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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Let it shine

11.18.17

My mornings in China tend to start much the same. I wake up early while the sky is still dark, and I text home because the window of time when we’re both awake and able to respond is quite narrow. Mark shares pieces of what happened while I slept. I read and respond. And, I write out my heart in the form of phrases, short texts one after another, glimpses of feelings in the form of little blue bubbles on a screen.

It’s near the end of the trip. I’m tired. My body is tired from days of being on from beginning to end. My heart is tired of hard conversations and coming face-to-face with deep brokenness. At the very same time, I want to run home to be with my own, run away to be alone, and run in and ask to stay just a little longer for one more conversation, ten more pictures, another song, to give another touch on the back.

It feels sadder here.
Like the kids know there’s something a lot better, and they are powerless to do anything that might make their life look different.
The injustice feels thicker and deeper.

He told me:
Yeah. Tends to happen.
It is good. Take advantage of it.

I boiled my hot water. Made my milk tea. And, I opened my Book.

It is for this reason that I bow my knees before the Father, after whom all families in heaven above and on earth below receive their names, and pray:

Father, out of Your honorable and glorious riches, strengthen Your people. Fill their souls with the power of Your Spirit so that through faith the Anointed One will reside in their hearts. May love be the rich soil where their lives take root. May it be the bedrock where their lives are founded so that together with all of Your people they will have the power to understand the breadth and length and height and depth of your love, surpassing everything anyone previously experienced. God, may Your fullness flood through their entire beings.

I have never faced brokenness so close as when I am in this place…holding the hand of a child who tells me she remembers her parents and doesn’t know why she is where she is…reading a note found pinned to a abandoned baby’s blanket…being asked by a caregiver if there’s any hope left for this older boy who she says isn’t so clever. These places are hard. They are uncomfortable and painful and messy. And, they are good. It is here that I am rescued from complacency. It is here where my spirit is stirred to hope for immeasurable, seemingly impossible, all-things-new redemption. And, it is here where He asks me to fight for it, and I say yes.

The injustice is thick and deep. But, His love is deeper still.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China, Orphans, words about faith

Magical Bunchems

11.17.17

I discovered them at our local Goodwill in a ziploc bag on a shelf buried under wallpaper border and puzzle boxes. They looked like fun for Lydia well worth the Goodwill price tag. A few days later, and many dragons, new Monsters Inc. characters, and potato heads later, I decided they were a lot of fun for all of us. And, when I find something that is fun for all of us that doesn’t weigh much and squishes into a much smaller package, you know what I think about next.

China.

Hundreds of colorful little velcro-like balls went with me to China this time, squished into zippered pockets and stuffed into shoes. And, they proved their worth. Eyes were wide when I poured them out onto their table.

Little fingers started touching them, giggling at how they prickly little loops tickled them.

Kingly creatures were created. Many bracelets adorned tiny wrists and larger wrists as kiddos decorated the wrists of their nannies.

And, little ones sat and focused like I hadn’t seen them do before.

Complete with a teeny tongue sticking out when she was working the hardest to make whatever it was she needed every single color to create.

Oh how it makes my heart happy to bring simple things that produce so many sweet moments.

{click HERE to check out the Bunchems that filled our bags. They’d be so great to take on an adoption trip to pass the time and build connection during down times in a hotel room.}


The little lady creator is currently available for adoption, and Madison Adoption Associates is offering a grant to families who want to bring her home for lots more creating. Email Sarah@madisonadoption.org for more information.

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

Our penpal {advocating}

11.9.17

I met him and his foster mother, but he wasn’t so happy to talk to me and join in with the other kids. He’s an orphan too, but he’s been in a foster home; he doesn’t know the children here and older than most of them too. I tried to talk to him, but I didn’t get too much. I didn’t even get the chance to take a picture of him. And, I regretted it because I knew his papers were at Madison right now. And, I really did want to help him.

So, I found his foster family on WeChat. It sounds so simple put that way. It wasn’t really. But, all the effort has been worth it because Drew and I now have a Chinese penpal.


 

B: Hello. My name is PQB. I like playing football. I like reading. I want to be an inventor when I grow up.

Me: Wow! You are smart! I saw you on Monday at the orphanage. You did not seem very happy. Are you shy?

B: It’s not that I’m upset. I got a little dizzy in the car.

Me: Oh! I am sorry!

…

B: Did you have barbecue for dinner?

Me: We did! Do you like that? We made “hot dogs.”

B: Love! Very good!

…

Me: Do you want to have a family in America and live there forever?

B: Oh yeah! Summer! Fun! I like swimming best. I swim 100 meters at a time.

Me: Summer is fun. No school and lots of activities. But, summer is short. Do you want to learn English and go to school in America and do homework in America?

B: Yeah, I’d love to. But not doing homework in America. :( :(

Me: Great. If you want to, then I want to help you. It is okay to feel a little nervous about all of that. Do you feel a little nervous?

B: A little bit.

Me: It is normal to be a little nervous. Every child is nervous about coming to America. It is a big change.

B: Schools in China are under a lot of stress.

Me: Yes, I know. You work so hard. Schools in America might be a little hard for you. But teachers here do not lecture as much. I am sure you would like science class since you like to know how things work.

B: Can we learn about the invention of electrical appliances?

Me: Yes, you can! Would you like that?

B: yes.

…

B: I like skateboarding.

Me: Wow! Cool!

B: We all went cycling today. Are you going to work?

Me: No. Not on Sunday. I will go to church and spend time with my family today.

B: Oh! Can you send me a video?

…

Drew: I like Legos. Do you?

B: Can you send me a video? I love inventing electrical appliances.

Drew: me too.

B: I’m looking at today’s headlines to see inventions. Invention is very popular. I’m happy to meet you.

…

B: When can I go to America?

Me: I am trying to help you come. A family wanted to adopt you but the rules are very strict, and they could not qualify.

B: Oh. Well, thank you.

Me: Tell me what kind of family you want.

B: With dad, mom, brothers. Family must like me.

Me: Of course :)

…

B’s foster family: I want to know, why didn’t the family from last year adopt him?

Me: I don’t know exactly. But it is a good question. Maybe they were not qualified.

B’s foster family: He must not be up to the mark.

Me: That is not it. He is a good boy. They liked him.

B’s foster family: Oh really? There are other problems.

Me: Can you please explain?

B’s foster family: Maybe he is too thin.

Me: That is no problem. His height and weight are not a problem.

B’s foster family: Maybe he did not study English with his heart. Maybe he played mobile games all day. There must be a reason.

B’s foster family: He’s been living with us for 10 years. Built a strong bond with our family. But I am happy to have a family adopt him! …He deserves it!


“Max” is 12 years old, is healthy, and currently available for adoption through Madison Adoption Associates. The family must like him. :) Email me or Sarah@madisonadoption.org for more information. Madison only has his file for a short time longer, and he really deserves a family.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Advocating

It’s time to recharge

11.9.17

It’s amazing outside today. The trees are so colorful, and the air is simply quintessential Fall. It’s the perfect afternoon to sip on a hot decaf coffee (which I’m presently doing), and the perfect afternoon for our men to head out to recharge.

I’ve had very little to do with the whole plan for the next 3 days really. Last winter, Mark approached me at my desk and announced that he and his buddy Matt had decided to do a men’s retreat. I was kinda shocked given that I’m usually the one to make crazy statements like that (which in the past have led to hosting a marriage retreat or something like another child, just for two examples). These guys championed this whole darn thing including choosing the menu and booking a ropes course 40 feet up in the air. All I did was help to promote it a little–okay, Matt’s wife Wanda and I may or may not have also gathered a few goodies for each guy and s’more supplies.

It’s 2pm now, and I’ve already gotten a text from Matt with a picture of all the name tags and swag bags set up, seemingly bragging that they were able to get it done without any help from the ladies. I’m told that by 4pm, Matt, Mark, and Zach, who got roped into this whole deal, will be standing next to all those goodies ready to welcome the rest of the dudes. I’m smiling just imagining the scene sans the social girls by their sides. They’ll eat dinner together tonight and then meet for the first of four gathering times over the next three days where they will hear truth, be challenged, and encourage each other.

I have no idea what it will look like. I guarantee that it won’t look the way our marriage retreat looks or the way a women’s retreat would look or the way I WOULD want it to look if I were running this thing. But, I’m not. They are. And, that is such a good thing. Because, you know what? It really doesn’t matter what it looks like; what matters is that there are 23 men on their way out now or heading out soon who are gathering together, all sharing the desire to grow and do what they’ve been called to do more fully, as healed, whole, and holy men. It’s pretty overwhelming to think about.

Would you join me in praying for each one of these guys–Matt, Zach, and Mark included–that God would meet each one of them wherever they are as they arrive tonight, that they’d know more deeply God’s love for them, and that God would use these next 3 days to recharge them to be the men, husbands, and fathers that He wants them to be.

 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: The Sparrow Fund

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