January 10, 2012

supporting us in 'the wait'

Its been awhile. I REALLY appreciate the folks who have remembered us and our adoption in the last month. I'll just come out and say it-I've been struggling. I have been thinking and working on any and all other options in the adoption realm to hurry this excruciating wait for our daughter. My conclusion in prayer lately has been "yes, waiting is going to be really hard. I have good plans and growth opportunities for you during this time. Stay on the path I have you on until I tell you otherwise." ok. I'll try to stop today...and tomorrow you may have to remind me again, Lord. The truth is still true to me, but I'm also "paperwork pregnant" and I'm hormonal. Have I mentioned how grateful I am that people remember we're adopting still and ask me about it? I am having a baby girl and I LOVE talking about it and knowing people remember even though I don't have a bump. She's overtaken my heart :) A friend of mine who is adopting put this on her blog and sums up some of what I've been thinking lately. Thank you friends for praying, and supporting us in this journey!!


Supporting Families Before the Airport Arrival

Your friends are adopting. They’re in the middle of dossiers and home studies, and most of them are somewhere in the middle of Waiting Purgatory. Please let me explain something about WP: It sucks in every way. Oh sure, we try to make it sound better than it feels by using phrases like “We’re trusting in God’s plan” and “God is refining me” and “Sovereignty trumps my feelings” and crazy bidness like that. But we are crying and aching and getting angry and going bonkers when you’re not watching. It’s hard. It hurts. It feels like an eternity even though you can see that it is not. It is harder for us to see that, because many of us have pictures on our refrigerators of these beautiful darlings stuck in an orphanage somewhere while we’re bogged down in bureaucracy and delays.

How can you help? By not saying or doing these things:

1. “God’s timing is perfect!” (Could also insert: “This is all God’s plan!” “God is in charge!”) As exactly true as this may be, when you say it to a waiting parent, we want to scratch your eyebrows off and make you eat them with a spoon. Any trite answer that minimizes the struggle is as welcomed as a sack of dirty diapers. You are voicing something we probably already believe while not acknowledging that we are hurting and that somewhere a child is going to bed without a mother again. Please never say this again. Thank you.

2. “Are you going to have your own kids?” (Also in this category: “You’ll probably get pregnant the minute your adoption clears!” “Since this is so hard, why don’t you just try to have your own kids?” “Well, at least you have your own kids.”) The subtle message here is: You can always have legitimate biological kids if this thing tanks. It places adoption in the Back-up Plan Category, where it does not belong for us. When we flew to Ethiopia with our first travel group from our agency, out of 8 couples, we were the only parents with biological kids. The other 7 couples chose adoption first. Several of them were on birth control. Adoption counts as real parenting, and if you believe stuff Jesus said, it might even be closer to the heart of God than regular old procreation. (Not to mention the couples that grieved through infertility already. So when you say, “Are you going to have your own kids?” to a woman who tried for eight years, then don’t be surprised if she pulls your beating heart out like Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.) Can I just add my personal note here...pretty please don't say "just have a kid while you're waiting" to me. This is an especially sensitive topic and it's against contract with our agency right now anyways. If you talk to one of our family members you can reiterate this to them too :)

3. For those of you in Christian community, it is extremely frustrating to hear: “Don’t give up on God!” or “Don’t lose faith!” It implies that we are one nanosecond away from tossing our entire belief system in the compost pile because we are acting sad or discouraged. It’s condescending and misses the crux of our emotions. I can assure you, at no point in our story did we think about kicking Jesus to the curb, but we still get to cry tears and feel our feelings, folks. Jesus did. And I’m pretty sure he went to heaven when he died.

4. We’re happy to field your questions about becoming a transracial family or adopting a child of another race, but please don’t use this moment to trot out your bigotry. (Cluelessness is a different thing, and we try to shrug that off. Like when someone asked about our Ethiopian kids, “Will they be black?” Aw, sweet little dum-dum.) The most hurtful thing we heard during our wait was from a black pastor who said, “Whatever you do, don’t change their last name to Hatmaker, because they are NOT Hatmakers. They’ll never be Hatmakers. They are African.” What the??? I wonder if he’d launch the same grenade if we adopted white kids from Russia? If you’d like to know what we’re learning about raising children of another race or ask respectful, legitimate questions, by all means, do so. We care about this and take it seriously, and we realize we will traverse racial landmines with our family. You don’t need to point out that we are adopting black kids and we are, in fact, white. We’ve actually already thought of that.

5. Saying nothing is the opposite bad. I realize with blogs like this one, you can get skittish on how to talk to a crazed adopting Mama without getting under her paper-thin skin or inadvertently offending her. I get it. (We try hard not to act so hypersensitive. Just imagine that we are paper-pregnant with similar hormones surging through our bodies making us cry at Subaru commercials just like the 7-month preggo sitting next to us. And look at all this weight we’ve gained. See?) But acting like we’re not adopting or struggling or waiting or hoping or grieving is not helpful either. If I was pregnant with a baby in my belly, and no one ever asked how I was feeling or how much longer or is his nursery ready or can we plan a shower, I would have to audition new friend candidates immediately.

3 comments:

  1. LOVE this, Megan! Thanks for sharing! I am right there with ya, girl! This waiting thing is no fun! I am way too much of a planner, this not knowingt thing is killing me! Cannot wait to be your roomie in two weeks!!! YAYYYY! (:

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  2. Sweet friend, thanks for giving me some food for prayer. And I can't wait for the day when our little ones will all play together on this side of the world!

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  3. ok I feel like I need to kind of apologize to my readers (friends and family) I didn't mean for this to come across harsh and I think I was venting as much as I was being "transparent". I don't plan on doing that a lot and I appreciate your grace with me!!! The faithfulness of our God is what I want to hold onto and highlight on this blog and in my daily conversations. Ps-Michael said "I don't really feel this way, but then again I'm not the mama" :) So feel no pressure talking to either of us please!

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