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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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a letter to my 4 year old on her birthday

3.11.13

adoption china special needs letter to birth familyMy sweet,

You are such a big girl now. 4 years old. Wow. You remind me all the time of what a big girl you are. And, I know I always agree with you. But, now that you’re 4 years old? You are really big.

When I put you to bed last night, I talked to you a little about your China mommy and daddy because 4 years ago, you didn’t come out of my belly, you came out of your China mommy’s belly. I wasn’t with you that day to see you see the world for the first time. Daddy didn’t get to hear your first cry. And, I’m a little sad that I missed those things. But, you know what? Your China mommy and daddy got to see you and hold you. And, even though we don’t know anything about that day, I do know what birthdays are like. And, I really think it was a special day for them when they met you for the first time. It was definitely a special day because it was the day you entered the world.

We prayed together last night for your China mommy and daddy. I think you prayed something like this: “Dear God. Thank you for my China mommy and I come out of her belly in China then I come live with mommy and daddy. And, I a big girl because it’s my birthday and I turned big and I get a flashlight and I a big girl now. Thank you for my birthday because I a big girl. Amen.”

adoption china special needs letter to birth familyI prayed something like this, “Dear God, we thank you for Lydia’s China mommy and daddy particularly today on her birthday. We thank you that they gave her life. And, even though we don’t know them right now, we know that you know them. And, we pray that you would bring them to yourself and that we could one day know them. Amen.”

When we were done praying and you were getting all snuggled in under your covers with all your renrens and flashlights around you, your big sister in the bunk above you said, “I want to meet Lydia’s China family. If we met them, I think they’d be happy and sad–happy to see her again and sad that they don’t have her anymore.” I want to make sure you know, my sweet, that I think the same thing. And, I hope one day we have the chance to meet them so that we can all be happy and sad together as a family.

You are a precious treasure. Beautiful. Smart. Full of spirit. Able to do just about anything you put your mind to. And, I’m so so blessed to be your mommy.

XOXO and lots more,
Mama

4 year old birthday cake party

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, Letters

Unprepared

3.7.13

I wasn’t feeling great tonight. I laid on the couch while Mark managed it all. Scrolling through my inbox, trying to catch up on emails (a task harder than keeping up with laundry) led me to this. I was unprepared. I simply clicked on the link. Mercy Mercy.

An hour and 36 minutes later, here I am.

It’s a story of two children, two biological parents, two adoptive parents. None of whom were prepared for the reality of adoption.
Subtitles kept me captive to the screen. And, what I read in word and in expression will stick with me.
“We are just like stuff floating in the water.”
Indifferent. Reserved. Ignore.
“I thought you learned something, but you haven’t”
“I have nothing more to give.”
She leaves. She leaves. She leaves.
“Let God see my tears. Let the God of the truth accept my tears.”

I know their story isn’t every story. But, it’s their story. In my opinion, it should be required viewing for Hague training as it gives an inside view of the need for ethics before adoption and the need for good preparation, counsel, and support after adoption. And, it reminds us that the child needs to come first.I wasn’t prepared for it tonight. But, I’m so glad I ended up there.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption

Dear Chick-fil-a…

3.5.13

Dear Chick-fil-a,

It was Daddy-daughter date night tonight. My husband and my 9 year old daughter got to have dinner together complete with a string quartet in the background at our local Chick-fil-a. The tables were set beautifully, candles were lit, flowers were presented, and the food they both love was served. They reported that the restaurant was hopping with dads and little girls. We love that you support families in a very tangible way through hosting events like this to get parents to connect with their children without distraction.

There was a booklet they received tonight called Continuing the Conversation full of questions (provided by the WinShape Foundation) Dads and daughters can ask each other on date nights to get the conversation going. What a great idea! What a great tool to help give both girls and their dads ways to grow their relationship beyond the day-to-day car dropoffs and homework help. 
My husband showed this booklet to me as soon as they got home because of a specific question in it. In the first set of daughter to daddy questions, he read me this one:

Tell me about the day I was born. What was it like for you?

I know this is a fun question to ask. I’d love to hear my own father answer this one. But, to be sensitive to families like ours and like a few my family met tonight at your restaurant who have children who joined their family via adoption, I think this question should have been worded differently.

Tell me about the day I joined the family. What was it like for you?

or

Tell me about the day you first met me. What was it like for you?

These questions would encourage the same conversation but in a way that honors families built a little differently, families who may not know anything about the day their child was born.

We love who you are and what you do. Sometimes, it only takes a little change to do it even better.

Sincerely,

Kelly

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, Reviews

The Counted

2.26.13

I’m so humbled to have been invited to join the ranks of some amazing mamas and amazing writers over at No Hands But Ours. My first post there went live yesterday, and I’m reposting it here today.

__________________________

I’m a reader more than I am a writer. The stories from China I likely will never see–they draw me in, show me things in a new way. Some make me wonder; some make me laugh. And, sometimes, my casual blog reading while I sip on my morning coffee makes me pause and somehow changes the way I see things. Sometimes, they change me.

He’s a Western doctor in a very Eastern hospital. On one particular day, he witnessed something that didn’t seem all that unusual at first. About once a week, a group of people will come in, angry and looking for someone to blame. There’s yelling, a big scene, police come; 30 minutes later, it’s business as usual. A ½ hour malpractice suit, and then it’s over.

But, on this day, it didn’t end so simply. The protestors numbered 60 people, and the yelling turned to physical fighting. Their passion and grievance turned to blood—all over a baby.

Their baby had been born that day, a baby who no doubt held many dreams. And, he was born without an arm. They shed tears, raised their fists, and demanded compensation, yelling, “How can our baby live without an arm?” Unlike every other riot like this, they were actually protesting a life, not a death. 

This baby would be nearly 2 years old now. I wonder where he is and what his life is like. I wonder if he is hidden away by a family ashamed and afraid. I wonder if he is well cared for or served resentfully. Does he live still with the family who protested on his birthday or does he live with another? I wonder if he is a big brother now to a “more whole” child. He lives in a place where children like him labeled as “severely handicapped” don’t count. With a signature from one of those doctors, his family would have been granted permission to break the one-child policy. When a family has a child severely disabled, they are given a free pass to try again. And, that precious child, their first born, no longer counts. They are zero, do not exist. Even in perhaps the darkest time in U.S. history, African slaves counted as 3/5 of a person.

The way I see it, the birth families of children like this precious baby are faced with a decision I cannot fathom—very simply put, (a) keep their child and raise him or her in a place with no acceptance of a special need, where he or she will always be looked at as crippled and unable or (b) let their child go to maybe, just maybe, go on to count somewhere else.

I look around at my blogroll, at the families I now call friends 3 years into this adoption adventure. I look at the pictures of their sweet babies and silly children, read the stories of funny things they say and the trouble they get themselves into. They so much more than count.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, China, Orphans

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