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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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While you were Labor Day BBQing…

9.9.11

we were doing a few other things which have become our own Labor Day traditions. 

traditions like ziplining into a lake 3 at a time. 

traditions like the rush of the screamer swing. 
(at this point in the picture, Drew yelled up to Ashlyn and cousins Bo and Maddie, “Pack your underwear!” That boy’s a kick.)

traditions like climbing from tree to tree.

4 of us preferred watching safely from the ground while sipping our skittles, swedish fish, and M&M milkshake.

the other 2 were super brave…and seriously focused while very far from ground.

traditions like tubing over and over again.

love my niece Abby’s expression here. Seriously having a good time.

We even got to visit with a friend 

and meet a new friend, her new baby girl Joni. 

who was not so happy about posing for pictures because she just wanted her mommy. And, that’s a good thing.
(please note and appreciate my efforts of dressing up for 80s night…fringed t-shirt, people, hanging off my neck Flashdance-style. Found the directions on how to make it online with a posting titled “How to Make a Totally Rad 80s T-shirt.”)

The girls went with the Cyndi Lauper look…and managed to look oh-so-cute as they posed in another group’s picture. Someone right now is probably looking at their pictures wondering who these children belong to and why they are in their pictures.

traditions of watching some super funny guys do crazy things that my kids now can’t stop imitating. Even Lydia is mimicking these guys.
And, traditions like hearing some great teaching (including some from my very own hubby who did a great job). 
Who needs BBQ? Young Life’s Labor Day Family Camp has been a tradition in my family for years–my parents ran it and now my older sister and her husband run it. And, our whole family looks forward to it all year long.
Mark your calendars–Labor Day weekend 2012 in Glen Spey, NY. 

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

Giveaway Winner – A Waiting Mommy

9.7.11

I love hitting that “generate” button and then counting down to see who won.

And, this time was no different. Just read that comment. So fun to send her this book. 
On her blog, she shares:

Deep in my heart I have always known I wanted to be a mommy. Even if life has turned out to be different than I expected, you know, the husband, the white picket fence, the van full of babies….It is still beautiful. . . . The road I am walking is perhaps one of the most complex, beautiful, frustrating, and faith-inspiring journeys I have ever been on. God has planted a dream, a passion in the deepest part of my soul. I will be the mommy of a baby girl I have not yet met. She is out there, or will be. I hold this truth, this certainty close on those days of waiting, of wondering what to do. Follow me on this journey of faith, of discovery. Follow me as I travel down this road. Not the one I had planned for myself but the one God has for me….I am realizing that it is crooked but perfect. And that’s exactly where I want to be…

Go check out her blog and give her some encouragement as she waits to become a mommy. . . however the crooked road leads.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: giveaways

They aren’t the only ones with school supplies

9.1.11

Sometimes blogging is particularly fun. 
There’s a big ole company–Avery–heard of them?–they’ve got a big cause going on right now that they are promoting. And, as part of that promotion, they had some PR people looking for ways to promote it. And, someone read this post–the one where I mention that I felt like I needed to take out a home equity loan to pay for school supplies–and this post–the one where I confess my love for office supplies and my odd joy perhaps over sharp led and colored wax. 
And, check out the fun box I got in the mail–glue sticks, highlighters, dry erase markers, tabs, dividers, and a brand spankin’ new binder. 
And, they are all for me. 
That’s right. They aren’t the only ones with sweet new supplies for the first week of school. I’ve got some of my own. And, I’m pretty excited to put them to use. I can see it now–walking into CBS with my tote bag with my new binder stocked with labeled dividers and maybe a pencil case with my highlighters and other goodies. And, you bet I’ll find a use for those glue sticks. Someone is bound to need one in class one Tuesday morning. And, I’ll be the gal they come to. Because this gal’s got school supplies. 
Oh, yeah, I’m pretty happy about that. 
Avery’s got some smart PR people–and some smart executives doing some pretty neat things. I hadn’t heard about it before now, and I can’t believe I hadn’t. 
You know those box tops we send into school with the little pencil logo on them? Well, Avery is part of that Box Tops for Education program. With each little coupon found on their products, schools have earned over $1,000,000 from Avery stuff alone to buy computers, playground equipment, textbooks, etc. Wow. 
And, Avery has their own program called Avery Give Back to Schools–folks can vote online for the K-8 school they want to win (and can nominate their own local school). The top 5 schools at the end of the promotion will each win $10,000 worth of Avery school supplies–that’s a lot of binders, glue sticks, and sticky notes–10,000 bonus box tops coupons, and $1,000 worth of gift cards. That’s pretty sweet. And, 25 runner-up schools will get 5,000 bonus box top coupons as well. 
Head on over there–do a quick registration to vote (takes a whole 60 seconds, maybe)–and then vote for your local school (or look up Barkley Elementary in Phoenixville if you want to give my kids’ school some love). Share the link and get your friends to vote too–so easy to do by clicking on the little FB or Twitter icon there on the voting page. Just think, no home equity loan needed, and your kids could have all the supplies they need.
Thank you, Mr. or Mrs. Avery. 
Now, I’m off to find something to highlight.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Kelly, Reviews

An Adoption Folk Story – Sweet Moon Baby – Giveaway

8.31.11

Despite the busyness of filling backpacks and nesting (Oh, I’ve been nesting), I’ve been thinking a lot lately about birth families–the posting online of a baby found, a journalist and adoptive mom’s retelling of her experience of finding a little one, the posting I read of a mother who regretted leaving her child and hasn’t slept well since. A lot to consider. And, sometimes, it’s hard to consider. And, frankly, I hope I never “feel done” considering.

I conjure up images. I don’t really want to do this. I know I’m creating a story from the skeletal pieces of a story we have. But, for some reason, the images come. And, maybe I should just not fight them and let them come and morph as time passes.

I know I’m not the only adoptive mommy who has felt this way.

When one adoptive mommy faced the fact that her daughter’s whole first year of life would forever be a mystery for her as a mommy and for her daughter, she created a story of her own, a fairytale, to inspire her daughter’s imagination. That story about a perfect baby girl’s journey down the Pearl River to her forever family struck such a chord with her little girl that she shared her story for everyone–a brave step I wouldn’t be able to take. Karen Henry Clark took her version of an adoption folktale and gave us all Sweet Moon Baby. Using beloved items in her daughter’s life, she tells the tale of a Chinese man and woman who release their baby girl because they cannot care for her as they would want. She floats in a basket over the river guided by a turtle, a peacock, a monkey, a panda, and even some fish until she is welcomed into the arms of her new parents on the other side of the river.

The images. The illustrations are perfect, like I-need-two-copies-so-I-have-one-to-read-and-one-to-cut-up-and-hang-on-my-wall perfect. The final illustration = the perfect wordless ending. The little girl no longer a baby, sleeping with a smile while snuggling her stuffed panda with a goldfish and peacock feather on her night stand and stuffed monkey and turtle by her feet. The sweet goodnight tale for this little girl.

Some families have fallen in love with the story. But, some critics have hit this book hard — It’s confusing. It’s too scary that the birthparents sent their baby off in a basket into the river. It will lead to too many questions. I’m uneasy with all the fantasy. One adoption therapist even sent the book back to the author saying she couldn’t even display it because “it lacks plain honesty” and adopted children need facts, only facts.

Really? If that were true, we wouldn’t be able to read any adoption related kids’ books. None of them are just like her story. The only story factual for her is her story, the one God wrote for her life. And, there are no children’s books with her story.

So, I have read books with kangaroos and fox, books that tell about two Chinese babies going home together and becoming sisters forever, a single mother bringing home her baby, families adopting healthy baby girls all from the same orphanage, and babies adopted domestically. None of them are factual–for Lydia. But, they make “adoption” not a word that is whispered but something we talk about freely.

Sweet Moon Baby is Karen Henry Clark’s dream of a history for her child. And, you know what, some of those reviewers got it right.

It is confusing–adoption can be. It is a little bit scary that the baby was sent off alone–abandonment is sad and scary. And, it did lead to a lot of questions from my older children, questions that led to some really good conversation about why Lydia’s birth parents may have made choice they did. It’s not true, not true at all. It’s a fairy tale of sorts Karen Henry Clark used to encourage her daughter–and Chinese daughters adopted into Western homes all over–to keep wondering and keep talking.

And, I guess it serves to encourage adoptive mommies to keep wondering too.

_________________________________
Wanna see for yourself?
I’ve got a copy to giveaway – and not just any copy – but an autographed copy. Despite the fact that I’m really tempted to keep two copies for that whole hang-the-pages-up-on-the-wall thing, I’m sharing.
To enter, leave a comment on this post with why you’d like to win or what interests you about this book or something like that.
If you want a second entry, share a link to this giveaway on Facebook and leave me a second comment here telling me you did. It’s nice to share, you know.
I won’t make you become a follower here to enter. But, it would be nice. And, I know you all are nice.
Enter before Sunday, September 4th at 10pm EST. I’ll choose a winner randomly using random.org after that. And expect an email from me asking what you think of the book, okay?

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, giveaways

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