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Friday, December 30, 2011

December Martini

Just sibling cuteness.

My packaging assistant.

This was a big day for Meadow.
It was her first day of wearing a barrette all day and
her first day of wearing underwear all day!
She's getting so big!

We traded some our of shirts for these sweet shirts.

You can get one for yourself here.

Riding the buffalo's.


And the komodo dragon.

This is Meadow's favorite doll and she has started wanting to sleep with her. It's sweet.

The 3-5 year olds sang "Go Tell It on the Mountain" at church a couple weeks ago.
Moses claimed that if he took the beaters with him it would help him sing. I'm a "whatever works" kind of mom so along the beaters went.

Meadow didn't sing but she sure did look cute!

Moses in red on the far left, beaters in hand.
(Pretty sure they didn't help. Oh well.)

"Icing" cookies for our friends and neighbors. Not much icing going on...



My sweet red headed nephew.

Sleepy monkey on Christmas morning.

Santa's helpers at Mimi's house.

The shoe fetish continues...

Moses climbing on the "Original William Wallace."

Papa helping Meadow with his favorite banana pudding.

Happy New Year!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Waiting: Month One

Since we were only technically on the referral list for 3 days, I don’t feel like the waiting really began until we had a referral picture, one month ago today. 
A couple years ago I heard someone from our agency give advice about “protecting yourself” from getting too attached to the referral picture kid. Her advice was good I guess but I remember sitting there thinking “There’s no way” and “How do you do that?” It seemed at the time completely unrealistic.
But now that we are here, I get it. I think that I get it in part because of our experience with Ethiopia. Being denied was hard and hurtful and my fleshly reaction was/is to put up walls to protect myself from being hurt again. I went through the motions of requesting an updated home study, filling out the DRC program application and changing our CIS approval, etc.  all the while not truly letting myself fall in love with the children of the Congo.
The morning we received our referral I had spent the previous 12 hours alternating vomiting every 30 minutes with Moses. I begged William to stay home from work but he couldn’t so Moses and I lay on the couch while Meadow destroyed the living room. I was dazing in and out of sleep when William called with “good news.” He said “There’s a little boy in the Congo named…” at which point I interrupted him with “SHUT. UP.” He continued with the very little info the Congo Lady gave him. Within 30 minutes we had signed a non-disclosure form and gotten back a picture. (Via email)
And there he was. Two big brown eyes staring back at me from my computer screen.
I’ve been asked if I “knew.” If I immediately fell in love with the kid in the picture. If I knew he was mine.
I didn’t. And I don’t.
I thought on that day a month ago it was because I was sleep deprived and sick. But the fact that I still don’t “know” tells me (among other things) that I’ve still got my walls up. I’m still trying to protect myself. (Which is ridiculous for a number of reasons, including that I’m not even capable of that.)
I know that I’m still subconsciously trying not to fall in love with the kid in the picture because of the “what if’s” and my inability to control them from the other side of the planet. (Or at all, from anywhere.)
What if someone claims him?
What if the DRC denies our case?
What if the Tshisekedi supporters take to the streets and the embassy shuts down?
What if he gets malaria and dies?
I have spent the last month trying to control my life and ignore my fears. I’ve kept myself busy by making ornaments and managing our Etsy shop. I haven’t taken the truth about how I feel to God. The truth that I am scared to fall in love with the little boy in the picture because I don’t want to be hurt again. I don’t want to live through another “what if” coming true.
So am I protecting myself? Yes. But not in a healthy way. And I’m not honestly even sure that it’s good advice. Or possible.
The little boy in that picture deserves to be loved so much that it hurts. And, just like a women with an ultrasound picture hanging on her fridge, while a “what if” might come true and I may never hold him in my arms, God put him in my life right now to be mine in this way.
I can intercede on his behalf in a way that no one was able to do before. And that kind of protection, from the Ultimate Protector, is infinitely better than my selfish ambition of keeping myself from being hurt and controlling what happens to him in my own strength. Only God can protect the little boy on our fridge, only God can give me the strength to make it through the “what if’s” that come true and only He could have adopted someone as selfish as me into his family.
I’m SO thankful for the picture of adoption the gospel provides for us, for His power over the tragedies that make adoption necessary and the grace and protection He freely gives to us as his children.
As I fall in love with those big brown eyes (and get real with God), I’m asking that you keep the little boy on our fridge in your prayers. He needs protection that only his heavenly Father can provide.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

November Martini



Is tomorrow really the first of December?! I can't take it!

Here's a bit of what November was like for the Wallace's...

Hanging out at the park.


Possibly the only actual day of homeschool that occurred this month because soon...

We started making ornaments and learning about e-commerce and postage.
That counts as homeschool right?

After being stuck at home sick for four days Mama had to get creative. Yes that is shaving cream.

Driving to Mamaw and Papaw's house for Thanksgiving.

The tree before.

What, you let your three year old play with saws right?

The tree after. Moses was so proud. He declared "Our tree is perfect."

After selling over 100 ornaments on Etsy (in a little over a week) I had to call in the reinforcements.

I am SO thankful for these ladies.

And, the most exciting thing (that I can't even share a picture of) is a sweet little boy in the DRC! Please continue to pray for him. Pray for his safety and protection and that his abandonment cercertificate and birth certificate would be issued miraculously quick.


Friday, November 18, 2011

Referral Day!

Today marks a new chapter in this long book...

We. Have. A. Referral!

There's a 3 1/2 year old little boy in the Congo we are praying is ours! (and yes Moses is almost exactly 3 1/2:-)

I wish I could share his name and picture and what very little we know about him but we cannot until he is legally ours...

What I can share is that he is preciously adorable and we all love to stare at his picture!

Please pray that the investigation into his orphan status and collection of his legal documents (birth certificate, witness statements, etc) goes quickly and smoothly! Once that is complete our case will be filed for court. It could take 6-8 months for that to happen...

Pray, pray, pray!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Progress!

If you've been following along on Facebook then you know we have officially switched to the DRC program. Our 4th homestudy is in and for the first time ever...

We. Are. Waiting!!!

There is an attorney in the Congo looking for a little boy for us! It's very surreal to be here, at the waiting point of our journey. It has seemed elusive for so long!

As I said before the Congo program is very different from Ethiopia SO, while we should be getting a photo of our potential little one soon, we still have a long way to go...

After we accept the "photo" as a little boy we'd like to adopt, the attorney will begin an investigation to ensure that he is actually and legally available for adoption. The little boy will then also have a physical exam. This may seem a little backwards to you, as it does me, but because so few children are adopted from the DRC they cannot put the time and money into investigating and examining every kid that comes into the orphanage when very few of them will acutally be adopted.

It's difficult to say how long things will take because we are part of a pilot program and no kids are home through this program yet. We were told to expect 10-15 months but we were also told that 2 1/2 years ago...

I wanted to do a big post on the differences between the Ethiopia and the DRC adoption programs, the history I have learned about the country, the election coming up later this month... but I cannot find the time for much more than taking care of my family and selling jewelry.

Monday, October 31, 2011

October Martini


If you're new here you can read about the monthly martini's here. As I said, it's basically a way for me to show off my super cute kids and rejoice in all the blessings of the past month. There are quite a few pics from October - enjoy!


We had five jewelry parties in October. (and one in September) Each one was a success! Five more to go and then I'll do a post about the do's and don't of using rolled paper bead jewelry as a fundraiser.

Seriously love our neighborhood this time of year. Not sure I could live without the change of seasons!

Meadow enjoying her hot coco at Sunergos.

 
My little girl thinks she is SO BIG.


And this guy. Man is he cute!

Picking pumpkins with Mimi, Grandpa, Uncle Dave, Aunt Emmie and Baby Otto.


Meadow loves her Mimi.

The cousins.

Our first year at the Zoo Halloween party.

 Wow. How did this happen? 


Picking Papa up at work.

Not sleeping.

Seriously cute jewelry models

Wish I had one with all three of them in focus!



My robots.

Happy Halloween!