• Home
  • Blog
  • The Sparrow Fund
    • Together Called
    • We Are Grafted In blog
    • Speaking
  • Jiayin
  • Contact

My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

  • Home
  • Blog
  • The Sparrow Fund
    • Together Called
    • We Are Grafted In blog
    • Speaking
  • Jiayin
  • Contact

The Counted

2.26.13

I’m so humbled to have been invited to join the ranks of some amazing mamas and amazing writers over at No Hands But Ours. My first post there went live yesterday, and I’m reposting it here today.

__________________________

I’m a reader more than I am a writer. The stories from China I likely will never see–they draw me in, show me things in a new way. Some make me wonder; some make me laugh. And, sometimes, my casual blog reading while I sip on my morning coffee makes me pause and somehow changes the way I see things. Sometimes, they change me.

He’s a Western doctor in a very Eastern hospital. On one particular day, he witnessed something that didn’t seem all that unusual at first. About once a week, a group of people will come in, angry and looking for someone to blame. There’s yelling, a big scene, police come; 30 minutes later, it’s business as usual. A ½ hour malpractice suit, and then it’s over.

But, on this day, it didn’t end so simply. The protestors numbered 60 people, and the yelling turned to physical fighting. Their passion and grievance turned to blood—all over a baby.

Their baby had been born that day, a baby who no doubt held many dreams. And, he was born without an arm. They shed tears, raised their fists, and demanded compensation, yelling, “How can our baby live without an arm?” Unlike every other riot like this, they were actually protesting a life, not a death. 

This baby would be nearly 2 years old now. I wonder where he is and what his life is like. I wonder if he is hidden away by a family ashamed and afraid. I wonder if he is well cared for or served resentfully. Does he live still with the family who protested on his birthday or does he live with another? I wonder if he is a big brother now to a “more whole” child. He lives in a place where children like him labeled as “severely handicapped” don’t count. With a signature from one of those doctors, his family would have been granted permission to break the one-child policy. When a family has a child severely disabled, they are given a free pass to try again. And, that precious child, their first born, no longer counts. They are zero, do not exist. Even in perhaps the darkest time in U.S. history, African slaves counted as 3/5 of a person.

The way I see it, the birth families of children like this precious baby are faced with a decision I cannot fathom—very simply put, (a) keep their child and raise him or her in a place with no acceptance of a special need, where he or she will always be looked at as crippled and unable or (b) let their child go to maybe, just maybe, go on to count somewhere else.

I look around at my blogroll, at the families I now call friends 3 years into this adoption adventure. I look at the pictures of their sweet babies and silly children, read the stories of funny things they say and the trouble they get themselves into. They so much more than count.

No related posts.

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

He called us together

2.25.13

It seems like it was so much longer ago that we sat down together over lunch and shared our vision for Together Called 2013. So much has happened in hearts over the last several days that the clock itself seems to have been anointed by Him.

As we quieted our hearts after a busy season of preparation, God brought us to a Scripture just Friday morning.
Acts 20:18-28 reads:“You yourselves know how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia, serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials that happened to me through the plots of the Jews; how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you in public and from house to house, testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. And now, behold, I am going to Jerusalem, constrained by the Spirit, not knowing what will happen to me there, except that the Holy Spirit testifies to me in every city that imprisonment and afflictions await me. But I do not account my life of any value nor as precious to myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry that I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God.”

Paul’s words to the Ephesian elders spoke to us that morning as we prepared to receive 61 couples. The resort was quiet except for the buzz and laughter of the 8 of us over lunch. God unified us a team, together called, readied our hearts just as we knew He was readying the hearts of the 122 men and women, together called, on their way there.

It all was His work–every dollar brought in to offset costs, every t-shirt given away, every cupcake and biscotti and book and mug given away. It was His work–every prayer interceding for every single couple coming, every hour spent in preparation for a main session message or a smaller breakout, every decision for every song in the worship set. And, as He welcomed us into His work, the work He simply swept us up into along the way, we put a stake in the ground together as He had called us to. We made a commitment to not shrink from declaring anything that would be loving and serving and blessing and directing to the truth of the grace of our Father. Nate and Sara had a platform to teach publicly. And, Carl and Kim had a platform to bless publicly. But, we all committed to not shrink “from house to house” as well, praying that every conversation, every exchange of words and glances that weekend would be glorifying to Him and make us fade away and make Jesus more.

We’re tired tonight, physically exhausted. Yet, our spirits feel like they have just picked up more momentum. The experience of the Body truly working together using the gifts He gave us to use for His purposes–it’s a beautiful symphony written by the most talented composer of all time.

What a joy to hear testimonies of transformation last night and throughout the day today through notes and personal conversations and emails and online posts. We are full–not because of anything we did or will do but because we have seen the work of His hand up close. You can’t see Him up that close and not be changed. We were led by the master composer and got to play first string even though we’re out of tune and missing strings. And, the music was beautiful.

 

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: The Sparrow Fund

Together Called to 12 Hours of Prayer

2.18.13

Three days from now, Mark and I will be arriving at the Inn at Leola Village to greet Sara and Nate Hagerty as they arrive from a long day of travel from across the U. S. to Lancaster County, PA. After lots of emails and a few Skype calls over the last year, it will be great to actually meet them as we prepare for the 61 couples who will be arriving the next day for Together Called.

These 61 couples have made a big commitment–they’ve worked out the finances and the childcare (both of which can be super challenging)–to be able to join us. They come from 14 different states and all different backgrounds–about a third have adopted or are adopting domestically while the rest have adopted or are adopting from all over the world, about a fourth are waiting to adopt while the rest have already brought a child into their family via adoption, a few have not yet become parents while others have up to 8 children. Perhaps most significant, these couples are all over the spectrum in their faith–and we’re so glad that each one has set aside whatever fears or anxiety they have about a “Christian couples retreat” and will be there to be treated, served, and fed truth.

We need a covering of prayer over our time, over the couples, their families, and every element of the weekend. We know so many are praying for us. But, we wanted to set something up a bit more formally as an offering to God.

For 12 hours, from 6am-6pm on Wednesday, we will have people praying in 1/2 hour increments. We’re giving them a guide, and they’re taking those things in that guide right to the throne. And, we’re going to make sure each one of those 61 couples are prayed for by name. We’re going to offer each of those couples to Him, knowing He’s going to do big things this coming weekend. big. big. things.

What a joy to get a front row seat.

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: The Sparrow Fund

CNY in USA

2.15.13

My post reviewing children’s books about Chinese New Year has gotten a lot of traffic. Lots of moms looking for books to use as they go into their child’s classroom for a Lunar New Year presentation have been surfing for ideas. Paper lanterns have been made. Chopsticks have been practiced. And, no doubt, fortune cookies (which are not even from China, mind you) have been eaten.

But, is one school party enough?

A petition titled: “Establish Lunar New Year as a National Holiday. Give it the same importance and weight as the other cultural holidays” was submitted to the White House yesterday with almost 40,000 signatures on it.

The petition read:

Our nation is composed of a wide array of nationalities and cultural background. It is imperative that we as a diverse nation to recognize and acknowledge that diversity. The Asian population represents a large percentage in U.S.’s population and is growing ever more. Students in public schools voluntarily take off from school to spend the Lunar New Year holiday at home with families. Yet, they are marked absent for their in-attendance. Please make this important holiday widely recognized and make it an official day off for students too. The holidays in our calendar year already consists of holidays from different cultures and definitely has room for Lunar New Year too.

Asian-Americans number approximately 17.3 million, comprising about 5.6% of the total U.S. population. In fact, Asian Americans recently passed Hispanics to become the largest group of new immigrants to the United States.

What do you think? Should the most significant Asian holiday of the year be made a U.S. holiday?

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 153
  • 154
  • 155
  • 156
  • 157
  • …
  • 371
  • Next Page »

Hello

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.

Connect

Recent Posts

She’s come a long way

Gift ideas for a happy-China-traveler-to-be

Three gifts.

A letter to my friend on her adoption eve

The day my husband quit his job {reflections 5 years later}

Subscribe to keep up to date via a newsletter

Archives

Popular Posts

  • The day we met Lydia in Xi'an
  • Getting the attachment thing
  • The day my husband quit his job
  • Other places you can find my writing

Follow Along!

Categories

Recent Posts

She’s come a long way

Gift ideas for a happy-China-traveler-to-be

Copyright © 2015 | Design by Dinosaur Stew