Four years ago, I looked those boys in the eyes and knew I was their mama. Everyone told me it couldn't happen. Everyone told me the risks, steps, hurdles - that is was impossible. I didn't listen. I've always been a bit stubborn, and in this case, it worked out. One of my favorite memories was riding in a car full of Creole-speaking strangers (and a chicken) to get to a meeting in the hills of Haiti to start the process of adopting of our sons. I was crazy! When I look back at that day and all that we've been through to get to where we are, I have so much to share with our boys and the world. And I will. It's on my heart to write a book. Someday. For now, I'm going to focus on being a new mama. And what I can't put into words right now, I'll let a video speak for me. Click here. (Unfortunately it won't work on mobile devices due to copyrighted music - but enjoy it on your computer!)
"And He took the children in His arms, put His hands on them and blessed them." (Mark 10:16)
Friday, July 25, 2014
Coming Home 7/30/14
Finally. I have wondered what I would say or do when we got the word that it's time to bring our children home. Four years. What do you say after four years of waiting? When I look back at our first posts, they are joyful and exciting. As the months and years drug on, the posts got pretty raw and cynical. I don't regret that honestly. It was always my intention to be real about this process and our feelings. But looking back my biggest hope was that more than our helplessness and utter pain, you witnessed our courage and fight. We pray you saw our constant faith to keep going and believing. We hope you heard our cries to Jesus and saw our continued trust in Him even though we were sad, angry, and hurting.
Four years ago, I looked those boys in the eyes and knew I was their mama. Everyone told me it couldn't happen. Everyone told me the risks, steps, hurdles - that is was impossible. I didn't listen. I've always been a bit stubborn, and in this case, it worked out. One of my favorite memories was riding in a car full of Creole-speaking strangers (and a chicken) to get to a meeting in the hills of Haiti to start the process of adopting of our sons. I was crazy! When I look back at that day and all that we've been through to get to where we are, I have so much to share with our boys and the world. And I will. It's on my heart to write a book. Someday. For now, I'm going to focus on being a new mama. And what I can't put into words right now, I'll let a video speak for me. Click here. (Unfortunately it won't work on mobile devices due to copyrighted music - but enjoy it on your computer!)
Four years ago, I looked those boys in the eyes and knew I was their mama. Everyone told me it couldn't happen. Everyone told me the risks, steps, hurdles - that is was impossible. I didn't listen. I've always been a bit stubborn, and in this case, it worked out. One of my favorite memories was riding in a car full of Creole-speaking strangers (and a chicken) to get to a meeting in the hills of Haiti to start the process of adopting of our sons. I was crazy! When I look back at that day and all that we've been through to get to where we are, I have so much to share with our boys and the world. And I will. It's on my heart to write a book. Someday. For now, I'm going to focus on being a new mama. And what I can't put into words right now, I'll let a video speak for me. Click here. (Unfortunately it won't work on mobile devices due to copyrighted music - but enjoy it on your computer!)
Saturday, July 5, 2014
In the Home Stretch...and then...
Last Wednesday, June 25 was just a regular day. Todd and I had been basking in the excitement
of knowing our boys would be home in just another 6-8 weeks. We were finally ending the “wait.” Everything seemed uphill from here. And then I got the email with the subject
line, “Wendy is very sick.”
I was at my favorite coffee shop with a dear friend. Todd was in London for work. He had not slept for 24 hours because of
traveling, and it was now bedtime in England, but I awoke him to ask with
confusion and panic, “What do we do?!”
We both started making calls, and through an American friend
in Haiti we were able to connect with a hospital run by American doctors who
were able to see him right away. We
waited for answers while also feeling so helpless – all of us in 3 different
countries wondering what to do next. His
diagnosis was a ruptured appendix. They
removed his appendix, repaired his intestines that had become damaged, and for
several days following surgery drained toxic fluids from his abdomen and kept
him on antibiotics while monitoring for any infection. Our visas are currently being expedited because
of this medical situation, but we still have no way to know for sure how
soon that will be. We struggled with decisions.
Should one of us go be with him right now?
And then do we just stay until we get our visas? Or do we go be with him, come back home when
he’s out of the hospital, and go back when we have visas? Or do we just pray
and wait? Without knowing when those visas will come, we
face the uncertainty of days/weeks of being there in Haiti waiting.
Logistically and financially we decided to wait until we have word of
visas. And it was especially helpful to
know Wendy was recovering so beautifully and doing well. But we still struggle with this
decision. Was it the RIGHT one? Is there a RIGHT one? Oh, the shame I have felt as a mother.
Only weeks away from being HOME. Weeks away from celebration. Weeks away from smiles, laughter, joy, and
the hope of relieving some long pent-up anxiety and grief of being apart. But we found ourselves again scared, angry,
and helpless. I still can’t understand
this – why our family has gone through such hard times. We could really use a break. And I am also determined to keep going, fighting,
and believing.
I absolutely despise the phrases, “everything happens for a
reason,” or “God doesn’t give us what we can’t handle.” They feel so dismissive and avoidant of human
pain. We have had a lot of things on
this journey we couldn’t handle. And
what does it mean to “handle” it anyway?
If it means being in fetal position praying and crying with a glass of
wine nearby, then maybe I did handle it?
Or if it means asking your friends for help because you can’t mentally
or physically do anything else, then I’ve handled it. If it means sitting on this computer sharing
brutal honesty with myself and others, then I’m handling it. If it means pouring out my heartache to God
and letting him comfort me while STILL feeling my feelings, then I’m handling
it. But if it means pushing through, pretending
to be okay, or putting on a happy face and not complaining because “God’s got
this,” then I’m failing miserably. A dear friend who had a very scary brain
tumor shared about all these “be strong” one-liners she received when facing
her surgery: “They take away the validity of your feelings and
make you feel like you're spiritually failing if you're not 100% calm, peaceful
and totally trusting the plan.” Amen,
Sarah. Well said.
God gave me my feelings. They are allowed. I realize my behaviors in response to those
feelings aren’t always ideal. But the reality is that I spent a lot of years
“pushing through” and “staying strong.” Those things really just kept me
unaware of the reality of being human. And in humanity, we feel. We feel hard things. And when we are honest about what we feel, we
can experience life fully together. I don’t think tragedy is for a reason. I think tragedy just happens because life
just happens. Feelings just happen
because we were created with them. And
we phone God and loved ones to get through it – not around it.
I don’t know why our son had to suffer just weeks before
coming home. A long time ago I might have
wasted energy trying to figure this out.
Now instead of ignoring my pain by “trying to figure this out,” I’m
noticing my pain. And what I notice is
that I’m feeling a lot of guilt and shame.
I have questions like: “Is he going to be okay without his mom and dad there? Does he feel loved and safe? Am I a
bad mom because I’m not going RIGHT now to be with him? What will others think
of me for not going to be with my kid during surgery? Was there a better way to handle this?”
In his book The Voice of the Heart, Chip Dodd says about
shame…
“Shame tells me I am limited. I am mistake-ridden. I have
some answers, but I don’t have all the answers.
I need you to help me; I can’t do this alone. We need each other.”
Todd and I are exhausted, hurting, and just want our kids to
come home. One of us could have gone to
Haiti right now. That would have been a
good decision too. But we felt a huge
pull to one another through this recent crisis.
So we decided to pack up the car and get away together - to just sit with
all that we are facing and about to face. We talked about our boys – school,
doctors, soccer shoes, etc. We cried
about his grandparents not getting to meet them. We recalled these last 4 years of waiting and
how it has taken its toll. We talked
about our parenting fears. We got
dressed up and went out like teenagers.
We lay under the stars. I don’t
know if this was the right thing. But it
was our right thing. As Dodd’s line
above suggest, we can’t do this alone. We need each other.
We are hopeful to bring them home sooner than expected.
Because it is already a huge transition for the entire family, and especially
now with the circumstances of Wendy’s health, we are asking for help and
establishing healthy boundaries. Not
only do we need help from each other as parents, but we will need help from
others. So we’ve called in the
troops.
We want to be able to focus our time and attention on the
boys, so we will be unable to field all the calls, emails, texts, and facebook
messages of those who want to help, meet them, etc when it is time to bring
them home. We have friends who will be
in charge of communicating and setting up specific things for us (like meals,
etc). This is not in any way intended to
be rude – in fact, we hope it ensures you actually get a response since we will
be so focused on our boys! So we hope
you will understand that in the days ahead, most of our communication about the
boys’ homecoming will be through these dear friends who have graciously
accepted our request for help.
This is what our hardship is teaching us – be honest about
our pain, lean on each other, be in community, ask for help, let people love
you, let go of what we can’t control, and pull the weeds in our life
garden.
Thank you for loving our family.
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