Monday, March 28, 2016
Alex Li Bao Bao
This is Alex and the boys. He is a happy child. Holly says he picked them. I don't know what that means exactly. He is liking the boys, burger king, soccer, and the swimming pool. I'm posting this for her. She says he is a good fit for their family. Honeymoon period is on. Holly's mom. Sue
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Bao Bao
A week from tomorrow, Lord willing, we leave for Beijing
to add this little guy to our family.
He looks up to the challenge, don't you think?
Life will change completely for him.
New: language, food, family, culture, school, smells,
even a new name,
Alex LiBao, if he chooses to use it.
Alex/BaoBao is described as being self motivated, a good helper, ready smile, clever, energetic, talkative, gets along well with others, sometimes obstinate, loves to look at books and be outside, fond of listening to music, deep sleeper, active, concentrates and participates in school and his favorite toys are balls and stilts.
March 26 - we should get to Beijing.
March 27 - bullet train to Taiyuan, Shanxi
March 28 - Meet Alex
We hope to go to his hometown Yangquan during the week while officials get his passport ready.
April 1 or 2 we take the train to Guangzhou where the US consulate that handles adoptions is located.
We'll be there for around a week getting medical and visa paperwork done.
April 9 we start the loooooooong flights home.
This will be the weirdest trip for me. The boys are going along to ease the transition for Alex. They'll help model relationships between parent and child and between siblings. Also, kids tend to bond with kids faster than adults. The girls are here and going with the Minnesota grandparents to see the Florida grandparents and taking in "Dizz -We - World" according to Emily. So I'll be on a trip with kids...and won't be taking anyone ALONG TO THE BATHROOM! In the land of squatty potties, I am blessed! I can't wait to watch Kenton escorting multiple kids to the bathroom as I go solo! Woohoo!
I bet Alex will hate this picture when he's a teenager.
But since we have less than a dozen pictures to help him remember the first 7 years of his life, each one is a treasure.
See the little treasure in the blue shirt and yellow shorts?
He's almost ours!
Lisa told Lena that this is the boy our family is going to adopt.
Lena said, "That's why he looks happy."
We hope she's prophetic.
Please continue to pray for Alex and all the changes that he's going to be experiencing, that God will continue to prepare his heart for a new home.
Friday, March 11, 2016
Thoroughly Chastened
Words of wisdom from James 4
13 Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”—14 yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. 15 Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.” 16 As it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. 17 So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.
Lesson #1 for today and many yesterdays.
13 Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”—14 yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. 15 Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.” 16 As it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. 17 So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.
Lesson #1 for today and many yesterdays.
Saturday, March 5, 2016
Trending at our House
Davis has the farming equipment and the train set up in their room
Going into the boys' room after dark is quite the obstacle course.
Steel-toed boots are recommended.
I'm specializing in surgery today.
I reattached one leg to a bear,
I sewed up a neck wound on a cow,
And I reattached a foot to a leg.
All my patients lived to be loved and hugged for awhile longer.
The little girls are ready for Disney when we finally leave for China.
(The grandparents are taking the girls to Disneyworld
while the boys are going to China to help the transition with their brother.)
Megan was a bit alarmed when she saw me making these and informed me that
SHE DOESN'T WANT ONE!
I wish I had it on tape that she once requested
matching mother-daughter dresses.
Imagine the horror!
Sunday, February 28, 2016
On the Rollercoaster
You know that whole opposites attract thing?
We are living proof.
He's calm, I shriek
I'm on time (usually), he prefers 5 minutes late (or more)
He likes animals, I detest them.
I'm a planner (kind of), other than farming he doesn't plan.
I would far rather have way more than I need, he prefers to run out rather than have extra.
These are just a few of the ways we are refining each other.
We'll either end up in matching straight-jackets (or behind bars)
or become lovely people.
Then there's the whole adoption waiting issue and that throws everything out of whack!
Tonight Mr. Calm-and-Reasonable-Just-Put-It-Out-Of-Your Mind asked,
"Do you think tonight's our night?"
(that's my line!)
"It might be, because all of a sudden I was attacked with panic and thought of the million and one things I need to do or should do before we leave the country. (And failed completely to mention that I could have been doing these things during the eternity we've been waiting!),"
responded the spouse whose motto is If In Trouble Or In Doubt, Run In Circles, Scream and Shout.
(It's Sunday and in the panic mode I had started the washer and dishwasher, cleaned up the disaster I call my kitchen, made a list of the 1,000,001 things to do, was heading out to fold a basket of clothes, and thought about {really briefly!} sweeping the kitchen floor.)
"Me, too,"
said Mr. It-Will-Happen-When-It-Happens
"That's why I didn't work here on Saturday."
And so the rollercoaster starts down the hill again.
I realized the stress is getting to Mr. Patience when I called him one morning and he answered with, "Did we get it?" After my negative response he added, "This would be so much easier if you could just put it out of your head and forget planning about it until it happens." Turns out that "you" was a reference to himself. I only realized that when he repeated it a couple of days later. It's getting to us. Both of us. Which is kind of nice because I hate to think of going completely crazy alone.
I haven't blown up with our agency - except when the executive director told me last week on the phone that it "will happen eventually and in the meantime you should just try to forget about it." That made me pretty mad. We've busted our butts for the last year trying to get everything done promptly and paid for overnight postage to keep things moving as quickly as possible and NOW, right before we leave for China, we're supposed to just forget about it until we get THE CALL. Come here and say that to my face, lady!
And I want to remember this:
I had a dream the other night of Alex. I pretty much only remember a dream once a year or so and then it's usually a nightmare. In the dream Alex was about 14 with the name Queue Home (Go figure! I never realized that my subconscious was into symbolism.) and he was SO NICE and KIND and everything we would pray for. I went to introduce him to someone and blanked on his name. Completely. Then I remembered Queue and he smiled gently and filled in, "Home" and my heart broke. How could I forget? What I remember best was that gentle smile.
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Still Here and Random Thoughts About It
We got this message from our adoption agency today. Our wait for TA (which is averaging 3 - 10 days) is now at 49 days.
"Our Beijing office personally visited CCCWA today China time and pushed further on the delay. Our people were told that the delay remains the fallout of the computer glitch that I discussed with you in January, when the accounting department was having some problem accessing their computer records to confirm your dossier and translation fees were paid, a confirmation the matching department requires in order to issue the TI for any family. Of course, we were told at an earlier point that this glitch had been fixed and obviously has been since families with A5 approvals issued in February are getting their TIs. Our staff was told the financial section was “too busy”, which I take to mean to get to the backlogged families right now, and that we were to wait while they caught up. It’s illogical why the financial department would not deal with backlogged families before more recent ones, but we as adoption professionals learned that logic rarely applies in international adoption. "
SO WHY WAIT?
Because some things are worth waiting for.
It may not be the desire or the dream that God has given to you, and you may not understand it from an earthly perspective, but we believe that it is God's plan for us and His plan B for Alex. Thank you to those who have prayed for us and encouraged us. Please keep praying for Alex. This is from Love Without Boundaries and addresses the possibilities of why he may or may not know that we are coming:
Of course that was an extreme response, but adoptive parents in the West need to understand that orphanage directors and nannies regularly see families who stop adoptions. Whether it is from divorce, or money issues, the loss of a job, or a death in the family, sometimes adoptions fall through. Many orphanage officials feel in their minds that they are protecting a child from future heartache by withholding information about a family until that family actually arrives in China. They also might feel like they are protecting the child from hearing taunts or even threats from other children in the orphanage who are dealing with their own feelings of not being chosen.
On the other hand, Alex may have been told and given our album back when we received LOA back in October. And now it's February. That's a long time for a 7-year-old to face an unknown future. Please keep his little heart in your prayers.
God is building patience (although it feels like we are just working toward official straight-jacket status).
Again, someone else's words are better than mine, so from Sandra Zimmerman at Tales From Our House:
After I wrote yesterdays post I was listening to a radio program and what I heard felt like God was prodding me, giving me a reminder. In my own words this is what I heard, "Patience, we ask God for it, desire for Him to pour it upon us, to give it to us a gift of sorts, if you will. But God usually doesn't answer our prayer by filling us with patience. He often leads us through hard times and let's us earn patience because like most things, we will value it much more if we have to earn it." The speaker then gave the illustration of someone learning to water ski, again my own words, "You are in your living room with your new ski's and an instruction manual. Even though you follow the instructions, you will have a difficult time learning to ski because you are missing the key ingredient, water. Learning patience is similar. We have an instruction book and we know what we wish to attain, but without trial's, we will have a difficult time learning patience."
I'm sorry, Lord, but I HATE PATIENCE.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
February
The neighbors have lambs.
Everyone enjoyed them and tried to persuade dad that our farm needs some.
I'm afraid that my pet Q-tip permanently spoiled owning a lamb for Kenton.
However, you know the old adage - if at first you don't succeed...
Kids in the van.
This is an old mill between the farms.
As long as I don't have to touch them, chickens are so much fun.
(Especially when they roost on my husband's skid loader at night.)
Graffiti - generally best done with something other than your own name.
Oakview Ridge Farm parlor
Sebastian during milking.
Hello, ladies!
Milk house with milk tank
More barns and silos
Emily dressed up for Chinese New Year.
We've been expecting TA since early January. We've had rough days and good days
and put our lives on hold as we waited to hear that we are cleared to travel.
Yesterday was not a good day.
Despair hit the fan and it wasn't pretty.
We need to quit waiting and planning and just focus on living.
So our family of seven - five wonderful kids - went to a museum.
It was good to get away for the day and just enjoy what we have.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







