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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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Poured Out

10.24.15

Baoji conference room - 1

Everyday we entered in, we started in this place. There we’d gather to be served hot leafy water before we started the work we came to do. We walked by this wall over and over again throughout our time there, coming and going. No one knew what the red characters meant until the end of the week.

“The greatest goodness is like water.”
“Nurture orphans with a merciful heart.”

That is what hangs on their wall as their mantra.

When we left that place at the end of the week, I had only the energy to send my husband a one-line text.

I am poured out.

There, over the course of only one week, that was where we all were. Poured out.

It looked like this.

poured out team - 1 (1)

and like this.

poured out team - 1 (2)

and like this.

poured out team - 1 (4)

and like this.

poured out team - 1 (5)

It looked like this.

poured out team - 1 (7)

and like this.

poured out team - 1

and like this.

poured out team - 1 (6)

It looked different for each one of us as we served in the ways we were called to serve. Teaching, rocking, playing, talking, laughing, asking, hearing, cheering, loving. We were poured out. Our unguarded hearts emptied and left fragile. But, that’s right where we all wanted to be at the end of this trip—vulnerable and in need, longing to be filled again and desperate for the One who was near and able to do just that.

cup poured out

 

Baoji goodbye - 1

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

A beautiful melody

10.23.15

There are a lot of sounds in an orphanage of 300 children. Some rooms of toddlers are full of chaotic noise of toys crashing together, pots of porridge being banged with spoons, crying by little ones who just got bumped or felt ignored, ayis chatting away in Mandarin to each other and to children. All the noise echoed in the hallways off tiled floors and bare walls, making it seem much louder than it should. Other rooms seemed to be missing sound altogether. Children in those rooms lay quietly on the floor. Ayis sat beside them folding towels that serve as cloth diapers. The absence of noise in those places seemed to create a chaos in and of itself. They made me long for music, just a quiet melody to fill the quiet with something beautiful.

My heart let out a sigh when we were led to this place.

Here, a local woman comes every Friday morning from 9am until 10:30am. She pulls up a stack of papers where little socked feet can rest. And, she shows little fingers where to touch little keys and teaches little eyes to read little symbols on a page. She receives no compensation for what she does; she just comes on her own volition. The orphanage has no budget for piano lessons. And, there in the middle of the chaotic noise and chaotic silence, she helps little people create beautiful melodies all their own.

Day 5 blog post - 1

Day 5 blog post - 1 (1)

Day 5 blog post - 1 (2)Day 5 blog post - 2

In that moment of hearing a simple tune played by a few tiny little fingers with a few obvious mistakes, it was if I heard a perfect symphony, and I applauded when it ended in kind.

There’s always something beautiful if we look for it. There’s always hope, always something to admire and always something that leads us to say, “There is good here. He is good here.”

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

Day 4 Every Child Is Our Child

10.20.15

It was a 100-page labor of love. For months, I had been collecting the updates and, in the end, 50 families contributed to it. I had asked them for their son or daughter’s Chinese name and the name they go by now, a referral picture or a picture from their adoption trip, a handful of current pictures, and a few sentences of an update. I took all of those and put them together in one place, in the form of a hardback book of redemptive stories, to present to the director of adoptions, a man who could be seen in many of those adoption day pictures.

When the orphanage directors hosted a feast for the team, I presented gifts for all 12 of the orphanage directors…

Thursday c blog pics dinner - 1
Thursday c blog pics dinner - 2

…and then presented what proved to be the most significant gift of all–the update book.

Mr. B literally spent several minutes looking at every page. He would look at the oldest picture of the child, covering up his or her name to quiz himself and then say it aloud. He knew every. single. child. in. that. book. Not only could he name them all correctly, he clearly knew details about each one.

Thursday c blog pics dinner - 5
Thursday c blog pics dinner - 4

How are his legs now? His feet were bad.

He had marks on his hands. Are they still there?

She was so active! Is she naughty for her parents?

Is her heart all healed now? She needed a serious surgery we couldn’t give her.

I didn’t have most of the answers, but I offered what I could. Every piece of information I could give was clearly treasured as if every word of news was a gift to him.

He told me that he has “short love,” that he only gets to love them for a short time but that he knows he is doing a good job when he sees their pictures and knows they have “happy lives” and “a future.” He keeps the update books in his office and he has the children’s pictures prominently displayed so that they are the first thing he sees when he walks into the room so that he “remembers why this job is so good.” He explained that many Chinese people do not understand foreign adoption. Some do not “think it is good” and “have many questions about it.” When they come to the orphanage, he takes them in his office and shows them the update books and shows them the pictures and says, “you cannot argue with these pictures. Look at their happiness. Look at all the good.”

IMG_0384

In between his words to me, all passing through my translator, he spoke gently to the boys who he had invited to join us for dinner. The older boy has a family (yay!), one we got to introduce to him through pictures for the first time only the day before. He’s a little scared about being adopted, but he knows it’s the best thing for him and that it’s going to be good. The younger boy’s file will be available soon, and he’s a lot more scared. The day before when I spoke with him, he was digging his heels in a little and wasn’t willing yet to believe it was the best idea. So, the directors brought them to dinner on their own accord, knowing that time spent with us would be good for them.

IMG_0387

As Mr. B spoke to the younger boy, the other director smiled at me and nodded–no translation was needed for our exchange. I knew what was happening but asked our translator to confirm.

Look at this boy’s smile. Look at this boy’s family. Oh, and look at this one too. Look how happy he is. See this child? This could be you.

By the time the last page was turned, the young boy spoke and the directors both nodded and laughed.

What did he just say? Somebody tell me what he just said.

Okay, I want to be adopted. But, I want to live near CG. Can I live near him?

YES. Progress.

I knew the updates were a good idea. I had seen on previous trips how much they blessed the staff. I had watched as ayis crowded around the book. I had seen one run quickly away for tissues and to hide her tears. I had heard their joyful laughter when they saw the pictures of a child they had loved looking older, wearing nice clothes, riding a bike, sitting on a horse, holding the hands of their American parents. What I HAD NOT seen before was how the staff had used the updates to education Chinese people on what international adoption is and how the staff had used the updates to nurture children, to help them understand what adoption looks like and to help them prepare emotionally for the overwhelming change that adoption is for them.

Those 50 families–my own family included–hoped the ayis who cared for their child would enjoy seeing the pictures and reading the English words. But, the impact they made by contributing to that book was multiplied exponentially and we got to see just a glimpse of it.

Thursday c blog pics dinner directors - 1

 

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

Day 4 Where Orphan Care Must Begin

10.19.15

This trip has been a whole lot of being able to do things we’ve never been able to do before. That openness towards us that allowed us to take pictures and videos from the start, teach a workshop to the staff about making connections and building relationships with children, complete forms on every baby in the four rooms where team members have served, and interview foster parents has been a privilege that we have not taken lightly. In all of that, there has been another open door, one we were not at all expecting but one that proved to be one of the most significant experiences of the trip.

The director asked us to provide some training to their “kung fu” therapists (aka physical and occupational therapists) given that we had 2 PTs and an OT on our team. We were led to the front building on campus, what used to be the building where our teams served before they moved into the beautiful new building in the back where we are now. We learned that there is much going on in that old building still, and what’s going on is nothing short of amazing. In that space that used to be filled with orphans are families. In tact families from all over the city come with their handicapped children to receive therapy. Since they may be traveling very far distances from the countryside even to get the help their child needs, they come for 15 days at a time, sleeping there where the orphans once slept and receiving therapy daily–speech, aqua therapy, massage, PT, and OT. Then, they go home with homework to keep the momentum of therapy going and return again 15 days later until the therapists are pleased with progress and release them to allow another family a spot.

I watched our team members come alongside their team members, encouraging, giving suggestions, asking to learn from them. And, I watched the women and children, some mothers with their beloved sons and daughters and some grandmothers who now care for grandchildren day in and day out, and could not help but look around me and feel like I was right where I should be, watching something miraculous happen.

Thursday b blog pics - 4

Thursday b blog pics - 3

Thursday b blog pics - 2

Thursday b blog pics - 1

Thursday b blog pics - 5

Orphan care starts right here, friends. It starts with all of us joining efforts to support families. It starts with people who care who may not even speak the same language working together to give families what they need so that they are best set up to climb the hurdles in front of them. Orphan care must include doing all we can for family preservation.

Orphan care begins right here, where we are.

Thursday b blog pics tsf shirt - 1

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

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