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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Overthinking fundraising

6.21.12

Fundraising.

Just the word can give me the chills. I picture overpriced wrapping paper and pizza kits, going door to door and begging family friends to help me go on my choir trip or get new softball uniforms.

Years later, I don’t really remember who bought the candy bars or candles or pizza kits I was selling though I remember where they got me.

But, raising funds—terms with a whole lot less chill factor, in my opinion—for an adoption is entirely different.

A private domestic adoption may cost around $20,000. An international adoption costs a whole lot more than that–$10,000-$25,000 more than that. I have a friend who spent $60,000 to bring their daughter home. There are simply not a lot of families who have that kind of money at their fingertips.

Enter…raising funds.

And, enter criticism.

If you can’t afford to adopt, you shouldn’t be doing it. You shouldn’t use a child to play on people’s sympathies to give you money. If you wouldn’t fundraise to buy a house or your car, you shouldn’t do it for an adoption either.

But, see, a child isn’t a house or a car. And, not having $20,000-$45,000 in a savings account doesn’t disqualify you as a good parent—thankfully. And, actually, I’d venture to say that most families raising funds for their adoptions are not standing on street corners with cans and a picture of a malnourished child wearing a tent sign saying, “Help bring my baby home.”

I give families raising funds for adoptions a lot of respect. Everywhere I go online, I’m finding families who have designed and are selling great t-shirts to raise funds. I’m finding moms who have learned a craft and are working hard when all is quiet in their homes at night to make them and list them online. I’m finding parents writing books, threading needles, making jewelry (and more and more jewelry), selling coffee, teaching a skill–in this case, Chinese!, becoming artists, selling items through The Sparrow Fund (there’s a program for fundraising families), gathering unwanted stuff to sell at massive yard sales, hosting giveaways for Kindle Fires, putting together big ole raffles, doing their best to somehow get closer to that money needed to grow their families through adoption.

And, I’m finding God providing.

These families aren’t playing on my sympathies and making me say, “Fine, already, take my money!” Instead, I’m saying, “I want to be a part of that family’s story. I want to play a part—albeit a small part—of God’s provision for that family.”

I read a post not long ago written by an adult adoptee criticizing adoption fundraising, criticizing adoption itself in a lot of ways. At one point, the author wrote specifically about fundraising with this:

Is it really so hard to see how that [fundraising] is using the child, your future child, for personal gain? Do what you have to do, but is doing it at the expense of your child’s privacy, and well-being, really how you want to begin your new family? What will it teach your child? Will it teach them that when you want something bad enough, it is acceptable to play on the compassion and sympathy of others to get what you want?

Is that really how parents want to begin their new families?

Yes.

What will it teach their children?

It will teach their children that they did all they could to bring them home. It will teach their children that their being a part of their families was not a mistake. Families will recall to their children the late nights, the thank-you notes, the clicking away on the computer. And, they will tell their children how God provided through people—people who shopped with purpose and people who gave with purpose.

Count me in.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption

{summer ♥} Repurpose a Dollhouse

6.20.12

The wooden firehouse and doll house haven’t been played with in a while. But, on a summer morning when the “What should I do?”s started, these toys were reincarnated.

1. With Evan all into the Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory book, then the play, and now the book The Candymakers, Candy is a big theme around here lately. When I suggested creating a candy factory, his eyes lit up. Next time, I may suggest a super villain lair or a mad scientist laboratory or a haunted house.

2. Empty out the dollhouse, looking for things that might be able to be repurposed as you do.

3. Think creatively, and don’t squelch any ideas.

(I love his pipe cleaner pipes and the baby toy on top that is a gum ball machine maker.)

4. Encourage teamwork. Drew made the truck garage for Sweet’s Candy Factory. Ashlyn turned the dollhouse into the candy store where Drew would deliver the goods. 

5. Be warned that little trouble makers may not understand the repurposing and interfere a bit much to the creative thinkers’ dismay.

6. As with other projects, spend all morning setting it up and once it’s complete, the fun is over. No real playing going on after that. But, who cares. I remember getting more excited about dressing my Barbies than playing with them. 
7. Surrender your living space to giant repurposed creations that have to remain out for way longer than you’d like them to—or until you can come up with something else you can repurpose them for…and maybe a different place to do it. 
we ♥ summer

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

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