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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Yes, my 4-year-old still takes a bottle

7.10.13

bottle feeding

At 12 1/2 months old, most mothers are training their babies to take a sippy cup.

When our daughter was 12 1/2 months old, we were training her how to take a bottle from us. Of course, we got nothing but support—she needed the nutrition, she needed the closeness, we needed the closeness, it fostered attachment both ways. No one questioned it.

A year later, at a chronological age of 2 with a family age of 1, maybe some people thought it odd that she still took a bottle several times a day. Being so teeny though, most people didn’t think twice about the bottle coddling going on.

Now, she’s 4…actually, 4 1/3 to be exact. And, yes, while her family age is behind that, it too is now 3 1/3.

bottle feeding 2

Every morning, this little one stumbles into our bedroom, wiping the sleep from her eyes, often with her “ren ren” (aka her most precious blanket friend ever). She climbs into bed between us, gets real close to one of our faces, and says, “Can I have a hot big bottle?”

And, every morning, one of us comes downstairs, searching for one of only 3 functional bottles we have left and give her exactly what she wants. She lays calmly in our bed and slowly sucks down a bottle of warm rice milk as she has done since soon after she came home 3 years ago. Most days, she wants another one in the afternoon when she’s feeling tired. And, she’ll predictably ask for one when she’s upset or is anxious or is just not feeling good. And, I give it to her. Then, every night before bed, she wants one more.

bottle feeding 3

Seems a little strange to give a 4-year-old a bottle still, I know. While she never is a public drinker, I’m sure if she were, we’d turn a few heads. But, here’s the thing—I. don’t. care.

For the first year of her life, arguably the most critical development time for a human being, she was not fed on demand. She was fed on a schedule, because that’s they way things work when you have lots of babies and few caregivers. What should have been comfort-giving early on likely became a race to get as much as she could before it was taken away.

One day, she’ll say to me in a tired voice, “I want my hot big bottle” as she lays on my shoulder, and someone will say, “A bottle? You don’t want a bottle. Only babies drink bottles!” At some point, she’ll hear it one too many times and decide she can’t drink a bottle anymore. But, until that day, when she tells me she’s too big for a bottle, I’ll keep stumbling downstairs to our kitchen, looking to see if any of the 3 bottles are clean to make one for her. And, I’ll hand it to her and watch her quietly drink it as she plays with my covers.

It brings her comfort, makes her feel safe, makes her feel protected, and reminds her that we’ll give her whatever she needs. Yes, my 4-year-old still takes a bottle.

bottle feeding 4

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, attachment, Lydia

teresa

7.1.13

teresaHours ago, Lydia greeted Mark as he came home from work and told him about Teresa.

“Daddy, there was a little girl whose heart didn’t work and they gave her another heart and that one didn’t work and they gave her an electric heart and she died.”

“I know. I heard that.”

“Yeah,” she said sorta slow, “She was from China like me.”

“I know.”

I remember years ago when this precious one’s picture was circulated. Recognizing the severity of her heart condition, the office in China that handles adoptions did something unprecedented; they allowed people to advocate specifically for her and two other little girls in an effort to find them families fast and give them a chance.

Their efforts worked. The Barlinskis, a family who were not strangers to adoption, said yes to making her their daughter. Only a few months after we traveled to bring our daughter home, Teresa came home to them.

Ann, Teresa’s mother, shared about surgeries early on and more recently when Teresa received a heart transplant and the possibility of longevity on Earth. Ann invited people all over the world to pray for healing; and we accepted.

Today, Ann, Teresa’s mother posted again, “While we were not there when she took her first breath, God blessed us to be there when she took her last.”

And, just like that, nearly every member of the adoption community and others who have embraced this family from afar lost their breath.

The grief of strangers has been spilling out in words on screens over the last several hours. Her life ended too soon. Tragic. Heartbreaking. So sad.

Speaking as one of those strangers who have followed her story from afar, I feel compelled to thank God for every one of her 2,381 days and that her last days and many before them were spent knowing she was a precious treasure and deeply loved.

It was no coincidence that God introduced her to the world on Christmas Day. She was a gift.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption

A tangle of roots {birth family searching}

6.8.13

23andme picWe’ve been practicing spitting. Maybe it’s more like drooling actually. Whatever you may want to call it, we’ve been practicing getting saliva from where it belongs to somewhere else.

She doesn’t know why. And, that’s fine for now. We’ll send it away and wait a bit. We’ll find out some random interesting stuff, hopefully some things that will help her later as she wrestles with her story. Maybe she can pull that info out when someone tells her she doesn’t “look Chinese” or when she has to do a school project on ancestry. Maybe it will even prove helpful when the doctor asks her again for some sort of medical history. It won’t give her all the answers, but maybe it will help.

But, I’m hoping for more than that. I’m hoping that another parent like me somewhere is thinking the same things for their daughter, maybe for their son. I’m hoping that they’re practicing spitting too and that our stories get woven together as our children discover they are family—cousins or maybe even siblings.

It’s controversial in the adoption community, you know, searching for your child’s history. Some say parents searching violates their children’s rights to choose and do it themselves. But, others say that if your child has a chance of learning anything ever, you have to do whatever it is you can do sooner rather than later. And, that’s where my view falls. I know it could get messy. But, in all actuality, it’s already messy.

I read the words of one adopted person:

How can you prepare someone for this tangle of roots? This road of reunification is not reunification. If it were unified to begin with we wouldn’t be where we are. But it is a road of meeting—meeting each other where we are in life.

It is a tangle of roots. This beautiful child before me with a sister who adores her and two brothers committed to her no matter what, with a mommy and daddy who laugh at her antics and marvel at her beauty, with an extended family who see her as another treasure in our family tree…this child also has a finder, ayis who cared for her for a year and heard her infant cries and bathed her tiny body and worried about her wearing enough layers of clothing, and a father who may or may not have known she even existed, an extended family, someone who had to know she was coming into the world, and a mother who felt her grow in her womb and birthed her only to say goodbye to her. It’s a tangle of roots for sure.

But, if there’s something that I can do now that may help comb out a tangle or two when she is older and those knots become increasingly painful, I’m in. As soon as we know she can get enough spit out to fill this little 23andMething, we’re sending it in. And, then we’ll wait, a couple months at first and then maybe years really. But, one day, one day, we may find a part of her family she doesn’t yet know, a part of our family we don’t yet know. Until then, we’ll be the family we are, growing stronger daily despite our tangle of roots.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, attachment, Lydia

Build the Nest

5.1.13

I’m such a numbers girl. Give me percentages, and I start tracking. These particular numbers stuck with me. The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services reported that 30% of all Americans reported having seriously considered adopting at some point in their lives. Yet, only 2% actually adopt. That means that of those who say they’ve seriously considered adopting, 14 out of 15 don’t ever do it.

Why not? It’s daunting—the financial cost, the impact this child will have on your family, the overwhelming number of unknowns. It’s no easy thing. We get that.

As we walked that road ourselves and alongside other families, we saw a need. That 2% of families who were taking that leap of faith to bring a child into their family through adoption—they needed more support. So, we took the leap of faith ourselves to do whatever we could to do just that.

Build the Nest for The Sparrow FundTwo years ago, we started The Sparrow Fund to give grants to families specifically for the purpose of family support through programs around the country that provide preadoption support and counsel, on-call support for families while they travel across the world to meet their children and bring them home, and support once they are home to help both the parents, new son or daughter, and family as a whole become a family.

Recognizing more need, we added programs to encourage and support families from those waiting to meet their children to those who have been home for years. We’ve helped families learn about the unique needs of children who have been adopted in the classroom and how to use correction as a vehicle of connection with their children in a way that is sensitive to them and their histories. And, this past February, we put on a weekend retreat for couples (Together Called) to be reminded of their calling as parents and refreshed to continue serving their children. When registration opened nearly 5 months before the event, it sold out in 16 hours. The need is undeniable.

We’re not interested in growing the number of families adopting; that’s not our focus. Rather, our focus is on pouring into that 2% who are adopting; we want to love and serve them and do whatever we can to make the daunting a little less daunting. And, maybe, just maybe, as the daunting becomes less daunting and the support available becomes more readily available, we’ll see more of those families who have seriously considered adopting say, “maybe we can do this afterall.”

Today starts an important month around here. A whole bunch of folks are coming alongside of us, saying, “Yes, we support adoptive families and the work of The Sparrow Fund to pour into them. And, we want to help.” This May, in our third annual fundraiser, about 50 businesses have made a commitment to help us build the nest so that we can help others as they build their nests. In addition to event sponsors who have donated set amounts to get that nest going, these business partners have made the commitment to give 10% of their total sales throughout the month of May to The Sparrow Fund so that we can do what we do. Isn’t that incredible?

That’s where you come in. We need you to start clicking and start shopping—check these places out.  Shopping purposefully is pretty fun—and makes shopping totally justifiable, by the way. Let’s work together to make that 10% something crazy big.

{p.s. you may want to subscribe to blog posts via email because I’m going to be hosting some awesome giveaways from a handful of these places this month just to make the month even more fun.}

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To get the nest started…

Sparrow Sponsors

Trades of Hope

Trades of Hope empowers women to create sustainable businesses worldwide. Their desire is for women worldwide to realize their potential as world changers, business owners, dream creators, and heroes of their own stories. A perfect supporter to build the nest for The Sparrow Fund.

Norman L. Graham, Inc.

Norman L. Graham, Inc. is a premier builder of custom homes and additions in South Central Pennsylvania. From design to construction, every Norman L. Graham project is built with care and careful attention to detail. What better partner to build the nest than a company who is all about nest building.

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If you would like your store or business to be a part of this May fundraising event, please contact Kelly at The Sparrow Fund to be added to this post and future posts as part of this effort.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, The Sparrow Fund, The Sparrow Fund May drive

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