Thursday, August 30, 2012

Love at first sight

At 2:30 in the afternoon on a Friday we got THE call. It was a wonderful day. The timing was obviously orchestrated by our Loving Father. We are never together at 2:30 in the afternoon on a weekday…except for August 17, 2012. Jeremy had a lull in his usually busy work schedule so he decided to work from home that day. It just so happened to be my day off work. My aunts were in from out of town and I had planned to meet them and my mom for lunch and spend the day together. After lunch they convinced us to stop by a local coffee shop for a blended pick-me-up. We were in a separate car so that Jer could easily get back home to finish work. As soon as we got back to our car with frozen treats in hand Jeremy felt his phone vibrate in his pocket. He had a message and a missed call. He looked at the number. Area code 703. Voice shaking he said, “I think we just got our referral call.” With a racing heart I looked at my phone and saw I had a missed call too. It had been too noisy in the coffee shop to hear my phone. Our family coordinator said in the message that the office was closing for the day (as they are on east coast time) but she graciously gave us her personal number so that we could get in touch with her. We hurriedly dialed the number. She gave us the news we had waited 21 months to hear. They had a child for us. She is 4 months old. When we started this journey our social worker told us that more than likely we would get a boy because they had a higher adoption rate. Throughout the wait both our moms and several close friends told me they dreamed our baby was a girl. What an unexpected gift. We got to listen as she told us some background information and medical history on our little girl. I had to pinch myself to be sure it was actually happening. By the time we got to my parents house over 20 minutes had elapsed. We knew my family would be wondering what took us so long. They teased us by asking if we had been making out in the parking lot. I wasn’t sure how to tell them - so I just blurted out with tears in my eyes, “We got the call!” Chaos ensued. My mom jumped out of her seat and knocked over (Jeremy insists she karate kicked) my aunt’s coffee as she rushed to give us hugs. Once everybody settled down we went inside to their computer, checked our email and got to see her face for the very first time. It was love at first sight. The rest of that day and the next were spent sharing our joy with family and close friends. We even got to call Jeremy’s mom and sister-in-law all the way in Tanzania!


Since then we have been getting a lot of questions about her. Unfortunately we are unable to share her name, pictures or really any information until we pass court. When will that be? Courts are closed for the rainy season until October 1st. We hope to be assigned a court date sometime that month. So for now we are staying busy getting ready to bring her home. Jeremy is working on a big project redoing our backyard and Megan is reading up on attachment and everything else that comes with adoption. Each day we gaze into her smiling face and know this is the child that God chose for our family.


 
In the car right after we got our referral call.    
 
A care package we put together for our little girl.  Another family will deliver it for us next week!  


Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Warning. This might make you hungry...

After much searching we FINALLY got the opportunity to attend an ETHIOPIAN cooking class. The options in Portland are quite limited so we took ourselves for the weekend to Seattle and as a bonus got to attend a Mariners game too.  During the class we learned a lot about Ethiopian culture and made some super delicious food.  The main ingredient in Ethiopian cooking is berbere: a combination of many spices and dried ground chilies.  It was said that berbere is to Ethiopia as curry is to India.  Megan's favorite was the misser wot or red lentil stew and Jer really liked the beef tibs which is basically an African version of steak stir fry.

Check. It. Out.










Looking forward to making many family Ethiopian meals in our home!

Saturday, June 23, 2012

A Father's Perspective


Well let's be completely honest...we all know Megan has been writing the blog entries. That is because she is amazing at putting together words in the English language to express the way she is feeling. So since it is around Father's Day, I thought it was about time I spend a few minutes (okay weeks) to put down some of my thoughts about the process. The best time to stop reading would be now...you won't miss much.

If I was to list a few of my feelings (no specific order):
Frustrated
Scared
Amazed
Unworthy
TRULY BLESSED

Let me take a minute to explain each of these a little for you. Any expecting parent is scared. What if you're not the parent you want to be? What if you mess something up? This is natural feeling...I hope. Frustrated!! Many would assume because of the process or wait time. That is not the case. I'm frustrated because there is nothing I can do as dad to get my child home any sooner. The process and wait time is all part of God's plan and I just need to be looking to Him for strength. How can I not be amazed? God is creating a child that we will love for and care for thousands of miles away and He has already placed love in our hearts for him/her. You might ask, how can you feel unworthy and truly blessed at the same time. I guess I would explain it this way, I'm blessed with life, a beautiful wife, a loving family, a great church and most of all being adopted by my loving, heavenly Father. But I feel so unworthy of all thee things and most of all being responsible of one of God's precious children.

In the end, God is amazing and for some reason continues to bless us even when we fail in so many ways. Oh, I forgot one. EXCITED!!! 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Good fortunes.

Went out for dinner this week at our favorite Thai restaurant….we were excited over the silly fortune cookies we received at the end of our meal. God continues to remind us of His faithfulness is BIG and small ways. There has been a lot of movement on the waiting list over the last few months! Three infant referrals from our adoption agency in February, four in March and one so far in April. Seems like our wait is a little easier as we can see a faint light at the end of this long tunnel. Looking forward to the day we announce our own referral, but for now we are celebrating with others who get to look at the beautiful faces of the newest members of their families.


What we did while we were waiting for YOU:

Went to Colorado, Crater Lake, Seattle and Africa

Bought a Prius

Decorated your room

Spent lots of time with high school students

Started a new hobby - snowshoeing

Studied for a nursing certification & an architectural exam

Practiced cooking and eating African food

Read parenting and adoption books

Picked your pediatrician

Celebrated the birth of your cousin Adelaide

Prayed for you, longed for you and imagined the day you would come home

Sunday, February 26, 2012

I couldn't have said it better myself...

“The English language lacks the words to mourn an absence. For the loss of a parent, grandparent, spouse, child or friend, we have all manner of words and phrases, some helpful some not. Still we are conditioned to say something, even if it is only “I’m sorry for your loss.” But for an absence, for someone who was never there at all, we are wordless to capture that particular emptiness. For those who deeply want children and are denied them, those missing babies hover like silent ephemeral shadows over their lives. Who can describe the feel of a tiny hand that is never held?" -Laura Bush

Recently we have joined a network of other waiting parents from our adoption agency. It is a place where we can share our feelings openly, offer support/encouragement and pray for one another. Many of these families have expressed pain that comes from the words of others who are possibly insensitive or just naïve to the adoption process. We feel so fortunate to have a VERY supportive circle of family and friends that are making this adoption journey with us. Ninety nine percent of the comments we get are out of love and concern for our wellbeing. But the longer we wait the less people seem to know what to say to us. It is an unusual place to be. We get that. As part of our calling to adoption we feel it is also our duty to educate and empower those around us. We hope this blog will leave you with a little better idea of how some adoptive parents feel and how your words make an impact…

A collection of comments from adoptive parents

Words that hurt:

“Don’t you want to have your own kids?”

“When people don’t say anything at all – I am sure it is because they don’t know what to say. But to me, that’s one of the most painful ways to respond. It is real to us and I want it to be real to them too (especially to the people we are closest with). To not bring it up is to both deny the pain of what we’re going through and to deny the reality that there really will be a child for us at some point. Can you imagine someone going through a pregnancy with their friends and family never asking how they are doing or how the baby is doing?”

“My advice would be to be mindful of an adoptive mom’s feelings at baby showers.”

‘“Why don’t you just try to get pregnant?’ The problem doesn’t lie in whether or not we can become pregnant. The problem lies in the assumption. The assumption that since it is a harder and longer journey to our Ethiopian child, that a biological child would be more desirable.”

Words that help:

“To me, the most helpful and loving thing that people can do is to acknowledge and validate the pain we are feeling, to cry with us and to pray for us. We just want the people in our lives to say ‘We love you guys and are so sorry that you are experiencing this pain right now.’ That to me is so much more helpful that the person who off handedly responds that we need to trust God and its all going to work out.”

“I just like it when people ask me real and honest questions. Questions like, ‘So what happens next?’ or ‘Why does it work that way?’ It lets me know they are concerned.”

“I love being able to educate people about adoption. When they walk away saying, ‘Wow, I never realized there was so much to it…’”

“I would rather have someone say, ‘I have no idea what that must be like and how you are feeling, but I love you and I am here for you.’”


Thanks again for your support and encouragement during this long process. We feel so fortunate to have such a great network of people that will walk alongside us as we daily figure out how to live purposefully and to be fully present in each moment. We love to answer questions about adoption. Please don’t hesitate to talk to us if you think that this might be something you are interested in. God has called our family to this journey and we know He will be faithful to complete it!

Sunday, January 29, 2012

A hairy situation

About the time we started our plan for adoption I also coincidentally started growing out my hair. At first it was for practical reasons…I wanted to be able to pull it back into a pony tail for our overseas trip to Tanzania. Now the increasing length seems almost symbolic of our waiting time. I decided to embrace the symbolism rather than becoming embittered by it.



These growing pains are a necessary part of the journey and quite evident to those who know me well. This process of waiting has changed me. So it seems fitting that I look different on the outside because the inside is slowly being transformed day by day. The growth is hard, but so good. I trust this time will allow Jeremy and me to be stretched and molded into the kind of parents our kids will need. Because of this I have decided that from now until the time we bring home our firstborn I will continue to let it grow. Hoping it will happen before I start looking like Rapunzel!


Saturday, November 19, 2011

Worth every minute

Today marks the one year point since our paperwork was submitted to Ethiopia. On that day we never would have guessed that it would take this long (at that point there was an estimated 4-6 month wait). We are trying to be cautious in our response when people ask us about how the process is going. Adoption is so dear to our hearts that we would not want any comments coming from our impatience or emotions to cause someone else not to adopt. There are already so many negative ideas floating around about the cost, the wait times and the difficulty of adoption. It is hard to know what to say. So we smile and respond, “We are just waiting.” Some days it feels like we are pretending, like this waiting will never come to an end. We wish we had a “due date” like many of our friends who have gotten pregnant and had babies since our adoption process began. Often it feels like our entire life in on hold. It is hard to make any kind of plans for the future when there is an empty space in our family and we don’t know when it will be filled. And then there are times when I (Megan) cry for no apparent reason at a commercial, song on the radio or picture of a child, not realizing I had been holding back tears all day long. It those moments God gently reminds us that the ache we are feeling is a necessary part of this process. He is making room in our hearts for the child that one day we will get to hold in our arms.

The reality is adoption is a battle for the lives and hearts of children. It is standing up and telling them they are worth it, every minute, every penny and every emotion. This is the first time either one of us have really had to wait a significant amount of time for anything we wanted. It is hard. It is humbling. And we are confident it will be worth every minute. We are just waiting…and that it okay.