Freshman Brittanie Blume recites her speech for Inquiry class in AC321 Friday. Blume suppressed her pre-speech jitters just 30 minutes before videotaping her presentation. “I want this to be good and look like I know what I’m talking about,” Blume said. | Photo by Sara Dvorak.

A freshman psychology major and a freshman mom

Brittanie Blume’s journey of being a full-time student and a full-time parent.

Sara Dvorak
ROYAL REPORT
Published in
4 min readDec 10, 2018

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By Sara Dvorak | Clarion Correspondent

Brittanie Blume dropped two pregnancy tests and a Butterfinger peanut butter cup on the conveyor belt. She teetered in line at the new Dollar General in Grantsburg, WI; since no one she knew worked there, no one would be in on the secret. She threw the Butterfinger on the conveyor belt as an afterthought; that way, if anyone asked, she went to the store to get some chocolate and nothing else.

She got into her black 2007 Dodge Charger. Her hands shook as she drove exactly one mile to her house. Her sister was the only one home and was asleep on the charcoal couch.

“Ok, I’m fine,” Blume thought.

She set her timer for 10 minutes and perched on the edge of the folded down toilet seat. Her mind was as empty as a church on a Monday morning.

Her iPhone timer reverberated off of the cream bathroom walls with the radar melody.

Her hands tingled as she peeked at the two blue plus signs.

Her boyfriend demanded for her to get an abortion.

“Do I lose my boyfriend or do I lose my baby?” Blume thought.

She clutched her stomach and couldn’t fathom killing another human. Her human.

From that day forward, Adelynn Mae always came first.

This is a story about Brittanie Blume and her determination to defy the odds of being a teenage mother and make a life worth living for her daughter and herself.

Blume drives one hour and 10 minutes to school for her four Monday, Wednesday, and Friday classes. The drive is usually filled with audio textbooks to “kill two birds with one stone.” Blume calls this and pulling herself away from Adelynn only three days a week to work out for an hour her “me time.”

Psychology major Brittanie Blume promptly begins her homework at 9:50 a.m. Friday. Blume could not waste the only time she had to do homework in between classes. “I have no choice,” Blume said. | Photo by Sara Dvorak.

She does her homework during her break from 9:50 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and attempts to tackle it all during those two hours and 40 minutes. Whenever she gets sidetracked, she thinks about how it will effect Adelynn.

“Putting myself being a mom first … that’s my first priority in everything I do,” Blume said.

Delia Labatt, a friend from high school, attests to Blume’s motivation.

“I see how much she loves her little girl and it inspires me to find that kind of love,” Labatt said. “Ever since she had Addy, Britt’s whole life has been about her baby and I think that with every decision Britt makes, she thinks about how it will affect Adelynn.”

Blume has made heartbreaking decisions for her daughter.

Like the time she brought Adelynn to the Emergency Room at 11 p.m. because her acid reflux caused choking sounds. The doctor told her it was normal, but Blume wasn’t satisfied with that answer. She took an ambulance to Children’s Hospital at 2 a.m. because of Adelynn’s episode.

“There wasn’t anything I could do to help her,” Blume said.

Blume slept two hours during that 40 hour timeframe. She refused to leave until the hospital put her in an acid reflux class to spell out how to deal with the episodes and clarify preventative measures.

“This baby will be used to glorify God.” — Brittanie Blume, 19

Blume forfeited the rest of her teenage years for the sake of her daughter.

Her social life has been diminished to going out with friends every other weekend for an hour or two at a time.

Freshman Brittanie Blume spruces up her face before her presentation. Blume eyeballed her face via her Apple laptops built in camera. “I can’t look oily and gross when I do this, a lot of people will see it,” Blume said. | Photo by Sara Dvorak.

“She sacrifices hanging out with friends because she wants to spend time with [Addy],” Brittanie’s mother, Shannon Blume said.

85 percent of her paychecks go towards Adelynn while the other 15 percent is used to buy food for her family. Blume’s mom admires her selflessness for Adelynn as she buys necessities for her daughter without other support.

It started from a one dollar pregnancy test that turned into a priceless gift.

“This baby will be used to glorify God,” Blume said.

Now she goes to Dollar General with Adelynn on her right hip. She drops baby formula on the conveyor belt and is proud of the family they’re becoming.

Pie Chart | Blume’s Paycheck ($275 every two weeks)

$110/275: Daycare

$50/275: Gas

$30/275: Formula

$10/275: Wipes

$30/275: Diapers

$40/275: Groceries

$5/275: Fun money

Bio Box | Blume’s Hopes and Dreams

Graduate School

Become a Therapist for Childhood Development

Run Track in College

Get Married and Have a Family

Adelynn becomes involved in sports

Have Adelynn attend the same high school that Brittanie attended

Blume’s daily timeline| Blume’s schedule

Getting ready/Getting Addy ready

Driving

Classes

Homework

Doctors appointments

Working

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