Amazing, Awful, Adoption

IMG_4231I have had so many folks asking how art classes at the orphanage are going – I know this post is overdue – but I just don’t know how to put it all into words.  Shocking, I know!

I want to say they are AMAZING.  Well, because they are!  I have two classes of some of the best kids.  This week we created all kinds of magic with play dough and the next class we “painted” fireworks to get ready for Chinese New Year.  The kids thought I was joking as I handed out straws for them to blow the paint around the paper.   The first blow brought out gasps of disbelief.  So fun.  Their skeptical faces were soon transformed through laughter as they created all sorts of cool patterns.  One boy said, “It really does look like a “boom”!”

As I stood there and laughed with them, congratulated them on art well done, and watched them play with a novelty item like a straw….I thought again how blessed I am.  Blessed to have the opportunity to teach these amazing kids.   I was created for this.  Love it.

As amazing as it is…..

I also want to say that it is AWFUL.

Actually, awful isn’t a strong enough word.  How can I love on these kids for a couple hours a few days a week and then walk away knowing they are still there.  It is painful to cuddle a sweet five year old and teach him the names of the colors and realize he won’t be cuddled at bedtime.

My mother’s heart breaks for them and my heart’s cry is for them all to find families and to be given a hope and a future.

So how are my art classes….amazing and awful.  I am not sure how to reconcile that.  Well, maybe another “A” word could redeem it.  ADOPTION.

Birthday fire!

IMG_7277If you are going to celebrate….go big is all I have to say….big pink with fire.  Soccer Dude’s birthday cake (decorated for his favorite team) came with a bit of a surprise when the candle almost lit our whole apartment on fire.  Chinese candles….wow, is all I have to say.

The store had one kind so I thought we would give it a try.  I should have known it was going to be an adventure when it showed music notes and safety tips on the box.  (I really should learn to read Chinese characters!)  After the three foot flame upon being lit….it burst open with sparklers and singing “happy Birthday.”  I wish I had known what was coming so we could have gotten it on video.  Little man started to cry, the girls were screaming and the birthday boy….well in good 12 year old boy fashion he yelled “COOL” and blew with all his might saving us all from certain destruction!

The girls made me swear I would not buy a Chinese candle like that for their birthday cakes!  Soccer Dude never wants me to buy candles in the States ever again.  Boring!  (No fire hazard, but boring!)

IMG_7278

 

IMG_7282

I would say that his birthday was calmer from then on, but we had his buddies over for a movie, pizza and nerf gun fun.  Not calm, but super fun.  He has made some very sweet friends since our arrival in Asia (don’t tell them I called them sweet…cool would be better!)  Not every day would you see a group of 11 and 12 year old boys including a 3 year old little brother…with joy.  They did.  Little Man sat on the couch and shot the boys as they ran past during the nerf war.  They pretended to die and made him laugh multiple times.  Those are boys I am thrilled to have hanging out with my son!

IMG_7262

There is something about the birthday of my first-born.  Each year as it rolls around I get overly sentimental as I ponder how life has never been the same since I became a mom.  This child came into the world easier than should be allowed (at my doctor’s appointment they sent me to the hospital saying he was about to fall out on his own.  I hadn’t felt a thing.  He was born two and a half hours later.  I didn’t even miss my favorite Thursday evening show.  See.  It shouldn’t be that easy!)  Three months into my new life as a mom, I was sure I could write a book on parenting.  He ate well.  Slept well.  A dream.  To be sure my bubble has popped along the way – read the other blog posts on my parenting and you will agree!  I am more humble now.

This year as we stand at the edge of him becoming a teen – I feel like I am entering a whole new season of parenting, just as foreign as it was the day he made me a mom.  I thought I would dread the teen years.  But, I actually am excited.   His questions challenge me.  His dreams enlighten me.  His passions astound me.  How could I not be excited to see how God is going to use that as He grows into a man.

The best is yet to come!

IMG_7273

The End

IMG_6814Exams given and graded.  Class averages are now being calculated to be turned into the dean tomorrow.  Thus, completes Hubby’s first semester of teaching at the university.  (I am pretty sure Little Man was most helpful in getting all those averages calculated!)

The semester has flown by, but I think if you asked him, he is ready for the break.  It has been intense.  He has taught a lot of english, literature, and philosophy….but he also has had a lot of learning to do.  The key word has been flexibility as he has learned that the Chinese way of giving exams, planning a semester and turning in grades is done completely different than what we expect as Americans.  I keep telling him next semester it will be easier!  We shall see!

The students are now packing up and returning to their homes for Spring Festival (Chinese New Year), the largest Chinese holiday and the largest break in the school year.  The students won’t return till March. See even the breaks are opposite from the States (long one in the winter, short one in the summer.)  It takes some time to get used to.

As Hubby is winding down my art classes are gearing up.  Since November I have been meeting with folks at the orphanage getting one approval after another, submitting paperwork, evaluating children….you get the idea.  On one of the visits to the orphanage when I was trying to convince the director that the blind children could participate in my art classes…I began to wonder if my creative side that makes me think outside the box would be to much for them and we might never get things all arranged!  But, the time has finally come!  Classes start this week.

I am busy making a gazillion batches of playdough to get us started.  Nothing like playing with clay!  It is a great down the middle activity that should help me get to know the kids better.  I would appreciate your pr@yers Tuesday and Friday afternoons as i hang out with these special kiddos.  May they see the love of JC through playdough, paint, and a crazy art teacher who thinks even blind kids can make art.

Let the adventure begin!

Christmas Open House – Decorating Cookies

It has been a busy two weeks around here.  Let me tell you what has filled our time….baking cookies!  With an oven the size of a toaster oven, baking cookies for all of Hubby’s students was time consuming, but well worth the effort.  I also had great help which made the task much more fun!

IMG_7084

The students all had a great time decorating cookies.  Many of them had not done it before and took cues from Roo and Little Monkey on how it was done.  My kids crack me up in these settings.  They become little experts helping the students, entertaining and ultimately being amazing hosts.  One of my gifts is not hospitality so I guess the Guy upstairs knew I needed four little loves to help me out!

IMG_7043

 

IMG_7035

IMG_7066

 

IMG_7049

 

IMG_7028

 

Great conversations about Christmas and many photos in front of our Christmas tree rounded out the afternoon.  Love, love our lives here.  Have I mentioned that before?! 😉

IMG_7052

 

IMG_7031

 

 

Christmas Carnival @ the Orphanage

sambabyWe created memories on Saturday as a family along with 150ish children.  The international school planned a carnival for the children at the orphanage and the two big kids and I were able to volunteer with the event.   Games, Santa, balloons, prizes and snacks made for a special time for the kids whose days are often the same.

One 17 year old, who is unable to walk, was carried by four volunteers to the room of the party – it was the first time he had ever been out of his room.  As I watched his eyes taking in the Christmas tree mine filled with tears.  I am not sure that I ever have felt the joy of Christmas more than in that moment.

Soccer Dude helped run a game,  (pin the carrot on the snowman), while I made balloon animals.  Roo was asked to assist one of the younger children who was unable to walk.  She pushed his stroller, fed him a special treat of unsweetened applesauce, made him an ornament and sat with him near the Christmas tree so he could take in the lights.

There are few moments that I feel truly successful as a parent, but Saturday as I watched my two kids I had a glimpse of the amazing people they are becoming.  Compassion and love flowed through them in a way that made my mother heart burst.   Roo explained to me later that she thought loving that boy was her Christmas gift to God.  Watching her was all the Christmas gift I could ever want as well.  All of the volunteers saw the children, many with severe handicaps, as precious little people made in God’s image.  In that humble setting with simple games, Father was being glorified.

stroller

samgame

tree

The afternoon flew by and before I knew it the time had come to take children back to their rooms.  My two kids and I escorted our small charges back.  It wasn’t a silent walk.  “Oh mom, let’s ask if we can bring them home with us!  We have enough love for two more brothers!”  The pleas stopped in their throats as we entered the infant room and they saw all of the cribs…so many unclaimed brothers and sisters.  My heart always stops when I enter that doorway too.

A new little one was sleeping on the bench in the far corner.  I asked the nanny about him – one month old. All the faces at the party flashed before my eyes.  This is where it starts.  If there is no one who claims this child then he too will grow up as an orphan…unwanted, alone with no family name.  Will he be 17 and only have seen the green walls of this room?  At times it feels suffocating knowing there isn’t more that we can do.

As you can guess I now had a little one I was ready to bring home as well.

When I walk away from the children’s home, I always feel such a mix of joy and sorrow.  This week two of my children walked with me.  I listened as they processed the afternoon and I whispered a thankful pr@yer in my heart.

Thank you Ld for blessing our family through adoption – for teaching my children to love more deeply, to have compassion and see others the way you see them.  Thank you for our adoption in JC.  

We needed these children more than they needed us.

applesauce

The tree

IMG_7019We went to buy a Christmas tree from THE florist shop that carries trees this time of year.  They put out a few artificial trees with many bright blinking lights.  There are not many ornaments to choose from, but many gigantic Santa heads for your liking to mount in your window, on your door or…..heck, I am not sure what they think we would do with  huge Santa heads!!   The children were all enthralled with the 6 foot dancing, saxaphone playing Santa.  I must admit I found it pretty amusing myself.  The store owner’s son, about 11 years old, found us amusing.  He followed us around the store practicing his English and even walked three blocks with us toward our bus stop!

As a whole Christmas is not celebrated here which is why Santa heads can be found, but no nativity scenes.  I have found misprint Christmas cards made by Hallmark at the supermarket, wreaths with Merry Christmas in spanish, and many of our students asked us when we would hang the children’s gifts on a tree (what? not sure where they got that idea!)   Hubby also joked after the university Christmas party that included a white elephant gift exchange that somehow his least favorite holiday tradition/game has followed us across the world!!  How his colleagues had heard of this holiday game, but have never heard of the birth of JC is unfathomable!  Folks know about Christmas from the movies and many young people will go out to eat on Christmas eve with friends, but there is a lot of confusion about the holiday in general.  But to be frank, isn’t there a lot of confusion about the holiday in the States.  Shopping, decorating, baking (and family drama, if we are being honest) often are in the forefront of December rather than the true Christmas story.

One look around the floral shop turned Christmas and any thoughts of a perfect Christmas tree flew directly out of my brain.  As I type this, our puny tree has four sets of  LED lights, all white, but with different blinking patterns.  Actually, it is perfect – a perfect way to keep the holiday in perspective for myself.  It is about celebrating the amazing gift of JC not about perfectly executed traditions.

In the next week and a half we will be having many opportunities to share about Christmas.  We would appreciate your thoughts and pr@yers.  Open house with students where we will be decorating cookies and reading the story, local friends joining us at our home for Christmas baking…and the story, Hubby sharing about the true meaning of the holiday in his classes – it is going to be a week packed full of sharing.  We are pr@ying for soft hearts and open ears.

We are lifting you up as well – that your holiday is blessed with many ways to keep the birth JC in perspective and that you also have opportunities to share the true meaning of the holiday.

IMG_6978

IMG_6997

 

IMG_6993

 

IMG_7002

 

 

Flu day 7 – thoughts from the trenches!

My daily reading was about the Israelites.  I have read the story for years – but I was struck anew by Gd’s provision for them as they walked through the desert.  Their sandals and clothes never wore out.   They had food to eat and water when needed.

Usually I compare the provision for our work to this story.  It is true we always seem to have enough.  Indeed, I panic from time to time when I come up with my own plan, my own timing rather than waiting on Gd.  That says something about lessons I continue to need to learn!

We have been struggling with a string of illness the past several weeks.  It has seemed that someone in our family has been ill ever since we have arrived in Asia.  Nothing serious – colds, stomach issues, a rash – the cherry on top has been the flu.  It began 7 days ago and continues to reak havioc on our household.  All four kids and now Hubby are sick at the same time.  I was at my wits end – up at nights with sick kids, worried during the day about the youngest two who have fevers that seem to climb higher and not give up.

Yesterday, we were able to visit an American nurse practitioner at her office.  As I stood before her as she checked my children I realized I was witnessing G0d’s provision for me.  I needed peace of mind.  I needed her to tell me that this flu would run it’s corse and we would survive.

G0d provides.

The kids are still sick this morning.  G0d’s provision doesn’t mean that what worries and wears on us comes to an end.  His provision doesn’t always look like what we have envisioned – yet He provides if we give him credit for it or not.

The Israelites weren’t to keen on manna as their provision!  I wonder if I would have been part of the grumbling crowd.  Today I choose not to be.  I am thankful that God provided a friend to help my peace of mind during a rough flu week and I am confident that next week I will give him thanks that we are all well again.

Looking to recognize all the ways He provides for me.

Blessed.

A pink pig humidifier

I was lugging a 50 pound bag of flour home from the small shop down the street that sells eggs, rice and flour in bulk.  The wind, rather chilly yesterday, made the 4 block walk seem a bit longer than usual…or was it the 50 pound bag that got me wheezing….or the cold/flu that I am now sharing with the children.  At any rate, it all struck me as hilarious.

Life for me has changed a bit.

Daily chores that I didn’t think twice about three months ago have now taken on a life of their own.  You may think I am exaggerating (I am prone to making a blah story better) but no my friend, this is a true statement.  For example, making sandwiches for lunch.  I have some peanut-butter and jelly loving kiddos.  Not much thought went into that lunch of choice except for which low sugar jelly could I convince my picky eater to enjoy.  Now, it all starts with me lugging home a 50 pound bag of flour so that I can begin making bread for my family.

I actually enjoy the challenge of it – most days.  I was pretty proud of the green bean casserole I served up at Thanksgiving.  I started with mushrooms and ended with homemade french fried onions for the top…it was pretty good.    Yet, earlier this week when I set out to buy a humidifier.  Oh lordy!  I am not always so eager to embrace the crazy market and not so proud to mention I am very willing to pay a few extra dollars to the lady at the market who doesn’t make fun of my faltering Chinese.  Yes, I did buy a humidifier in the shape of a pig.  It is pink.  The lady was kind to me.  It looks just great sitting in my living room…end of story.

Not sure if I am really telling this in a way that makes you understand how funny all of this truly is.

I am an independent, perfectionist who likes to have things neatly wrapped up.  You can’t even imagine how opposite from that my life now is.  I am a blubbering idiot when trying to talk at the market.  I no longer know how to cook the most simple of dishes, I am wheezing as I trudge up hill all for a peanut-butter and jelly sandwich.

“G0d, you have my attention.”

Just saying.  Having my world turned upside down isn’t a bad thing.  It is just what I needed….a reminder that I can’t do this all on my own.  I am not perfect and I am pretty sure JC didn’t intend for me to have life all wrapped up neatly with a matching bow.

Leaning on Him.

Learning to draw closer, rely more, and trust.

 

 

 

 

New members of the family

IMG_6967Ever wonder if God has a sense of humor? Wonder no more. I have a son who is border-line obsessed with birds. Last year it was chickens.  Since our move to Asia he has embraced the typical pet here – lovebirds. Why is this funny….I HATE BIRDS.  Actually trying to save face here.  I don’t technically hate them.  I fear them.  Long story involving a bat in the church attic followed by an encounter with a very mean red-winged black bird.  I won’t bore you with the details.  (Trying to save face again in case you are wondering!)

I was content to live with my fear. God saw fit to give me a bird loving son. sigh!

I say I am overcoming my fear, but I must admit I hide in my bedroom when Soccer Dude has to open the cage to change the water or feed them.  He is a respectful son. He actually takes the birds in the bathroom and closes the door to give me extra peace of mind as I hear them flapping and squawking.

So all that to introduce you to the newest members of our family…. Skittles (the green one) and Starburst (the yellow one.)

IMG_6964

Behind bars they kinda look cute.  Their song also is almost enjoyable.

IMG_6970

One more thing….when Little Man had crawled on top of a stool and was figuring out the latch to open the bird cage, I suddenly saw many future funny blog posts about birds flapping through my house.  Oh right, already wrote one of those.  Surely I am safe.  Right?!  Oh Lord, have mercy!

Back at the Orphanage

It was one of those moments that seemed to hang between time and space. I stood at the front gate of the orphanage filled with excitement and sorrow. I paused and prepared my heart. Could I win over the new director? Would my Chinese handle the upcoming meeting? Would my former students still be here? Could my heart handle the new children I was bound to meet? Questions abounded. In the silence of the moment, I knew life was about to change.

My thoughts flashed back to four and half years earlier when I first entered that gate. It started as a way to pass the time while we waited for the adoption of Little Monkey to finalize. I would enjoy teaching a weekly art class that would possibly offer a bit of joy to the older children. I didn’t expect to fall in love with those kids and I didn’t expect them to fall in love with me.  I never imagined that they would anxiously wait for me calling my name, fighting over a peek in my bag of “goodies” and art supplies.

Here I was…about to walk through that gate again.

Those pensive moments were the last quiet moments of my afternoon. The rest was a blur.

You can imagine my surprise when I met the new director of the special education unit only to find that I knew her from days past. She had been a nanny. I had been a first-time volunteer in her class. Formality didn’t seem as intimidating as she told stories of the children enjoying art lessons and welcomed me back with open arms.

What she offered me – I never could have imagined.

“I saw how art helped all of the children who are not accustomed to expressing themselves. It makes them happy. I think you could have classes with all of the children in the orphanage. We will think of many ways as a team to make life better for them.”

I toured the facility and saw many changes that had been made in my absence:

  • a new group home (parents with four children in a small apartments set up like homes)
  • new therapy equipment
  • additional nurses and social workers that I was introduced to during my tour.

I was amazed that I was being ushered into areas I wasn’t allowed to see before and shocked by the presence of so many new opportunities and open doors.

My tour ended on the 6th floor.  As we rounded the ramp taking us to our final destination, I saw a crew of older children….my former students. I stopped dead in my tracks taking in the reality that they were still here waiting – as if three years had not passed. They greeted me by saying, “Hello,” in English and with confused glances at one another and shy smiles. I wasn’t sure if they recognized me, but I remembered them. Not much had changed and that made my heart so sad.

I did meet a new friend on the 6th floor. The newest addition to the children’s home. I am not really sure why they introduced her to me or why I was allowed in the baby room. They won’t be my students. But the intent of my visit was quickly revealed. I walked in and saw the tiny new infant. She was missing her ears and struggling with some facial paralysis. She was cuddled in the arms of a nanny as they were testing to see if she would suck a bottle. The nannies anxiously asked me,  “Why does she cry? You are a mom, do you know how to care for her? Does she have hope?”

She is such a beautiful infant, an infant who has already seen much grief and sorrow in her short life. It was hard to tear my eyes from her, but as I did, I noticed the others. They were not sad – but cheerfully playing in excer-saucers.  I couldn’t help but compare them with the older children in the hall. Would these dear small ones live their full lives within the walls of the children’s home? Would they live here long enough to become students in my art class?

Do these little ones have hope?

I didn’t know how to answer the nanny who was obviously so taken with her new charge. To be honest, the first answer that wanted to come to my lips was, “No. She has no hope unless a family loves her and calls her their own.”

Later that afternoon, I paused for a second time before a door. I prepared my heart and took a moment before I walked through. This time it was at the door of our apartment. Life through this door in stark contrast to the life that I just witnessed at the orphanage. I was looking forward to my four loves calling my name as I entered and smothering me with hugs as if I had been gone days rather than a few hours. Before this pleasure, I took a moment to pray for all of the children who don’t have a home or a mother to hug.