Sunday, December 28, 2008

snippets...

Just in case you thought we'd forgotten! We did so much these last 10 weeks--oral surgery & fittings for a new partial, wedding calligraphy for 380+ invites (some twice!), a baby shower for my sister (in SC!), three (count them) 6-hour-one-way trips to SC, the Christmas parade, preschool, umm--Christmas (with its 400 cards)!, and then the odd backed-into car, busted waste pipe spewing sewage beneath the house, etc. Really, it's been quite calm (for not having medication)!

YoYo is our delight. Yesterday I woke from our afternoon nap when he patted my face gently & murmured, "So cute...so cute." Delicious boy! He got his Grandma when he asked to pray over lunch and proceeded to give thanks for "YeYe and NaiNai coming to my house to see me." He is so very sweet & deliberate. It is hard for me sometimes to remember his timid places, and that he likes to come to new people slowly and without fanfare.

Every time we turned around, it seemed, he begged us to sing "Silent Night" so he could make up a dance to it. He delighted in turning on the Christmas tree lights. He was so very careful each time he opened a present. He offered guests photos of himself (how he got a hold of them remains a mystery) or even ornaments from our tree, and he was so happy to decorate cookies on Christmas Eve.

We played in the leaves on Thanksgiving...


We went to the Franklin Christmas Parade with friends...


We spent time playing dress-up...


And did I mention we made cookies?

The only disappointment seemed to be when we headed to SC for the shower. YoYo made the cutest gingerbread (graham cracker) house in preschool, and he wanted to take it to show Nana and Papa. I forgot and left it in the kitchen, and as we rolled into Chesnee just shy of midnight, I heard his tiny voice pipe up, "Oh, no, Mama! I forgot my gingerbread house! I wanted to give it to Nana and Papa for a surprise!" I had no idea that was his plan. Sweetest little bear.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Fu Xia


I haven't posted in a while-I didn't realize anyone was still reading the blog til I got some "Hey you!" emails-sorry ;) I'll start anew with a Christmas wish.

I've said it many times, but YoYo's foster home--defies everything you've heard of Chinese orphanages. The children don’t share beds, the food is so good, the play area is well-organized, education is offered no matter the challenges. I am thankful Tian Yo lived his first years there. When we left, his ayis gave us four books with photos and letters in Chinese to be shared when he is older. Their love is the reason he is such a happy child.

The ayis now are trying to find a home for Fu Xia, their oldest charge. Born with arthogryposis and clubbed feet, Fu Xia was sent to an orphanage for severely mentally handicapped children. When a group from Blue Sky encountered him, they swept him up quickly. He was six. He’d never seen school or TV. Now eight, he attends school and has an incredible command of English. He’s a talented artist, working with brushes designed for his tightly arched hands, and his paintings grace the walls in large frames.

Fu Xia is such a strong personality, we were at the home hours before I realized he was rolling across the floor to get around. That blew my mind--I was the kid secretly terrified of children with physical challenges, watching the Jerry Lewis telethon with my Grandmother in quiet horror--but here was this boy, exuberant boy!, and he leapt into my heart before I could count his challenges. He laughs that his wheelchair is slow. He flung himself upstairs to give us a tour, proudly showing us his room. He wheels along the alley outside with children clinging to him; he's their big brother. When the volunteers were out, Fu Xia translated for us. Once I found him perched on a stool, carefully folding dumplings for the Cook. He is remarkable.

For several reasons, we're not currently eligible to adopt Fu Xia. My hope is to help him find parents. He is precious. In those first days with Tian Yo, Fu Xia asked us many questions, hiding his eyes when we left because we would not be taking him home. I grieve to remember when he told me, softly but matter-of-factly, “You have not come for me.” He broke my heart. I hope somewhere that a mother is not too afraid to love. I hope someone will come for him. I don’t know if his condition is treatable or correctable or manageable, but none of that matters because he is a child who needs a mother and father.

It has been nearly a month since I posted, and I hope you can forgive me for not offering fresh news of YoYo’s conquests. I am asking you instead for prayer and hope for this little one, and for information if you have seen him on any agency’s Waiting Child list. My Christmas wish, dare I breathe it, is to help this boy find a home.

Friday, November 21, 2008

This Kid


I have to admit it, I've had a hard time posting. It's hard to know what to write or how to talk about the settling in of a daily rhythm when the events which led up to it were so incredible. Everything I carry now as I look at this little boy, from kissing his toes to knitting my first little boy hat to feeling his tiny hand pat my face as he murmurs, "I love my girl," seems like the treasures that are stored up in any mother's heart. They are no less precious, but they're a different thing from the journey that brought us here. It's probably entirely ungrateful of my heart, but I find myself reluctant to blubber Momminess everywhere, as though it would tarnish this incredible thing that has happened. I have a lot to learn, I think.

We still exist in this world where our son has a life that played out before we came along. There are photos in so many places of him, some even in distress in hospital, that I don't know of and will never see. I don't feel unsafe in that; instead, it reminds me that we are so blessed to be part of such a larger image of God's love for one small child.

Shane jokes that YoYo is Bono--but there is still that rock-star like feeling sometimes. I staffed a booth in October for Shaohannah's Hope at a Steven Curtis Chapman concert. When we approached the table at the beginning of the evening, my Mom poked me. "Hey, that's YoYo." Sure enough, he was the poster child on the tabletop "November is Adoption Awareness Month" display, clutching his pink dog and looking upwards with Precious Moments eyes. Mom, in the Most Proud Grandparent in the World mode, told every single person--and I mean that--who that little boy on the poster was. This kid! Who has that happen to them?

Then yesterday, we collected our mail and found a catalog from the adoption agency. As many negative things as we experienced with them, I still have to say in fairness that their sponsorship program for orphans with special needs helped give YoYo lifesaving medicine and daily supplies. We opened the catalog, which highlights sponsorship information for several countries...and found a full-length YoYo, his two-year-old hands clutching a Christmas ornament, his feet snuggled in footed pj's capped with panda faces. They weren't soliciting funds on his behalf, mind you, it just so happens that he's the most beautiful child in the world, and who else would make such a convincing case that all children are precious?

Of course he laughed at it. He has no idea that there's anything unusual about his photo being on random pieces of mail or news video links. Why wouldn't he see himself on TV or in other people's posters? It doesn't seem to be a fixation-he doesn't constantly ask to see pictures of himself-so perhaps I won't obsess over that for now.

But he is adorable. And yesterday, in the greatest of all gifts in the world, he proudly gave me his first hand-turkey at preschool. I am such a lucky girl.



P.S. That toothless grin? We had oral surgery the day before Halloween (tragic!), and it turns out he had a LOT of infected teeth. We're getting "new teeth" in a few days, but moments like this make me think twice-so cute!

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Anniversary


This is difficult to put into words. One year and two days ago, our agency called at 11 am to say that we had been matched with Tian Yo if we still wished to adopt him. I collapsed to the floor in tears, staying there long after the call was ended, the receiver on the floor. I was undone.

The night before had been sleepless. By the time gray light streaked the wet sky, I was convinced we would have to say no if we were matched with this little one. In the two weeks since seeing his profile, our lives had changed. I filled four notebooks with everything I could find about Tian Yo's challenges, from exstophy to colostomy to single kidney to spina bifida. My silly penchant for endless research was finally validated. And there was no way we could do it, we concluded. Medical supplies, surgeries, more money than teachers can hope for. What were we thinking to even request this little boy? I prayed he would never know how we failed him, that he'd never know he was rejected because his body's betrayal had scared people. I tried to imagine when and how he might find parents, or if he would go unrequested so long he would finally be ineligible for adoption. What would he do? Where would he go?

And then the craziest thing happened. The phone rang at 9 am. It was Dr. John Gearhart, the pediatric urologist who operated on Tian Yo just months before we learned of him. T, Tian Yo's tireless advocate, had sent Dr. G. YoYo's story when the constant reflux of fluid into his kidney endangered his life. The Dr. replied that he would waive his fees to correct Tian Yo's condition if the foster home could raise the money for hospital stay and travel. They did it, and Dr. G. saved Tian Yo's life. Now this surgeon, perhaps the best in the world in his field, was calling me about this little boy. He said, "There is a reason Tian Yo was born with this, and there's a reason he came here, and you and your husband are part of that story." No naming of God, but indeed words of Shalom.

And then came the call. Yes we will bring him home, yes we will love him forever, yes we will...

I drove to school weeping to tell Shane, playing one song again and again. When I first heard U2's "When You Look at the World," I wept. For three years, I had not been able to hear it without crying. There was something in it of a love larger than I had, without sympathy, empathy, pity, and I could not imagine being able to know it. But now, this was changing, too.

When you look at the world
What is it that you see?
People find all kinds of things
That bring them to their knees...

...When there's all kinds of chaos
And everyone is walking lame
You don't even blink now do you
Don't even look away...

...I can't wait any longer
I can't wait til I'm stronger
I can't wait any longer
To see what you see
When you look at the world.

For years, I cried, wondering how someone could love freely enough to gaze steadily into the eyes of a broken human. Death, age, blood, disability, leprosy, maimed torn life that I could not fix, how could anyone not blink? What could it be to love like that?

It could be Tian Yo-Heaven Protect, Heaven Bless. Welcome home, little one. I love you.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

tag!


Well, Chelsea did it-she totally surprised me, and boy was it a welcome one. Thanks to Chelsea Gour, over at gourfamilyadoption.blogspot.com, for the challenge. I don't know how to link a blog, but I'll sure try. As for the random facts...well, you really shouldn't be surprised.

Fact 1: I had an album on Word Records. Really. I do a mean NYC accent, so I was hired as a Rosie O'Donnell impersonator for a kids' Christmas album called, "The MK Christmas Special." (MK=Missionary Kids) They even asked me to sing-haven't gotten any other offers...yet.

Fact 2: I set my classroom on fire in 5th grade-I didn't mean to. I was isolated for talking too much (imagine!), and when I got my work finished before everyone else, I pulled the wire from a spiral notebook and stuck it in an outlet to see what would happen. Turns out, it set the carpet on fire.

Fact 3: I demonstrated/taught a pilates routine for pelvic support to an ob/gyn and her assistant the day before they opened the first women's post-natal care clinic in Northern Iraq.

Fact 4: One of my life goals is to win a ribbon at our county fair for my chocolate pound cake, peach preserves, or both. Dear Aunt Betty, I am coming to get you. Dear Grandmother, I am converting your recipes from cups to grams in the pursuit of America's Test Kitchen precision.

Fact 5: Long story, but when I was 8, I played drums for the first time in the home studio of Artimus Pyle, then drummer for Lynyrd Skynyrd-he let me try out his drum kit and my Dad feared we'd be in a world of trouble if I broke anything, but Mr. Pyle said, "It's OK, man, let her do her thing."

Fact 6: I took a weekend Pre-Raphaelite painting class at the Tate Gallery, London. Can we just live there, please?

Fact 7: I ran numbers for a bookie...when I was six.


Ok, that was fun! So here's my tags-go girls!

http://kat.eleven33.com/
http://www.erin-eje.blogspot.com/ (also see www.erinelizabethjones.com for her thinking-ful art)
http://shouston.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 9, 2008

shuffling hope

It's hard to imagine that time could pass as swiftly as it has since my last post. This kid, he keeps me on my toes.

Turns out, he had an MRI, buried in some of the records from Johns Hopkins-ones I didn't see-and there was no evidence of spina bifida. Oh tired quiet wonderful deep joyful praise. Let me just rest in that for a bit.

This week alone, we have traveled to a GI doctor to discuss prognosis, an ENT for a followup to last month's visit, and a pediatrician for a physical and permission to have anesthesia for the Oct. 31 oral surgery. The GI visit was great-that's where we learned the spina bifida news. The ENT visit, not so great. YoYo had really dirty ears (let's all pause for a moment and recognize that I am using very gentle language to describe the condition of my boy's inner ears), and it has taken 3 weeks of nightly administration of very strong eardrops (bedtime + 5 fizzy drops in each ear + suctioning < fun) to get those ears clean without damaging eardrums. One clean ear is fine, the other isn't. Too early to say whether he is or will be deaf in one ear--we'll just have to wait until April, apparently. Boy am I glad for that spina bifida news.

We went to preschool for the first time today-scoped one out, actually, hoping to hear more Monday from them-and the little Prince grabbed hold of the rope with the rest of the kids in the class, waved and called, "See you later, Mama!" before jauntily marching out to the playground. I was so proud-and relieved-that he feels safe.

I forget, sometimes, that YoYo's wounds are hard for some to see. I have been so utterly plunged in up to my eyes with his care that it wasn't until today, at preschool, that I realized I must make his path smooth by helping those who will assume his care in my stead at school or elsewhere. How to anticipate the needs and uncertainty of others....

It's strange, but it seems that looking out for that fearful glance, the pause that may stop a person's tongue from voicing their fear of my son, their faintness at seeing him for the first time, and speaking to it gently, finding the person inside and behind that moment, is as much a way of loving Tian Yo as hugging him tightly. I wish I'd thought further, sooner. I felt suddenly such a need to limit his exposure and even his knowledge of it. When and how can a mother choose to help her child feel beautiful and unafraid and loved, and how can she make him brave for the future, and how can she teach him compassion for others?

With hope that shuffles from one day's good report to the next day's uncertainty-it shuffles, but it stays, and it dances, but is still. With love for the boy who races his car down the slide, who makes me Lego chairs, who takes my picture with tireless glee, who offers me his last pretzel without reservation, who jumps with newfound energy at 9:30 P blessed M. I help him most when I can meet him as he is, a sweet child who wants me to play and build with him, until even I forget the catheters and pouches and cleaners and medicines.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

time

I was looking at Chelsea Gour's great blog last night, and I realized it's been 3 weeks since I wrote. Fear not, gentle reader, this implies no lack of action on my part--in fact, there's been a lot of action in the Caudill household. A quick update...

YoYo is speaking almost entirely in English, although we still use limited Chinese. We don't want him to lose that language. We've enjoyed playdates and are looking for a way to do preschool. I've been emailing with the families completing adoptions of his buddies! And we traveled to SC for a few days.

We've visited a TON of doctors. A checkup at the pediatrician was good, although he sent us to an ENT. YoYo has hard wax in his ears, so the ENT visit ended with him strapped to a board and screaming while the doctor recommended ear drops & a return visit. Our first trip to the dentist was bad--we were swiftly sent to a pediatric dentist with the recommendation that "sleepy juice" should be involved (for YoYo, not me). Then the pediatric dentist took a looksee at YoYo's awful teeth and cheerfully outlined a $ 4500 plan to cap and fill them while he's under anesthesia so they can last long enough to fall out naturally in a couple of years.

Then, there was the first Sunday School. Honestly, I was just hoping to see if he was ready for a classroom, and Sunday School comes in a small dose--a little over an hour. He clammed up at first, then was a totally new man when the prospect of graham crackers emerged. Does that count as revival? The class headed to the playground briefly, and suddenly Mr. "I'm not making eye contact with anyone here" was on top of the tallest slide, arms in the air, yelling, "Everybody look at me! Mama, YoYo is all the way up here and EVERYBODY else is down there." So, great-he speaks English well enough to reveal that he's a megalomaniac.

Oh yes. We had our 6 month post adoption visit with our agency. What? We've only been home 4 months now, you say? Well, that's true. Our agency is downsizing and is closing ALL regional branches in the nation, leaving only its headquarters open. Our branch director was thoughtful enough to make a plan for our third/final post placement visit, turning our file over to another agency. We'll have to pay the difference in fees, as that agency's present cost for post placement stuff is higher than the fee we paid upfront to our agency last February. In the middle of closing the branch that she thought she'd be working with for the rest of her career, the regional director was kind enough to move our 2nd post placement visit forward so we wouldn't have to pay extra for it and would get taken care of in a timely manner. There have been some moments of mercy with our agency, as bad as it has been at other times, and I am so thankful that this was one of them.

The waiting parents are not so lucky. They had a chatgroup that was moderated by our agency. As regional offices began to close, it seemed each region was left to make its own exit plan. So far, our regional director did the best job of communicating and caring for clients. Other regions sent emails to partial lists of people, leaving many waiting parents to find the news via chatgroup. The panic that ensued was predictable, as was the anger. The same program director who was deaf to my fears last November when I drove to St. Louis first reprimanded these parents for their posts, even calling some at home to scold them for causing "anxiety" for others online. A few days ago, the agency closed the chatgroup with a reminder of the contract parents had signed with them--parents should not abuse or be disrespectful toward agency employees, the letter said, referencing parents' mean, selfish spirits in their complaints and negativity towards staff in the chatgroup. The letter went on to remind (threaten?) folks that if clients didn't uphold their end of the contract, the relationship could be terminated at the AGENCY'S DISCRETION. Oh, yes, you read that correctly. The agency director even went so far as to tout that staff members prayed collectively every morning for God's will to be done. I hate when that gets all weaponized.

Ah well, that's enough for the moment. You chew on that, while I go put papers together to prove to our insurance carrier that YoYo is our son. And then I have to give Vanderbilt some spending money. And then I have to see if the translation of our adoption certificate is finished. I'll come back. You know it.

ps-I love this kid-he's so amazing. I'm not even smart enough to keep up with him, but I'll run as hard as I can!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Changes


Tonight YoYo lost a word. He tried to describe the day’s rain and was at a loss for the Mandarin word, one he easily sang just a few weeks ago. His English, by contrast, is remarkable.

In the preadoption classes and reading, I learned that there comes a break for a child with his language and culture. I find myself mourning this loss for him, as I am sure he will when he is old enough to name it.

We have wooed this little prince. We tried, limited as we are, to speak Mandarin as much as possible in China. We made up little songs like, “Mama, Baba Ai YoYo,” (“Mama and Baba love YoYo”) to sing him to sleep. He responded more to our efforts than I expected, graciously laughing with us at ourselves when we gaffed, gently leading us on. We brought home so many pieces of his daily experience, and we kept as much as we could for his sake. The foster home played a certain CD every afternoon; the copy we were given immediately became THE CD for naptime and bedtime. His ayi gave us a Winnie the Pooh book, and we’ve read it at every bedtime since May 8, developing an elaborate ritual. We watch Teletubbies. We try to sing along with the Chinese language CD of children’s songs in the car, and we’re coming close to having “Xiao Bai Tu” (“Little White Rabbit,” a nursery rhyme) downpat.

The biggest key to this little boy’s heart has been food. I ventured to an international market and brought home frozen dumplings, bok choy, red bean buns, so many noodles, and the biggest container of soy sauce I’ve seen in my life. He danced with his arms in the air as I unloaded the bags, singing “Gyoza, Gyoza!” (“Dumpling, dumpling!). Now, at the end of every meal, he reaches for me and says, “Thank you for making YoYo’s food, Mama.” This morning, he held my face and said softly, “I love you Mama, you know that?”

When we read Pooh, now, it presents a dilemma. He’s clearly bored, yet he wants us to read it. I think he doesn’t feel like he can make the decision to let go of it on his own. He cries when he wakes up alone. The bedtime CD is not the soothing presence it once was. My Dad says (wisely, I might add), that YoYo is here now, not in China. I know it is time for change, but I feel it must come in little steps. I want to tell myself that I am valuing him and the life he came from, but I also know that I am at least in part trying to protect him. I need bigger hands.

Monday, August 25, 2008

scarlet thread


Today was eclipsed by a funeral for a child Tian Yo’s age who died of cancer. Afterwards, I could only wonder that my little boy has been spared so much, while another woman’s little boy, the grandson of a sweet friend, did not survive. It brought to mind a poem written in the late T'ang Dynasty by Meng Chiao, the translation of which I read this evening.

Wanderer’s Song

The thread in the hand of a kind mother
Is the coat on the wanderer’s back.
Before he left she stitched it close
In secret fear that he would be slow to return.
Who will say that the inch of grass in his heart
Is gratitude enough for all the sunshine of spring?

I’ve concerned myself with marveling over Tian Yo’s journey to us and our journey to him. Many adopting parents refer to the “scarlet thread” leading to their little ones, perhaps because the image implies redemption. Our own thread is a cord binding many lives together. But back there, in his mother’s country, the yin of this yang grieves her loss, the little boy she did not see to manhood. Her cry is not unlike the one I heard at the funeral. Her grief may wane as YoYo blossoms in the riotous exuberance of a three-year-old boy, but it will surely wax fuller when he is old enough to understand that the scar on his belly traces his path away from her even as it mends him, and but for that chance condition of exstrophy, he might be with her still, and not with us. Both halves are part of his whole, both mothers will have loved and lost.

But for grieving another woman’s little boy lost, I would have missed it. YoYo’s birth mother wrapped him in what one nun called “a traditional red cloth” before sending him on. I’m left to wonder, as I watch him sleep, whether his mother meant to catch a glimpse of him on occasion, or to at least know how he fared. The scarlet thread in her kind hand is bound with ours.

Friday, August 8, 2008

sweet little boy

OK, OK, I'm sleeping better, finally, with much thanks for kind thoughts and prayers and a good talking-to from my sister Rose (who will get her fair share of sleepless nights come Jan. 30-WAHOO!) and encouragement from Becky C and the hope + help of the Barlow clan. Still, this little dragonfly-boy of mine swoops me up into the clouds of "Wow" and back to the still places in the grass where I have no answers.

A remark from an "easy" day--Shane & I sat at dinner, planning our evening routine. I'd read to YoYo the night before, but Shane hadn't gotten any sleep (long story involving insomniac me and an Ambien and subsequent hallucinations and him staying up to make sure I didn't take off naked down the road with the map of Canada, which I was sure was an angry crowd in a bar trying to eat Greenland while China fell on some man carrying groceries). Seriously, think twice, people, before hanging a world map in your bedroom. And there are sooooo many reasons that ceiling fans create bad, bad feng shui when placed over a bed.

ANYWAY, I offered to put YoYo to bed for the second night in a row, so Shane could slide off to bed. YoYo put his hand up to signal a pause. "Mama read to YoYo last night, Mama can read to YoYo tomorrow night, tonight is Baba's turn. Share, Mama."

Yesterday morning, it was not so much laughter. YoYo woke up crying, asking for his friend Lo Fei from the foster home. Shane was finally able to soothe him, and we had an uneventful morning. Shane left for school, and at naptime, YoYo asked, "Where is Lo Fei?" "At Lo Fei's house," I answered. "Ahhh, where is Qing Qing?" "At Qing Qing's house," I answered. This went on, with mostly ayis in question, but some children, too--Zi Ping, Mah Ling, Xiao Jing, and then I explained that just like YoYo lives in YoYo's house with YoYo's Mama and Baba, now Zhi Jing lives in her house with her Mama and Baba, and Zi Jiang will live in his house with his Mama and Baba, and Hai He will live with his Mama and Baba. He nodded, and replied, "Zhi Jing is in Zhi Jing's room, Zi Jiang is in Zi Jiang's room, Hai He is in Hai He's room, YoYo is in YoYo's room." My breath caught when he added, "And Qing Qing and Mah Ling and Zi Ping and Xiao Jing Jie Jie are all at Lo Fei's house?"

"Well, yes. They are."

"YoYo can see them?"

Four words he can now master in English well enough to string together with a simplicity that smites my heart. God help me to love this little one well, so even amidst such profound loss he remembers being deeply loved. What on earth can I tell him?

"We can see their pictures. Would YoYo like to see their pictures?"

"YES! YEAHHHHHH!!!" And thus begins the cutest dance with little fists half-pumping the air, "We'll see the pictures, we'll see the pictures, YoYo will see the pictures and Gou Gou and Mama and Jie Jie, yeahhhhh!"

For now, it is enough for him, and I walk to the living room fighting tears to retrieve the most beautiful gift, the square pale blue scrapbook filled to brimming with the love of volunteers I may not meet and ones who avoided my eyes crying when we parted in Beijing. The scrapbook holding his past and by paradox, his future, his friends and ayis, a letter from someone Very Important who wrote the story of his birth and journey to the foster home, and so many photos. We look at this for a half-hour, and I'm desperately thankful that I have seen these little faces of his friends and can share knowing them with him. I cannot imagine how much trust that builds between us, that he knows when I speak of Hai He and point to his sweet silly smile and the fish on his head that Mama knows Hai He and Mama has played with Hai He and YoYo together. Someday my Little Prince may not be content to only look at pictures and remember that time, but for now I will let it last as long as he needs it to and whenever he needs it, too. I know, too, what I will grab on the way out of the door if fire or lightning strikes, and what will join us in the bathtub if tornado comes, and what will be under my arm the next time I sprint 12 flights of stairs in an earthquake...

We took a nap together, a little later than most afternoons, holding hands and snuggling.

Friday, August 1, 2008

zombie

I'm writing this at 1 am. Of late, I've found myself awake in bed, just like in the olden days before YoYo came to us, waiting for sleep to finally come to me at 4 or 5 or 6 in the morning. Shane is remarkable, always supportive, caring for YoYo until I can stumble out of bed. Some nights, I wonder about YoYo's spina bifida, about all that is still unknown to us about his condition and what his future holds. Sometimes, I think about my grandmother's recipe for pound cake, or how to secure microloans for Kurdish women in Northern Iraq who could sell their yarn to eager American knitters and give their children an education, or how to start a canning business in a small Tibetan town which wants better dentistry for its monks. And then I think of the families waiting for children.

Granted, there are a lot of families who come to international adoption with fluffy thoughts of rescuing orphans and having true religion and claiming a child who was born "in the wrong tummy." Some bring infertility baggage or noninterested spouses or racist pandering with them. But there are ones who hope, too, ones who know that the child they adopt will not be an orphan biologically, but instead will have been "orphaned" by circumstance. They know that their child already has a name, a precious commodity when possessions and personal history are lacking. They will try to give their child room to grieve, and they will not be embarrassed when their child acts out at a restaurant in some lonely province (I confess my failure there), because they will know that they are the latest power-brokers in a sea of ever-changing faces and loss. And they will have a mighty trial ahead of them if they are with our agency.

Our agency has been denied Hague accreditation AFTER being reviewed a second time. One by one, their employees with the China program have been "reassigned" to another country's adoption program or have "resigned" to pursue other interests. The chat group is full of angry and frightened parents. I'm sure there are many like us, who have stretched past their financial abilities, who could not even dream of bringing a child home but for the love and support of a faithful community of friends and family. I wonder if they will be able to make it. If they will be able to afford being transferred to another agency to complete their adoption. If they will decide that they were never meant to have a child. If part of them will die. And of the ones who are easier to dislike, if they will be further hardened. If they will try to cast out government demons, blaming the CIS (immigrations) or the COA (accreditation board) for calling out our agency's wrongdoing. If their marriage will fail under the strain of so many deaths. If they will decide they are alone.

Their emails and questions echo in my mind each night on into morning, and I am powerless to help them. I know that I could post a caution in the chat group, that I could tell them to run and run and run to another agency, to transfer their files themselves...but what would that do? What would I think if I was one of them and read that? I know (or trust that I cannot grasp the fullness of) the sovereignty of my Maker. How will these people be rescued? Who will bring them hope?

After our scramble in early April to redo our I-171, which our agency completely mishandled, I thought, "They should be shut down. No parent should have to go through the added strain of not knowing whether they'll find that their paperwork is wrong or inadequate until it's too late and they can't finalize." Now, I ponder the fate of 2,500 adopting families. They are people. Some have children. Some do not. Some have room left to hope. Some hang, even now, by the slenderest thread.

And they keep me awake.

Friday, July 25, 2008

joyful joyful




I'm working on a new link labeled, “thanks.” The idea is to put together, to the best of my abilities, a comprehensive list with every person who helped YoYo come home. I hope that it serves to begin as a “thank-you” to many gracious souls, but I also imagine that even a brief looksee will prompt a double-take. If only every child knew that much love on entering a family-it takes much more than a village.

On to some sweet friends, the Gour family from Charleston, SC. They were in our travel group to China, and they brought home a beautiful little girl they named Claire. If you check out gourfamilyadoption.blogspot.com, you’re sure to see Claire and YoYo striking a pose at the good old Cracker Barrel in Smyrna, TN, as Claire and the Gours were on their way home from St. Louis. I'm surprised at how many of the “Most Important Moments” of my life have taken place in a Cracker Barrel…

And about that little boy…he is SOOOO HAPPY! He has turned a corner this week in his English skills, and he blows my mind every day. Snippets…

*He banged his knee and asked for a Band-Aid. When I told him I didn’t have one with me (because he wasn't bleeding and I really didn’t want to have to peel it off the couch 5 seconds later when he tired of it), he repeated, “No Band-Aid?" and looked down at the floor, shaking his head and murmuring, “Poor little YoYo.”

*Every time I bring dinner or supper to table, he looks at it and then says, “Thank you Mama so much!” (I kid you not, neither of us has coached this response.)

*As my parents sat with us for dinner the last time they came up, he turned to me mid-meal and with one hand on my cheek, he said, “Mama, sometimes it’s hard.” I have racked my brains to figure out where that came from. We cried laughing.

*In a trying moment, Shane gently reminded YoYo, “Everybody peepees, everybody poopoos.” YoYo appeared in the living room that evening and took Shane’s hand. “Where were you?” asked Shane. “Bathroom with Gou-gou (the dog).” Fearing what he'd find, Shane walked calmly to the bathroom to find every single toy the little guy owns lined up around the toilet. “Everybody peepees, everybody poopoos,” said YoYo solemly. “Close the door.”

Oh, and he sings. A lot. He loves to hum or la-la-la “Ode to Joy.” And he’ll sing the Barney song world without end. How can it be that we could be fit so perfectly with this little one?! I am amazed.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

a touch painful on re-entry

I find myself running in slow-motion, as if in a dream where I can see something happen but cannot get to it quickly enough to effect any change. We have been home nearly 6 weeks now, and it is not hard to imagine going through days and years merely trying to survive.

YoYo is the Happy Prince, awash in song, exuberant over Teletubbies each morning, delighting in baths and slides and puppy kisses and green beans. He is a restless sleeper, running from (or to?) all that he is leaving yet can't leave behind. I lie awake each night next to him, he in his bed and I on my mattress on the floor, flinching with each of his stirrings and sitting upright to right him all night. I can't remember what I am like. I only know that I really want to love him well and to be more patient and to extend to him the understanding and shelter that I yearned to offer my art students these last 10 years.

The hardest thing is to push back the lie that my whole life was leading to this moment. In a sense, yes, of course it has been doing just that, but after this moment, there will be another, and another, and little princes need room to grow.

The most humbling thing is everything. Each moment, each memory, each of the times that I struggle to think on even just one of the things that has happened. I am utterly incapable of appropriately conveying my thankfulness, gratitude, relief, love, to any person who held our hands along the way. Of course there is no way to really say, "Thank you for giving us a family," but that is what so many of our friends have done. There is no card for this, and if there was, I would not buy it, because it would be stupid. There is, too, the fear of, "What next?" I will do my best to say thank you and thank you and thank you, and then I will see each friend again, and whatever words I mustered to carry the weight of my heart will hang for moments or longer between us, coloring the next set of actions or how well I will love them in the seconds and days and years to come.

And I will fail, just like I will fail this little one. Oh, for the moment when I will find freedom in writing that!

But thanks will come and we will find a way. I will wake up to look in the eyes of a little boy who would not have come home with us had it not been for the efforts of friends who prayed or took some of the financial burden or who made phone calls or wrote letters or encouraged. I will stumble to the kitchen in a daze, where I will prepare this little one breakfast in a space which makes me feel like a cherished guest in someone else's home, thanks to friends who put in cabinets and moulding and paint and a dishwasher and flowers and who really went a little crazy! I will go outside with him to play in a fenced yard on toys from so many loving hearts and hands. I am powerless to count those who have had a hand in this.

And the enormity of that is amazing, leading my mind to thoughts of restoration and redemption, wondering if this has been an army of love, wondering what may come of it. Is this shalom? Is it a fullening of fruit to goodness and wholeness? I'll get impatient and grumpy tomorrow, that's for sure, but what a wonder it is that so many hands would join to help one little boy, and what a strangeness that the moment demanded it.

Monday, June 16, 2008

A Happy Sight

...seeing YoYo catching fireflies in a friend's back yard Sunday evening with his buddy Cole.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

stranger still...

...Our son was on the news the other night.

http://www.wsmv.com/video/16526523/

There's a story behind "eating tree fungus," but not the one implied by my words that evening. I should have spoken more carefully.

That said, Chris Tatum is an incredibly gracious newsman, and we were honored to be part of his storytelling and hopeful to represent well the fruit of Shaohannah's Hope.

Will wonders never cease?

Thursday, May 29, 2008

aftershocks

The fingers of human stories entwine in unforeseen ways, irrevocable and complex.

On Thursday, May 22, we woke up late, but it was not a problem. We were quietly excited—in a few hours, we would travel to the Consulate for our oath-taking ceremony, the last phase in China of making our adoption complete!

As we got ready for breakfast, I checked the email, and suddenly everything stopped. Friend Rinda had written quickly to ask for prayer on her way to the hospital. Steven and MaryBeth Chapman’s daughter, Maria, had been hit by a car at home. She wasn’t breathing as they lifeflighted her to Vanderbilt.

We paused to pray, to ask for mercy, to fight the fog of unbelief. Surely this was a passing thing. But moments later, friend Tricia followed with a new email posting the saddest news of all, that Maria had died.

I reacted with denial, much as I did when I woke up to the hotel swaying that afternoon—it seems so long ago now. It couldn’t be true. There must be a mistake, a misinterpretation, a communication breakdown. We didn’t say anything to the others in our group as we boarded a bus to the Consulate, and my heart filled with the strangeness of it as we took our oath, one small family in a sea of adopting Americans, some already struggling fearfully with their children’s burdens.

How could one family’s happiest day be the same day another family would hope against ever happening? Where are these children going, and what is to become of them? The mingling of joy and grief throughout is too much for words, let alone imagination. How could one mother who encouraged and helped us so much more than we can repay-without whom we would not have our son, in truth-lose her daughter as our own hope’s fruit finally ripened?

“If he is buried in a landslide, who am I to say his story, our story, is wasted? The events thus far have been not a means to an end, as a prelude to a life of leadership or remarkable character, but instead have been their own fullness, fruit of the love of others.” My words from just days earlier throbbed in my aching head as I stared past endless anonymous crumbling concrete housing filled with numberless persons whose paths will never cross my own, save to say that they lived in the city through which I traveled that day my son became my own-but not my own, still. Do I believe those words I wrote? I cannot think of a time when what I’ve pondered has been challenged so quickly or profoundly, but I think that what I was trying to say that day is all that I have even now. In an earlier time, I would have sought justification, a deitific purpose behind such sadness, or perhaps condemned some ethereal spiritual attack. But those thoughts scar the mind, marring the receipt of love. That season of joy in that lovely family was its own season, and its end does not mean the end of joy, else what can we hope for? I cannot ask what the meaning of this is, any more than I can ask what great work my son must be destined for, seeing the number of people and weight of sacrifice required to bring him this far. It is its own time, and it is full, growing fuller still, whether we will it or not.

Even as the Chapmans ushered their daughter onward, we bundled our son home. Near and far, to and fro. Even as we flew homeward over Canada Saturday, the funeral commenced, and when we arrived safely, wearily, home, we were met at the airport by friends, sweet faithful friends, who came straight from that funeral to our homecoming. Near and far, to and fro. Joy, when it is sombered, is a deepening thing, slow to blossom and hard to hold. A rose in a vase is enjoyed in the fullness of scent and color, even as it dies of its severance.

I’m reminded of when I read “The Grapes of Wrath” in high school. I was so angry at Steinbeck that I barely finished the book. The moment in which one family member passes even as another is conceived in the same vehicle was too much to bear. I couldn’t explain why, then, but it nagged at me, kept me awake, drove me to beg the teacher for an alternate book, any alternate book. Looking back, I think it was, perhaps, the self-consciousness of the construct, the idea that this near and far, to and fro, happens in the same breath in this life, but it is truer than what he writes. Somehow, his telling of this thing which truly unfolds was a lie. Perhaps the lie was hopelessness, or maybe it was that such a moment had to be invented, as though it does not naturally happen.

I’m reminded, too, of Peter, the disciple I would name “Most Likely to Have Americans Compare Themselves to in Hopes They Were So Cool.” In a moment of sifting, scores of followers suddenly found Jesus’ words incompatible with their expectations of Messiah, and they left. Jesus turned to “the 12” and asked if they were prepared to leave, as well. Peter replied, “Where would we go?”—some texts interpret it as, “To whom would we go?” I’m beginning to think, more and more, that his words were unhindered by ambition or personality—it sounds like the query from a man at the end of himself.

But we are home, and we are HOME, and it is good that this time has come. Our little prince finally slept through a night last night, and the moments of his day are enormous. There is yet more to tell, as we settle in and begin something like a schedule...the homecoming, the emails, the help from doctors and nurses as we traveled, the stories and improbabilities, the mighty story of our son's origins, the weaving of the strands that for a time served as legend to us...to tell them as they unfolded would have allowed me to dwell in places that would have disabled me from moving forward, and we desparately needed to move forward each day there. There is more and still more, fuller and fuller.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Home Again

They are home, safe and sound! YoYo has many, many balloons now.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Hello and Goodbye

What a day! We just finished a whirlwind tour-in-an-evening of Hong Kong. Friend Phemie's sister Shelley and family were more than generous hosts, whisking us through the antique district, then to a tram (the oldest and cheapest transit in HK) for a brief ride, then to a fabulous restaurant where we feasted like we were hip and famous, showering us with precious gifts for YoYo, then across the stunning harbour on a ferry.

Of course, the evening could only start after we'd checked in to our hotel, tired from our high-speed train (think 160 mph) from Guangzhou to HK. Our agency had booked the hotel for us incorrectly (surprise!), so we had to pay $ 100 USD for a rollaway bed for tonight. It was the day's only flaw.

We began the morning at White Swan Hotel with breakfast (like good little parents), and of course we ran into Tam., one of our new friends through Tian Yo, whom we first met in Beijing. She was in Guangzhou for a shopping trip, staying at White Swan - don't try to calculate the odds. We had a great chat, and she snagged a few more pictures of us with YoYo before we left.

How did we meet her, you might ask? I can only say so many times that YoYo's story crosses borders and reaches far. BlueSky is supported richly by many volunteers, whose families live in the expatriate area of Beijing. Many of these folks took part specifically and deeply in YoYo's story. The day before we left BlueSky, they hosted a party for us, sans YoYo, to send us off with all their hope - it was incredible.

The guests had ridiculous stories. One woman had solicited help from United Airlines for Tian Yo's passage to the States last year for surgery. Two guests representing United had given her not one but two free flights to the States, one for YoYo and one for his ayi - they presented us with a beautiful model 747. The co-founder of our adoption agency was there, unaware of our struggles Stateside, only deeply happy for our son, passionate for the sake of China's children-she is even now in the earthquake's epicenter, sleeping in refugee tents as she tries to secure the future of as many newly orphaned little ones as possible - she presented us with very special chopsticks with jade rests in a pretty case. There was a woman from Great Britain who had taken part in a group run across a portion of the Great Wall to raise funds for YoYo's hospital stay in the States. There was the woman who hopes to adopt YoYo's best friend - she actually hosted the fete, and her chef (on loan from the Consulate--you heard me) prepared fajitas and salad and Coronas and salsa. There was no end to the people, and my memory could not hold them all. Some had created an elaborate and beautiful scrapbook for us of YoYo's life thus far.

We met Tam. at the party, and she sat with us and filled us in on so many of the others and their ties to our little prince. And of course, to see her this morning, just a few hours before our checkout at Guangzhou and the beginning of our journey home, brought our time here full circle. How gracious a time this has been, despite the viral outbreak and the strain of travel and natural disaster and oh so many agency gaffes. I feel as though I am in a tree which is coming to fruition, and it only gets fuller and fuller and riper and fuller - there is no end to its season, but only a richness of being. As I drift towards sleep these few hours before our flight home, I know that the awareness of this richness is a gift, and I can only hope to be awake to it and ready for it even when I am impatient and he is grumpy or is having a tantrum or I am tired. Can I receive it ever? It is at hand.

Tomorrow, it's off to the States! Yahoo!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Done Deal

from Anna, at end of quickie email:

"ps - he's ours! details forthcoming..."

More precisely, Shane says on his facebook page that "Shane Caudill is officially the father of a US citizen."

--Susan, Official Typist

Monday, May 19, 2008

The good, the bad, & the ugly

We’re on Shamian Island in Guangzhou. It is a containment island for families on the last leg of their adoption journey. The Island was severed from the mainland more than a century ago and filled with the banks and embassies of many countries—it was the first city allowed to bring in trade from outside. The atmosphere of those now-derelict buildings is “empire left to moulder.” We are here, shielded somehow from traveling street vendors and beggars. There are only a handful of stalls hawking cheap souvenirs across the street from our hotel, the White Swan, and they do not chase us down—they only call out as we pass.

What is good, so good, is that we’re almost finished. Our little prince plays with us, clings to us, snuggles with us each morning. He chatters during dinner, and he tries so hard to teach us Chinese. One morning, as he told me that he wanted to go downstairs, I tried his patience. The words in Mandarin for “small” and “down” sound similar to me. Each time I answered his “down” with “small,” he said, “No!” and gently corrected me. Finally, he took my face in his tiny brown hands and said, “Mama, ni shodo bu how” (“Mama, you speak poorly”). I laughed so hard!

Today was bad in many ways. We walked as a group of 10 families to a clinic on the Island for physical examinations of all the children. For most families, it was an in and out affair, with some tears and cries of anguish on the children’s part, but mostly painless.

Then there was us. We were early in line, but as soon as the examining physician pulled off Tian Yo’s clothing, we knew there was a problem. She asked about his bowel movements and his urine. We said they were good. She looked at his medical notes, then at him again. She pressed his colostomy pouch. “What is this?” she asked. I explained carefully, without too many words-her English was poor. Her hands were bare, unwashed throughout the last dozen children examined. Only the small square of disposable paperlike fabric had been changed on the examining table. She began to press his genitals, actually pulling at some parts as he cried out. “Elsie!” I called for our agency’s guide, frantic. The doctor pulled another doctor in, and the two of them began pressing YoYo’s flesh while he screamed. Elsie came in, took one look at Tian Yo, and draped a comforting arm across my shoulder. “How sad! How hard!” Her voice was thick with tears of pity for my son, and I felt my anger choke me. “Tell them that it is all in his medical notes—in Chinese,” I urged her. She translated, and the first doctor paused in her exam to speak. “She wants to know how he urinates,” Elsie explained, as both doctors pulled on him for what must have been the tenth time. My head spun, and I thought I would faint. I could not see these three as people at all, only as objects of my anger in their incompetence. I yanked a catheter from YoYo’s emergency kit in Shane’s backpack. Shane was tightlipped with anger. The doctor pulled the guaze back from YoYo’s stoma with her bare unwashed hand and TOUCHED IT (I can’t explain here how bad that is without launching in a completely different direction, but that is so very unhealthy, exposing his bladder directly and instantly to a profound amount of bacteria). They pressed him one or two last times, and the second doctor left. As I tugged his clothes back onto his sobbing body, she asked if we had any record of his surgeries. This was totally unexpected. We had given our guide copies of every piece of medical information that they were supposed to have. But now they wanted more. Out came my notebook, and within seconds, I covered her in letters and records from Shanghai, Singapore, and Johns Hopkins which I had carried in my notebook “just in case.” She stared at the English papers, uncomprehending, then ordered an assistant to make copies.

A sick feeling hit me. What if all this just led up to, “No, you cannot have this boy?” Did they have the power to try that? What would we do if that happened? I tried not to let my imagination run wild as this doctor sat staring at words which held no meaning for her in Chinese, much less English. YoYo was clinging to Shane, his tears abated, his face a picture of a child overwhelmed. The color of his face was terrible, pale and tearsoaked, exhausted. Our useless guide was back in the main waiting area, sorting the paperwork from all the other families in our group, who had long since finished their examinations.

When the assistant returned, I took my papers back and restored them to the notebook, and we fled. The examination was over. Back at the hotel, I doused his stoma in Betadine and gave him extra antibiotic. He was asleep the minute I picked him up from catheterizing him.

Tonight, we sailed a brightly lit cruise boat up the Pearl River. YoYo was grumpy, unwilling to touch his food, still breathing roughly from the cold he has had the entire time we have had him. I tasted my own food, something unidentifiable from a large and cold partially cooked buffet. It was awful, and instantly, I felt like an ugly American inside. “Pizza,” I said to Shane, and when we returned for the evening to our comfortable room with uncomfortable beds, we feasted on Papa John’s pepperoni pizza, and I didn’t care what message it sent YoYo as long as he had food in his belly and a smile on his face-finally.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Shalom

We left Zhengzhou for Guangzhou today. On Wednesday, we had returned to Zhengzhou from Jiaozuo along the flats of the Yellow River. We saw so many tiny towns dotting the dusty rutted road. The economic bloom of Beijing has not yet pollinated here. Traffic was wild, with donkey cars, transfer trucks, buses, private cars, bicycles, motorized scooters, pedestrians, and police all competing for right of way. We saw the inevitable result just before lunch: a woman on a motorbike has collided with doom, and she lay spread flat, facedown across the roadside, her lifeblood puddling around her head. Shane turned YoYo's face close in to us, his gentle voice singing "Big car big car big car" in my ear as I saw her outstretched arm. At once this land seems so hard, with its earthquakes and control and battering snows and poor roads and undrinkable water and dirty hospitals and teeming life and fleeing monks and desperate disparate people. What would her mother think, seeing that hand flat on the pavement, remembering her birth? It is more than I can bear, yet just hours away are galaxies, it seems, of mothers' children dead in the rubble of cities which shook down to the ground.

I think of Tian Yo growing up, and of all of the persons whose love has carried him to this moment, and of all the sheer persistence and effort it has taken, and the miracle of it. I know only One who could author such a tale. And I know that this little boy cannot carry alone the weight of this love--it must remain effortless, he cannot possibly pay it all back, he can only maybe partly receive its sum and be aware of it. How much effort, how much love, was I unaware of as a child, and how much painstaking time on my behalf was squandered at any point when my child's mind was not ready to receive or to comprehend? There is no guilt in this, only wonder. I cannot as of yet draw conclusions, or I will render myself unteachable. I can only hope to love without expectations attached. This boy, this prince, has reached the sum of three years with a story larger than I can imagine, but he will do stupid things and wise things. If he is buried in a landslide, who am I to say his story, our story, is wasted? The events thus far have been not a means to an end, as a prelude to a life of leadership or remarkable character, but instead have been their own fullness, fruit of the love of others.

We are all tired, and we are all heartsick a little. But we are hopeful.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

“Mr. and Mrs. Lo Kee”

At least in China’s eyes, we are at last a family. We journeyed to Jiaozuo city today, a two hour drive from Zhengzhou, the capital city of Henan province.

Hours after arrival, we traveled to the Notary, who would put the city seal on our adoption certificate. The director of Jiaozuo Social Welfare Institute was there, as she had been in Zhengzhou. On the way in, a woman clung to our guide, barraging her with talk. Not wanting to invite risk, I kept walking in and up the stairs, just ahead of our guide. The woman finally left, and our guide turned, laughing, towards us to identify her as a journalist. In the building’s basement was an emergency China Red Cross donation center for earthquake relief. If we’d make a donation, they would take our photo for the next day’s newspaper.

We agreed for several reasons, not least of which was peacemaking. The notarization ran long; there was a mistake in the translation, and money had to be taken to the bank for counting. We pressed our red-inked fingertips over our signatures and then drank hot water in paper cups and took photos with officials. Our gifts to the officials were not warmly received, but our presence afterwards in the Red Cross office was.

We walked in and made our donation, pausing over the clear acrylic collection box with our money suspended midway through the slot, each of us with a hand visible on the bills as they spread fanlike to reveal their sum. Cameras clicked from every corner of the room, and then in a special ceremony, we were presented with a card of thanks by a gin-scented representative who made a small red-faced speech. More cameras clicked, and the journalist re-emerged to tell our guide that the newspaper was not available to the general public, only state officials, but she would get us a copy for YoYo.

The ground beneath their feet

from Anna:

On Monday, China saw its worst earthquake in 30 years. The number of persons lost climbs alongside rescuers pressing their way north and west through rubble that just last year was the road we traveled from t*b*t to Chengdu.

We were asleep: the little prince in his stroller and his grateful parents beside him. We awoke to the building swaying steadily, smoothly, like a tree. Realization dawned slowly, and I looked out the window to see if it was real. The swaying grew, and suddenly people streamed like ants below our 11th floor, fleeing their buildings with hands covering mouths, on cellphones and crying, looking back or slowing down as their curiosity outstripped terror. With weird calmness, we grabbed our backpacks, took the prince-laden stoller, and ran. We took a staircase and hauled the stroller between us those many flights. I have no idea how we did it, but by the time we made the ground floor, we joined hotel staff who were hastily discarding filthy kitchen aprons and clinging without thought to hangers and shouting as they ran.

One could only assess the situation minute by minute. We began the registration process that morning and were supposed to meet our guide in the afternoon to return to the offices for our certificate of adoption. It didn’t occur to me that we might have come this far and yet not make it. Our crying guide found us, and we sat in chairs that hotel staff were made to bring to the parking lot for guests. They brought water, as well, and I wondered quietly where the epicenter was. I also remembered joking with Shane about earthquakes as we checked in. Last year, as we arrived in Kunming, China, a sign in our hotel room warned of earthquakes. We looked at the “earthquake kit,” a flashlight, and were amused and sobered at once. Our arrival in this new hotel, with our soon-to-be officially pronounced son, brought another flashlight with no instructions. “An earthquake kit,” I laughed. Now it seemed like a stunt in a poorly written novel.

When the all-clear was given, we were well past YoYo’s catheter schedule, so he and I were among the first allowed to return to the lobby washroom. What choices can a mother make when her son can’t empty himself? I could only pray that the building was stable, that I wouldn’t have to jerk the bathroom door open and rush out with his pants down, catheter intact, away from crumbling walls. We made it, and I emptied him into a trashbag while he sat on a disposable changing pad I had packed “just in case.”

Our driver sped us to the registry office on schedule for our certificate. To my surprise, it was open, filled with six adopting families. Usually, only one family comes through in a week. This time, one family brought all four children and their new son. There were six guides, representatives from each of the provincial orphanages, a translator, the office staff of four, computers, chairs. The 16’ x 20’ space was not up to the task, the children were tired, and the earthquake siren was wailing again outside. After waiting an hour, we were evacuated from that building, too, as an aftershock was on its way. We were told to return the following day for the certificate. Our guide told us we would head for the hotel, where we should pack what we would most need—if we were allowed to return inside.

By the time we got there, everyone was back inside, and we rushed upstairs. I packed while Shane took YoYo for bottled water and food—just enough to carry. Packing was an ordeal—we might be made to stay out until very late. I tried to keep in mind what we might need if stranded in a devastated city for a week. Adoption papers, passports, medical supplies, every antibacterial wipe or cleaner we had, clothes for YoYo, cellphones, money…how should I divide things so we could still survive if the city was crippled and one pack got stolen? How long would YoYo last? How should we leave things in the room in case it was looted before we returned from an evacuation? Was there a way to protect anything? So many contingency plans…where is that darn flashlight?

Then Shane and Tian Yo returned, and their supplies—water, nuts, cookies, dried fruit—brought courage. He played unawares while we planned. In fact, he had slept through the whole event that afternoon.


Before my mess could be cleared, there was a knock at the door. It was our guide and two officials from the registration office. They had come to present us with our certificate of adoption because of the uncertainty of events to come. It was, as it happens, the first time they had ever done this in a hotel room. They apologized for the earthquake and for how we would miss out on the official ceremony because of it. We smiled and were apologetic for our room, forgetting to offer them seats, taking photos, giving them our gift, receiving the certificate. Their visit was brief—there were five families remaining. It was already six in the evening; who knows how long their day lasted.

Our guide advised us to sleep lightly, perhaps taking turns, in the event of another evacuation. She was calmer this time, as there had already been two aftershocks reported that we had not felt. I called family to say all was well, and they were breathless with relief. We made it through the night and somehow, we managed to sleep, although my head was spinning. We did not wander for hours, waiting.

It sounds like a skewed fairy tale, I wrote someone later. “When the prince found his family, they were joined by officials, and dragons shook the whole land of China in farewell.” Now that seems too terrible to have said.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Earthquake Story #1

from Shane:

For those who wake up to hear on CNN that China had an Earthquake, it was true! We were taking a nap, with YoYo sleeping in his stroller waiting for our next appointment when the whole building started shaking. Eventually they set up chairs outside for the VIP's to sit and wait it out. We got VIP seats. The woman with me is our guide who raced in to the hotel past security up six flights of stairs to find us. Unfortunately, we had already come down 11 flights of stairs (carrying the stroller full of baby) and were waiting on the curb looking for her. Anna will send details, but here are some pics.

Safe!

All is well - yes, they did feel the earthquake, they had to evacuate the hotel temporarily, but they are safe. More news and pictures to come!

--Susan, Official Typist

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1949097/China-earthquake-death-toll-to-hit-5,000.html

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Well, it's like this.

The mystery of Yo-Yo's origin grows deeper even as we find more information. I would have never known a great deal, had I not asked the Doctor one day about the finding ad. This is an ad placed in the local paper in a child's town by officials when that child is found abandoned at a hospital or elsewhere. His is irrelevant, because it happened several weeks after he arrived at the "home" of nuns. They received him with a note containing only his birthdate and they opened his wrappings to find the shock of their lives.

They called our friend the Doctor, who knew that the little boy must travel far and wide to survive and eventually make a new home. But the nature of things here is that he would not be able to leave because of where he was left at birth. Bringing him to the nuns' "home" made him non-existant in the eyes of officials, and therefore he was ineligible for international adoption.

So, in these first few incredible days, as back in America we grieved over the realization of not being able to enjoy both adopted and biological children together, his good Doctor found another region which would give him the status and identity he needed so that he could someday leave. We're traipsing about the country on my first Mother's Day with a boy who was not our son but is our son, the little Prince who did not exist, but whose plight moved men to run the Great Wall, and women to move secret mountains. His story is in Sweden, Holland, Singapore, Scotland, the US, and Australia... and I awaken every day to discovery of new connections between him and persons I have yet to meet. Will I ever get to meet all his courtiers?

Just now, he has come back from a much smaller expedition to a supermarket in Zhengzhou with his Baba. They brought back Mother's Day tributes, pistachios and cookies and milk (oh blessed for black tea with milk! no Yorkshire Gold here) and he was so proud to struggle across the floor of the room dragging the bag to me by himself, thank you very much! Happy Mother's Day, indeed.

(ps - I got a "Wo ai ni" (I love you) today. Just three little words to carry a heart forever.)

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Transition

We got to the hotel today after a brief outing at a much smaller park than the original plan. Tears when everyone left the park but us, and then we traveled to the hotel with one nurse, one volunteer, and Lynn, our able and tireless guide. They gave us a fold-up umbrella stroller! Kathy M gave us a beautiful stroller, but we found after a few changes to luggage restrictions on inner-China flights that it might be a problem, so we left it home to avoid losing it entirely.

Our entourage made a pit stop for lunch before the hotel-and that little boy must have eaten his weight in noodles, watermelon, dragon fruit, sweet and sour pork, bean shoots, and cucumber. Wow! We settled in to our room nicely, and the care routine went well for the first time without training wheels.

Just so overwhelmed that I can't really journal yet. It seems presumptious to think that we can step in and make the claim of parenthood on this little boy when so so many have worked and given unfathomably to get him to this point. We are only two people, and small at that. But as Gunilla (the incredible nurse who helped teach us this week) reminded us today over coffee, we aren't given anything that will overtake us. There is just as large a family to which this prince comes as that he has left behind. And even then, the cord has not been severed between him and them; they are we.

Thanks to Rinda, Lisa, Phemie, Lori, and Bridgette for the toys--the MagnaDoodle and Eric Carle lacing cards are an absolute hit. David and Tricia, the little cow from Christmas is endlessly fascinating. What joy this boy takes in life. For me, so afraid for so long of eternity and its endlessness, he is freedom. He is our little prince.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

I can't wait til I'm stronger!

We have a watermelon boy on our hands. Like his PaPa (my Dad), he does not want to wear socks with his shoes, and he loves watermelon in large quantities. Shane and I prepared dinner for the children and ayis tonight - real southern cooking. We went to an international market in the expat village here and bought ingredients to make vegetable soup, pinto beans, and cornbread. Only one catch - no oven, so we had to make corn fritters. We served it with watermelon and rice (just in case) and it was an unequivocal hit. The ayis were scraping the fritter crumbs off the plate--literally--and no pinto beans or watermelon left. Hmmmmmm....

Keep us in your thoughts. I may or may not have said it, but there is a virus (hand foot & mouth) spreading rapidly through China, and it has led the Doctor to cancel our picnic outing for tomorrow--just too much risk. Also, Tian Yo had some blood in his colostomy pouch today. They tell me it happens from time to time... We are currently using care methods which have been compiled between 2 Dutch nurses, an American nurse, a Chinese doctor, an American urologist, etc. Every time we catheterize, it seems the process changes a little! They gave us what is a very spacious apartment by Beijing standards--about 10' x 16'--with a kitchenette and a toilet that is also a walk-in shower. Yes, we wear shower shoes. I just figured out today that the warmed milk (from the microwave) they've served us every morning is unpasteurized--how bout that!

YoYo has taken to us HUGELY. Singing solves tears. He loves to sing, he loves to say "car," and he absolutely adores dogs. Every time a dog barks outside, he stops everything to point to the nearest window and shout, "Gogo!" (dog) Baba (Shane) knows enough Mandarin to play "Where is Gogo?" and that has become a favorite, along with "Baba sleep--wake up wake up wake up!"

I think I told you about the incredible party yesterday. They have showered us with not only all of his medical files and x-rays, but also baby clothes that have been carefully saved, his favorite bedtime book, and some favorite toys. A couple from Singapore loved him so much, and he spent his first 2 birthdays with them. The wife flew to Beijing just to see him off last summer to the States. They sent beautiful little outfits for us to take with him.


His main ayi, who now works with the babies here, Qin Qin, talked to us a long time last night. She told us about how he best falls asleep, that he likes pizza, and that he falls asleep in the car. She had saved a bag of his baby clothes for 2 years, and in her office, his photos are plastered all over the walls. She made us 2 DVDs with photos of him set to several of his favorite little kid songs.

I am overwhelmed. This little guy has been loved so much, and we are so small. That we have such a loving circle of friends and family is, I think, the only way we can stand it. And he is a sweet boy, for all the attention and fuss he has garnered. Tonight, as I was changing him, I tried not to let him see how frightened I was by the sight of blood in his colostomy pouch. He touched my chin gently--I was so overwrought with nerves that a boil came up on my chin as we flew here, and by now it is scabbed over--and he said softly, "Ow." I agreed, "Ow," gently--and then he patted my cheek as if to console me. I have no words for that.

More soon - tomorrow we will travel to the hotel in Beijing, where we will meet up with 3 other CHI families. (and do some laundry! We only brought 3 shirts & 2 pants each--including what we wore here--and sink laundry with air drying needs a vacation, I think!)

Love to all and full hearts
anna & shane

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Even Better than the Real Thing

from Anna:

I can hardly stand it. Here we are, Day 3 in China, and there are already too many firsts to count. First time he has run to me saying, “Mama!” with arms outstretched, first kiss, first time to dry him after a shower, first time to say, “Don’t hit,” first time to share a treat with Baba (Shane)…

Can a mere mortal stand it? YoYo has a tight knit group of friends, and many times, he and his buddy Hai He resemble two little old men, patting each other on the shoulders and nodding in agreement about a snack.

So much to say… we have been showered with gifts. We’re staying in a small apartment for volunteers, and fresh flowers greeted our arrival. We’re invited to every meal, and we were Doctor H’s guests on May 1, a special holiday in China, for an elaborate feast at a very fine restaurant (which took who knows what to book). We ate Peking Duck, tofu soup, seafood soup, steamed riced potatoes, stir-fried mushrooms, in all about 20 different dishes, complete with Chrysanthemum tea.

We’ve been given a pile of YoYo’s clothes, a book of well-wishes from a group who sponsored a man to run a length of the Great Wall when money was being raised for the surgery in the US last summer, a book with notes from every volunteer passing through who has met or worked with YoYo, many tears from his loving ayis*, a book which his favorite ayi reads to him each night…

And then there’s Gogo, the stuffed dog we first met many Skypes ago. Gogo is a constant companion, sleeping with YoYo, eating with him, sometimes joining him in the shower. Yesterday, YoYo used a tiny chair to pin Gogo against a table, where he mixed dried beans in a bowl and pretended to feed his friend a simple dinner. And our photo ball is the guest at YoYo’s changing table, where he plays our Shilo’s bark each time he’s catheterized. He talks to her photo each time.

There’s so much more… but there is also time to tell it. Suffice it to say… Wow!

*ayi = nanny

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Here we go...

Ready or not!

We're in DC @ Dulles Airport, preparing to take off in about an hour for Beijing. We will be meeting our son face to face in under 18 hours!

--relayed over phone to Susan, Official Typist.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Welcome to Go!

A week left and counting...

Skype #3 with YoYo tonight--apparently the dog is a hit. I have to admit, however, that 2 things disturb me about his care thus far: he knows the Barney song, and he fled our conversation tonight to find solace in the arms of a stuffed Teletubbie. NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!

If you're new to my blog, I'll summarize. In July 2005, we started the adoption journey with a local agency. Because of breakdown within the agency, we left after 18 months with nothing to show for our time. Last February, we picked up the journey again with a new agency. A month later, we had completed our homestudy and traveled to China for a two week tour. We decided to pursue special needs adoption--called "Waiting Child" adoption by our agency. We requested children in June, then again in October. Our October request for one little boy with very large needs was frighteningly successful--and in 6 days, we'll travel to meet him and bring him home!

I'll admit, summarizing was harder than I expected. It brought back so many things that haven't yet made it to the blog. I told a friend the other day, "Who would walk the path before them if they could see its entirety? Fear would crush us forever." Some might choose to call it spiritual warfare, but I know that the biggest battle was with my own fear, and if it had won, not only would we not be traveling in 6 days-we might never be parents at all. There were so many near-misses.

But here we are, and I'm blogging as if I don't have a list to panic about. I must be off.

Monday, April 21, 2008

SKYPE!!!

Amazing things...

Friend Lisa's baby M was rushed to Vandy Children's hospital Friday, where they discovered the six-week-old had a "little artery trouble." Risky surgery today went smashingly well, and hopefully, she'll be off the ventilator soon. We've logged some time in these last few days back & forth to visit, praying, running errands... we've decided all play dates from YoYo's arrival onward will be at Vandy Children's Hospital. It's where the cool kids hang out--where they go to see and be seen, as it were.

Then home again, lickety-split, to Skype our boy! The weather cooperated tonight--yesterday, heavy rain in China prohibited a connection--and we got to see and talk to our little guy in real time for the first time!!! He was pretty concerned about the dog in the house, as he had not been there before and the dog was about, so he kept murmuring, "Dog, dog," in Mandarin. We didn't rate as much attention. So, that sounds like normal parent stuff!

T suggests we try again tomorrow night, and then perhaps we can do this every night until we travel. Oh, my...

Oh--I may have started a mural in YoYo's room, too. You know, just to kill time.

List of things remaining until we travel:
  • pick up YoYo's ostomy supplies
  • pack
  • buy a new suitcase (Tania told us he has "a lot of stuff")
  • three showers (3 showers?!?!)
  • order cabinets (oh yeah, there was a leak and damage to our home in this whole story, and yea! thanks to the Florians and the Smiths for taking our housekeys and rescuing us while we're gone)
  • finish the room
  • patch the roof
  • YoYo's prescriptions
  • last-minute paperwork
  • finish 7 AP Art portfolios
  • wrap the school year
  • film our award ceremony remarks
  • create a CD of student artwork for awards ceremony
  • there's soooo much more
  • about $ 5,000 to go!

Did I mention we heard his voice for the first time?! OH, there's PLENTY of baby-ness left in him. He is soooo yummy!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

On the Air...

We're getting ready to talk to Yo-Yo for the first time! We're Skyping him between 8 pm and 9 pm tonite!

(stay tuned)

Monday, April 14, 2008

Think of this adoption as...

...the most unlikely combination of events imaginable...an unlikely bridge between two places in spacetime...you know, a wormhole.

This evening, I thought we'd surely hit the benchmark, the defining moment which galvanized the spidery webs of hope and imagination into a very tangible event--plane tickets.

It's funny how a flight itinerary can make things real. While we made preparations for Iraq nearly two years ago--can it be two years already since that magical summer?--I existed in some sort of dreamworld, flowing from immunizations to supply lists to lesson plans to packing, and suddenly one day we had tickets. Until that moment, Iraq was a far-off land, and in that moment, it became very real and very close.

That's how it was tonight. Finally, e-tickets!!! And even if I haven't printed them yet, there is this sort of irrevocable sense of certainty, as if the journey to Yo-Yo has finally wound its way from rutted dirt lane to pavement. I babbled on the phone for 2 hours with who knows who about our flights.

And then the roof blew off even that.

T, the tireless co-hope of Yo-Yo's house, Skyped me. Rather, she told me to Skype her. And I, wildly insecure about my appearance in the best of times, much less in the wee sma's of Central Time, Skyped her. We talked for all of 20 minutes, but I may as well have been talking to Amelia Earhart tonight for as real as it felt. I can't begin to say how nervous I was--but it was for the best of causes that I stuck with it--and I ended up feeling not unlike those uncharted times in high school on first dates. I am going to be this boy's Mom--I AM his Mom! What do I say to not let them know how dumb I really am? What if she thinks I'm too ugly to be his Mom? Too fat? What if she comes away from our conversation pouring out amidst giggles and fits and starts and wireless interruptions and pixelated faces and thinks, "Maybe this isn't the best idea?"

Don't ask me why it felt like a casting call. It just did. And T was the kindest, gentlest person, self-effacing when it came to talking about her work, concerned that we'd have to figure out how to navigate introductions with Yo-Yo, delighted to be chatting casually about this event that will forever be the quantum bubble of our Big Bang. This is our zero, our shift from one end of infinity to the other. Before & After.

And it started with my first Skype. What a spaceship!