Saturday, December 15, 2012



One of the ways that adoption creates ripples is by pointing to the undeniable bridge that love makes between a family and a child without a blood connection.  
Allegiance and loyalty to one's own family, traditionally defined by blood line and marriage, can be seen as attacked here.  This is particularly true when this loyalty has been called upon to make repairs to relationships or to "hold the family together."  If, instead of foregiveness, I use another value like that of the central strength of family, I place family in a place where it can be attacked.  Then, when someone or something, including adoption, shines a light on this error, I become defensive, resistant, and even aggressive.
The crucial nature of love is that it does not need defense.  Allegiance and loyalty do.  People do.  But love, itself, does not.  Love is the true source of our valuing for family.
It is much harder to define family in terms of love.  Blood lines, birth certificates, even adoption papers only label and document where love should be.  Why we accept the compulsion to define in these terms is another expansive topic.
Can we accept that our only true choices are who, when and how to love?
If we can, then we can see that loyalty is not a stand-alone virtue.  Allegiance to the values of our family, especially our parents and their parents and so on, are not the best measure of loving our family.  There is no real measure.  The first step in respecting them is by being grateful for their work in shaping our world, and more deeply, for the love they shared with us.  Then we can accept that their failings and the hurts they passed on to us as we love them back, compassionately.  We can then foregive ourselves for our own failings and hurts we pass on to others, despite our own best efforts and intentions.  From here, we are truly free to continue the work they started, or continued from the previous generation.  In this freedom, we feel the weight of the responsibility to make changes, to act, and most importantly, in a very vulnerable way, to love.  This last hurdle is where we have our choice: to fear and push away the power to change and be changed, or to embrace it, and to feel all of the power, joy and pain that loving brings.  This choice determines whether we are loved back, whether our children will respect what we have done to shape their world.
I intentionally left out the "where", "what" and "why" in the question above.  The "why" introduces a much more abstract element to this.  The "where" is embedded in the "when" - the right time for expressing love is directly and inextricably linked to the where.  Also a divergent conversation.
The "what" is an important distinction.  We make an important distinction between "what" and "who" - arguably not in the right place yet.  For this, I would like to make the distinction between loyalty to ideas or principles, and loving people.  
When we place greater value on an idea, especially ones that have a history of emotionally charged conflict, we risk placing that idea in a place where it restricts how, who and when we can love.  
When we choose to hold an idea so tightly that we begin to deny how that grip harms others, we do harm to ourselves as well.  We create a situation where guilt, projection, intolerance, fear, and ultimately hatred can grow between us and within each of us.
If we hope to persuade others of the greatness of an idea (cue Tony here!) we have to bring more than enthusiasm and certainly more than a strategy to increase its power.  We have to share it by building a real connection to each other person, strong enough to support the idea’s greatness, and suited to the other person.  This is a very intense process, unique to the relationship and the two people in it.
I have lived with values deferring to two generations back, particularly deferring to their values of gun ownership.  Add to this the great legend told of how gun ownership helped give birth to this country.  Add to this the lore and integration of guns as signs of manhood and extensions of personal power, and it is little wonder that this country holds so tightly to this value.  I have grown to a turning point: I must respect my family’s values by moving beyond my need to hold onto those values.  I give up imagining that this a way for me to continue to love them.  My integrity and all the other things that they would love about me require me to value something else.  So, to honor them and to be true to myself I have to stand for something new: I stand for a new America, one where we care more about each other than about individualism or family values or gun rights or any of the other political definitions of how we “have to” relate to each other.  These “battles” waste our time, keeping us from a deeper reality.  Political paralysis and lack of will are surface descriptors that do not help point the way to this deeper place. 
Instead, we have to peel back how these “issues” hide the choices each of us make.  We have to stop hiding from ourselves and each other the real (and only) choices we make: who and when and how we love.  

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Intriguing study

In the midst of some engagement with some down-on-adoption folks, I cam across this study:

Warning: it is dry - being loaded with appropriate statistics.

However, it does show some promise for community (not government) response to local increases in local orphan needs. And it does take some of the blanket negative out of orphanage care.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Help these families

There are 16 children waiting in VietNam all who have parents waiting in the US for them. Please sign the petition and help them come home!!!


http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.petition2congress.com%2F4665%2Fbring-home-bac-lieu-orphans%2F&h=d2524

Friday, February 4, 2011

a little update


This isn't a breaking news post. Medko has been growing like a weed on MiracleGro! He is almost entirely out of 3T clothes. His speech is also improving dramatically, especially in his willingness to string together full sentences, even trying for multiples. Unfortunately, a lot of his enunciation is not especially clear, so we are still running down near 20% understanding of the words he is using. Super fortunately, he hasn't yet gotten frustrated with us. He is still sticking mostly to functional and concrete questions and requests - after a particular cracker, wondering where Tam or other missing family member is...
Here the boys are enjoying playing at Uncle Daniel & Aunt Toni's house with their golf clubs and one of their dog toys. Far more enjoyable than boy toys, age appropriate or not!
We have decided that most of the Disney movies are off limits for a while. There are too many sneaky instances of disturbing scenes or bad behavior (esp word choices for Tam). "You want a piece of me?" from Toy Story is now a common phrase just before roughhousing begins. Which all by itself is okay, but following the heroes' leads into hitting, not so much. So it's back to Wonder Pets, Ni Hao Kai Lan, Go Diego Go, etc.

Monday, January 24, 2011

We need your help!!!

Our boy's photo is in the top 10 of a photo contest for JCICS, TWICE!!!
and he's not even in the double digits %-wise yet. Clearly, the fans of two of the little girls have been mobilizing longer than us.
It's time to get serious!
Feel free to leave a comment too...

http://betheanswerforchildren.wordpress.com/2011/01/18/sweet-child-of-mine-photo-contest-choose-the-winners/

Obviously, we think he's super cute, but they must have too - they put two pictures of him in the top 10 :)

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Friday, December 31, 2010

2010 pics...




Hoping for a year full of laughter and peace!! It has been so long since I posted pictures of the boys I thought I would end the year on a high note....

Night-night



Obligatory pictures (no relation to the story)


So, after the night time story is over, Tam goes off to climb in his bed. Barry manages to hold Medko like a baby and rock him for 15 seconds and sing something silly to him. He responds with a great grin and a slightly slurred (delirious from no nap?) "I'm so happy". WOW!! There's three little words to rock your parental world!

After singing him the ABC song (breaking a several month streak of Baa Baa Black Sheep), we climb into Tam's bed and he asks: "what that is?" He's pointing at the mist coming out of the humidifier. Barry explains it's water vapor, Donna that it makes the air moist. Tam nods and answers with: "Like chicken." And he doesn't even know how hilarious that is! Though he certainly enjoyed our laughter.

What a just plain great night!

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Breakthrough for Medko at soccer!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDYUm-20TC8 This one is Tam.


Medko has now mastered 'B' - as in bubbles, bye-bye, etc. No longer guggles, gye-gye, etc. And 'P' is not far behind! YAY!!! He tries SOOOOO hard - scrunching up his face, and exploding with a giant "PAH-PAH, Please!" Just awesome to watch!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The big cleft eval appointment

Medko spent about 4 hours at Duke Hospital today, seeing 6+ members of their cleft palate team. He glowed with all the attention - and they were great. He has a bit of hearing loss in his left ear (recent ear infection) and a bit of fluid in both. He has a follow-up with both the Ear, Nose & Throat MD and the audiologist in a month. The surgeon was pleased, and said he'd see us in a year. The orthodontist was very pleased/surprised because Medko has an overbite, and most bi-lateral cleft kids have the reverse. After a year or two, he'll take a panoramic x-ray and possibly a bone graft to make sure he has a one-piece upper jaw and bone for the roots of his permanent teeth to attach to.
The speech pathology ladies (2) were pleased with the sounds Medko was making and that we have already begun his speech therapy. They are especially pleased with his level of effort (facial expression when "ramping up" for a 'p' is quite intense) and his willingness to try many of the sounds.
He'll have an eval by the Durham County Schools staff for speech therapy from them soon.

No surgery in his future, provided we can get the fluid to drain from his ears.
YAY!!!!

Monday, November 1, 2010

Halloween 2010

http://picasaweb.google.com/108543218847972405082/Halloween#

Need we say more?

It took maybe 2 houses for Medko to get the hang of it...

Another big day


Just before going out to the car for yet another moment that will define the demise of Tam's toddlerhood, Tam says: "Medko, it's not all about you. It's all about me!" And off to half-day preschool we go... Anyone willing to bet that they'll calling for an early pick-up?

Friday, October 22, 2010

Cuddles like a sheep, but ...

So, after a paltry 1st breakfast of 1/2 a squash & sweet potato muffin a piece, the boys decide at 9:45 that it's time for 2nd breakfast. Between the 3 of us, we consumed 7 eggs, 1/2 cup of brown rice, some soy sauce, a lot of Frank's hot sauce (esp for this time in the morning), yellow mustard, 2 oz of pepper jack cheese. I ate 2 eggs & 1/4 of the cheese, pretty yummy if I do say so myself. Tam had 1/2 of his egg, rice, soy sauce & mustard (=fried rice?). Leaving the wolf in Medko clothing to eat 4.5 eggs, the rest of the rice & cheese and all of the hot sauce. AND he just asked for more. He's been eating for nearly an hour! We have moved to a few almonds, and will soon move to apple or strawberries or ...

Monday, September 20, 2010

Good News!

Scott Simon has a book on his own adoptions:
It is well worth reading the article!
and
AND
is making a film - AND their website, at least, seems to indicate a purpose that is child-centric.

WOW!!!!!!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

A bit of normalcy and a big change

So ... big change first - after visiting our pediatrician and asking Tam about changing his name, we have decided that Medko (pronounced Meedko) will be Nikolas's primary name until he is of age to decide for himself.

Yesterday, we took the plunge and packed up the boys, bought a second hand double stroller from a listing on Craigslist on the way out of town and drove the 100 minutes to the zoo. Yes, long trips are best measured in minutes! The trip went well. The weather was gorgeous: 80s, low humidity, blue blue sky. The boys really enjoyed the seals, the otters, okay almost all the exhibits, except the plants and the empty or apparently empty ones. Tam was extremely concerned about when we would be leaving, asking at least 7-8 times. Tam's favorite was the otters - we got to see them as they were being fed fish and tomatoes. Medko most enjoyed the Dirt Cafe - where both of them got to make muffins, omelettes, drinks, pies, etc. out of a pea gravel/sand mix. Tam almost got a customer complaint for not prioritizing Mommy's order of mashed cauliflower with cheddar cheese. Really very tasty after a beautiful day at the zoo!

Medko protested loudly every time we told him it was time for night-night. When we got on the highway, he didn't last more tha
n 7-8 minutes and was down for the count!

We did get our first picture of the four of us. The 3 ladies we asked were from Norway and one of them was adopted - tiny world!

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Made it home!


WoW! What a difference a 4 year old makes for a transatlantic flight! And a tired one at that!
Again, he is a SUPER trooper, running on 2 hours less sleep (up at 4:30a) and so ready for a nap even before we make the flight from Germany to the US that he imitates a fellow traveler, a 6 month old, who he met crawling in the airport. Crawling, with head down, yipes!

The first bit of great news: no apparent discomfort with takeoff or landings and the pressure changes, and he completely refused the Earplanes, though he accepted them in the apartment on our trial run.

The above was written on 09/05. The details of the plane trip have been lost in the ensuing craziness of life at home. Nikolas had some sparkling mineral water on the plane. BAD! Pretty much meant no further liquids for the plane trip, car ride home, the next week. Yup. Week! Thank the Lord above that we have bananas. And cantaloupe & yogurt. And that he had eaten like a 200 lb man for a week in Bulgaria. Because he nearly stopped eating altogether and we all went to see his pediatrician a week earlier than scheduled. Viral infection at the back of his throat, which made it painful to swallow even to this trooper. And no treatment, except for Chestal and unfrozen ice pops.
Miraculously, two days later, his appetite returns though much reduced, and still no drinking. We let him play in the kiddy pool everyday, in part because he loved it, and in part because he might splash some in his mouth... Sad...
He was very concerned about the dogs - still is at times. He started with screams and running and now chases Zoey and holds Tanner's head in his hands. He still gets agitated by their barking and noisy play, but they are loud... No puppy kisses just yet, but he's made a lot of progress so far.
He is an outside boy, through and through. The sunroom, deck and garage (with door open only) are his favorite places. Balls and cars are his favorite things to hold and play with.
He started out in Bulgaria with a massive dislike - bordering on emotional trauma - each time we would correct him or tell him no. This continues, though much reduced. He will vary his response - choices are: run away and flop over, still standing onto the couch and rock from side to side; run away and lay on a step on the stairs; run away and stand in a corner or the dining room or the edge of the deck; collapse into tears and wailing. Apart from the last one, well, the pattern is obvious. The source, perhaps, not so much. A mix of: we started out as the purely fun people - toys, treats, play - so any no is contradictory to that initial relationship; and he wants very much to please us - even a correction about where a ball can be thrown could be a life changing event - the upset and fear are right on the surface. He recovers quickly now, and at times won't even get very far - since he sometimes will respond to questions in the right tone - indicating the mood is still fun and things haven't taken a turn for the worse.
He can be incredibly willful. Today, he and Tam were playing with superballs in the sunroom for over an hour, completely engrossed. The rise of crotch grab and crossed legs signals could not be ignored, and neither would take a potty break. Daddy pockets both superballs and is immediately mugged - 4 little hands trying to pull off his shorts. He drags them across the floor, giggling the whole way, into the 1/2 bath and shuts the door. Tam gets it and immediately drops onto his potty. Nikolas takes a bit longer and when he turns to the big potty, he is prepared to stand for his business. He is still in training about the seat - yes ladies, we are raising him right! So Daddy lifts the seat. This is met with a very firm "eehhh!" and a couple steps back, straight into the wall, hitting his head on a bar on the wall. He stands there, head down for a few seconds, and finally.... he begins to pee - while still leaning against the wall - onto the floor! Daddy is none too pleased and brings the seat down fast (i.e. loud) and grabs him and plops him on it. He begins his wail and Tam asks:"You mad at him?" Daddy is honest and says yes. Tam finishes his business and takes off, straight upstairs, wakes up Mommy and tells her "Daddy is angry at my Nikolas." Not a big mess, and after some talking and snuggles, everything is right with the world again. And so the brotherly love begins to manifest!
His appetite is completely back. He has eaten 4 bananas in each of the past two days on top of two breakfasts (4 banana pancakes - no syrup or butter necessary) and bunches of pasta with either marinara (goes great with everything but bananas, BTW) or tasty butter (for those of you who aren't Nana - that's pesto mixed into butter - YUM!), chicken, deli turkey and salami have all met with celebration noises and forks raised overhead before or after each bite, just depends. Today he even asked for water and drank it!
His skin and hair - WOW! To start with, his skin was literally rough - sandpaper rough. We used Burt's Bees lotion on him in Bulgaria - it was not especially well received - massage-like tough was the culprit we think. We also used Burt's Bees shampoo too. His hair started out coarse, thick and almost puffy. Thanks to some miraculous Miracle II lotion (that's its name) and lavender essential oil from Nana, he nearly free of dry spots, nearly done with non-emotional excuses to scratch his skin. He had an especially dangerous looking pair of wounds at the top of his butt that were nearly completely gone in 36 hours. And his hair is approaching silky and is laying flatter, approaching Tam-like. We'll let it grow out a bit and continue to discuss hairstyle options.

Our SD card to USB adapter apparently did not make the trip back with us, nor does the one we have here work with the current card. YAY! So, another has been ordered and we will have a gazillion pictures when it arrives. The 16GB card only has room for another 2 minutes of HD video or 90 pictures.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

"keka noscht"

Okay, so it's supposed to be "leka noscht" - good night. But when it's said with a very little boy high nasal voice, well it does things to you. IT is SUPER sweet! and at the same time, there is an element of sadness in it. He has never slept in a room alone. There were at least 15 other beds in his orphanage room. So, if it's too dark or he can't tell your still with him, well, it'd probably be better to be having the worst nightmare you've ever had. And, of course, we have these great floors, that creak at every little twitch. But back to the boy...

So, if either of us get up non-quietly-enough, there are two possibilities: 1) he follows us in about 90 seconds, looking soooooo pitiful, or 2) he makes this low but truly horrible moan that grows into a cry (see previous post). As Barry lay with him tonight, he rolled until his forehead was nestled into the curve of Barry's nose. And he fell asleep there.

Until us, he has likely never slept with another person in his bed - someone to keep him safe, someone to help him sleep more deeply and restfully, someone to just plain snuggle him, hold his little hand, cover his little foot that so often sticks out from under the covers, stroke his hair, coo to him, kiss him on the forehead after he has fallen asleep.

Little wonder he and his little friends are neurologically delayed - esp. compared to kids who get the above attention. Yipes!

More pictures...

Same place...
http://picasaweb.google.com/108543218847972405082/20100829?authkey=Gv1sRgCP69o4n425nvNA#

Monday, August 30, 2010

So... the pics!!!!

Not here!

And these are just some. We've leave the rest to your eyes except that Donna got an Obicham te tonight! Barry is quite jealous! The first heard I love you for the new boy!!!

Another awesome day!!

A few downs with the ups, but he is sooooooo good! A little testy with us when we are not being entirely firm - we've learned not to expect him to be completely okay with "suburban parent" tone - he is accustomed to tone of a rather more emphatic sort, okay stern and ready to spank tone! He remains a bit intimidated by older women on the street.

It's official: he's AMAZING!!!