For more than three decades, I lived with the silent ache of a woman the world calls “barren.”
I married my first husband at 23, full of dreams and hope. Year after year passed without a child. We tried hospitals, injections, expensive specialists… but my womb stayed empty.
The worst pain wasn’t the needles or the bills. It was the whispers. The neighbors who said I was cursed. The in-laws who told my husband to “find a real woman.”
He died suddenly when I was 38. And with him went my last fragile hope of being a mother.
I lived like a shell after that burying myself in work, avoiding baby showers, pretending I didn’t care. But every Mother’s Day was a wound ripped open. I remember crying into my pillow at night, begging God for just one child, even if it came late.
Then, in my late 40s, when I had given up completely, I met Joseph, a widower. He was kind, steady, a man who carried his own grief. We married quietly, both of us resigned to a future without children.
But the ache never really left.
One day a friend who had walked a similar road said to me, almost in a whisper:
“I know someone who can help. Go see Dr Bokko. Sometimes it’s not just biology… sometimes it’s a barrier you can’t see.”
I resisted at first. I was embarrassed. I thought, “At 50, my time is over.”
But that night I knelt by my bed and sobbed, “God, if there is still a way, show me.”
The next week, I sat across from Dr Bokko. I expected empty promises, but he only listened quietly. Then he said:
“Mama, there are wounds you’ve carried for years. There are doors that were closed over your life. We will pray. We will cleanse. We will heal what has been blocked.” Read more.






