• 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

He’s Ready For His Family

9.14.11

Most of my editing work stays within academia. But, not this time.

I worked with Rob Molloy, a young man from Dublin who just got back from spending a couple weeks in China with Bring Me Hope, to write a piece to advocate for a very special friend of his.

This little guy is right now waiting for his family to step forward to bring him home. Hearing about him through Rob and watching him on video makes me want to get on a plane and go play some basketball with him myself (and basketball’s not even my thing).

The post starts with this…

I want to tell you about a little boy called Lei Xiao Feng (lay shou[t – without the t] fung). He is the most amazing boy that I have ever met, so joyful and energetic. I had the joy of spending 5 short but incredible days with him. Each day, I felt myself loving him more and more and, at the same time, realizing that I would have to say goodbye. . . . 

Read the rest here…

And, watch a video of Lei Xiao Feng here.

Email me if you want to know more about him. Let’s find this boy’s family.

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, Advocating

Zhong Qiu Jie

9.13.11

Happy Mid-Autumn Festival. The second most popular holiday in China right behind Chinese New Year, and my parents are in China right now to celebrate.

Going back 3,000 years, every year on the 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar calendar, when the moon is at its brightness for the entire year, the Chinese celebrate “zhong qiu joe” or Mid-Autumn Festival. Historically, children were told the story of the moon fairy Chang’e who comes out to dance on the moon. The story of the fairy dates back to a day when legend says 10 suns appeared at once in the sky. The Emperor ordered a famous archer Houyi to shoot down the nine extra suns since the land was scorched. Once the task was accomplished, the Goddess of Western Heaven rewarded him with a pill that would make him immortal, but he had to fast for a year before he could take it. He hid the pill in his home while he started to fast. But, his wife Chang’e saw a light emanating from the pill and couldn’t resist it herself. When she swallowed it, she started floating to the moon. Houyi tried to catch her, but instead landed on the sun. During the festival days, the sun and moon appear close together, and it’s said to be the time for Chang’e and Houyi to visit each other. And, Chang’e’s beauty is said to be the greatest when the moon is at its brightest–which is the day of the festival.

Most Chinese now, however, only know the holiday for spending time with family, a little moon gazing,  and moon cakes–which have become sort of the “fruitcake of China.” Lots of people make them (a process that takes 4 weeks if they do it themselves!). Lots of people buy them (some boxes can cost up to $100 even). Everybody gives them. And, lots regive them. And, some even eat them.

Maybe that’s because the things (1) are hugely fattening (like 800 calories) and (2) are “an acquired taste,” code for they just don’t taste good. I used to think that was just to us Westerners. But, seems like even the Chinese don’t like them. They are about the size of a hockey puck and just as dense – a thick “pastry”of sorts filled with all sorts of “goodies” from red bean or lotus seed paste paste to salted egg yolk. Sounds like some companies are recognizing that they have a marketing opportunity here with a traditional food that nobody actually wants to eat and have introduced some potentially more palatable flavors like fruit and green tea. Starbucks in China sells their own set of 6 for about $60. And, Haagen-Daz has even cashed in by introducing an ice cream line of moon cakes which probably ends the regifting on the spot but may actually taste good (note–red bean ice cream is actually quite tasty. I know from experience.).

The Chinese government didn’t miss an opportunity either — this year, the tax bureau announced that employees who receive moon cakes as a gift from their employer would need to pay income tax on them. Some people got bumped up into a higher tax bracket just because of their gifted moon cakes.

I wonder how a fruit-cake tax would go over here. 

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China

the (not so) itsy bitsy spider

9.13.11

(don’t worry. no photos for this post.)

My kids may need therapy.

Maybe that’s not such a bad thing.

But, it may be if this single event is part of the cause.

Ashlyn was going down to the basement to get something–don’t even know what now. That’s not important. What was important is that her mission was stopped because of a spider. And, it was no little spider. She came upstairs without whatever it was she was going down for and told me she would not go down in the basement again until that spider was gone.

Oh, come on. I’ll get it.

Nope. Too big for me. This is one Dad’s gotta handle (you know, he’s so much older and more mature than me).

But, my message must have gotten somehow confused because rather than kill the spider, he put it in a bug catcher jar which I’m embarrassed to say we have too many of to count and many hang out either empty or with some sort of remains of some creature in my kitchen, usually on top of my refrigerator…but sometimes not. It is what it is.

This spider was huge and even scarier close up. I mean, I know a firm piece of plexiglass was between us, but this thing was disgusting and somehow managed to spend a good couple days on my kitchen counter in full view.

I had had enough. When my eldest started taunting me with it at the dinner table, I announced that they better take the thing outside and let it go (so merciful of me). And, I meant immediately. But, my first (second? third?) mistake was going into the other room to make a phone call. As I was hanging up, Evan and Ashlyn ran in laughing, claiming that Lydia had the bug jar and now it was empty and the spider was somewhere in the kitchen.

Ha. Ha. Very funny.

Mark, you guys took it outside, right? Come on, you are kidding me….right? right? Lydia had the jar and then it was empty? No…

Seconds later, Lydia screamed like I’ve never heard before. I mean blood-curdling, trembling all over, eyes bulging scream. After which she shakes her arm and flings off the spider which proceeded to land on our dinner table still full of our dinner. I scoop Lydia up and try to calm the poor girl down (who is now sobbing crying) while the spider makes a break for it, scurrying quickly across the table. Drew, who had still been eating, is now also sobbing crying and cowering in the corner of our eat-in bench. Dad, always the hero, goes after the escapee with the first thing he can grab…which happened to be Drew’s fork. For some reason, swatting at a fast-moving large spider with a child’s fork isn’t all that effective though he did manage to force it off the table and onto the floor where he then stepped on it. and smashed it. as he should have by himself when I sent him down to the basement a few days earlier.

Drew calmed down after a few minutes. Lydia took a few more minutes and kept saying, “bug bug, up, arm, scary.”

Nice.

A couple days later, they seem okay. But, for some reason, here I am at midnight blogging about the whole ordeal. I find myself having to debrief about it. Occasionally, since it happened, I’ll just think about it and shutter or just smile and laugh aloud (…a little).

It was quite a scene.

Perhaps I’m the one who might need therapy.

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: daily life, Drew, Kelly, Lydia, Mark

40

9.12.11

When I came back to my senior year at Grove City after Labor Day weekend and had a man start calling me soon thereafter, there was a small stir on the third floor of Harker.

He was 5 years older than me. And, for about 3 weeks, on paper, he’s 6 years older than me. That’s a big deal when you are 20 and the man calling you is 26. 

For some reason, somewhere along the way, people stopped caring about that difference. I, however, have not. This man is robbing the cradle, this 40-year-old man who truly looks about the same he did 14 years ago when we first met. 

We didn’t do much yesterday though I got a sitter and told him I was taking him out for a special dinner, just the two of us. 
I thoroughly enjoyed his rosy hue when we were escorted to our table for 11 instead of 2. 
I so love surprises…when they are on other people. 

There is seriously something so gratifying about pulling off a good old-fashioned surprise.

And, I have a feeling this is the start of the best decade ever.

Sunday Snapshot

No related posts.

Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Mark

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 223
  • 224
  • 225
  • 226
  • 227
  • …
  • 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