This Much I Know To Be True

It’s one of Oprah’s catch-phrases. This much I know to be true. Following that phrase, she expounds on some epiphany or conclusion or lesson she has learned.

There are many things I know to be true. In most of those cases, it is because of personal experience or first-hand knowledge.

I know that the bottom of the Dead Sea is very difficult to walk on because of the large salt crystals littering the bottom. (personal experience)

I know that acting uninterested at a David Copperfield show seems to ensure you will be called up on stage to help with an illusion. (personal experience)

I know that the pain of giving yourself fertility injections is nothing compared to the pain of being childless. (personal experience)

But, there are other things I cannot be sure of. I can only imagine how it must feel or be or what I would or would not do, but I don’t know for certain.

I think it would be great to have an awesome singing voice and perform for the masses. But, I don’t really know what that would be like and never will.

I can imagine that losing a parent at a young age would be incredibly painful and difficult. But, having never experienced that I don’t really know how it feels.

I can say that I would never move far away from my family, but I have never had to make that decision and pray I never will.

That’s just it. We don’t REALLY know what it’s like to experience something without really experiencing it ourselves. I can imagine how I hope I would react, what I hope I would think, how I hope I would respond all I want. But, until I walk through it myself, I really have no idea.

I have never been a very scandalous person. No huge public life dramas have played out in my life…until this past summer. We did not complete the adoption of the child we traveled to bring home. Naively, I had no idea just how scandalous this was in the eyes of some in the adoption community. In reading what many other AP’s think about disruption, it seems as if the thinking is either you bring home the child you were referred no matter what, or you are a terrible, selfish person who wishes for that child to never find a family.

I can tell you, without a doubt, that that is not the case. At. All. This much I know to be true.

Our adoption journey was pretty bumpy. But, by far, the hardest things this momma still deals with are the misconceptions people in the adoption community have regarding those who disrupt, and the hurtful comments said about “those parents.”

The sadness and shock we felt when the serious undisclosed needs became apparent was hard, but we had lots of supportive people walking us through the confusion. Discovering that we were not the best family for the child we thought was ours was hard, but we had peace about the decision, knowing it was the best for that child and us. We were simply not equipped to handle that child’s needs and knew that there would be a family out there who could meet those needs and meet them well. Facing the reality of not coming home with a child, the child who we had attached to at some level through video and pictures, after almost 4 years of being in the process was hard. But, with the peace we had in our decision, we knew that if that’s what it came down to, it would be okay. Our family, our friends, our church lifted us up in prayer; listened to us as we processed through everything that was happening; and supported the difficult decision we had to make.

However, the comments about disruption I read upon returning home, and still stumble upon as I scan adoption boards, pierce my heart and rattle me for days. I sit stunned at the broad paintbrush often used to paint all parents who go through this as cold, heartless, uneducated, and unprepared, only thinking of themselves with no thought or caring for what happens to the child. It just is not that simple. It is not like that.

The comments seem to center around the same logic:

Thoughts on Foster Care (from a 5 and 7 year old)

Paige (7 1/2)

The other day I sat my girls down to ask them a few questions about foster care to see how much they understand about what we’re doing and to get more of a idea about how they feel about it. I loved hearing what they had to say and I typed furiously while they were talking in hopes to catch every word.

What is foster care?

Paige ( 7 1/2): Foster care is when mom and dads cannot take care of their children because they are not taking care of them the way they should. Then the foster children have to go to a new house that does not have children that are in the foster care because if they go to a family that have children in the foster care then those families will not be able to take care of those other kids that were given to them in the foster care because they’re gonna be exactly how they were to their other kids that were in foster care so they have to learn how to take care of their kids and then they can be foster parents but first the foster kids that were given to them should go to parents that know how to take care of kids better. And then when the foster kids real parents are done being trained, then if they’re still bad then the foster parents that are taking care of them will adopt them and if they are not bad and ready to take care of their kids then they can take them and keep them forever, unless they get bad again.

Raegan

Raegan (5 1/2): It’s a place for kids where they find somewhere to live without their mom and dad. They might miss them but they will have a very nice mom. They might call her mom for awhile but they will have a very nice evening with them and they might get adopted or they will go back to their mom and dad OR when they live in, like I forget what it’s called, when they wait for somebody to bring them home with them well, um – can you spell

161 Airplanes from Here to There

It all started so tiny, almost as a whisper. We were driving in the car, watching the trees fly by and my daughter said,”Mama, I want to do something to help the orphans too.”

Ravenna's Idea

We were heading to Mexico in December to serve in an orphanage and had been talking about what it would be like. She thought for a few minutes and said, “Mama, I want them to have fun…how about if I make them paper airplanes and have a big party?” Then, a few minutes later, “But, Mama, they need food and medicine and Bibles too…”

Preparing

When we started this journey (officially) 10 months ago, every night, I would watch “Gotcha Day” videos on YouTube. I have watched countless videos of children meeting their parents for the first time.

As we get closer and closer to our very own Gotcha Day, I have stopped watching anything related to anyone’s Gotcha Day. They are just TOO PAINFUL to watch. I can’t help but see our G in the videos . . . and I see pain. And fear. And heartbreak.

And it hurts to watch.

We can’t wait to see our little girl’s face in person. We can’t wait to scoop her up and hold her. To see our family grow in just an instant. To call her our own. To wrap in her love . . . love she has never known, the love of a mother and a father.

The feelings of joy and happiness that S and I feel will not be shared by our daughter. She is probably pretty happy right where she is. She probably likes her crib. Her room. Her nannies. Her friends. Her food. And while every child deserves so much more than growing up in an orphanage. It is the ONLY life she has ever known.

Then, here come these two Americans. They look funny, talk funny, and smell funny.

It’s painful to think about how afraid, confused, and heartbroken she will likely be. Even if she is prepared at all, she is really too young to understand.

I’ve had dreams about Gotcha Day. I’ve seen her face through a window as we enter a government building. I have heard the facilitators say her name. I have have seen her handed to me. In every dream, she is crying. And, so am I. She looks away. She screams. She reaches for her nanny. And, I cry. Because she hurts so much.

A mother doesn’t EVER want her child feeling ANY of these feelings. While there may be many tears of joy, I am sure I am going to share tears of heartbreak with her.

How does one handle such a crazy convergence of emotions?

I’m thinking I might just want to hand her back . . . because it will ease her pain for the moment. I know. I KNOW that sounds crazy! But, what a mother wouldn’t do to ease their child’s pain even if just for a moment.

I’m not sure how to even prepare for this. I can prepare to have a baby again. Packing diapers and bottles, toys, and treats. I can be prepared for illness. I can be prepared for sleepless nights and changing stinky diapers.

All of that is easy.

I cannot seem to figure out how to be prepared for heartbreak.

I pray God will see us through. He has led us this far. He has moved mountains for G to become a part of our family. So, I must trust in Him. I pray that God helps to prepare our little G for the two (actually five) strangers that will come into her life and turn it upside down. I also pray that He will prepare this mother to help her daughter heal from the pain that IS adoption. On Gotcha Day. During our two weeks in China. The first few weeks home. And on ALL the days in our future.

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Deb Migneault

Deb has been married to her husband, Steve, for 10 years. They have been blessed with four children, ages 8, 6, 4 and 1. The littlest is still waiting for them in Henan Province, China. Deb and Steve hope to be traveling to China in February 2011 to bring their youngest blessing home to her family. You can follow their journey to China, as well as their ups, downs, giggles, tears, and chaos of their family here.

Pei’s Momma

Each week seems to bring about a new surprise in the grief and attachment area. Pei seems to be grieving a bit this past week. No trigger, just a bit sad and far away.

It is in the midst of our after-dinner routine that Pei decides to have a meltdown. I really do not think much about it. She is two and occasionally will cry and call my name . . . repeatedly. So, I lean down and ask her what is wrong. And, that is when it happened. She pulled away from me while she was still calling momma.

OUCH!

At that point I realized it was her foster mom that she was calling for not me.

I would be lying if I said that it did not hurt a little bit, but it was like a lightbulb went on in my head. She has done so well with us that I really thought that she was moving past the grief.

But I was wrong.

Since we have been home from China, we have not shown her any photos of her foster family. I thought that we should wait a bit and let her settle in a bit more. So, after this, I decided it was time. I cannot even begin to imagine what is going on in her little mind and heart. The only momma that she has ever know and loved was there one day and gone the next.

So, the next day, I pull up a photo of Pei and her foster mom. I think I held my breath until I saw her reaction. She looked at it and smiled. So, I am thinking, “Okay, you can breath now!” I pointed at Pei and said “Who is that?” and she said “Pei Pei.” Next , I pointed to the foster momma and said “Who is that?” and she answered “Momma”.

[Insert a sigh ]

I have to say it felt like someone had kicked the air out of me. But, worse than that, my heart just broke for her.

So, then I pointed to my chest and said “Who am I?” At that very moment, that little girl came over to me and wrapped her arms around my legs and sweetly said “My Momma.”

[insert a really happy sigh]

So, there you have it. My beautiful daughter has three mommas.

She has her birth mother who held and loved her for 4 days before she picked a place to leave her where she knew she would be found.

Next, she has her foster mom in China who was not afraid to love Pei, knowing that she too would have to give her away. But, despite that, she loved and cared for her like her mother.

And last, she has me, her final and forever momma. I am the one who gets to reap the benefits and sacrifices of the first two mommas. I get the greatest gift of all – Pei as my forever daughter.

So, one day, when she asks about her life story, I will tell her that she was so special that God gave her three mommas to love her.

As we sat down for Thanksgiving dinner this year, I could not help but think back to last year. When we awoke on Thanksgiving day 2009, we received an email that we had received our preapproval for Pei. Along with that PA, we received some updated photos. I honestly was scared to death! It was so real at that point; we truly had found our little girl.

Now, that same little girl is sitting right beside me. I cannot help but watch her and think how last year, I could only dream about her. Now, she is sitting as close as she can possibly get to me, meowing like a baby kitty. I cannot help but feel so thankful that my baby girl is finally home.

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Nicole Settle

In 2008, we walked into an orphanage in Russia, and our lives were forever changed. The blessing that adoption has brought to our lives is amazing. As Ava spent her first birthday in a Russian hospital, a beautiful baby girl was born in China and destined to be our daughter. In August 2010, we became a family of six!

Browsing Blogs

I was browsing blogs Sunday night and came across a post from a mom who is waiting to bring home her child. She talked about a recent training and how there had been so much “scare” info – things that they might well expect for their adopted child…..

struggles with attachment
struggles with school
struggles with siblings
struggles with self-image
struggles with health issues
and on and on.

I went right on down the list and was able to check off every single one.

Before we adopted – even while we were in process and I was reading everything I could find – I still had the notion that the only really “scary” issue that might come out of our adoption would be a RAD diagnosis. I read stories of families struggling with RAD and believed that it would be the rarity and that I didn’t need to educate myself too much because chances are we wouldn’t need it. It would only be those really traumatized kids who would be at risk – abused, witnessing war, living alone on the streets, etc. Our kids – coming from African orphanages (where I let myself believe that kids were cuddled and doted on and hugged and rocked and carried) would be at low risk.

Wrong. First, they aren’t low risk – trauma is trauma, and my kids have experienced plenty. Second, RAD isn’t all there is. There is definitely the rest of the list to consider. And, RAD isn’t just RAD – it’s on an attachment continuum. No adopted child comes home “attached” to his new parents, and there is no way to anticipate how far or how fast they might move forward on that continuum.

And this is what it looks like…

My daughter – who probably had one of the easiest “adjustments” of the children I know still melts down about once every six weeks – this weekend, dissolving into a rage that lasted an hour. This is the kind of rage that she really can’t even seem to see or hear through. She seems to lose all of her faculties and can only rage until she’s spent.

My son still can’t hug me without being reminded to “put your arms around me and squeeze” except on the rare occasion when he is copying a sibling or performing. I do get genuine hugs here and there – about one every six weeks. Last night, I did the “put your arms around me and squeeze” routine while he held himself stiff as a board and then he trotted over and gave dad a real hug.

My daughter will always struggle with learning. It will never come easy to her, and she’ll arrive at each stage three to four years later than a typical child. She is about to turn nine and is just starting to read four-letter-words. She has just started to count by 5’s (which we have been working on for about 18 months now).

My son has impulse control issues that spike with any change in environment, with any anticipaton of change in environment, with any extra environmental stimuli. He loses the ability to thoughtfully maintain control of his mouth and body. And, it is work to get that control back.

My daughter still sneaks food on occasion (but not any longer in the middle of the night, as far as we can tell).

My son considers himself on equal footing with me and resents being parented.

My daughter has had three years of speech therapy and still cannot form full sentences or articulate clearly.

My son couldn’t name one child that he’d spent over two years living in an orphanage with. No special friend. No sweet baby. Not one name. It still takes him a couple of months before he can name kids in his class.

And on and on.

And, it’s all completely explainable and understandable. And, it still gets under my skin all the time. And, I still have to self-talk every day. And, I still fail all of the time. And, I still fall into the trap of thinking that these are behaviors that they are “choosing.”

I sometimes forget in the moment (or long stretches of moments) that their neurological development was hindered and interrupted and that the ramifications of that are life-long. We can parent therapeutically; we can do our best with nutritional helps; we can read; we can educate others; we can anticipate bumps and prepare ourselves; and, we can see improvement. We can even forget for a few days here and there that there are any struggles. But, the underlying issues are there.

When we reached Avi’s one-year Happy Home Day, I cried. A month later, I had my first prescription for anti-depressants. I had thought we just needed to give ourselves a year for things to “settle.” While I was crying, Greg said “we need four years – he needs as long with us as he had before us.” And, it’s true. Each year has brought significant progress in his comfortability with family life. Our relationship and our days are far easier than they were at that one year mark. We have more strategies in place. We generally know when things are “off” and what we can do to help get back on track. But, it is still hard work – subtle work but constant. I still do it wrong so much of the time. And, I now know that four years isn’t the mark. Getting him into an adulthood where he can experience healthy relationships is the goal. And, I know it’s a long road to get there.

I love adoption. I love seeing waiting children join families. It’s really my passion. But, I know that it can be a hard, hard road. And, I know that it takes years of commitment and work. I know that it changes the shape of a family. It changes the shape of a mom (and I’m not just talking about my twelve Avi pounds which are finally gone!).

But, I also know that the work and committment aren’t wasted. Avi may always struggle with relationships. He may always be uneasy if he isn’t controlling every situation. He may never want to hug his mom. But, it is so clear to us that Avi would not have entered adulthood with anything even close to the ability to form relationships without being in a family.

And, everyday, I get to see the areas where we have moved forward, where we have grown, where we are successful.

It’s not wasted work. It’s slow progress. It’s uphill. It’s wearying. It’s life-changing. It’s soul-challenging. But not, not, not wasted.

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Jennifer Isaac

Jennifer Isaac lives in Colorado with her husband and four children, two of whom were adopted from African countries, both with medical needs. She is passionate about medical needs adoption and runs From HIV to Home, a nonprofit that aims to provide education and support to families adopting children with HIV. She blogs here.

Tell Me About It

Donovan girls

The other day, Gracie—my 3-year-old—pointed to the top of her hand and said, “I’m the color of chocolate cake, but my family’s the color of this…” She turned her hand over and touched her palm. “How does that make you feel?” Kristin asked. Gracie touched her fingers to the sides of her eyes and pantomimed tears running down her face.

Kristin expressed sympathy and Gracie moved on to the next thing, but the image of her palm and of her sad mime tears had burned into my memory. I felt I had utterly failed as an adoptive parent. We’ve talked a lot about color in our home. We’ve read books, talked about color in terms of flavor, and discussed (sometimes at length) what flavors and colors and shades of brown each of is. But, this was the first time my adopted daughter expressed sadness because her skin was a different color.

At first, I was troubled. I felt a bit intimidated by the comment. I wasn’t sure how we should respond. I was also a little hurt. We’ve done a lot of work over the past several months to build a stronger connection with Gracie. I interpreted her comment as a failure on my part and that stung. Honestly, I was kind of scared too. In the 2 seconds it took to drag her fingers down her cheek, my little girl exposed an ocean of grief and confusion I feel unequipped to help her navigate.

Slowly, my sadness turned to gladness. Hearing my daughter express these feelings is a good thing simply because she’s expressing them. Sometimes, I forget that. At the young age of 3, she’s already processing complex emotions and trying to make sense of the differences she notices between herself, her sisters, and the rest of her family. If her mom and I are too timid, hurt, or scared to listen and dialog, it’s then that we fail her.

I feel sad when my daughter says she feels different from her family. I’m sad that she longs for a fuller sense of belonging. But, I’m really glad she feels like she can tell me about it. I want for her to always, always, always tell me about it.

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Matt Donovan

Matt and Kristin have three girls–Jaimes, Sevyn Grace, and Davy. Gracie came home at 1-year-old in March 2008. They were foster parents for two other children before adopting her. They loved it and plan to foster again some day. Matt and Kristin are on the leadership team for FAM, the Foster Care & Adoption Ministry at The Village Church in Highland Village, TX, whose mission is to provide resources and community for people connected to foster care and adoption. He works as a web designer for Captura. You can read more from him over at Adoptive Dads.

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The Bring Me Hope Giveaway winners were randomly chosen and are the following three readers….

From a Full Heart… has won a copy of Hannah”s Story DVD, a Sound Delivery CD, and the novel These Three!

And, The Gang”s Momma and TinaCD have won the novel These Three.

Congratualations! Please use the contact button to contact me with your mailing address so we can get your winnings to you!

When?

A few months after bringing Matthew home from Korea, I began my search. After a while, I thought that things were supposed to be perfect between us, and they weren

One Year Ago Today

One year ago today, I was checking my email like always. Some emails were immediately deleted, other’s were read and responded to, and other’s were read and simply ignored because there really wasn’t anything to say. And then, there was this email…

I forwarded this email to Kevin with this statement: “Kind of random, but I got this email today from an agency that I got information from about three years ago. Isn’t he cute?!”

To which he responded:
“Yeh. Keith. That’s funny.”

Later that evening, when he came home, I let him know that I was very serious about learning more about this little boy named “Keith.” He did not argue, only knew that I would not stop until I was certain that we were not supposed to bring him home. This was on a Wednesday; we had the weekend to decide if we wanted to pursue this. By the time Monday morning came around, I had heard the Lord tell me, “I’m about to do something big, are you going to be a part of it?” It was His way of telling me, “You are such an insignificant part of this whole thing, My work will be done whether you are here or not, but I am going to let you come along if you are willing.” That was it; that’s all I needed. This wasn’t about me; it wasn’t even about the cutest little Chinese boy I had ever seen. It was about God, and only God.

Here we are a year later, and we have filled out and signed TONS of paperwork, travelled to China for 2 weeks, and had and recovered from 2 surgeries. I’m not going to pretend that it has been easy, far from it. There have been a lot of tears, frustration, even anger. There has been lost sleep, lost freedoms, and occasionally lost tempers. But, in the middle of all the adjustments and sacrifices, we have gained a son and become a family of four! We’ve got a long way to go, we’re not perfect (never will be), and we still struggle more than we would like to admit. I often think back to the words the Lord gave to me that weekend one year ago. And, sometimes, that is the only thing that keeps me going. It not about me; it’s not about Xander; it’s not about the McNeelys in Texas. It is about God, for God, because of God!

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Allison McNeely

I’ve been married for 9 years to a laid back and loving guy. We have virtual twins, a bio daughter and an adopted son born in Fujian, China, who are just 6 1/2 weeks apart. Currently, our “twins” are 2 years old, so “share,” “listen,” and “please stop throwing a fit” are the most common things said in our house. We crave sleep, and coffee is a must. But, most of all, we love the Lord and desire to follow His plan for our lives.