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Winning!

We can’t say the word “winning” this year without at least a split-second image of a manic Charlie Sheen.

But true winning is finding a path of forgiveness and love.  Winning is finding God’s way through pain instead of our own.  Winning is finding the passion that can drive us forward to make a difference, to love out our faith and impact lives.

Alex Krutov is a winner.

Alex has found hope in the midst of hopelessness, laughter in the midst of fear, perseverance in the midst of abuse.  Enduring horrors no one should ever endure.  Watching friends die.  Burying them in unmarked graves. Accepting the impossible forgiveness and grace of Jesus.

I am a winner.

I have seen God use my painful past to help my girls heal.  I have rediscovered my passion for writing.  I am serving, and expecting nothing in return.

Joe Lalonde is a winner.

Joe runs a great blog about leadership and faith, and is a fellow member of the blogger community Killer Tribes.  Joe has won the drawing for Alex’s book, Infinitely More, and a Starbucks Gift Card.  Thanks to everyone who entered and shared!

You are a winner.

Look at the past year, and think about your goals for next year.  Find the threads of winning that weave through your life.  They’re there.

Leave a comment to congratulate Joe and tell us why you are a winner.

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Sunday was my one-month anniversary at RiverOfThoughts.com and Monday was my 100th post related to Adoption.

To celebrate these milestones, and to wrap up National Adoption Month, I want to give away my favorite moment of peace:  a good book and a frilly coffee!

This means I’m giving away a copy of Infinitely More by Alex Krutov, along with a Starbucks Gift Card!!! 

Enter yourself in the drawing by following three simple steps between now and next Tuesday, 6 December:

1. Find your favorite post on my blog site.  How?

  • Visit the Adoption Story or Portfolio pages for links to some key moments
  • Use the Search feature
  • Browse the Archives
  • Click on a subject in the Tag Cloud

2. Share that post with people you know.  How?

  • Tweet it
  • Share it on Facebook
  • Email it to someone (or many people)
    Look for the super-easy buttons to do all three of these things at the bottom of every post!

3. Comment Here!  (this is the important part!!!!!)

  • Tell me which post was your favorite
  • Include your real email address when you comment
    (your email will NOT be available to anyone but me, and I will ONLY use it to notify you if you win)
  • Explain how adoption has touched your life, whether through your own adoption journey, through friends, or not even at all

I’ll announce the winner in next Thursday’s post, and I’ll contact the winner privately by email to get a mailing address……

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Raw honesty is rare in the adoptive community, and when I find it, I just want to share. In her post “After the Airport,” blogger Jen Hatmaker says:

“…if you ask me if these are the happiest days of my life (which a ton of you have), and my eyes kind of glaze over and I say through a tight-lipped smile like a robot, “Yes. Sure. Of course. This is my dream life”…I am lying. I am lying so you won’t feel uncomfortable when I tell you, “Actually, I haven’t had a shower in three days, I lost my temper with my uncontrollable daughter this morning and had to walk outside, I’m constantly cleaning up pee because uncircumcised tee-tee goes sideways onto walls, and sometimes when my two littles are asleep and we’re downstairs with the original three kids who are so stable and healthy and easy, it creates a nostalgia so intense, I think I might perish. But enough about me. How are you?”

But that would be weird. So I say, “Yes. I am so happy.”

We are “after the airport” 4 1/2 years with Masha (adopted at 12, now 17) and almost 2 years for Lena (adopted at 14, turning 16 soon).  I can’t count the number of times people have asked “How’s it going?” and I’ve smiled and said “They are so great,” when I wanted to just curl up in a ball and bawl…for the girls and for myself.

Crying for them because they are the two most courageous young women I know, but it’s been such a tough road for them, ripped from the only life they knew…trying to fit into a world that was literally foreign to them…with a language that doesn’t even use the same letters…into a family that comes with a full set of baggage, already packed.

Crying for us, trying to shepherd them as their wounds heal into scars that will fade, but never be completely gone…learning to balance between limits and freedom…differentiating between trauma responses and normal teenage reactions…making mistakes that hurt them in ways we never imagined.

We knew what we were getting into.  We read books; we scoured the Internet; we prepared ourselves.  More importantly, God prepared us.  But that doesn’t mean it’s been easy.  It doesn’t mean it will get easier.  But nothing easy is worth much anyway, is it?

I see too many families who expect the rainbows and unicorns–who can’t recognize and address the brokenness in both the kids and in themselves.  Too many agencies who fail to prepare them; too many parents unable to understand the reality of how trauma works on the human psyche.

Adoption of older kids can be one of the most rewarding things in life, but it’s never easy.

So when you say “How’s it going?” don’t be surprised if it sometimes takes me a few seconds to answer.  Just sayin’.

 

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I carry you with me
Tess O’Day
2010 Copper, Tree Moss, Cherry Wood.

A tribute to Ari’s birth mother and all of the suffering mothers of Africa. In Africa and other places in the world, a starving woman is not likely to survive a pregnancy and birth, so many terminate the pregnancy without any help from a doctor. I honor, love, and respect those who take a leap of faith and TRY to hold on. That is true true love right there.

 

I admire artists who can evoke visceral reactions and tell stories through imagery. In this piece, Tess O’Day beautifully juxtaposes starvation and new life, and reminds us of the choices that women in impoverished nations face every day.

As an adoptive parent, Tess’ art reminds me this Thanksgiving week of the birth families that came before us.

Tess’ piece moved me.  I want others to see it and be moved.  I want others to know that adoption isn’t so simple.  Poverty isn’t so simple.

This is Societal

Many children in orphanages are “social orphans,” children who have living parents. Parents who, for whatever reason, aren’t able to care for their kids. Parents who, for whatever reason, are separated from their children forever.

True, allowing their children to be adopted to the United States gives that child choices that they never would have had if they stayed.  But at what cost?

Each and every one of these women has a story–a circumstance that I could never imagine from my warm, dry house with its stocked pantry.  The choices each one makes to survive and to ensure the survival of their child are ones I could never begin to make.

This is a complicated topic, and every adoptee has a unique, private story.  Each family processes this differently.  But I firmly believe that the foundation of handling it well lies in respect and gratitude and love and grace for the birth mother.

This is Personal

As adoptive parents, we put a shiny happy face on our new families, and so often we discount the loss that our children feel for their birth families.  And the older our kids are, the more they remember those families.

Here in the warmth and safety of our homes, they struggle with the balance, with how to still love and respect their birth family, to forgive the past, and to discover that they have room in their hearts for everyone–their first family members and their new ones.

So this Thanksgiving, I want to honor two mothers, Sveta and Yulia, who gave my girls the greatest gift I could ever imagine.  Thank you.

 

* Tess O’Day:  Tess’ work has been exhibited in many juried shows in the Midwest.  She recently received ‘best in show’ at the Colfax Center in South Bend, Indiana in a juried show titled ‘Art & Social Justice’.  Tess has dedicated the purpose of her artwork to raising awareness for issues that she considers to be of significant importance.  Using primarily copper and pewter, she creates sculptures with themes of tragedy, injustice, poverty, rebellion, heroism, and remembrance.  Her online store, MidWestMetals, features hand-crafted jewelry that is made to order.  

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Designed for anyone who is called to love and care for the orphan, the Together for Adoption Chicago conference is coming up next month.

Registration is only $15 for a full-day conference, and includes lunch!  Register now at www.chicagoadoption.org

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