Showing posts with label adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adoption. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

covenant family!

Please join me in welcoming David Wu to his forever family!
Our dear friends are in China RIGHT NOW bringing David home!



























Isn't he just adorable?

Welcome to your family, dear David!  You are beautiful and we are so happy to see you held securely in their loving arms.  Now the government recognizes what their hearts already bear witness to: family!  You belong together.

It is with great joy and thanksgiving that we uphold you in prayer to our Lord.

Psalm 68
4 Sing to God, sing in praise of his name, 
   extol him who rides on the clouds[b]; 
   rejoice before him—his name is the LORD. 
5 A father to the fatherless, a defender of widows, 
   is God in his holy dwelling. 
6 God sets the lonely in families,[c] 
   he leads out the prisoners with singing; 
    

Saturday, October 23, 2010

i'll have the reuben please

Our little Chinese girl is going German on us.  She completely passed on her noodle dish at dinner.  Pushed the entire thing my way...and dug in with glee and abandon to the reuben.  Dripping melted cheese, sauerkraut, rye bread, pastrami and all.  

You can see proof of her diversifying culinary tastes in our photo section.  

We have decided coming home will not be a problem for her.  She wouldn't touch the congee after the first day.  

Good thing we have an awesome Chinese grocery a block away from us at home.  We can still encourage the tastes of her homeland, even if she ends  up prefering the flavors of...Germany????

Good night from Foshan, where our darling girl has not suffered so much as a whisper of fever today.  We are in awe and so grateful for God's protection of her.

Onward!

plush accomodations

here in Foshan.   We moved out to a suburb of Guangzhou this afternoon.  We are joking that it is like we are staying in Eden Prairie.  Our hotel is beautiful; we are in a corner room that is a living area, guest bathroom, a bedroom, huge bathroom, and a dressing area.  The boys are in an adjoining room, and they are quite excited and pleased with their living "conditions".  To say we have been upgraded in an understatement.  However, with the trade fair on the price is actually the same as if we were currently staying at the Victory.  Their rates this week skyrocketed.  We are quite pleased to be enshrined in Foshan.

There is a small little manmade lake across the street with walkways, pavilions and playareas.  Tomorrow we will explore there.  There is also a huge and quite fancy mall across the other side of the street.  It does have a KFC (gross!) that we ate lunch at.  The boys (that includes Jim) were pleased with their greasy chicken.  I nibbled.  Afterward we strolled the mall.  It is filled with high end stores, and is huge.  Very different from our Beijing shopping extravaganza where I felt like we were in a TJ Maxx gone maxxed flea market style.  There is a very nice market on the main floor, and it felt a bit like shopping at Lund's or Byerly's versus Cub Foods, if that gives you an idea of the difference in where we've been shopping to where we just shopped.  I was surprised to see many families with multiple children.  There were numerous parents with two children.  I'm not sure what to make of this, but it is certainly a different slice of China than we have seen thus far.  

Emma is now taking a bit of a nap.  We are trying to emphasize the "bit" so she isn't up until 10pm.  The boys all went down to play in the pool.  It is gorgeous.  I'm enjoying the quiet moment.  It is a luxury to be able to go to another room and type and have a coffee and not wake her up!  

She has thus far tolerated her shots well. No fever at naptime (at 4pm...late, I know).  We did learn at the appt that our little girl is really quite proficient at cheating on the eye exam!  She had the whole room smiling indulgently as she kept shifting the little eye cover over to one side.  Needless to say, we will be visiting the optometrist for some adorable glasses once we are home.  One of her eyes has terrible vision!  Jim announced that she gets that from his side of the family, causing our guide to look askance until he realized Jim was joking (sort of).  She is "our side" of the family.  She will be the cutest little thing with her beautiful brown eyes peeking out from spectacles.  Good thing we know she likes glasses...it took us days to get those sunglasses off of her!  Maybe we should encourage their return!  JennJenn, KTG: they have polka dots!

She is such a trooper, and is blossoming more and more each day.  She has such a sparkle in her eyes, and we are astounded at both her resilience and the joi de vivre with which she greets each day.  She is affectionate, and also knows well when she isn't interested in giving affection.  Those are such healthy boundaries to have.  She is not indiscriminately affectionate or familiar with strangers, and for that I am so grateful.  It speaks volumes about our journey to becoming a family together.  I think she has had consistent caregivers and is able to recognize the idea of a family unit.  She loves it when we say, "Mama, Baba, Emma, Cooper, Jeb" and make the sign language sign for family.  

Arriving in Guangzhou has given us all a fresh breath of life.  Our time in her province was important, and good.  It was also hard and we are glad it is now behind us.  And behind her.  I feel like there is so much to still process, and hope we take the time to do that.  For her sake as well as ours.

Please join us in praying for the three (we saw two) boys at Emma's orphanage who are on the shared list.  We may have some incredible news to share soon.  

One big day done.  Seven sleeps to home.  
We can't wait to see you all!

We arrive on Friday, October 29th at 4:30m.  Delta flight.  You are welcome to come meet our family of seven!  We would really love to see people, before we whisk Emma off to nest at home for a bit.  Jim keeps looking at me and saying, "Honey, we have five children".  I just laugh.  In a really good way.  Five.  I can do this...

Love from Foshan/Guangzhou!
xoxo


Friday, October 22, 2010

4 shots and a Starbucks

We made it! M & ms go a long way for Emma. Latte makes it all ok for momma and daddy.

Guangzhou!

We are here.  Thank goodness!  It is so great to be here.  Our plane was delayed, and we arrived late last night.  We actually got to stay at the Victory last night, and it is WONDERFUL.  I don't know which one we are in, but I wish we could just stay here!  Jim and the boys made a beeline for the 7-11 while Emma and I got ready for bed.  We all quickly fell into sleep...by 12:30am.  

Today is a big day.  We have our medical exam this morning at 10am.  Our guide told us to be prepared for many shots.  He asked us to bring her vaccination record (which is complete, by the way) and he said he will fight to have some eliminated (as in, she wouldn't need to get them today)  

After the exam we go out to our hotel in Foshan (sad little tear falls down my cheek- ha ha).  I'm sure it is a great hotel.  We have the boys primed for the beautiful ppool and sauna.  Maybe tomorrow EMmacakes will be up for her first swim???

Today we area betting I am ministering MOmmy love to her in our hotel room with tylenol, motrin and cool washcloths.  

Love from Guangzhou,
Silburns

Thursday, October 21, 2010

last hours in Fuzhou

We leave for the airport in two hours!  It is a momentous day to depart Emma's province and move on to Guangzhou.  A huge change for her, and a giant step toward home for all of us.  We fly from Fuzhou to Guangzhou, Guangdong province in the far south of China.  All Americans adopting Chinese children complete their adoptions here as this is where the American embassy is located and where our consulate appointment takes place.  

The business side of Guangzhou involves a medical appointment tomorrow.  It is a fairly cursory medical exam.  For our family it has a significant difference from when we adopted Anna in 2005.  There are new Hague guidelines in effect that make it mandatory for children to receive new immunizations before returning home to the states.  I'm not sure why some children receive 4 and some 7, but the net effect is that these poor kiddos are subject to up to 9 immunizations AT ONCE.  It is a terrible piece of the Hague legislation, that I have no doubt will be repealed soon.  All these kids get reimmunized upon their arrival home by their pediatricians, and it is done on a staggered schedule so there isn't the high risk that comes with multiple immunizations at once.  We would very much appreciate your prayers for Emma tomorrow: for the Lord to protect her, to minimize the side effects of the immunizations, that any harm would be thwarted and that she would be able to turn to us for comfort and safety.  I feel sick just thinking about it.

After the medical exam, we have to also wait 48 hours for a TB test to be read.  If it is negative (on Monday) we are good to go.  If it is not, I believe there is a course of action, and it involves an extra 2 weeks in province for medicine or something.  We are praying for a negative TB test!  I have not heard of anyone who had a positive one.

On Tuesday we have our Consulate Appointment where the final pieces of EMma's US paperwork are completed and we take oaths on her behalf for citizenship!  Then on Thursday we pick up her passport and Visa and head home via Hong Kong!  There is a very short night's sleep in Hong Kong and we fly out for home on Friday morning...arriving Friday afternoon. :)  Weird.

While we are in Guangzhou we were supposed to stay on (Shamian) island at the Victory Hotel.  The Chinese government commandered our hotel rooms last week, as only the Chinese government can.  In a communist country things happen much differently than in the US.  Our agency made arrangements for us to stay in Foshan (which on the map seems to be a sort of suburb of Guangzhou?) at the Intercontinental Hotel.  It was just built in the spring of 2010, so we hope it is completed and we can enjoy a brand new hotel!  We are gulping at the cost difference, but there isn't really anything we can do about it.  Merry Christmas. :)  We stay in Foshan from Friday through Tuesday morning, and believe we move to the Victory on Tuesday morning.  So we will at least have a dayand a half on island.  

Shamian island is a fun place to be, as it is easy to roam a bit, there is a great park to play at and the little shops cater to adoptive families.  Jim and the boys are very excited for the 7-11 and a slurpee.  I am, as pathetic as this is to admit, giddy for a Starbucks.  Can't wait for a nonfat vanilla latte.  

One week and we are heading home.  Our time is both going by in a blur and at the same time crawling along.  I think we are all ready for Guangzhou. 

Anna and Luke seem to be doing famously at home.  My parents will be awarded sainthood upon our arrival home and we will need to send them on an extended tropical vacation.  Rochester is south of us, does that count as tropical?  Ha!  It is MEA weekend at home, which means the kids are off of school for Thursday and Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  Gogo and Pa took them to ROchester for a few days, and then they are back to the cities for fun with friends.  We have been so blessed by dear friends who are loving on Luke and Anna in many ways while we are gone.  Than you to each of you!  You have our gratitude and heartfelt love!  

This morning consisted of packing and Cooper worked on his homework documentary.  Jim, Jeb, Emmacakes and I headed out for a last walk around part of West Lake.  It is a cooler day, overcast and quiet feeling.  A good day for a peaceful adieu to Fujian.  

SEVEN SLEEPS TO HOME!
Love from Fujian,
Sara


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Orphanage visit and finding place

Yesterday morning we left to take the bullet train south to Jinjiang, where Emma has lived for the past five and a half years in Jinjiang's Social Welfare Institute.  It is an orphanage, and according to our guide and the orphanage officials we met, it is the oldest orphanage in China (not the physical structure, which was built in 2008, but the institution itself).  

We were questioning whether or not to go, as Emma had such a hard time after seeing Miss Susie the day before.  After much discussion, prayer, consulting of Christine on Skype and mulling, we decided the long-term gains were worth the trip, and perhaps even any immediate pain the Lord would use to Emma's good in terms of understanding and more closure.  I don't know if there was truly a right or wrong choice, we just used our best discernment and prayed God's grace over our choice and that He insulate and protect Emma from any harm.  Right or wrong, I can't say.  The day felt right, though, and Emmacakes did very well.  She is incredibly brave and courageous.  Perhaps she would have been Joshua or Caleb in the story of the 12 spies.  Certainly she has seen giants in the land in her life, and she has chosen to keep walking forward with a strength and endurance and hope that astounds and humbles us.  She is beautiful: inside and out.

At breakfast we ended up seeing Miss Susie again.  The team for the cleft repair trip is staying here also, and she was there for breakfast.  It was a wonderful encounter, and we all felt that it was much less traumatic for Emma Kate this time.  Perhaps even more closure?  I was able to give her a gift form our family, which I'm so grateful I could do.  It is a pendant necklace that our dear friend, Mimi, made for our trip.  It is a 1.5 inch wood disc with red Chinese paper inscribed in beautiful calligraphy with the word (in Chinese) "Love".  I was wearing mine, so I hope when she opened it she knew it was special to me, too.  A very small token of our regard and appreciation and deep gratitude and love for Miss Susie.

At 8:20 we took a cab to the train station, and then a train to Emma's birth city.  Our guide explained what was happening, that we would visit her friends and orphanage family and then return to the hotel all together as a family.  She seemed calm and indicated that she understood.  (Okay, side note here: honestly, can you even believe what this sweet child is processing and going through?).  The train took an hour and traveled at 200 miles (or km??)  an hour.  We were in a private berth and had just a great time together playing, laughing and connecting.  It was very relaxing.  YuXiao loved it.  So did her brothers and her parents!

A van picked us up at the train station and drove us to the orphanage.  We recognized it from the main road before it did a loop back on the city streets and we were pointing it out to Emmacakes.  She leaped from the van upon our arrival, and led us with obvious joy and glee into the doors, and then she galloped full speed like a little spring colt down the hallway into a green door.  We were laughing at her exuberance.  Jeb remarked, "I didn't know she could even run!".

We were able to see the rooms she lived in: her sleeping room with the little wooden beds lined up in the middle.  They are toddler sized and each has a single fleece blanket.  The kids sleep on the wood.  I'm sure it would be impossible to keep mattresses clean, and yet it made me so sad to think of her all these years on that hard wood.  No pillows.  Again, how in the world would they keep them all clean?  There is a bathroom/bathing area in the middle and then what seemed to be the classroom, playroom/main room area where the kids spend most of their time, I think?  It was just after lunch and right before naptime, so we saw them in a transition time.  They were all honestly adorable, and it was just so incredible to finally meet all these adorable faces I've looked at all these months in photos, wondering what they were like.  They are Emmacakes classmates and orphanage "siblings" and they are beautiful.  It broke my heart that they are still there waiting.  Each one of those sweethearts is so deserving of a family and a true home.  So able to become a treasured son or daughter.  

As i posted earlier, we were able to get incredible video of two of the boys whose files are woefully out of date and are on the shared list right now.  They are both incredibly sweet little boys.  Walking, climbing, steady on their feet, nimble, agile, able.  Completely mobile, not a single hesitation from either of them.  I don't know what their special need is, besides the need of being an orphan, but it is totally not discernable to the eye.  They were giggly and funny, and also calm and you could see them taking it all in, stepping back a bit and processing what they were seeing and experiencing.  

Emma was so excited to be there and see everyone.  She was equally happy to see her friends and her nannies.  It was so special to be there with her and put context to all these pictures we've seen these past 9 months.  

We showed the guide the names of our sponsored children, and were able to meet three of them.  That was really special.  I wish there wasn't a language barrier as there was so much I wanted to say to them.  Beautiful children of the King.  Children who matter and belong to the One.  Princesses and knights.  Sons and Daughters of the Lord of Lords.  My heart hurts just typing about them.

From there we went to the rooms where the babies are.  I don't think I have words yet to write about it.  I prayed out loud over each of the babes.  One room housed what seemed to be healthier babies, another babies with more obvious special needs.  They all were just laying in their cribs, some sleeping , some rocking themselves or doing repetitive movements to stimulate and calm themselves.  I could have fallen down crying.  It is so wrong that our world does this to babies.  And these little ones are lovingly cared for, we believe.  But it is orphanage care.  It is so not what they need or deserve.  One little boy was having small seizures.  I asked the Lord to go to a spare room in heaven and get him a new brain and bring it right then as I laid hands on him.  He would make eye contact and then you could see his dear little eyes go sort of blank and his hands would twitch and his body move.  It broke my heart.  It really did.  Knowing what we know about seizures and having experienced them this year as a family with our beloved Luke, I just can't stand it that there isn't more help for this little boy.  There was another little boy with albinism.  So handsome.  A newly delivered and premature baby rested in a crib in the corner.  Her little head was just tiny, tiny and so I know she was really early.  Oh, the anguish!  I can't even write about the rest of them.  I just spoke God's truth over them, individually.  Jim said he was going around the room doing the same thing.  I honestly do not know how long we did that for or what was happening while we did or what the orphanage staff thought...it was time suspended.  I know the Lord has called us to intercede for those children.  One of the babies just had his paperwork submitted to CCAA.  I stared really hard at Jim and he just shook his head with tears in his eyes.  

Cooper and Jeb took it all in with wide eyes.  We still haven't had a chance to process with them.  I know there was much they learned, and much they have to ponder.  My prayer is that their hearts become broken with the things that break GOd's heart.  And that their hearts rejoice at the things that make His heart rejoice.  We saw both yesterday.  

We spent come time talking to Emma's teachers and showing them pictures of her family.  Everyone just loves that she is the baby in the family . We tell everyone that in the US the baby is the most special.  They can't quite fathom that.  I love saying it.  And I think they liked seeing how we all clearly adore Emma.  It is obvious that they love her, too.  So many people went out of their way to come greet her and give her their attention and love.  She was happy and glowing.  It was a very good thing.

When it was time to leave for lunch, Emma had time to say goodbye to the staff, and it felt right.  It was hard to know what they were saying, and while Chris translated some of it, there is always the wonder if some things are not translated.  It is all okay, though.  We know what we know and we know what we saw.  We will hold it all in our hearts, and help Emma remember, too.  They asked us to please bring her back to visit one day.  I surely hope one day we do.  

Lunch was its own adventure, and you get the gist of it from the post about worms and lungs, intestine and pickled seaweed.  We did also eat WONDERFUL things: our guide ordered an incredible seafood noodle dish that had squid, shrimp and a bevy of other sea creatures that met our approval in it.  There was a very spicy chicken dish with peppers and onions that were so delicious I could have eaten them alone for a meal, a beef dish that was in a savory sauce, firm tofu in a really tasty sauce (I can't really recall it right now but Cooper especially loved it), eggplant that I want to recreate at home, two kinds of tea that were different and good!  They offered us all beer, and we declined.  Although after the worms...just kidding.  

From lunch we drove to try and find Emma's finding spot.  The finding spot is the place she was left by whoever left her.  It was very hard to find, and in a part of town that was a very different China than we have seen before.  I will let the pictures tell the story. We tried to take a lot of video of the area.  It was good to see the neighborhood.  And hard.  Sad.  

It was then onto the train station.  That is a memory I would like to erase and features hours in a train station with a little girl who just had a day that would send most of us to bed for a year.  It also featured inquisitive people asking who her Daddy is (I think they thought I was her Mom?), babies going potty behind trash cans in public (I know it is just fine here, and it isn't wrong, it is just very different and unhygenic and slightly disturing to us), clouds of cigarette smoke (Jeb and COoper decided that since being here they have technically tried smoking due to all the second hand smoke they have inhaled and they can authoritatively claim smoking as disgusting!) and a very tired group of westerners who had just taken in a lot and didn't have much margin left for more.  End of rope, might have described us all quite well.  When the train finally came and I sat down on a seat that was clearly wet with urine, I decided it was either take a VERY DEEP breath through my open mouth (to do so through my nose would have then involved retching) or start screaming.  I didn't scream.  You can clap now.  There is a crown in heaven for me with that event of righteousness inscribed on it.  And yes, I will cast it down with glee. Jim put 2 magazines on the seat and did what any good "blue" does for "pink", he took one for the team.  I sat in a different seat with damp pants and valiantly tried to repeat over and over the words from the Little Engine that Could.  Soon, just not soon enough, we were back in Fuzhou.  The people in the seats in front of us were also relieved.  They are probably writing blog posts about the annoying Americans whose child kicked their seats the entire time and a really weird woman who kept looking out the train window and crying.  Oh, well.  Sometimes we just do our best.  And as Tony says, "forget the rest".  That's a shout out to the Andersons.  Remember this for your own adventures. :)

FINALLY we were back "home".  We walked through raw sewage in the train tunnel, threw ourselves into 2 separate cabs, because we can't all fit in one.  Jeb, COoper and I were in one cab with 50 yuan and my cell phone and a card with our hotels address on it.  It was night and I had no idea where we were.  DId I already post about this?  It involved a lost and angry cab driver who repetitively banged his head on the steering wheel, a silent three passengers except for me who finally prayed out loud in the cab, and Jim's backpack that had his (dead) phone.  I couldn't have called him.  But I did have a plan.  There are army people on every corner.  They were going ot help us if we needed them.  And I was ready to be a strong, loud blond woman.  No one would be able to "not see us".  Thank goodness that didn't come to pass and we arrived at our hotel.  

All done.  :)

We remedied the drama of the day with apple pie a la mode and french fries in our rooms.  Long hot showers and two sinks full of clothing washed and wrung out and we were feeling a bit more human.  I will say that showers were before the food.  

Bedtime came quickly, and we all feel into sleep with much on our minds and in our hearts.  Jim dreamed I was hosting a Saturday Night Live show, and Obama was coming to town to play a secret baseball game.  Jim had to somehow facilitate his visit as an undercover agent and I was going to interview Obama.  

I'm going with WORM DREAMS on that one.  Today was a new day.  No urine, no raw sewage, no worms or lungs.  

Our last sleep in Fuzhou and Fujian.  We board a plane tomorrow to Guangzhou where we complete the final steps in our adoption.  We had a beautiful family day today, and i will post about that later!  Cooper ahd the computer all afternoon working on homework.  It's cutting into my writing! :)

Love you all,
Sara

Rain rain you can stay

We will have fun anyway!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

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I've watched the rain fall in fujian all these months

And finally we are here together. On a rainy day. Full silburn hearts.

Mama gets big smiles

When daddy is gone at the bank !

Ling at the worms

just for the record.
so did Cooper.

Ling does like China!  And now she is going to fling a matching game aroudn the room with her daughter.  Playing it "matching style" is not on the ticket right now...we are into the throw and have mama make a big dramatic silly game of picking it all up again!  Mama to the rescue.  

Jim is in the bathroom....we are having an interesting morning racing each other there.  I have yet to sing, "The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out" song to him.  :)  GROSS!!!!

It is pouring rain outside, and we opted to skip the tour of the temple this morning in lieu of a family day alone.  We all need it.  We'll head out around the lake when it clears up later on.  For now, we are so content to hang out in our room.  

The boys are burrowing in and decided it was a good day for homework.  We are going to shut the doors between our rooms and give them a bit of peace and quiet.

I can't wait to tell you all about our visit to her orphanage.  Parts of it were beautiful, and parts just broke my heart.  One quick highlight was being able to get video of two boys who are on the shared list (up for adoption) right now!!!! Their files are woefully out of date and list them as not walking.  NOT TRUE!  They were climbing, running, walking, totally mobile darling boys.  SO cute, engaged, darling and sweet.  We have video of it, and are very much hoping to advocate for them.  I know this information will make a huge difference in helping them find their forever families.  They are wonderful boys.  They will make a family very happy and blessed.  I can't wait to see who the families are...like a treasure hunt!  The Lord knows already, and I picture the heavens watching in anticipation as they are drawn together!  

Love to you all.  Emmacakes is doing GREAT!  SO great!




we ate worms

and other (mis)adventures in travel.

Post to follow on our amazing day at Emma's orphanage and finding spot.  
Suffice it to say, that in order to contextualize the day, we will set the stage with the following (and then go down to breakfast where we will erase them from our minds);

  • walk through raw sewage
  • sit on urine soaked seat on bullet train
  • eat what is billed as "sea plant" at lunch with orphanage staff, when nothing else but pickled seaweed and peanuts are on the table so there is no way to NOT eat them and appear respectful.  Later, on urine-soaked-seat train ride home, discuss with guide the fact that it was, indeed, worms.  From the sea.  Gag.  (kudos to Jim who ended up having to eat his, Emma's (becuase even though it is a local delicacy she is too smart to eat it herself) and Jeb's
  • finish up lunch by avoiding the soup with lungs and intestine floating in it
  • 4 hour wait in train station with five year old who wants to run away...for four hours
  • cab ride back to hotel where we are separated into two hotels.  Me, Jeb and COoper in one with 50yuan and a hotel card.  Cab driver appears lost, tries to talk to us and gets supremely frustrated gesticulating wildly with his hands and repeatedly bangs head on steering wheel.  I pray OUT LOUD and then try to call Jim.  Oh, wait.  I have his backpack with his phone in it.  Mercy.  Since I am typing this post, you know we did make it back.  The cab driver literally threw the money at me when we got out.  Not sure why he was so mad, but it's okay.  At least we arrived.
All that made us VERY DONE by the end of the day.  So done.  How to move on?  Hot showers, wash all our underthings in the sink and send the rest of our clothes out to the laundry, and an order of 5 apple pies and ice cream with a huge platter of fries.  Ahhhhhh.  

All the above made the day quite an adventure.  Intrepid travelers have reached the limit of our intrepidness for now. 
I will post about the orphanage visit after breakfast where we will not eat worms or lungs.  :)

Love you all!  More soon...

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Hello from the bullet train to jinjiang!

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