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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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How to serve my country {award-winning guest post}

5.25.14

Sevenly posterI have a poster in my room that says, “You don’t need a reason to help someone.” It reminds me that it’s not just me in the world and not everything is for me.

I can serve my country by serving others. Our country was started to help others. Our country is about helping others, loving others, and serving others. That could be giving homeless children warm food or it could be as little as picking up a piece of trash so someone else doesn’t need to. Some people might think, “Make a meal? That uses so much time. I could be doing something useful. I don’t want to help someone!” I want to say something to the people who think that: people matter! Life is not fair, and that’s okay! You might be helping someone when you don’t even know it. Sometimes my mom says, “Can you clean up the toys?” My brother says, “But, I didn’t do it!” Then, my mom says, “I didn’t do it either, but I am helping.”

Just like my poster says: you don’t need a reason to help someone. You can serve your country today by helping someone in big or little ways.

__________________________________________________________

Memorial Day post pic

Ashlyn is a Raudenbush rockstar, leading the Raudy kids as the second born and oldest girl with growing wisdom. She loves reading books and writing her own, playing softball, creating and running her own business (check out Bead it for Disney), playing flute, and growing in her faith. She’s never been to China but loves that her parents go there and is hoping to stowaway in one of their bags (or actually buy a plane ticket) and join them next spring. She can also say she’s met the Mayor and a whole bunch of other important people because she just won 2nd place in a district-wide essay contest and is now $50 closer to that trip to China.

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

From an outnumbered biological child in an adoptive family {guest post}

2.19.14

Because an intro really isn’t needed. Simply read these words from a friend’s son…the only biological child in a family with soon-to-be 8 children.

________________________________________

Munari familyTo be able to call myself a racial and ethnic minority in my own family is a privilege not many people can say. The ability to love and provide for a child not of their own flesh is a truly remarkable gift, a gift my family has been blessed with. The everyday struggles of family living is amplified by the truth that my brothers and sisters did come from different parents, that they were born into a situation very different than my own, a dynamic that effects all aspects of their character and relationships for better or worse. The path of adoption is a lifelong journey, a condensation of the full spectrum of human emotion. Through my humble role in the evolution of my family I have been shaped to view the world in a way very different than many of my contemporaries. To care for the needy, the weakest, and the most vulnerable is the greatest privilege and responsibility handed to me.

Adoption is the expression of the most pure and undefiled response to those in need, a response of grace and love. It is the quintessential story of redemption, the desolation and brokenness of the orphaned child is restored in full. However, the most resounding and beautiful feature of such a flawless ideal is that it is carried out by flawed people who dare to step out to help those in need. Many factors impacted the situations surrounding my sibling’s adoptions, the reasons why their biological parents could not take care of them. Disease, poverty, death, and drug abuse are all brutal truths that are part of my siblings past, and therefore a part of them and a part of our family. I have three brothers and three sisters in my family, all of whom have been adopted. Three of them are biological siblings we have just brought into our home a year ago hail from the proud African nation of Ethiopia. The pain of loss, the uncertainty of their future, and the isolation of living in an orphanage are still very fresh in their minds. Their buried emotions can manifest out of nowhere, triggered by a seemingly insignificant sight or smell that connects them back their home or parents in Ethiopia. As a family we understand that these experiences are a part of their character, and as our family identity transforms to equal the sum of all of its diverse parts, we are encouraged to keep our hearts and minds open to those who seek fulfillment.

Because of my unique exposure to these misfortunes of the world, my eyes have been opened. I have been given an invaluable insight into the pain, suffering, and loneliness through out the world, a gift I cannot begin to fathom, for it is this awareness which defines me. The realization that I am fundamentally different from most of my peers is sobering, and makes me grateful to be who I am. To live inside of a bubble, to be caught up in the comfort and ease of living in suburbia, to not experience differerent cultures from my own, to turn a blind eye towards the issues of the world, is effortlessly easy and is to often idealized in our society. To many people, their ultimate goal in life is to seclude themselves from those in need, to distance themselves through wealth, status and location. A willing ignorance of the problems faced by the orphaned, abandoned, and destitute is ingrained in our culture. For many, this illusion remains unbroken their whole lives, but I have been granted a glimpse behind the curtain of self-deception, and I will answer the cry of the orphan.

________________________________________

I’d like to be in that room when that college admission officer reads that one.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: adoption, guest post

Kim’s adoption story {Guest Post}

8.18.13

Way back when on Easter Sunday, I shared some suggestions on how to think through your testimony. And, I invited you all to do it and share it.

Kim emailed me this week.

I’ve pondered it for months, then several weeks ago began writing. It came out as what my husband calls “straddling prose and poetry.” This is a touch more emotional and raw than what I’d usually post online but for the purpose of your testimony.adoption story series, I’d be honored to share.

Grab a cup of coffee while the kids are still blurry eyed with sleep and sit for a few minutes to read the poetry-prose-song from Kim about how she came to know God.

____________________________________________

kim post picMy birth family

kept me,
raised me under the same roof for 18 years.
We never really talked about
my adoption,
the one that happened
when I was four years old,
in the private of my sun-lit room

on my knees.
Fists folded
next to the pink and white ruffle of my Holly Hobbie bedspread,
I asked The Lord to save me
from hell,
for Jesus to come into my heart.
I remember peace–I knew that it was good and right,
but somehow
even amidst all that was good and right,
it was all wrong too.
I had no idea of what it meant

to invite Jesus
into my life.
And although my mom had been the one
to shuttle me back and forth to church
that morning,
{where I’d heard that salvation message
that I couldn’t pass up;
I mean, who wouldn’t want to
get out of hell free? }
and claimed Jesus as her own too,
you see, she must not
have had any idea
either.
Because when I asked her to walk alongside me
and teach me the sinner’s prayer,
she said it was something
best done
by myself.
So off to my room I went,
by myself.

My birth mom
didn’t show up for that gotcha day,
but my new Daddy did.
And He saw to it
that my adoption into His eternal home
was only the beginning
of our family story–
Only the beginning
of our life-long pursuit of
love
and family
and truth
and beauty
and calling
that includes loving me just the way I am
at every stage–no matter what.

{Not that at most moments I get that.}

He always listens,
knows me completely.
He speaks to me: affirmations of who He is/who I am/who I am
called to be … He leads me through
the painful moments
of my past,
and reminds me that
though not pretty,
He has used them to make me
more beautiful.

My status
as God’s beloved daughter
does not erase
all that is wrong in the world.
It does promise to redeem it.

My Father, though the God of the Universe
and He-could-if-He-wanted-to,
doesn’t wipe away
a painful beginning, or one that is
just
all
wrong. He does
hold me in His arms and wipe every tear,
though.

My soul knows,
deep-down,
His comfort.
Yes,
comfort
is what it really means
to be His child.
On gotcha day I knew.
I knew I was being saved
from hell,
but really is that redemption?

Yes, I would learn, that is the crux
of it.
Relationship with Him.
My Daddy has saved me
from death, from life
without Him.
Existence without
the deepest, truest
kind of
rejoice-with-me, cry-with-me, cheer-for-me, understand-me kind of
intimacy,
that, now unimaginable,
relationally-devoid-path,
that road,
would be hell.

I am saved.

____________________________________________

kim smithKim met and married her husband Patrick while living and working in Asia in 2004. Their first two children, a son and a daughter, both born in Beijing, came along shortly after. Their adopted daughter, Marilla, was born in Henan province in 2010, then joined their family through the China adoption program as a two-year-old last fall. You can catch snippets of the Smiths’ day-to-day lives at home in China, on their family blog, asiaramblin.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: guest post, words about faith

A friend’s adoption story {Guest Post}

4.14.13

On Easter Sunday, I shared some suggestions on how to think through your testimony. I know it takes time to sit down and prepare it, but we’re instructed to be prepared. You never know when you’ll be asked about the hope that is in you.

A nonblogging friend took the time and wrote out her testimony, even sending it to me first to get feedback and suggestions for how to make it more clear. Then, last week, she shared it publicly at the Bible study she talks about. But, likely more important than that, she also shared it with some members of her family—like her husband—who had never heard it before.

God’s at work again. Sit for a few minutes and have a read about how what He did to draw her to Himself.

____________________________________________

Even at 10 years old, I remember feeling like I could never be good enough get into heaven. I would try to be good; but, in my heart, I knew I wasn’t good. In fact, I was so fearful of where I was heading that I was ready to become a nun, because I assumed that they would get right into heaven. In my brain, I needed to work to get there and do something somehow worthy of it. That was what I remember hearing growing up.

When I was about 10 or 11 years old, friends invited me to a neighborhood Bible study, and I went because I wanted them to like me. One lesson she taught was the story of Nicodemus from John 3. Nicodemeus (in my 10 year old head) should have not worried about getting into heaven because he was a Jewish leader; but, he did. That threw my getting into heaven by becoming a nun right out the window. More importantly, what Jesus said struck me: Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.” I didn’t ask any questions about it; I just kept playing it over and over in my head, but I didn’t really understand it. A few months later, the leader said that she would repeat any story. So, I asked her if she would repeat the story of Nicodemus. The following week, she taught the story again and told me if I wanted to come over and see her privately the next day that she would talk about it with me. I asked my mom if I could meet with her the next day; but, unfortunately, it was at the same time that I was supposed to be at my denominational religious course. But, since my dad had just became a Christian a week or two before, he told my mother to let me see the Bible study leader and that it was more important. I remember talking to the leader and asking Jesus to come into my life right there at her kitchen table. She told me something I had never heard before–that God knew I couldn’t be good enough to get into heaven so He had a plan and that plan was Jesus. My 10-year-old brain knew all about gifts, so hearing that God had a free gift for me made sense. My mother now says that she remembers me telling her that night, “I am saved.”

But, over the next 15 years, I didn’t live like I was saved. After I was married, my parents and I had a strained relationship due to “religion.” It was so bad that we had to make a no-religion talk rule.

My mother started going to Bible study. One day, as I was waiting for her to come home from it, I really just had it in my heart—I don’t even know where the thought came from—but I wanted to go to Bible study. While I was at home thinking that, God was already going ahead of me working out His plan. That day at Bible study, a friend of my mothers asked my mother if she ever invited me. So, when my mother called me that day, she told me her friend wanted her to invite me (because my mother and I didn’t talk religion). I just started to cry because I was waiting for her to get home to ask her if she thought I would be allowed to go to the Bible study with her. Once I joined, my life changed completely because I was reading my Bible, and I loved to study it. I started to see a new and clearer picture of God.

Several years later, I started dealing with severe depression, bipolar personality disorder, and an eating disorder and needed to be hospitalized several times. It was bad. I was a total mental mess, most of the time my thinking was totally unclear and unsafe for myself. With my marriage strained and ending, my whole life was falling apart. I was dying inside. I believed that I was a total burden on my children and husband and that they all would be better off without me. I turn my back on God. I think I did this because I was ashamed and overwhelmed with guilt. In my mind, I was a failure as a wife and mother. But, I was also angry, feeling as though God hated me and that is why “He gave me” all of this mental illness. I decided that I would hate God and run from Him. Without a doubt, this time in my life was the blackest and closest to Hell that I have every been in. I was seperated from my family and God; it doesn’t get any worst that that.

The pivotal point of my relationship with the Lord was during a trip down to the shore with the kids. Samantha was sitting in the front seat. Michael was sitting in the backseat. We got started
later than we had planned. I remembered as we got in the car how my mom and dad used to pray before we would go on a long trip, and I remember thinking in my heart like a smart-alecky, bratty child, “I am not saying a prayer to you I am not praying to you.”

As we are driving down to the shore, I remember thinking something doesn’t look right until my
brain registered what—it was a truck crossing the medium. Another car flipped up in the air. I slammed on my break, knowing I was going to be part of this accident. But, my car stopped about 3 feet from the accident. I kept looking in the rearview mirror thinking we were going to get slammed into the accident. Thankfully, we didn’t. The rest of the way down the shore, all I kept thinking as I was crying and driving was “I didn’t pray; I didn’t pray; I didn’t pray; I was such a jerk to You, but you took care of me anyway. You saved our lives.” We didn’t even come out with a scratch. Later, watching the news, we learned that people died in that accident. God melted my stubborn heart with his love and mercy for me that day. Immediately after that, I returned to church and decided to get baptized; I wanted to give myself a memory and experience of dying to my old self. About 5 years later, I was able to return to Bible study which was such an answered prayer.

By the grace, love, and the patience of God—and despite the fact that I let go of him—He held on to me. I am His, and I am not letting go.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: guest post

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