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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Archives for April 2014

The Adoption Tetrad

4.25.14

I still read them, the blogs of families traveling in China meeting their children and bringing them home. The images of their first moments together and a mother’s first words after meeting her child never fail to draw me in.

But, this blog was different. This post was the first of what I hope is many. A child we had served and quickly fell for is now a son. He was a favorite in our class; he loved stickers and toy cars. He raced to pop the bubbles I blew and to tell the ayis he called Mama all about it.

I knew he’d be the first we got to see come home. He’s got a family, we whispered to each other with smiles on the first day we were there. Six weeks home, and we got word that his family was there right where we were, but they were there to bring him home.

My fingers couldn’t keep up with my heart as I raced to click on the link to their blog. I quickly skimmed the words, anxious to see the pictures of my little friend with his new parents. There I lingered for a long time, unprepared for what it would bring out in me. This is good; this is good; he needs a family; this is good. I knew that, but something unsettled me. There I sat with a lump in my throat, staring at the screen in front of me, wondering what was wrong with me.

In his new family’s pictures, I saw a nanny I knew. She was shorter than me and knew no English, but she smiled all the time so large her eyes disappeared. She nodded her head and chatted many Dui, Dui, Duis at our team. We didn’t need common words to know she appreciated us. I’d pat her back and tell her what a good job she was doing. She didn’t know what those words meant, but she knew what I meant, and she’d nod and smile some more.

In their pictures, I saw the director I knew, the same man who delivered my daughter to me. All the children called him Baba, and he knew them all by name. He had stood in the hallway of the orphanage studying each page of the book we brought with updates on children who had been adopted from the orphanage. He would point to a child on the page touching their picture as if he was touching their actual cheek.

As the new mother shared about their first moments together, she also shared that the nanny and director quietly slipped out without saying goodbye. The people who loved him, the woman he called Mama who snuck him little snacks and zipped up his coat to keep him warm, the director who called him a strong boy and laughed as he raced down the hall on a little bike—they just slipped out with no goodbye and no expectations to see him ever again.

I spent three years reading everything I could get in front of me on attachment and loss and trauma, preparing for the little Chinese person I’d one day meet in a smoke-filled office in a bustling city. When that day came, I took my sweet baby out of her ayi’s arms, and I took her loss as well. My empathy for her and the foundational building of our attachment drove me; every action was intentional as I sought to be an agent of healing for her.

china footstamp1

As I pressed on in that journey, I confess that I rarely thought of the agents of healing who were there before me. Before I even knew who she was and what she looked like and where she lived, those ayis she called Mama while I was still reading books were there. They weren’t there like I would be there, her exclusive Mama ready to meet her every need day or night. But, they were there when I wasn’t. And, when she lost them, they lost her too. While we were pacing in our posh hotel room and admiring this sweet little thing who now was our daughter, they returned to the orphanage, to what they do everyday, caring for children to help them leave. Their lives are riddled with loss, living in a constant flux of happiness and grief as they celebrate the future one of their children gets to have and say goodbye again to a child who made them proud to be called Mama. I wonder if they learn to guard their hearts and or if some emotionally flat line.

I know why I was unsettled, why I was staring in front of me at a blog post waiting for something to click. I have been changed after serving at the orphanage six weeks ago. I see things more fully, in a way I haven’t seen before. The adoption triad—it’s familiar verbiage to those of us in the adoption community—the adoptee or adopted person, the adoptive parents, and the birth parents. But, there’s more to the picture. There are those who care for those children for weeks, months, years, day in and day out. There are those who feed them, nurture them as they know how though it may look different than how we define it, nurse them after surgeries, teach them songs they knew from their own childhood, and then bundle them up for a long car ride, hand them to another, and slip out without saying goodbye.

Adoption is a good thing in a world that is broken. I just see a bit more of the broken part now.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, China, Orphans, The Sparrow Fund

My second post with “boobs” in the title

4.23.14

Hysterical and a good principle to live by. If you wouldn’t ask it about someone’s boobs, don’t ask it about my child.

IF YOU WOULDN’T SAY IT ABOUT A BOOB JOB… from Rain City Church on Vimeo.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption

Righteous Anger

4.22.14

It’s after 11pm. My husband is asleep beside me. I should be asleep beside him. Instead, my face is lit up as are the keys before me and I’m surfing—a word that linguistically sounds too pleasant for how I’m feeling right now.

Screen Shot 2014-04-21 at 11.18.25 PM

Yeah, that’s a screenshot just to prove to you that that is in fact what I’m doing in case you doubted me.

I’m angry. And, I’m using this silly device in front of me that is like a Mary Poppins bag of information for some sort of…consolation? justification? Honestly, I don’t know what exactly I’m seeking.

After what had already been a long day, I hit refresh on my phone as I’m prone to do too often. Between all the random Groupon emails was an email address I recognized. Dear Kelly was the subject line. Thinking it was going to be good news that would lead me to take a deep breath of God’s goodness, I opened it right away and then pushed the home button and put my phone down before I could finish reading as if making it disappear before my eyes would make it disappear.

I’ve been wanting to write you regarding our adoption plan, but it has been a couple of sad and busy weeks…

On April 14th, we exhausted all of our options…

They can’t move forward. The family who had said yes to XY, the girl I called Little Miss Pink, while we were still there at her orphanage, the family who wanted her and was ready to tackle whatever struggles they were adopting as they adopted her, they are no longer making her their daughter. It’s done. The word MATCHED beside her name that marked her as taken and spoken for has been exchanged for AVAILABLE. She’s once again a waiting child.

They can’t move forward. They didn’t change their mind. They didn’t realize they were in over their heads. They didn’t realize they were comfortable where they are and didn’t want to upset the cart. They didn’t realize the money simply wasn’t there to do it. They were told they could not do it due to bureaucracy due to rules put in place to protect children and protect families that occasionally do quite the opposite…like right about now.

And, I’m angry.

So, I guess I am seeking something. I’m seeking permission to be angry right now. Angry that this world is a broken place where families are not whole. Angry that the orphanage where part of my heart remains is considered small with 300 orphans living in groups inside their walls. Angry that of those 300, many will grow up with no families beyond the many nannies they call Mama, Mama, Mama, a constant reminder of brokenness as you hear them calling out indiscriminately to their caregivers. I’m angry that some children there will never be made available for adoption. And, I’m angry that rules that were set up to support ethics in adoption and protect children all over the world is right now, at least for this one, preventing her adoption. Yeah, I know the rules are good; I’m not really interested in getting into that because right now I can’t see past the fact that that one little girl matters and she no longer has a family thanks to rules.

I found the permission I was seeking. 

Is my anger triggered by brokenness, something that isn’t how it should be? yes.
Does my anger focus on God’s concerns rather than myself and something I want or I feel entitled to? yes.
Is my anger expressed with self-control rather than chaos that moves towards good and specific ends? I hope so.

I’m going back in October. I’m not going because I’m angry. I’m not going because I’m exhibiting self-control despite strong emotions and moving towards a good and specific end. It’s a lot bigger than all that. I’m going because He called me to go again, and He’s calling others to go with me either on the team or the team of senders. I’m not going because of anger; I’m going because of love. But, that anger—as hard as it is, as uncomfortable as this lump in my throat is right now, as tired as I am after a long day that grew longer—I find myself not wishing it away. I don’t want to hit the home button and make the feeling disappear. I want it there, right there, balanced with joy and praise and hope and expectation, expectation that our God is not a passive God but one who defends and raises up and intervenes in our brokenness. Yes, I want to take that anger with me, anger surrounded on every side by love. I want to be brought into His work there with 300 children and with just this one.

XiaoYue8

Here I am, Lord. I’m nothing but a woman who gets frustrated when my kids are running late and get irritated when my husband forgets to tell me we’re out of dish detergent. I think I’m better than I know I am, and sometimes I just think I’m better. I’m distracted and selfish and often find my self-worth in what I’m doing or what I’ve done. Yeah, that’s me. Just as broken as this world I’m living in. But, but,…for you….the One whole thing in this place, the One who can piece me together with an expert hand without lumps of glue where the cracks used to be. Here I am, Lord, feeling emotionally naked before you and before the screen 2 feet in front of me. Nonetheless, Lord, here I am with righteous anger. Send me. 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China, Orphans

Girl time

4.18.14

We are a family that loves tradition. We take very seriously God’s call to remember, and traditions help us do just that. They are a sort of Sabbath for us, providing an opportunity to step back from our normal busy lives and celebrate what God has done for His people and for us specifically.

When Evan was nearing a very significant birthday that would take him from one digit to two, we decided that we’d start a tradition of a little surprise getaway alone with Mom or Dad when each child turned 10. Mark took Evan, a big chocolate lover, to Hershey, PA for his man weekend, a surprise that included a Hershey bar with a golden ticket. Ashlyn’s been anticipating her time away ever since. With snowmageddon this year, a marriage retreat, and two trips out of the country, her getaway was two and a half months after her actual birthday. But, that didn’t matter at all when I showed her folded clothes lined up perfectly by day and purpose on her bed and handed her a suitcase.

I wanted to do something different for Ashlyn’s trip. So, I chose to study God’s word with her, a girl who loves to learn just like her mother. I chose Esther. It’s the perfect book to study with a young girl—an adventure, a romance, a mystery complete with cliffhangers, a villain and a hero and…of course…Esther, an orphan who becomes a Queen who changes the world. It’s the perfect book to invite conversation about standing up for what is right, having courage despite fear, living wisely, and choosing to be a part of God’s Kingdom work. All that in the context of a book that doesn’t actually mention the name of God a single time but has His name written all over it as it overflows with His sovereignty and redemption.

esther working on study

We feasted on calamari and New York strip steak and talked about the king’s feasts. We got the red carpet (white robe?) treatment and Ashlyn got her first manicure and pedicure complete with mother-daughter matching blue and purple polish, during which we talked to the spa ladies about what it would be like to get beauty treatments for a year like Esther and the other young women got in preparation to meet the king. We went swimming in a heated pool and talked about ripple effects. And, we decorated a t-shirt with Sharpies and rubbing alcohol and talked about how something little and seemingly plain can become something really big and exciting.

Esther spa

esther nails

esther tshirt

She opened up about some of her own stuff with me. And, she taught me a thing or two as we sat with Bibles opened over six meals together. Isn’t that just how God works?

esther together outside

Ashlyn and I, with our “ebenezers,” matching necklaces from Compelled Designs

Since Ashlyn is currently Insta-obsessed (go follow her at ashlyn124—shameless plug for her Instagram feed that currently features more images from Frozen than anything else), I jumped right in there with her, posting lots of pictures to Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter while we were away. That led to some requests for the study I used. So, I edited it after our “trial run” for other mamas to use with their girlies for sweet times together like ours. Here it is at no charge to you. Just promise to come back and let us know how it went and how God blessed you during your time together and after—and maybe post some pictures on Instagram and tag us. That would rock.

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: why can't they just stay little forever

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I overthink everything. This blog is a prime example. Make yourself a cup of coffee and sit down for a read. Actually, make that a pot of coffee. There’s a lot of overthinking here.

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