I had a question about life today & the whole day is the perfect answer & I want to grab people & say 'Don't you just love when that happens?'
Friday, October 5, 2012
The Perfect Quote
Brian Andreas put this on Twitter the other day:
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Waiting for....Ella!
Our family is over the moon excited to announce that our next daughter will be ELLA!!! We received pre-approval from China to adopt our Ella. Why am I saying "our" Ella? Well, there's a story here, and it's long, 5 years long. But it's good, so very very good. Grab a cup of coffee and make yourself comfortable, do I have a tale for you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Maggie and her guaiguai at the orphanage Jan. 2007 |
When our Maggie came to us in January of 2007, she
carried with her the photo album and disposable camera we had sent and not much
more. After we arrived home, we developed the film and noticed a little pixie
of a girl in some of the pictures. Maggie would point and call her guaiguai
(darling).
Ella, 2009 |
Two years passed and I came into contact with Jodi, who was the XiaoXian
Foster Care Coordinator for Love Without Boundaries (LWB) at that time. She was
in dire need of sponsors for her program and asked me to look at the website
and see if I could sponsor a child. There, on the LWB website was my daughter's
friend, her guaiguai, LWB called her Ella. We became her sponsor and have been
supporting her in foster care ever since.
About 3 months later, in September of 2009, I was going through some old files in our safe and came across Maggie's finding ad. This is what I wrote on our blog:
My heart shattered into a
million pieces yesterday.
I found Maggie's "finding ad" that the orphanage placed in the newspaper. And right there next to her, was our sponsored foster kid. Among all the newborns was this toddler, a kid with special needs who was loved by a family for 17 months before they were unable to care for her anymore.
17 months.
Shattered.
I found Maggie's "finding ad" that the orphanage placed in the newspaper. And right there next to her, was our sponsored foster kid. Among all the newborns was this toddler, a kid with special needs who was loved by a family for 17 months before they were unable to care for her anymore.
17 months.
Shattered.
That was the day I got into contact with LWB and volunteered my services. I started working as an assistant to the XiaoXian program and eventually took it over.
You will hear me say that my Maggie is the inspiration for my work with LWB, but that is only half the story. The whole story is that she left her Ella behind and I took it as my duty to take care of her and the others who are still waiting.
As the years have gone by, Maggie would still ask me about "her Ella". She writes stories about her, paints pictures for her, and asks me why Ella's forever family hasn't come to get her yet. Bryan would look at her foster care reports and say, "why can't we just go pick her up? She would be the perfect sister for Maggie." I would look at her reports and send out a prayer to find this precious child a family.
Ella's adoption file was prepared last summer/fall and then it disappeared. She never made the shared list, and she wasn't on any agency lists here in the US. Then, the other kids from XiaoXian whose files were prepared at the same time started getting matched to Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. No word on Ella. When her file hit the shared list in late May, I knew that her file had made the rounds of Europe, yet she remained unchosen. I was heartbroken for her. Who was going to step up for our Ella?
As the years have gone by, Maggie would still ask me about "her Ella". She writes stories about her, paints pictures for her, and asks me why Ella's forever family hasn't come to get her yet. Bryan would look at her foster care reports and say, "why can't we just go pick her up? She would be the perfect sister for Maggie." I would look at her reports and send out a prayer to find this precious child a family.
Ella's adoption file was prepared last summer/fall and then it disappeared. She never made the shared list, and she wasn't on any agency lists here in the US. Then, the other kids from XiaoXian whose files were prepared at the same time started getting matched to Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. No word on Ella. When her file hit the shared list in late May, I knew that her file had made the rounds of Europe, yet she remained unchosen. I was heartbroken for her. Who was going to step up for our Ella?
Bryan and I talked about adopting her, and decided that it was too difficult, too complicated. Rules that would have to be bent, Maggie would be displaced as the oldest and the one who gets to do things first. Too hard, not for us.
(I know! I know! I'm the one who has drilled it into my daughter's head "you CAN do hard things!!")
I told my Mom that Ella was available for adoption and she said "Mary Margaret, if you love her, go and get her". I said, "Mom, it is NOT that easy. There's the birth order issue, and our agency would have to give us special approval, and she's 8 already, and and and....".
And then the very next day I read this article by Martha Osborne, where she says,
I told my Mom that Ella was available for adoption and she said "Mary Margaret, if you love her, go and get her". I said, "Mom, it is NOT that easy. There's the birth order issue, and our agency would have to give us special approval, and she's 8 already, and and and....".
And then the very next day I read this article by Martha Osborne, where she says,
“I would never ask a family to
take on more than they can handle, but I will always encourage families
to stretch. There are only so many 3 or 4 year olds out there
and paper-ready to be adopted. There are far, far too many 7, 8, and 9 year
olds who have been waiting for their entire lives for someone to see just how
wonderful that they are.
Stretch.
It's good for the body, the mind, and the soul. And it's good for your life
(and the life of a waiting child).”
I had another talk with Bryan and I said, "This is
going to sound crazy, but the universe has been sending me signs, and I don't
think we can ignore them. Are we making this too complicated? Is my Mom right? If
we love her, why don't we just go get her?"
He agreed with me, we needed to stop over-thinking. It was time to jump in, feet first, deep end. The REALLY deep end.
I then had a talk with Maggie. I asked her how she would feel if we adopted a child who was older than her. She told me flat out
that she didn't want an older sibling. She told me she wanted to be first. She told me she deserved to be first. I
asked how she would feel if it was Ella and she said "Oh Mommy, I would do
it for Ella, but no one else!" I promised her that we would
try. We would ask about Ella and no matter the outcome, whether Ella comes home
to us, or goes home to another family, we will be happy for her because she has
waited far too long.
Referral Picture, 2011 |
During all of this, and before we came to the decision to try to adopt Ella, I had been in touch with an advocate because I had been planning on finding a family for her. I read Ella’s file, and in there is another tiny bit of information that I
almost overlooked. In June of 2005, the Director of the XiaoXian SWI bundled up two
babies and sent them together to Bengbu for surgery. One of these was our daughter, Maggie, for her
teratoma resection. The other was Ella for her cleft repair. They came home together in early August. I like to think that two babies from the same orphanage might have shared a room, maybe even a bed. Once again,
her story has been woven into ours.
Referral Picture, 2011 |
We are looking forward to traveling back to Hefei next summer to get our second XiaoXian daughter. We have known her and loved her as Ella for so long we have decided to keep her LWB name as part of her new American name, Daniella.
As I write this story down and look at it from above as a big picture, I
can see all of our paths clearly, shining like bright gold. It is beautiful and has come together perfectly. I don't believe in luck, or
coincidences. There's a higher power at work here and we are incredibly blessed.
Monday, February 6, 2012
XiaoXian
If you are an adoptive parent matched with a child, one of the very first things you do is run to Google and plug your child's hometown in just to see what you can find. Unfortunately for us XiaoXian parents, you don't find much. Or you end up here! : )
XiaoXian is a small town (relatively speaking) of 2 million people. It is 4 1/2 hours north of Anhui's provincial capitol of Hefei. There is very little on the internet about XiaoXian and the surrounding area. I have compiled some video that I took of the city and put it on YouTube. I have the same background music in all of the videos, turn it down if it gets annoying.
Click here for my YouTube videos of XiaoXian.
(removed link to my Flickr account, leave me a message if you'd like access)
If you are an adoptive parent of a XiaoXian child, please leave a comment for me, there are very few of us and I would like to get to know you!
XiaoXian is a small town (relatively speaking) of 2 million people. It is 4 1/2 hours north of Anhui's provincial capitol of Hefei. There is very little on the internet about XiaoXian and the surrounding area. I have compiled some video that I took of the city and put it on YouTube. I have the same background music in all of the videos, turn it down if it gets annoying.
Click here for my YouTube videos of XiaoXian.
(removed link to my Flickr account, leave me a message if you'd like access)
If you are an adoptive parent of a XiaoXian child, please leave a comment for me, there are very few of us and I would like to get to know you!
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