving her a chance. You are the gold standard for the medical profession.

CONTENTS

Foreword
Introduction
1. Love Is a Leap of Faith
2. Love Necessitates Trust
3. Love Through Pain
4. Love Engages the Will
5. Love Through Changes
6. Love Is Persistent
7. Love Is Heroic
8. Love Implies Sacrifice
9. Love Obligates Knowledge of the Beloved
10. Love Is Unconditional
11. Love Is Patient
12. Love Requires Vulnerability
13. Love Unifies
14. Love Encourages Selflessness
15. Love Begets Peace
16. Love Chooses Joy
17. Love Gives Purpose
18. Love Brings Hope
A Mother’s Note of Encouragement
A Father’s Note of Encouragement
Acknowledgments
Notes
Names and Captions for Photo Insert
About the Authors
Photos

 

 

The L
ORD
is my shepherd, I shall not want;
he makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters;
he restores my soul.
He leads me in paths of righteousness
for His name’s sake.
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death,
I fear no evil;
for thou art with me;
thy rod and thy staff,
they comfort me.
Thou preparest a table before me
in the presence of my enemies;
thou anointest my head with oil,
my cup overflows.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me
all the days of my life;
And I shall dwell in the house of the L
ORD
for ever.

—P
SALM
23

FOREWORD


Michael W. Smith

O
bserving a friend or a loved one caring for a special-needs child can be bittersweet. Bitter—because of the pain, stress, and emotional weight they carry; sweet—because of the unconditional love exhibited by families caring for a child who cannot care for himself or herself.

My wife, Debbie, and I have been privileged to view firsthand both aspects of this mystery. We’ve witnessed the tension, but we have also seen a marvelous example of selfless giving as we have observed Rick and Karen Santorum care for Bella, their
beautiful
child born with Trisomy 18. Most babies born with T-18 do not survive more than a few hours or days. But, despite the doctor’s dire predictions that Bella did not have a chance, the Santorums refused to give up on her—and Bella refused to give up on
life!

I am a fan of the Santorum family. It’s not too much to say that I regard them as heroes. As parents, Debbie and I share similar values with Rick and Karen. We share a sincere desire to instill in our children a foundational faith in God, love of family, and love for our country.

I’ve known the Santorum family since Rick served with distinction as a US Senator from Pennsylvania. I have appreciated his courageous stands on important issues, but most of all, I have been moved by Rick’s love for his family. Our friendship deepened and solidified in October 2006, when I was invited to speak at a memorial service following the tragic shootings at a one-room Amish schoolhouse in West Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania.

Rick was in the middle of his senatorial reelection campaign. He canceled his scheduled rallies and campaign stops to attend the memorial service. Out of respect for the families—and not wanting his presence to have any political overtones—Rick simply sat in the crowd with the other mourners. He supported me that day in a powerful way, for which I will always be grateful.

So when I heard about Bella, I wanted to be there for my friends. I wanted to tell Rick and Karen and the kids that I understood what they were going through, but such words sounded hollow. I’m not sure that anyone can truly understand the overload of emotions that parents of special-needs children experience unless you have been there.

Having a special-needs child is not merely like tending to a child sick with the flu, who, after a few days of rest, medication, and TLC, will feel better. Barring a miracle, Bella’s condition will not improve until she gets to heaven. The Santorums know and accept that truth. It would be easy for other family members to become jealous or feel slighted simply because Bella requires so much of Mom and Dad’s time and energy. But the entire family pitches in to help. They realize they will be caring for Bella’s most basic needs every day of her life, for as long as she lives. Yet they are happy to do so. Rick, Karen, and the kids know that
love
is spelled T-I-M-E.

Other books

Though Waters Roar by Lynn Austin
Fallen by Stacy Claflin
Loving Cara by Kristen Proby
A Certain Kind of Hero by Kathleen Eagle
Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
South Phoenix Rules by Jon Talton