Monday, January 21, 2013

Guess What?!?!?!?!?!?!

We are BEYOND excited, elated, ecstatic, thrilled, overjoyed, on cloud nine, deliriously overjoyed, and tickled pink to present to you....





 


....OUR CHILDREN!!!





 
Please meet this sweet sibling group, we'll call them K1 and K2  (we have to keep their names and faces confidential until they are officially ours)!




K1 is a beautiful 5 year old girl, and K2 is her brother, an adorable 4 year old boy.  We know very little about them, and the little we do know we have decided to keep private.  These pictures were taken just 3 weeks ago, showing off the new clothes and shoes they got for Christmas!  These gifts were made possible by donations to Wren's Song, who supplied 4 orphanages with clothes and shoes for each child.  What a blessing our sweet children got to celebrate what is likely their first Christmas with something to call their own.

More to come about how we came to meet these angels in a later post!

We are officially in love...


Thursday, January 17, 2013

Two At A Time

I felt like this was more appropriate in our situation!  So, I updated it.  :)

Also, just out of curiosity...did anyone else notice the pirate clutching his cutlass or is that just me?

Choosing Kids......Not to be Confused with Car Shopping

Can I just say, this part of adoption is AWFUL!!!

Seriously, how can anyone feel good about "choosing" kids??  I mean, I know we can't take them all, and I know we're going to have to say no to several children...but you try looking at their sweet faces and feeling anything but guilt and heartbreak when you do finally make a decision!!

Okay, okay...I'll take a quieter approach to this.  Let's back up a little bit.  :)  Sam and I decided we would pursue an independent adoption (blah blah - you read about this already in the previous post).  We had a couple of options (you read about that too), which means there are kids from both independent routes available to us.  We had the option of choosing from the kids available from either group, one from each, or go completely blind into this and ask an attorney to find us kids of a specific type: gender, age, etc...

Starting to sound like car shopping yet?

Sam wanted to wait until after the holidays and after we moved to make a decision of this magnitude (kids, not cars).  At first, I was pretty disappointed, and I'll admit, I got impatient.  However, in the back of my head, it always came to mind that these are going to be OUR CHILDREN for the REST OF OUR LIVES.  It's a big deal!  So, my husband is a smart man to not cloud our judgement with the many other things going on during Christmas, New Years, and moving into a new home.  :)

So...moving!  We closed on the house on Friday, January 4th, and moved the next day.  We don't waste any time :)  Especially when we're waiting to make an adoption decision until after we move!  We got to meet the sellers, and they met us on Thursday the 3rd to do a walk through of the house and property.  It was so great to meet them!  And I think it was really beneficial for them to meet us as well.  They moved into this home the day after their honeymoon.  It was not only their first home together as a couple, but it was where they raised their three children, and spent the last 36 years of their lives.  This house was/is very meaningful to them, and they were rightfully a little fearful of who it was being sold to.  Since we hadn't met, and they knew nothing about us from just doing the paperwork back and forth, they could have walked into their home for the last time to meet someone who had plans to bulldoze the property and build new.  She had even expressed concern of that exact thing happening.  They were thrilled to hear of our adoption plans, and even more excited that there would be little kids running around, just as theirs were years ago.  We spent the next 2 hours going through the home with them and visiting about each other.  They were such a sweet couple, and we were so happy to finally meet them.  I had wanted to reassure them for months now that we were going to take good care of their home.  We love it.  They took such great care of it when they lived here, and I wanted to give them the peace of mind that they could move on from their family home without the worry of what would come of it.

We had quite the crew helping us move that Saturday!  My parents came up from Norway, and we had our friends and family from here helping as well.  Century 21 lets you borrow their moving truck for free when you buy a house through them, so we were pretty set.  We took 3 loads in the moving truck, plus several people took loads in their cars.  Needless to say, the first item on the agenda after making an adoption decision - PURGE PURGE PURGE!!!  We have way too much stuff, and we are really trying to initiate a simpler way of living.  It was especially humbling, and guilt-filled to be honest, to watch as people carried loads and loads of boxes full of things...just things.  All I could think about was Haiti...how some people have a bowl and the clothes on their backs to their name and that's it.  That's IT.  An outfit and something to cook and eat out of.  Ugh...It took several trips just to get all of our food into the house.  It's sickening really.  Just because it's the American way doesn't mean it has to be our way.  We're making changes, that's all there is to it.

We got pizza to feed all of our help, and soon the weather turned pretty bitter.  It was the warmest day in the previous 2 weeks (20 degrees - woooohoo!) and sunny during the day, but once the sun went down, it got COLD.  We quickly finished pizza and went back out for one more truck load.  My mother-in-law and I vacuumed and deep-cleaned our other house so it was ready for renters, and finally finished everything at about 10:30 that night.  We started at about 1:30, with 12 people helping..long day!  What a blessing friends and family are!!!

Sam and I decided we would designate some time the following Monday to talk about adoption stuff.  We had a list of kids we could choose from, and wrote them all out.  It was horrible.  For me at least.  I'm not sure about Sam, because up until this point, he had chosen not to look at any children's photos.  While I was receiving referral picture after referral picture for the past 4 weeks, he peacefully opted out of looking at any of them.  Even from when we were with our agency, he didn't want to look at any photos of kids who were options to us.  He would look at other people's referral pictures, knowing they were already matched with another family and weren't an option for us...but he wouldn't look at the ones we could choose from.  It left me feeling a little alone in these emotions of despair and guilt that these poor children would go yet again without a family as we weeded through them.  However, I too had that option not to look.  I couldn't help myself, but looking back, it would have been emotionally smarter not to.  I completely respect Sam's decision not to look at all the pictures, because he logically knew we couldn't take them all.  It's a matter-of-fact that we have to leave all but two there, and if there's no way to change that, there's no reason to torture himself.

SAM'S SIDE NOTE:  Hello all, I felt like I should chime in here and clarify something.  During this long and sometimes very difficult process, I have chosen to never look at any photos of our "potential" children.  I chose to do this for a couple reasons.  1).  Similar to what Laura stated above, I don't want to get "too" attached to the thinking of "this is my child and I know what they look like and who they are."  As we have learned along the process, there are many setbacks and uncertainties, and knowing who your child is the largest uncertainty.  At one point in the process, I'm fairly sure we were close to 100% confidant we were adopting three children!  Now, those children aren't even a potential because we aren't even with that agency.  2).  I am basically terrified of judging these kids based on looks.  I'm afraid of my own fickleness.  I struggled during this process with choosing which characteristics we would consider in our future children, such as HIV+, cerebral palsy, deformed limbs, etc.  As I went down that checklist, saying yes or no to each one, I already felt like I was judging these kids before I ever met them or based on some illness they had no way of controlling.  I put myself in their shoes, thinking what if I was that orphan?  I have diabetes, would someone overlook me just because I'd be too difficult to deal with?  It was a horrible time for me, doing that list.  So, I came out of it with the rationale, I'm not going to let my stupidness or selfishness get in the way.  So, for me, I chose to do that by eliminating a judging element of my body...my eyes.  I figured, if I cannot see them, I can't judge them based on how they look.  Too often, we as a society (as well as sinners) judge people based on how they look.  I'm as guilty as anyone else and not proud of it.  There is a lot of second guessing that occurs once you have seen a photo of a child, "Is this child really that age?", "This child looks really angry.", "What is wrong with her hand?", etc.  These are all things I've heard people say who have looked at photos of potential children.  So, for what its worth, putting it in God's hands and praying for an accepting heart has helped me tremendously.  END SAM'S SIDE NOTE.

The other difficult thing is what we are deciding on children we've never met, know absolutely nothing about, and can assume the information we're given is somewhat inaccurate because there is likely no way to know for sure how old the child really is.  Imagine you're told you can choose between two red cars.  Both are automatic, have 4 wheels, and run.  Now choose.  There would likely be a hundred different questions you would want to ask before making that decision.  How new are the tires?  Does it run well?  Is one faster than the other?  Are there any rips in the interior?  Any body damage?  Has it ever been in any wrecks?  What happened in the wreck?  Was the car totaled or repairable?  Do the tires keep air?  What kid of gas mileage does it get?

You get the point.  We know virtually nothing about these kids.  Now with this, we actually don't care.  We don't care what damage they're coming with, or what their personality is like.  Do you get to make a robot baby when you're pregnant with all the "right" features and characteristics you want?  Nope.  Kids are unpredictable as it is, so this is not an issue for us.  If it were, and we wanted more control in picking the "perfect child" (because those exist?), we wouldn't be adopting.  Or having biological children. Or probably still married for that matter.  (I know I'm not perfect!  Sorry Sam - I know that comes of a shock ;)  We don't care that we don't know what the kids are like...but... not knowing makes it nearly impossible to have a reason enough to say no to children and narrow down the list.  What criteria can you possibly use if you have no information on them?  Besides age and gender, which we didn't care much about anyway, there's nothing to help make this decision any easier.

It's an awful part of this process.  I don't like it.  I really, really don't like it.  Enough said.


Now, on a side note, I'd like to talk about something that's come to mind...
About those pictures...

In the adoption world, it seriously clouds your judgement when you're looking at picture after picture of children who ALL need mommies and daddies.  I found it impossible to feel good about what we're doing for the two we will bring home, because there are millions left.  It would have been a good choice not to make this part of the process any less difficult - I should have been more selective with the pictures I opened.  I felt at the time though that I wasn't giving each child a fair shot like God would want me to if I didn't look at them.  And that is partially true - God doesn't always call us to do the easy things in life.  He calls us to do the things no other servant is willing to do.  SEND ME is the attitude we should have, not SEND ME IF... it's safe, it's easy, it's cheap.  So by opening myself up to every child I saw, I felt I was leaving my heart open to whatever type of child God has in store for us.  But...if I had been more selective, I possibly could have enjoyed this process a little bit more, and I worry this creates a level of stress in this decision making that steals away the positive and overjoyed feelings I should feel anytime we come one step closer to having kids here with us.


However, outside of the adoption world, the same principles don't necessarily apply.  I'd like to point out that this ability to choose not to look into the eyes of these sweet, sad orphans and tell them no, is a luxury we should be very careful about indulging in.  It's easy to turn our heads when we see pictures like this:  




But the luxury of turning our heads can often create a sense of "not my problem" in our minds.  Out of sight, out of mind is often what happens.  If we don't sometimes force ourselves to look at and remember how children are living RIGHT THIS MINUTE, we forget.  We forget our responsibility as Christians, and it becomes incredibly easy to justify the money spent on a movie ticket, or Starbucks instead of helping to save an orphan from starving to death.  Some say it's too complicated to know how to help...what will be most effective?  And those same people usually continue to do nothing.  Doing something is better than nothing.  Even if you can feed only one starving child, that is one more child that doesn't have to live and die in horrendous pain.  I find it very important not to turn my head away, but instead to study these precious children's faces and create a motivation in me that isn't easily dissuaded.  If the conviction isn't deep enough, it won't last.  At least not for me.  There are too many distractions around us, and I personally NEED to be reminded of the pain others are suffering that I, little insignificant me, can do something...anything...to change.

"Sometimes I would like to ask God why He allows poverty, famine, and injustice in the world when He could do something about it...

But I'm afraid He might ask me the same question."

~Anonymous


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Adoption Setback #1 of ??

Warning...this is a long post.  There's a lot to say about this, so I'm sorry in advance!

I've been dreading writing this post for over a month now.  For those of you on facebook, you might remember I had asked for prayers awhile back, but was unable to explain what for at the time.  I feel comfortable writing publicly about it now, and can finally let people know they were praying because we are no longer working with our adoption agency.

About 4 months ago, my good friend and coworker told me about a woman here in Iowa who is adopting three children from DRCongo.  I found the woman on facebook, and sent her a friend request with a message explaining who I was.  Shortly after Orphan Sunday (beginning of November), my good friend and coworker - same one, she's great! :) gave me a newspaper article about an Orphan Sunday event that had a guest speaker from the Congo.  I read through the article about his experiences, and also read about a family who is going to bring their kids home soon from the Congo.  I recognized the family name, and realized it was the same woman I had tried to contact two months earlier on facebook.  This Orphan Sunday event was put on by Xio's Voice - a non-profit group who provides financial grants to adoptive families. I emailed about their grants a couple of weeks later to see if we would qualify for some assistance, and explained that we are adopting from the Congo.  They emailed me back, and in the email stated they were going to pass my information on to one of their board members - who turned out to be yet again the same woman.

At this point, I'm thinking pretty clearly...3rd times a charm - I'm apparently really supposed to meet this lady!

During our conversation on the phone, she asked which agency we are using.  When I told her, she got pretty quiet, and asked if we'd researched our agency.  I assured her I had, and we continued our conversation.  That night I got several facebook messages from her explaining what others were saying about our agency on an adoption facebook page where families adopting from DRCongo can network together.  It was pretty alarming, and we were grateful to know what others' experiences were so we could investigate.

Now, I realize I sound completely uneducated about the agency we already paid over $6,000 to, with a future total amount of over $30,000...but let me clarify.  I researched adoption agencies for weeks at the beginning of this process.  I got a list of references and contacted over 30 people who had completed adoptions through our agency.  There were only a handful of families who had adopted from DRCongo, but we felt confident in the positive feedback we received.  We did know about an incident earlier this year where they had to replace the director of the orphanage in DRC and some staff due to some issues they had, but we were assured by them that the problems were fixed and all is well.


Once we learned of these issues other families had with our agency, we began talking further with many families who used our agency.  We also emailed back and forth with our agency about our concerns.  They were very reassuring, and were able to answer all of our initial questions.  We were approached by even more families who had negative experiences, and yet again questioned our agency.  We wanted this to be a logical decision, and give our agency a chance to defend themselves.  Everything we were hearing left us even more confused and concerned, mostly because we had no way to prove or disprove anybody's side.  Without traveling to the Congo ourselves, we really couldn't decipher what was truth and what was someone's bad experience being blown out of proportion.  We ourselves didn't have direct issues with any of these things, and we didn't have any way of confirming they are still problems or that our adoption wouldn't have been able to proceed without incident.  However, even if there is a chance the problems still exist, we aren't interested in an unethical adoption.

All of these pieces of "evidence" we used to make a decision were told to us by other families, and have not been verified.  I want to put that disclaimer in there, because it is possible there is another side to the story.

First of all, there was the incident I mentioned above back in June causing the previous orphanage director to be fired, along with her staff.  Our agency does not own the orphanage there in the Congo.  They privately pay for and entirely fund an orphanage there, so they do have control over what happens in the orphanage, and the orphanage is named after the agency, but it is not officially our agency's property.  In June, the agency discovered that the former director was stealing money from the agency by 1) saying there were more kids living in the orphanage than there were, 2) coming up with fake expenses that required the agency to send more money over, and 3) stealing supplies from the orphanage.  Consequently, the agency fired her and all of her staff.
Secondly, from what other families have told us, the director was also falsifying paperwork to make kids orphans who weren't truly orphans.  In the Congo, if both birth parents are known and have a known address, that child is not eligible for international adoption.  They can still receive orphanage care if their parents can't support them, but they will not be able to be adopted.  They will instead be raised in an orphanage and return to their communities when they are old enough.  So, knowing these kids would have better opportunities in America, there is some motivation to make kids appear to be orphans on paper so they can be adopted and come to America.  While some argue that since these kids aren't truly orphans they shouldn't be adoptable, there is also the other argument that if the birth parents together cannot afford to feed them and they would otherwise live on the streets, they should too be able to be adopted.  Either way, not the worst case scenario.
However, then we discovered there were also some families who's adopted children were not only not really orphans (they had two known and living birth parents), but their birth parents were of the economic ability to continue caring for them.  In this type of situation, the director was falsifying paperwork in order to get kids to America even though they had parents who could raise them.  While this could also be seen as good intentioned, you have to think about the emotional effects this would have on the children, and of the other children who truly are orphans, waiting for homes.  There are already not enough families willing to adopt all the orphans in the world, let alone adding to this number unnecessarily.  While kids are coming to America who already lived in families who could support them, other kids continue waiting who have experienced the death of their parents, or abandonment, are only being fed one meal every other day because there's not enough food for all the kids, and continue growing older without the hope of finding a forever family.

Now, this by itself isn't the absolute worst case scenario.  But it's a far stretch from ideal, and it isn't what we're trying to accomplish.  We're wanting to give children who are starving, don't have parents who can care for them, in a country where 50% of all children die before their 5th birthday, a forever family. 

At this point, we were faced with a lot of mixed feelings about the agency, and while we had our doubts, we were again reassured that the problems were fixed when the previous orphanage director was fired.  But other families continued to point out - the problem before, and the reason things got as bad as what they got at the end when she was finally fired, is because the agency staff here in the US hadn't traveled to the Congo in over 2 years.  At first, our agency social worker told us that the agency director visited the Congo in an effort to reassure me.  However, when families questioned that, I inquired further and asked for specific dates she went.  That's when she admitted it had been 2 years since she or anyone had been there. Trips had been planned, but there was always something that came up that prevented the staff from going.  So, for this entire time, the problems went undetected.  After the problems came to head, the staff here felt like they had made the necessary changes, but they still didn't send anyone to make sure the problem was in fact fixed and the orphanage was running smoothly again.  Nobody has gone yet.  There is another trip planned, but as other families have pointed out - there were trips planned several times in the last 2 years that never happened, so the track record shows the next trip may not happen either.  The agency also continues to deny that there is even a possibility the problems could still exist.  They rely on emails from the new orphanage director, their attorney (which is the same attorney that was used when the previous director was there), and don't do anything to double check or confirm what they're told.
I can say anything in an email...like that I have 17 children...or that I work for the CIA....or that I'm a man....

So, they didn't travel to DRC in the first place (even when other agencies have someone traveling to DRC at least 4 times a year), they continue to neglect the sense of urgency to send someone to double check things even when they've found themselves in the situation they were in, and they continue to use the same attorney they used before.  The attorney signs off on all the paperwork that passes through, and I'm willing to bet he knew what was going on all along and was okay with it as well.  We've heard that even the orphanage director's own daughter was put up for adoption and adopted out to the United States...which we were told by our agency was her choice if it did happen.  However, there is a requirement of being destitute to put your child up for adoption.  How can a woman who was taking hundreds of dollars each month from the orphanage be destitute in a 3rd world country?  Again...it's possible there's another side to the story, but all these things added up make us very leary.

The first of the two final straws was when we found out about a family who had been matched with three siblings and had been paying orphan support for 10 months waiting to go get them.  (Once you're matched with children, you need to pay each month for their care so the extra money the orphanage has can go to the kids who don't have families yet...) There were three big red flags (one of which was that the agency had no idea where this family's son was for months...he went missing from the orphanage, but the agency still didn't send someone to figure it out...when kids go missing, that's a big deal), and they decided they needed to just go to the DRC themselves and check things out.  (How bad must the red flags be for you to spend $4,000 in plane tickets, and travel to a country you've never been to just to go find some things out for yourself?)  When they arrived, they found out within two days that their children were not truly orphans, met with the birth family, the children were returned to the birth family, and they found out that "their" children were actually the nieces and nephew of the previous orphanage director.  The adoptive parents were heartbroken, returned home to the United States, and flew from Chicago to Georgia where the agency headquarters are, and met with the director of the agency and the Congo social worker.  They were told that the information they found out couldn't be trusted as the truth, and that there was nothing anybody could do about it.  Let's think about this.  You have been matched with 3 children for 10 months.  You've created bedrooms for them, you've pictured them in your lives, you've sent care packages to them, you've prayed for them, your family has prayed for them and relished over their pictures, you've talked countless times about when you finally get to bring home these beautiful children, you've paid $600 each month to have their needs met until you can go get them (over $6,000)...and when you have some doubts about their orphan status and ask the agency to check it out three different times, the agency tells you everything is fine.  The little boy you were matched with comes up missing for months and you again ask the agency to check it out.  They tell you they will, and never get back to you about it...(I'm sorry...if you were in charge of a family's children and there was some concern that he is missing from the orphanage, wouldn't you do everything in your power to ease that family's minds about it?) and when you decide that's it, we're going to investigate ourselves and find our son, you find out that the children you've been dreaming about and praying for, and paying for over the last 10 months are not really yours and will not be coming home with you ever...how would that feel?  And when you return to tell the agency about the issues you discovered when you were there, they tell you they can't trust what you're telling them and can't do anything about it...how would that feel?  They offered this family another referral...and when the family, knowing the problems were absolutely not fixed, decided to leave the agency, they lost over $30,000 right along with their children.

The second final straw was when we talked to a woman on an unrelated adoption topic, and found out she herself had gone through our agency, and brought home her daughter last year.  The little girl's birth mother brought her to the orphanage, and her birth father was listed as unknown.  She found out after she brought her daughter home, that there was in fact two known birth parents, and her birth father actually visited the orphanage weekly.  Sounds pretty similar to what I mentioned above, except for one thing.  Because her daughter in fact does have two known birth parents, and her paperwork instead said that her father was unknown, her paperwork is fraudulent.  In order to obtain a visa to come to the United States, the child must be deemed an orphan...which she in fact, wasn't.  Since she really wasn't and the paperwork was falsified, technically her visa is not legal.  Which technically means she is here illegally.  Thankfully, there is no concern that they will send her daughter back to DRC since they had no knowledge of the paperwork being false (this is the agency's responsibility).  However, she does have to watch her daughter struggle with the abandonment and transitions of having her father come visit the orphanage weekly, to now going to a new family, country, language, and culture.  She is thankfully adjusted now, but the legal issues that could have ensued were absolutely nothing we wanted a part of in our own adoption. 

There were other issues (now seemingly small, even though they are detrimental in their own ways), such as purposely under-aging children and telling the children to lie about their ages, harsh punishments of the children by some of the nannies, and nannies who were supposedly fired are showing up in pictures at the orphanage by families who traveled last month.
Because of these things, we have decided to leave our agency.  This means leaving the kids we pictured adopting, the stability of an agency to help guide us through this adoption process, and the $6,000 we'd paid to the agency so far that is non-refundable.  It was a big kick in the pants, to say the least...but in the scheme of the rest of our lives with our future children, and the confidence that they came to us ethically, it is necessary.  I mourned the children we had imagined pursuing, and I was angry about the money we had paid that should be returned to us.  It shattered every trust we had in this adoption so far, and made us question what we could trust.  But this setback will not stop us from adopting from the Congo.  We have found another route, and will be pushing forward.  This probably will not be the last setback (hence the title of this post), as adoption is not for the faint-hearted.  Satan relishes in evil things, including keeping kids away from families who want them.  With God's help and guidance, we will persevere.












Now, I'd like to touch on one more thing. With all of these stories of unethical practices, it brings out a fear in people from pursuing adoption from a 3rd world country.  But the problem is multi-faceted, and cannot be pointed towards the country and it's citizens.  There are still kids there, who desperately need homes, families, food...like I already said, Satan tries to dissuade us from doing good in this world.  Just because it isn't always easy doesn't mean it isn't worth it.
It's easy for someone to jump to the conclusion that what was described above is an African problem.  People are corrupt, and they're at fault.  While I agree there are some individuals who have personal responsibility, I also think an agency's negligence and being overly agreeable is an issue.  There's a difference between physically beating a child, and not preventing them from walking in the middle of the street...but both are abuse.  If you're going to have an international adoption program in any country, you need to do your part to keep it running ethically, smoothly, and successfully.  That includes regular trips to the country, and when problems are presented, doing everything you can to remedy those situations.  Again though, there are always two sides to every story...Maybe this has taught our agency some things to do different, and they have now made some very positive changes. We just decided not to stick around long enough to find out.

Also, it is extremely easy to wrongfully judge the previous orphanage director and all she did wrong.  Absolutely there were choices she made that caused a lot of problems for a lot of families and children.  There were things she was neglecting, and things she was at fault for.  But we all sin.  We all make mistakes.  Remember too that we are not destitute.  We are not having to live in the conditions they are in.  Desperate times call for desperate measures.  I don't know her circumstances, and I don't know her heart.  Only God does.  While we know there is a lot of corruption in African countries, there are absolutely ethical people as well.  There are many God-fearing, Christian people helping with adoptions in Africa.  Keep in mind, there are unethical people everywhere.  How many unethical people do we encounter every day in America?  Just  because there are unethical people, we can't ignore the orphan crisis that exists.  Even if there are some of those children who aren't truly orphans, there's still millions who are.

We also absolutely do not want to portray that Africa is bad..our children were born and raised there.  This is their heritage, and they should never feel like their homeland is inferior.  It is a beautiful country, with a war-stricken past and present, and struggles nobody should have to endure.  They are a strong people, and their strength is what I admire the most.  They are faithful people, who rely on their faith because nothing else is reliable.  I pray one day I too will have the faith and dependence on God that they have.  And I can't wait to teach my children someday about their God who loves them so very much.  And teach them about the beautiful country and birth parents He provided for them until we could one day bring them here to shower them with the love and grace He shows us.




If anyone has any further questions regarding anything posted here, please feel free to ask!  We want to keep this blog honest on the ups and downs of adoption, but don't want to discourage anyone from considering adoption.  We are not any less excited about our adoption or future children...which you will soon get to hear about!  :)