Tuesday, December 23, 2014

A Wish for Christmas Links

This will just be a quick post…


CALEB!!!!


AWAA just posted on their blog today advocating for this sweet boy - 



LOVE This boy!  
Caleb is simply amazing!



Our ACT Missions team also spent time with Caleb in July.  My teammate Gretchen has written several blog posts about him - Caleb blog post . I have started numerous time to blog about Caleb, but I never seem to be able to finish one.  Putting into words everythin I feel and think and remember about him overwhelms me.  If both Gretchen and I could get our husbands to agree to adopt again, we would be fighting over this darling boy!


He need to come home!!!!!

Both myself and the November team leader would LOVE to share with any interested family about our visits with Caleb.




Please share Caleb's story...






Monday, December 8, 2014

Sleepless Saturday Night

Tonight I'm struggling to find sleep.  

150 days since our team left for China, 
and still I think my internal clock is permanently set to China time.

I haven't written a blog post for over a month now.  Not because I have nothing to write about or that I have no more children's stories to tell.  Neither can it be said that I have forgotten about "my" kids.

Time to write gets consumed in the busyness of daily life.  My thoughts overwhelm me as the flood of emotions and memories continues as the tides, ebbing and flowing.

So much…so many…so few!

***  Exciting Updates  ***

Another AWAA/ACT Missions Team returned to love on the children and staff during the first week of November!

One Less has become FOUR Sweethearts HOME!!!

Another family is preparing to leave this week to bring home a Christmas Treasure!!!

A family is currently reviewing the file of another Darling!!!

God continues to weave together His beautiful and amazing LOVE story through the lives of these precious children!  So much beauty in the midst of all the brokenness!

However, my heart aches and breaks more and more with each passing day.  

In the midst of all the Christmas hustle and bustle, I feel the rush around me but feel so detached from the joy of the holiday season.  Decorations, wrappings and trim, lights and bells, sweets and treats, shopping and gifts and gifts and more gifts press in all around me while my thoughts wander back to the children I left behind so far away.

Buying and giving and receiving countless and yet meaningless gifts for which  I, myself, and others have no need has become a source of stress and sadness as I long to give not only material things to the children and staff of the orphanage but also to see each and every one receive the gift of their own family!

I have become discouraged and disillusioned as I have attempted to advocate for the children we met in China.

It seemed so simple in my head! -  Show off pictures of the beautiful kids we met and tell their stories and their forever families will rush to bring them home as quickly as possible!!!  These charming, enchanting, lovable sweethearts would sweep everyone right off their feet just like they did our team!  BAM!  They could all be home within a year!  Yes, I dream BIG!  But I had fallen in LOVE!

However, now Mrs. G.'s question rings in my ears ("Boys")…

…"Why Americans no adopt boys?"

A couple of the youngest boys we met who are under two years old with cleft lip/cleft palate as their only special need had referral files that had just arrived for America World!  So many families request a child under two with a "mild or correctable" special need.  Within recent years cleft conditions have become categorized as mild.  Every day I have checked AWAA's photo listing, anticipating a status change to "Under Review" and the "Matched"!  But after three months, one boy never had a family review his file or pursue his adoption so his file was returned to China and placed on the Shared Listing with almost 2,000 other children waiting for a family.  If these little boys had been girls, they would never have even been posted on a photo listing.  Families are currently waiting 18 months to two years for a little girl as young as possible with a similar condition.

Toodling around the online I stumbled across a treasure today!  One of our team members in July was the Emmy award winning film director Jason Crossman!  He tagged along for half of our week with the children and then flew to Ethiopia to visit children at another orphanage.  His camera captured our journey through the beauty and history in Beijing and then ALL OUR KIDS!  But none of our team has ever seen any of his footage.  He has been working with AWAA on some projects.  Editing and the approval process takes time.  (UGH!  Have I ever mentioned that I have NO patience?)  Discovering that I could get a sneak peek at one of his earliest editing attempts was an honor and privilege.  (He's soooo GOOD at this!!!)

PUDDLE!!!
Ugly crying tears just flowed!

My computer screen was filled with the faces of "my" kids!  Laughing and playing!  Our field trip to the park!  As much as I NEVER wanted to be filmed for all the world to see, I LOVED watching the precious little ones I held in my arms!

Jason captured the moment when I held the very first child I met in the very first room we visited on our first day in the orphanage.  I remember feeling so cautious and timid as we asked permission to interact with the children.  A simple "Yes" melted away the fears until I found a darling four or five year old in my arms.  Her body and muscles were rigid from cerebral palsy's grip on her life.  Flying through the air with the freedom my arms and strength gave her, we laughed together and enjoyed these brief moments before our team was ushered away to another therapy room filled with children and the nannies working to help them learn and grow.

I watched "my" kids and longed to reach through the barriers of a computer screen, through space and time, through thousands of miles that separate us, to reach out and touch them, hold them, laugh and play, dance and sing, to wrap them in my arms and tell them all how much I miss them, each and every one of "my" precious sweethearts!

Oh how I wished that I could share these images with the world!  
I wanted everyone to see "my" kids!  

So many of the children are the older kids with whom we spent so much time together.  We played and exercised together outside.  We enjoyed a field trip adventure to a park and lunch at a restaurant.  We watched them sing and dance to entertain us as their honored guests.  We painted pictures together.  We filled and shaped wontons together and enjoy devouring the delicious wonton soup we had created.

Advocating for these children who stole my heart has broken my heart.  Not one has been matched with a family.  No one has reviewed their files.  No one.

Most of the older children we met were boys, but even the few girls we met have not had a family express interest.  These were some of the children who made it so hard for our team to leave.  These were the boys who waited by the windows of their shared room to shout their good-byes and wave to us as the van drove away for the last time.  These are the children who begged us to help their families find them and bring them home before their 14th birthdays entrap them in the prison of being an orphan forever.

My teammate and I have squabbled over who could convince their husband to bring one boy home first and then how often we would need to travel to visit just to spend more time with him.  One of my daughters keeps asking me about another boy who is already 12 years old, the same age she is now.  She knows about his desire to be adopted and heard from the ACT Missions team who visited in November that he requested a family with brothers.  She wants to know if he has a family, and if not why aren't we going to bring him home.  There are just so many!  So many waiting and waiting!

I understand…older kids aren't cute and cuddly looking…the big words that describe some of their special needs are scary sounding on paper…older child adoption can be challenging and difficult (Oh yeah!  I know about this one!)…families have dreamed of Chinese adoption equalling a daughter, not a son…

BUT

But what about all "my" kids?!?

Christmas is coming!  
I should be celebrating and rejoicing.  
Sugarplums should be dancing in my head.  

Instead, I watched the video of "my" kids one more time as I snuggled under the covers.  Tears dampened my pillow.  I glanced at the clock and adjusted for China time.  Tossing and turning, my thoughts and dreams and prayers return to the beautiful faces, and smiles, and laughter of "my" kids.  My heart aches as I ponder questions and long for answers…

Why, Lord?
How long?
When?
Who?
Where?
Why not?
Please, God?
Soon?

I will try to find joy and peace this Christmas season.  I will enjoy spending precious time with my six children and this first year with my daughter-in-law.  I will rejoice in the birth of Jesus the Christ, the promised Messiah.  Words will fill my thoughts this year…

Redemption
Restoration
Adoption
Sacrifice
Grace
Mercy
LOVE

As I thank my God for the great gift of His Son in my life, I will pray that some day each child I met will some day know and feel this miracle in their own life.

Monday, October 13, 2014

ONE LESS!!!

95 days ago, our ACT Missions team boarded a plane bound for China.  Such a mix of emotions!  So many unknowns!

In the middle of the night, as I tossed and turned, desperately trying to sleep while praying through the anxious butterflies in my stomach, Monday afternoon in China, our first Sweetheart met her Mama and Baba!

Engulfed in the loving arms of her forever family!  

A big brother waiting at home for his sister to come home!  

Ge-ge and Mei-mei!!!

It feels so SURREAL!!!  

Almost like I got to be in the delivery room watching a family born!  I got to spend time lost in this Princess's beautiful smile!  Then returned home to share stories photos of this little Enchantress, the Children's Welfare House that has been her home, and the nannies who have cared for her with her family while they waited for all the paperwork to be processed and approved so they could travel to bring her HOME!

More children are waiting…waiting for their forever families!

What is God calling you to do?  Is He whispering to your heart to grow your family through adoption or foster care?  Is He asking you to GO and Step Into Their Stories by joining an ACT Mission Trip and Becoming a Storyteller?  Are you an incredible intercessor, called to be a prayer warrior for families and mission teams?  Are you able to bless others financially in their calling to GO and adopt?

REJOICING with those who are rejoicing today!

ONE LESS!!!

How many more will go home in the weeks and months ahead?

Friday, September 26, 2014

“Logan”

Some of the kids we met are harder for me to write about than others.  “Logan” is one of these more difficult kids…

***

If God would shout with a megaphone to my husband’s heart that we should adopt again and throw open doors to allow the impossible in Chinese adoption to happen, I could easily see four children coming home from the orphanage we visited and joining our family.  Though I cautioned my team, my daughter Miranda, and myself to not allow ourselves to fall too deeply in love with the children we met, I rediscovered upon meeting the very first child after stepping into the Social Welfare Institute that my heart is not capable of loving with limits.  I just simply LOVE KIDS!  Some more deeply.  “Logan” has entered that treasured place in my heart. 

Every day, I check America World’s photo listing of waiting children to see updates on “our” team’s kids.  Every day I puzzle over why “Logan” and others have not been spoken for and claimed as sons and daughters.

Today, I lay my “Isaac” on the altar and give him back to God.  Today, I will write about this precious boy…and pray more deeply that his family will bring him home soon.

***

Monday morning, after our tour through several room of the Children’s Welfare House, we were taken outside to join some of the older kids in their exercise and play time. 


So many to meet!  So busy playing and taking pictures!  So HOT!

The province and city we were in was just hot and humid!  Think Florida in the summer.  Sticky, sweaty, hot! 

The staff was so kind to bring out water bottles for our team members.  Oh how refreshing a drink of water was when we had been playing with the children!  But they only gave water to our team and not the kids.  After a quick drink, I felt so guilty having water when the kids did not. 

One little boy came up begging for a drink.

I flashed back to my first dinner with my daughter Keziah at McDonald’s when I faced a defining moment.  She wanted a bite of my Big Mac.  My germ-a-phobic self almost denied her sampling my sandwich, but in an instant I remembered that she was my daughter.  Germs or not, I would share with her!  She ended up eating all her chicken nuggets and half of my Big Mac that night!

But this little boy was not my son.  I was leading a team of volunteers in a Chinese orphanage.  I had preached caution and cleanliness so that we could all avoid illness.  I just couldn’t give him a drink from MY water bottle! 

However, we were both pretty desperate for him to have a drink of that water.  So without words or language to help us communicate, he opened his mouth wide, and I poured a couple of swallows in.  A smile stretched across his face as he trotted off to play again.  I knew that I had shared my germs but was relieved that I could still drink the rest of my water.

Moments before we were called inside to feed babies, another little boy desired a drink from the water bottle now stored in my backpack pocket.  “Logan” and I started a game of keep-away.  I tried to offer him a drink just like the previous boy, but he wanted nothing less than my water bottle!  I tried distractions.  I tried hiding it from him.  I even tried taking video with my camera!


“Logan” won!

He drank his fill from my bottle and then returned it to me.  I tucked it back into its pocket, knowing I would be waiting for our afternoon return to our hotel before I could replace my water supply.

When we returned from our daily “nap time” after lunch, the children entertained their honored guests with quite a performance.  Dancing, singing, martial arts demonstrations!  Even the nannies demonstrated a Tai Chi routine!  Costumes and make-up added to the fabulous show!




That first day, there were so many children!!  A sea of unknown faces swam before our eyes.  Snapping photos to hold onto the memories and praying I could sort them all out later.  

As we spent more time with the children each day, they became distinct individuals with their own personalities.  Without knowing all their names, our team quickly began to give them nicknames.  

We became friends as we shared so many wonderful experiences together.


Tuesday, we explored a park and enjoyed lunch at a restaurant on a field trip together.

We painted pictures with buddies.

We played outside together.


We made won tons and enjoyed a delicious soup after our hard work.

And then we had to say good-bye.

Strangers just five days before, we now struggled to leave the children and staff who had become our family.  

Even on that final day, the orphanage director shared with me more about individual children. Through broken English, "Logan" she indicated was very quiet, he didn't talk much, and was a slow learner.  Some of this, I already knew very well; some of it, I still question…

Logan didn't talk to us much.  His laughter and smiles were rare.  But I never assumed he was "slow."  

Logan reminded me so much of one of my own sons.  Quiet and observant in strange new situations.  Contemplatively and silently evaluating everyone and everything.  However, once you allow him the time to warm up to you, you discover how amazing he is!  And he will probably never stop talking!!!

Miranda took Logan's solemn expressions as a challenge!  She wanted the photographic evidence of the boy she had come to love.





Her biggest challenge was simply the fact that Logan, like many of the boys, LOVED our cameras!  




SILLY BOY!
Logan kept trying to put her lens cap back on her camera while she video taped him!
LOL!!!

America World Adoption Association ( www.awaa.org/wc ) partners with Logan's orphanage, but currently his referral file is available on the Shared List.

I have never seen the information in Logan's file.  I have read the brief paragraph on AWAA's Waiting Child Photo Listing (password available upon request).  There are big scary word to describe his diagnosis.  I didn't meet words; I met a boy…just a boy.  I met a quiet curious boy who laughed and played with his friends.  Greeted strangers with caution, which is a good thing!  He may have some delays and learning challenges.  Uhm…yeah…so not a big deal in my little brain!

Two of Logan's biggest challenges?

#1 - He's a boy!  Most people adopting domestically and internationally want girls.  No matter how amazing this sweet boy is, his gender means many families would never consider bringing him home as their son.  :(

#2 - He's a senior citizen!  At seven years old, almost eight, he is OLD in the adoption community.  Most people dream of babies!  Older children are scary!!!  

Having adopted our little girls at six and seven, I understand  the concerns and fears.  Language is often the first question people ask about!  Ha!  I may not have been able to have deep philosophical conversations with my girls at first, but it didn't slow down my chatterbox or our ability to communicate.  Now…I long for earplugs some days!  LOL!  I won't deny that there are hard days.  I can never recover the "missing years" or fill some of the emptiness places in my girls' hearts.  Only God can fill these voids for my princesses.  But I can not imagine my life, our home, or our family without them!  

Logan…the best definition of the name's meaning I can find is "dweller in the little hollow."  Ouch!  That hurts my heart because it seems to describe him too well.  His home is in the emptiness of an orphanage.  Though filled with children, Logan does not have the love, nurture, and support of his family to open up his world, to ground him, and to allow him to grow beyond the limits of these walls.

LOVE!   
Dearly love this boy!  
Where, oh, where are his mama and baba?
Can you help them find him?
Or when you look into his eyes, do you see your son?

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

"There Is No Crying In Football"

Well actually in A League of Their Own Tom Hanks says, "baseball," and not, "football," but hopefully you get the meaning.  Right?  


FOOTBALL FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS!!! 

LOVE IT!

Sorry, I know I'm a complete female freak of nature because I actually more than like the game of football.  Actually both games of football - Futbol and Futbol Americano!

Before kids, it was only football and very obsessive - Friday night high school games, Saturday College ball all day, Sunday NFL fever, and Monday nights I'd set the VCR to record Monday Night Football so I could watch it all week long.  Kids kinda put a damper on that so I had to limit myself.

Then when our youngest son wanted to play soccer like all his big sibs and didn't have a coach, my sweet hubby refused to coach two teams.  He forced me to become more than just a soccer mom!  Having never really played soccer or even understood the game, at all, I became a licensed soccer coach to a bunch of 3 & 4 year olds.  I can't ever do anything halfway, so I researched and learned all I could about soccer coaching.  WHOOPS!  It is a game played with a ball and feet!?!  LOVE IT TOO!!!  (Please note I was in CHINA for the last game of the World Cup!  True sacrifice!)

Welcome to the view from my favorite seat on Friday nights for home football games…


…really close to the 50 yard line…not quite high enough in the stands for the best view, but we have an aisle seat!  Uhm…yeah…we have chosen to pay the extra money for the special season tickets for the numbered assigned seats with backs, so I sit here every home game.  Judge my wasteful spending splurge later, please.  Not only do these seats afford me a back on my lovely blue chair, but more importantly I have a guaranteed seat for each game without arriving when the gates open, hours before the game starts.  These seats allow our family to watch the game and the band with minimal meltdowns from my daughter who struggles with a few little issues.  Just trust me!  These seats not only save my sanity, they are saving the planet!

So I get to enjoy sitting next to my Princesses with their pom poms, negotiate every week that we just ate dinner and there will be no snacks from the concession stand until after the band performs at half time, supply all blankets and rain gear necessary to supplement spirit wear, while doing deep tissue massage as needed or discovering an educational way to circumvent a building monumental fit by guiding my Sweetheart to watch the game so that she can report the jersey number of the player who has the football…hmmm….that might even be future career skill training as a play-by-play, action, color commentator!  

AND…

...this year we have another wonderful family sitting in front of us.  Judging from items I've seen them carrying or wearing, I think they must have a daughter who is a cheerleader or a dance team member in addition to their son who sits with them.  Their son has Down's Syndrome.

Now do you understand the title?

Each week I sit with my princesses and this family and all I can think about are all "my kids" still in China.  

Especially…THE MAYOR!



I haven't written about The Mayor yet…some of my kids are harder to write about…okay…lots of my kids are just gut wrenchingly hard to write about and so these blog posts will boarder on book length and not just a brief blurb.  So hold on…

The Mayor was given his title by the very first team to visit this orphanage.  Within the first few minutes they were at the orphanage, he rounded them all up and organized a game of Chinese "Duck, Duck, Goose" without the help of a common language.  He's such an amazing leader!  So without knowing his real name, they called him "The Mayor."



Returning to the orphanage, I was asked to be on the lookout for him while we all prayed he would not be there.  That during the year since the last team visited, he would have been adopted and gone home to his forever family.  I was so happy and sad when I saw him on the playground that first day.  Happy to see his smiling face and warm welcome to our team, but oh so sad to know that he was still waiting.



Our team jumped right into playing with the kids and participating in the morning exercises led by the nannies.  Marching first with our hula hoops and then lining up for aerobic exercising to music with hula hoops.  I found myself somewhere on the second row having way too much fun making a complete fool out of myself because I have two left feet in Chinese just like I do in English.  



Suddenly I was being led by the hand to the back row by his excellency The Mayor.  He placed me next to another boy and stepped into the row in front of me.  I was clueless as to why, but followed his lead with a smile.



Then…it started…The Mayor turned around laughing and pointing at me and laughing…LOTS OF LAUGHING!  He puffed out his cheeks and held out his hands as he laughed and told me that I was "FAT!"  Okay, I don't know that word in Chinese, but he was VERY clear.  And he made it equally clear why I was stationed on the back row as he pointed to the boy next to me laughing and telling us both that we were fat.

Uhm…it's a good thing that I'm comfortable in my own skin…all of it.  And that my self-esteem is securely intact.

Plus, I can dish it out as well as take it!  Not wanting my teased partner to suffer without a defender, I motioned and gestured and let him know that my partner was muscular and strong.  We argued and laughed in two languages and an endless game of charades.


As the children enjoyed free playtime, Mrs. G., one of the assistant directors, let me know that The Mayor, 12 years old, would "be a very good son."  The staff longs to see him go home to a forever family before his 14th birthday traps him as an institutionalized orphan for life.

After we returned to the hotel for a short rest break after lunch, I told my team about The Mayor calling me fat.  In shock, they all questioned if I understood him correctly.  Surely he didn't really say that?  

We returned to an afternoon performance by the children.  Singing, dancing, martial arts displays, and The Mayor!


The kids were wonderful!  And totally kids!


Now, I did have an advantage because I knew that this performance to entertain their guests had been part of each of the two previous team's visits.  Miranda and I have lead Children's Worship time together for years!  We made sure we had some songs on our phones that we could share with the kids and staff.  


After chattering while their peers performed, the room was too quiet for our two songs followed by Miranda and Jason's karaoke "Love Is An Open Door" reprise from a previous van ride through Beijing.  However, as we stepped down from the stage area, The Mayor was waiting for me laughing and pointing with bubble gesturing hands once again calling me, "FAT!"  The team agreed with me.  No doubts.  Everyone knew exactly what he was saying though none of us really knew these Chinese words.  

On Tuesday, the children were waiting on a bus to enjoy a field trip to a park with lunch at a restaurant.  Off for the unexpected adventures to come!  



As we unloaded from the bus in a mixture of my tiny team of four, nannies, our guide Della, Mrs. G. the assistant director, and all the children who came with us, the children began to sort themselves and gather together in the shade until ticket could be purchased for our entrance.  The Mayor drew close to tease me once again with his declarations of my enormity and his selection of me as his touring buddy.

I only know a very few words and phrases in Chinese.  Then I totally butcher the tones within the language that distinguish "" from "" which is not to be confused with "Ma" or "" and do NOT say "".  Understand?  But one phrase I do know came in very handy…

"Wǒ de hǎo péngyǒu"
(My good friend)

These simple words transformed my relationship with The Mayor!  



At first he didn't quite understand what this crazy FAT woman meant.  So I pointed to him and added  "" (you) and then repeated "Wǒ de hǎo péngyǒu".  Relational gold mine!  Instantly his eyes brightened and his smile engulfed his face!  Taking me by the hand, The Mayor drug me along beside himself to introduce me to every nanny and Mrs. G. and Della as his new BFF!

To help us all endure the heat and humidity, each child and adult was handed a water bottle for the day while we continued to wait.  (I think they were trying to convince the park attendant that four Americans and a bunch of really special children would not disrupt the atmosphere and beauty of the botanical garden.)    With my backpack on my shoulders, I released my hand from The Mayor's grip and slipped my own water bottle into one of the pouches.  

New discovery!!!  
His BFF had water bottle pouches on her backpack!

Like any other man or child I've ever traveled with, the lightbulb moment shone brightly as The Mayor decided that I would have the privilege of carrying HIS water bottle too!  And once again, he gripped my hand to parade me around to each nanny.  He'd spin me around so that everyone could see both my water bottle and HIS in my backpack pouches.  Not only was I his BFF, but now I was his personal pack mule.  

Once through the main gates, we did what any group traveling with children must do upon entry at any exciting location…potty break!  Not for all, but we had to make a stop.  The Mayor did not want to wait idly by.  Despite my hesitations, I found my arm leading me behind His Excellency to a display of characters from the Monkey King stories.  As we walked over, The Mayor began to sing to me a folk song about the Monkey King.  Once he finished, he began my formal education on the proper pronunciation of the word "monkey" - "hóuzi"!



My new BFF and I trooped through the park to enjoy all the sights.  Frequent stops and requests for me to retrieve The Mayor's water bottle for him always brought a grin to his face.  After a while we all stopped to rest in the shade at some mahjong tables and benches underneath tall shade trees.  One of the nannies began to spray some of the children near me with insect repellant against the numerous mosquitoes we battled constantly so I slipped my own handy dandy spray out of my backpack to reapply.

Lightbulb moment again!
The BFF also has bug spray!!!

Uhm…YES!…from now on I was commissioned to reapply bug spray whenever a mosquito dared to enter the domain of His Excellency!



And then I took out a tissue…YEP!  Basically, I had been drafted to fully mother The Mayor!  Everything I was doing for him was nothing that I don't regularly do for my own crew.  Plan ahead, carry supplies, meet needs - mother.  

Following all the fun at the park, we boarded the bus once again with the promise of a delicious lunch at a restaurant.  The Children and the nannies loaded first, and then we hopped into the fold down jump seats in the middle of the aisle.  Made a BIG mistake as we loaded!  Gretchen went back to her seat toward the back, and I sat closer to the front.  

BIG MISTAKE!!!


Gretchen was seated close to The Mayor - my park buddy and new BFF!


I was seated close to Gretchen's park buddy.

The Mayor was NOT happy!  And he made sure Gretchen and everyone on the bus knew it, too!  Standing up to point at me and declare his desire to be with his BFF!  He did settle into his seat for the ride, but there was NO WAY he would buddy up to Gretchen.  

As soon as we were off the bus, The Mayor was glued to my side.  We entered the restaurant and were fist led to a small room with only two tables, but our group was too big for only two tables.  After a little shuffling, three tables in a corner were located for our group.  Miranda, Jason, and Della settled at the first table with several children and nannies.  Gretchen and Mrs. G. moved over to the second table. Uhm…that left me…and The Mayor at the third table filled with nannies and children…and nobody who spoke any English.  

Yep!  
Non-stop adventures!

We sat down to wait for the meal to begin arriving.  Have I ever mentioned what GREAT kids these are?!?  No kiddie menus, no crayons, no sports bar TVs mounted on the walls, no personal gaming devices!  And they just quietly sat waiting for the food to arrive.  Even at the park, we sat to rest FORVER, right across from amusement park or carnival type rides that weren't open for riders, and they just waited until the group was ready to move on, conversing with us or acting silly for photos.  I can't even imagine taking a group of American kids anywhere and having them behave as patiently and well mannered as the children who surrounded us for a week.



While we waited for our lunch, The Mayor began to sing for me again, but this was no spirited folk song.  This time he sang me a beautiful love song.  Well, I don't know what the words really meant, but he dramatically gestured while his voice followed the quiet calming flow of the melody.  So the drama queen in me joined in…I swooned, and ooooo-ed and ahhhhed, fluttered my lashes…I poured it on and hammed it up right along side my BFF.  The nannies were cracking up at the two of us!


Once the food arrived.  The kids ATE!  And ate, and ate, and ate!  And in  Chinese fashion to honor us as their guests, the food just kept coming!  Here I will skip tales of my many mealtime mistakes that again had the nannies and children laughing.

As we all began to sit back with FULL tummies, The Mayor began to speak very quietly and intimately to me.  The nannies were all occupied with the other children at our table, and even if they were listening in, none of them spoke enough English to help translate for me.  The Mayor continued his long soliloquy.  In the midst of his speech, he turned to the wall behind our seats to press an imaginary doorbell he sounded with, "Ding-dong!  Ding-dong!" and continued.  The only words I heard that I knew conveyed his message and plea loud and clear…


"Mama"  &  "Baba"

My heart shattered into a million pieces as I listened to this boy beg me for a mother and father, for a home and a family.

We spent three more days laughing and playing with The Mayor and his friends.  



My BFF could be so fun-loving and silly, and then I'd see his leadership skills as he attempted to settle a squabble between two younger boys.  


This rough and tumble boy sat with us in the 'Baby Room during one afternoon's feeding time and gently played with and encouraged a little one toddling around the room.


We painted artwork together.


We prepared wontons for delicious soup.

And then, we had to leave…



Our boys waited at the windows of their room for us to leave.  Through the safety bars on the windows they waved  and shouted their good-byes as the orphanages ambulance turned van drove us out through the gates and away.



The Mayor is 12 years old.

He has less than two years for his family to find him and bring him home.  If not adopted by his 14th birthday, he will remain locked away in an institution for the rest of his life.  His referral file is most likely buried within the Shared List of thousands of children waiting within orphanages in China to be found by their forever family.



If you are interested in bringing this wonderful boy into your family, America World Adoption Association partners with his orphanage in China (www.awaa.org).

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Tears Today

Last night, I shared my heart with my husband...

How much my heart still breaks for all of "my kids" back in China...

How much I miss them...

How hard it is waiting for some of them to go home to their waiting families...

How much harder it is...every day...knowing so many of them are just waiting...still un wanted...still rejected...still labeled unworthy of love...

I'm watching families waiting two years to adopt - a girl, as young as possible, preferably under two years old, with a minimal special need...

While so many children continue to wait for years...for a family which may never come to bring them home before they reach their 14th birthday.

IT BREAKS MY HEART!!!

EVERY DAY!

It rips me apart.  I hovers over me like a cloud.  I can't forget them!  These precious children fill my thoughts throughout the day and my dreams at night.  But I haven't cried.  I haven't shed a tear for them since our last day at the orphanage.  When we returned to our hotel room after "our boys" hung out their barred windows to shout their "good-byes" to our van as we drove away, I briefly cried a few heartbroken tears...and then I stopped...because I life had to go on...I had to be functional.

But today, I watched this video...

"You Need to Hear What a Little Girl Says About Her Brother With Down Syndrome"

A floodgate of ugly crying, sobs was released.  Even now I can barely control the flow of tears to type.

My mind is filled with the images of "MY KIDS"...


Sweet little "Izzie"!  ("Izzie") 
Such a precious sweetheart! 
What a blessing she will be to her family! 
She just needs to go home!!!

So many of the boys we met..."BOYS"
 
"Caleb"- ("Caleb")
 
and "Logan" - ("Logan")
 
and  "Charlie" - ("Charlie")
 
 
 
and "Gabe" - ("Gabe")
 
and "Henry" right after his first surgery

All of their files are waiting.  America World (www.awaa.org/wc) is just waiting for a family to ask for one of these precious boys to come home.


Even my precious "Joy" ("Joy") continues to wait, because she is too old and her needs seem to great.

As an adoptive mama who fully knows the challenges and struggles of adopting older children, I also know that...
...THE GREATEST NEED OF ALL THESE CHILDREN
IS A HOME
AND A FAMILY
AND LOVE!!!
 
 
More than just these are so many other waiting children...
 
from the orphanage we visited whose files I continue to work to locate...




 
...most of their files buried on the endless "Shared List" of children waiting...
 
...and waiting...
 
...waiting for a family to call them ...
...priceless...
...precious...
...son or daughter...
...and bring them home!