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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Archives for June 2014

5 things I want my husband to hear on Father’s Day

6.15.14

Fathers day
1. I appreciate you, and I mean that. 

I know it’s cliche. I appreciate you. But, I want you to know that I really do. All the little and not-so-little things you do, how you made time to mulch when I obnoxiously mouthed off about how embarrassed I was by the mess in our front yard, how emptying the dishwasher has become part of your morning routine, how you started making kids’ lunches when I complained about it being my least favoriting task of parenthood, how you put together play lists of the kids’ favorite songs, how you get up first to get a child a drink…there’s so much you do that you never get thanked for. Know that I appreciate you for doing those things even when there are no thanks.

2. I’m glad you aren’t good at multitasking.

You seem to think it’s a good thing that I’m a master at multitasking. But, truth is, I love that you aren’t because when you’re with the kids, you’re with the kids. You aren’t thinking about 10 other things, replying to an email, taking a picture that will soon show up on Instagram, cleaning the room you’re in, texting your BFF, checking off to-do list items and adding to the list, and making dinner. You’re simply with the children, wherever they are. I know I’ve complained more than once at your response to the question: “What did you do while I was gone?” But, please know that I really do admire your ability to let all else become simply background noise that disappears when you’re with our children.

3. You are the best at what you do.

There is no one else who can do what you do the way you do it. You are courageous, driven, and committed. You listen well. You study well. You teach well. You encourage well. You are just the man to do the job before you professionally and in leading our family. And, I will tell you that over and over and over again privately and publicly until you are red with embarrassment.

4. You make me want to be the best at what I do.

All of what I have seen in you makes me want to be more. You make me want to stretch myself, take more risks, study more, give more. Your passion begets my passion. Your steps forward urge me forward. Your confidence helps me put aside my fear. Whatever God has for me, I want to do it all as well as you have done what God has called you to this year.

5. Our children are blessed to have you.

I know you are not the perfect parent; there is no such thing. You and I are learning as we go, making mistakes together. Some days, I know it seems like we’re making more mistakes than earning jewels in our parenting crowns. But, these four children who live under our roof for a season would not be the children they are today or the adults they will become without you. They are blessed to have you as their father, a father who loves the God who gave them to him and would go whatever distance is required to make sure they have what they need and sometimes simply to give them something that will make them smile.

Happy Father’s Day.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Celebrations, Mark

And the lump in my throat doesn’t even matter

6.10.14

I’m sitting at my desk, the lump in my throat rising, the pain in my chest growing. It feels so real to me, the discomfort over the loss of all comfort.

The safe haven in Jinan China touted for it’s bright pink and green and cartoon images on the windows to give privacy that opened on June 1st has “exceeded expectations.”

44 children.

44 children in 6 days.

44 children, all ill.

I am one who rises to the defense of parents in China in general who make the decision to walk away from their child. When someone shakes their head or mutters a “How could…?” style question, I am the first to interject, to attempt to explain with compassion about a place where adoption plans are not legal and expectations and family and life are all riddled with things we cannot understand. I believe the words I share with all of my heart.

Screen Shot 2014-06-10 at 3.42.29 PM

from www.womenofchina.cn

Yet, there are times when I read an article like this and see the picture of a child believed to be drugged before being thrown from a car outside the “safe” haven that I feel like I have seen and heard enough, that the brokenness in this world is too much to bear.

There are 25 safe havens throughout China. I’m glad they’re there. But, oh, how my heart breaks to offer something more, something to make the lack of “deliveries” exceed expectations. How I wish I could serve right there at the door and offer counsel…something…something to make things different. I’m not sure it would matter in the long run when I would leave and they have everyday in front of them.

I feel the lump in my throat again. And, feel glad for once that I can’t speak Mandarin because I know that watching and actually understanding the language in this news clip would likely incite me more and make this lump something else entirely.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China, Orphans

Blogging {Why I bother}

6.6.14

She’s the antiblog. She doesn’t read them, snickers at the mention of them, rolls her eyes, and shakes her head. Blogs have created a relational disconnect; women blog rather than pick up a phone or gather to exchange stories. Blogs are either ways women brag about their Pintastic motherhood, try to make themselves look like women they are not in a online-dating-service kind of way, or pitifully share about absolutely nothing of any interest. Never before have so many people with so little significant things to say said so much to so few people. Told you she’s the antiblog.

library pictureBut, I blog. I really like to blog. In fact, I’m doing it right now. blog, blog, blog.

I was introduced to it all in 2007. We had just started the adventure of adoption, and I very likely wore down the keys on my keyboard that formed the words “china adoption blog.” I read every word of every blog I could find. I couldn’t get enough of referral pictures and current pictures, agency reviews, the how tos and how not tos, attachment woes and success. Blogs became my personal library with unlimited volumes of reference material all contained on the 13″ screen sitting in front of me.

While nail biting the initial steps forward in adopting, I wrote my first blog post seven years ago on an old blogger site with a cluttered and distracting design that I loved at the time. I wrote a little and someone other than my mom and husband may have read it every so often. My voice was guarded and the lack of any readership reflected that. A few years into it, our family grew as did my need to have a voice and my “stats” as they are called grew as well.

Hi, how are you? How is your family? How is your daughter doing? Oh good. That’s great.

With a child on my hip, one clinging to my leg, and two more either arguing, needing a wipe, or dying of thirst, that was pretty much the depth of my in-person conversations for years. Some days, that was generous; I was lucky if I was able to say hello and smile.

But, in the afternoons when there were some moments of quiet sandwiched between chaos or in the evenings when all were tucked snug in their beds, I had my overthinking and this blog. In a season that could have been isolating, I found companionship, not in Times New Roman and words in front of me but in the women who started to read those words and who responded in kind. Far from creating a relational disconnect, blogging has connected me. The clicking of the keys and the final click on “Publish” have been nothing short of keys to connection.

And, even when they are not and the words I put out there seem to be tossed out into an Internet abyss and come back void, I keep clicking because (a) intentionally taking the time to put my overthinking into semi-intelligible words forces me to overthink even my overthinking and process things I would have left swirling around my head and heart AND (b) my kids will thank me one day. Alright, maybe they won’t. But, I would be thanking my mom right now if she had blogged and I had an ongoing record of her overthinking and how she made sense of life and responded to our everyday.

It’s not about showing off. It’s not about making myself look like I’m someone I’m not. It’s not about stats. Blogging is becoming a volume in that reference library that is pulled out every once in a while and cracked open wide. Maybe I’ll never meet the person who reads the words on my these virtual pages or maybe the one reading will end up joining me on a service trip to China and become a dear friend. Better yet, maybe the reader will be my son or my daughter tracing the heart and thoughts of their mother. If no one else, the one blowing off the dust and clicking open the pages will be me so that I can remember where I’ve been and how I got to today.

Antiblog, go ahead and roll your eyes. I’ll just smile and shrug my shoulders and then go blog about it.

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Everyday life

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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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