• Home
  • Blog
  • The Sparrow Fund
    • Together Called
    • We Are Grafted In blog
    • Speaking
  • Jiayin
  • Contact

My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

  • Home
  • Blog
  • The Sparrow Fund
    • Together Called
    • We Are Grafted In blog
    • Speaking
  • Jiayin
  • Contact

A crotch full of sand

7.18.17

She looks good. Board in hands, tethered to her wrist. She stands and watches, waiting for that wave just like the boys who think they’re men 30 feet down the beach from us. She takes off at full speed, drops her board about 6 feet away from the surf, jumps on it and glides for a whole 6 inches or so. She promptly falls to the side, her dread locked hair sticking to her face, and looks back looking for someone to share her excitement. Which I’m glad to do.

She’s so legit.

Over and over again. Literally hours. Unphased at all by the fact that those boys in board shorts are doing flips while the nose of her board gets stuck in wet sand.

Mama, I have sand in my crotch.

I can see that.

Pulling her suit a tad to the side, I can see that we don’t just have sand in her crotch, we have a small bucket full of sand, essentially stuck there due to the fact a fatal design flaw to leave the crotch lining open in the front. “I know, why don’t we just leave this part open so that there’s actually a built-in sand pocket,” said some insane Target clothing designer somewhere who clearly does not have any young daughters.

While I’m doing my best to turn things inside out and clear out every grain of distraction so that she can get back to her wild world of surfing, I hear some dry commentary from the dry girl in the dry beach chair next to me.

I am never going to do that when I am a mom.

To which I answer with a smile, “Yeah, you will. Just like I am doing now and just like I did for you. That’s what moms do.”

And off she goes, with about 23.4% of the sand removed, unwilling to give up her sport due to some harsh conditions, still looking back for my jaw-drops and thumbs up when she catches the big wave. Which I give every time. That’s what moms do.

No related posts.

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

Introducing Oliver and Clawdia

6.18.17

The wait is over. There are two new teeny furry beasts in our home. And, while I know that baby anythings (including coke cans) are cute, these little ones are beyond adorable.

We’re pretty much all obsessed with them (them being Oliver and his teeny twin sister Clawdia). If you don’t believe me, check out the feline fortress Evan created this week in preparation, look at Ashlyn’s 150+ pictures she’s taken of them already, or ask the family we got them from who we’re quite sure are very happy to not have a wannabe feline attachment therapist texting them every other day since these babies were born 2 months ago. (Yes, I apologized to her a few times…in between messages…and gave her family gifts as peace offerings.)

It’s gonna be a great summer as hearts here heal and we laugh at a whole lot of kit kat shenanigans.

No related posts.

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

To my husband on Father’s Day 2017

6.18.17

Dear husband,

It’s Father’s Day. The kids made you cards. Evan complained that Ashlyn’s once again was better than everyone else’s and made theirs looked like garbage. I made you blueberry pancakes for breakfast but had to make the kids all chocolate chip ones because they didn’t want blueberries and it look so long that I barely got to sit down before kids were finished and forgetting to clear their plates. We were a few minutes late to church, and the kids fussed afterwards about avoiding any “conversation traps” so they could get home to argue over…I mean admire…the new kittens. Our picnic was moved inside given that it was so hot and our dining room was about 5 degrees cooler. The food was awesome though; I hardly minded Lydia crying over not having enough alone time with the kittens.

I hope you enjoyed your day, your perfectly imperfect Father’s Day with two teeny kittens frolicking in the sunroom and 4 not-so-teeny kids, 1/2 of whom give me lip about taking their picture. It was good, not because of any real significant moments but because of lots of insignificant ones. That’s kind of where most of the good stuff seems to be anyway.

I’m not going to tell you you’re the best father in the world; I wouldn’t even know how that role is measured. But, I will tell you you’re the best father for these four. Lydia said whenever she wants to wrestle, you wrestle her. Drew said whenever he wants to go to Goodwill to find something for a project or wants to make something and needs your help, you make time for him. Ashlyn said that whenever one of them isn’t happy, you cheer them up. Evan said that you agreed to new kitties—which I interpret as even though you weren’t thrilled about the responsibility and commitment of new kittens, you said yes because you knew it was what he needed. You may not be the best father in the world; I don’t know what that means and who would want that title anyway? You, my dear, are the father they need. You are the father I need to be by my side. And, as Lydia worded it, “I love you more than any father in the world.”

Thanks for loving them and loving me everyday in spite of days that never seem to go as planned and a little poo outside the litter box…metaphorically speaking, of course…

 

No related posts.

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

It shouldn’t be this easy

3.8.17

You spent hours in training. You learned about what trauma is and what it looks like. You probably even have a certificate to prove it. You spent more hours in another type of classroom, reading books that made you stop and catch your breath and blog posts that made you question what you were signing up for. Are they trying to scare me? Is adoption really as hard as it sounds like it is? You pressed onward regardless, with fear and trepidation yet hopeful. Maybe it was all the before-and-after pictures you scoured the Internet for that encouraged you. Those children were smiling; those families looked happy.

It seems like forever ago. At least it does for me.

Every night before their light is turned off, our daughters snuggle up in Lydia’s bed for what has become an evening ritual. With a pencil in hand, Ashlyn reads a prompt from a daily diary, Lydia answers, and Ashlyn writes it down. Every so often, while I am waiting to braid her hair or make a bed, I flip through and catch up on what has been added. Sometimes, I giggle. Sometimes, I shake my head. A lot of times, I end up asking Lydia to tell me more.

January 22nd. What makes you feel special?

I can think of 10 things in about the same number of seconds that I’d guess she’d say—snuggling with Mama in her bed, reading books with Daddy, eating a big bag of popcorn all by herself, being able to climb door frames and bend her body backwards into a circle…But, she didn’t name any of those.

I feel special because I am the only Chinese child in my family.

 

I teased her about it when I read it. Lydia, while you are very right that being the only Chinese person does make you special, you do know that each of the kids in this family is special, right? She giggled. She hugged me. She said she knew. It was one of those all-is-as-it-should-be moments. Here’s my girl, my girl who had a very hard start who suffered great loss, who failed to grow for no known medical reason, who had a hole in her heart in more ways than one. And, she’s doing okay. Actually, she’s doing really good.

It shouldn’t be this easy. While I’m serving other adoptive families, have I missed something right here in my own?

They are some of the words I hear in my head.
Until I replace them with truth.

This is good. She is safe, and she feels safe. She is the only Chinese person in the family, but she doesn’t feel alone; she feels special. In this season, today, right now, she feels no shame; she’s proud of what sets her apart; she knows her story at the depth that a little girl can, and she likes it. That doesn’t mean that there’s something I’m doing that I shouldn’t be or not doing that I should be; it simply means that’s where she is which means that’s where I am. I’m sure there will be harder days. They may or may not be as hard as some of those days I read about years ago when we were wide eyed with wonder about what adoption would look like for our child, for us as parents, for our family. They may start tomorrow, or they may start many tomorrows from now. But, if I spend today wondering why it doesn’t look more like those days, thinking today is too good to be true, I’ll miss today entirely. And, today is simply too good to miss.

Don’t stop here. Read It Shouldn’t Be This Hard HERE.

This post appeared first on No Hands But Ours. 

No related posts.

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

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 50
  • Next Page »

Hello

I overthink everything. This blog is a prime example. Make yourself a cup of coffee and sit down for a read. Actually, make that a pot of coffee. There’s a lot of overthinking here.

Connect

Recent Posts

She’s come a long way

Gift ideas for a happy-China-traveler-to-be

Three gifts.

A letter to my friend on her adoption eve

The day my husband quit his job {reflections 5 years later}

Subscribe to keep up to date via a newsletter

Archives

Popular Posts

  • The day we met Lydia in Xi'an
  • Getting the attachment thing
  • The day my husband quit his job
  • Other places you can find my writing

Follow Along!

Categories

Recent Posts

She’s come a long way

Gift ideas for a happy-China-traveler-to-be

Copyright © 2015 | Design by Dinosaur Stew