“What if the ‘no’ you’ve been mourning was actually a shield of protection?”
In this week’s episode of the Sisters in Loss podcast, we sit down with Angie Booker—an incredibly gifted writer, marketing strategist, and public advocate for infertility whose work masterfully bridges professional storytelling with raw, lived experience.
Angie’s path to motherhood began nearly a decade ago and was defined by years of silent unraveling. She navigated the heartbreak of infertility, failed IVF cycles, and the heavy grief of a life she imagined slowly slipping away. But then, her story took an unexpected and life-altering turn.
A delayed medical diagnosis revealed that pregnancy would have been highly unsafe for Angie. Suddenly, the “no” she had spent years grieving took on a completely different shape. She began to see that her closed womb was not a failure, but a form of divine protection.
Angie eventually became a mother through the beautiful, grounding path of adoption. Today, she speaks out to help other women and families not just survive infertility, but make sense of it. She shares how she learned to live inside a story that held both heartbreak and grace, and how she allowed motherhood to expand her heart, rather than letting it be defined by how she got there.
In this episode, we discuss:
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Angie’s decade-long journey navigating infertility, failed IVF, and the silent grief of waiting.
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How a delayed medical diagnosis reframed her perspective on infertility as a form of physical protection.
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The transition from mourning a biological story to finding grounding joy in adoption.
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Integrating faith and identity when your life’s script goes completely off-course.
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The resources that kept her anchored, including Therapy for Black Girls, Fertility Ain’t Fair, and the books that guided her adoption journey.
Angie’s story is a powerful, comforting reminder for anyone sitting in a season of waiting or dealing with a closed door. It reminds us that our stories can be beautiful, even when they don’t look the way we planned.
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