Showing posts with label Adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adoption. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Julie: An Urgent Situation



(Note: If some of my facts are skewed, please let me know, by either posting a comment or by using the “contact” form on the right sidebar, and I will make appropriate corrections.)

This situation is a dilemma for us poor humans, but it is NOT a dilemma for GOD!!

Michelle, who blogs from the perspective of a very recent older-child adoption, agreed to help me "spread the word" about Julie. (She has a lot more blog readers than I do.) She posted the first two paragraphs of this post here, along with a perspective that I can't come even close to matching.

If you came from her site, skip the first two paragraphs below. If you didn't come from her site, please go read it first, before reading the rest of this post.

Julie lives in an orphanage in an Eastern European country.  Her Reece’s Rainbow profile says she “was placed in an orphanage a few years ago.” (“A few years ago” means “a few years before December of 2010," as her profile has not changed since I first read it then. She would have been no more than 12 when it was written, possibly younger).

That means she spent at least the first few years of her life living somewhere other than an orphanage. With her parents? With grandparents or some other family member? Were they happy years? Were they sad years? What traumatic event landed her in the orphanage? I really don’t know. One thing I do know: Transition to an orphanage = loss to the child. Loss of family. (Parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, and possibly older and / or younger siblings.) Loss of home. At the age she might have been, loss of friends. Loss of familiar surroundings. Loss of any kind of stability.

I also know that her orphanage days are rapidly nearing their end. Adopted or not, she will soon leave the orphanage behind forever. If she isn't adopted, her days there are numbered. It might be as soon as her birthday in April, or she might be allowed to finish out the school year, and remain there until summer – orphanage “graduation.”

If she has done well in school, she could “graduate” to a “trade school,” which does have a “dorm” for the students to live in – but (if I have my facts straight), those “dorms” are rife with alcohol, drugs, and sex. Given that she was “about 3 years behind her agemates” in school 3 years ago (which has probably not improved since then) she might not “qualify” for trade school.

As I understand it, “not qualifying” for trade school puts her out on the streets. No job (and an “orphan” label that makes it hard to get one, even if she had the appropriate skills, which she probably doesn’t.) No money. No place to live. (It gets very cold in her country in the winter!!) No way to buy food. No one to turn to for help or advice. Sound bleak? It is. A very high percentage of young people who “graduate” from the orphanage do not live to the age of 20. The majority of them turn to drugs, alcohol, prostitution, and / or crime, in a desperate attempt to survive. (I've read these statistics somewhere; I'd link to them if I could find a source. If you know one, please let me know. Thanks!)

Julie does have a window of hope, albeit a small (and, at this point, rapidly shrinking) one: International adoption. Parents who are willing to take a leap of faith, and invite this teen to be part of their family. Her clock (see the countdown ticker at the top of this page) is rapidly ticking towards “doomsday,” so the process needs to be started ASAP. Like, NOW. (After you take time to pray about it, that is.)

While there is still time for a family brand new to adoption to rescue her, the sooner you can get the process started, the smoother it will be. There is a "best order" for doing things, and making sure nothing is overlooked.

The full adoption process for her country can take 6-8 months, or longer, from the first contact with your social worker until the plane with her on board touches down on US soil. Obviously there isn't that much time left between now and April first. (Not knowing which day in April she was born, the only “safe” assumption is April 1.) Fortunately, the entire process doesn't need to be finished by her birthday. Since it is a US law (not a law of her country) that sets the “age 16 cutoff date,” the adoption can be finalized after her birthday, as long as appropriate paperwork is filed with the USCIS (United States Customs and Immigration Service) before then. The folks at Reece’s Rainbow (RR) can walk you through the process. (Please read this page carefully  before you contact them, though.)

Finances. Yes, International Adoption is expensive. Like around $25,000 (yes, that’s 25 grand) from Julie’s country. And that’s just airfare and “in country” costs (housing, transportation, food, facilitator fees. That kind of stuff.) Even families who are fully capable of financially supporting a child once the child is home rarely have that kind of cash just hanging around in their closet collecting dust.

Remember, though, that unwilling human hearts are a far bigger problem to the God who owns the cattle on a thousand hills than a few pieces of human currency.

Before you read farther, please go back to the top of this post and re-read that sentence in red and green type. Remember that God is not bound by what looks impossible to us.

This is where the “dilemma” comes in. If you look at different children’s profiles on the RR website, you’ll notice that most of them have an adoption grant fund at the bottom. Julie’s does not, and there is a reason: It has been a long time since RR has had any kind of updated information on Julie. Like (probably) none since whatever was written when she was first listed, at least three years ago. The assumption is that she is still there, and still available, but RR doesn't know for sure. Because of this, they are not comfortable raising funds for her until they either get updated information or a family steps forward to adopt her. (This last bit of info is based on recent direct communication between me and an RR staff member, specifically discussing Julie’s lack of a grant fund.) 

RR may not have any “up-to-date” information on Julie, but GOD does!!!! He has the hairs on her head numbered, and monitors every breath she takes.  HE has a thousand ways of figuring this situation out that we poor mortals have never even thought of

Before you start throwing stones at RR for not keeping their records up-to-date, though, please consider that none of the US-based RR office staff (the ones who post updates to a child’s online profile) actually live in Julie’s country. I don’t know how many, if any, of them have ever even visited it before.
  •  They have little or no direct access to any kind of (official) records, other than what they received when the child was first listed, and getting additional information can be next to impossible in some situations. (Some institutional directors are very anti-adoption, and deliberately sit on unfinished paperwork, to keep the children in their care from being adopted.)
  •  For the most part, RR office staff has to depend on in-country facilitators (local people who work with adopting families while they are physically there), missionaries, and / or families who are adopting another child out of the same orphanage, for any additional information.
  • Sometimes adopting families get to mingle with other children in an orphanage, sometimes not.  Some orphanages confine prospective families to a small area with only the child they are adopting, and give them little or no access to any of the other children living there. (This would prevent them from having additional information about other RR-listed children in that institution to forward on to the home office.)
  •  Facilitators probably keep so busy working with currently-in-country adopting families that they don’t have time (or finances) to go running around the country keeping up with all the kids listed on RR’s site.
  •  Many of these orphanages are in very remote locations, and I can tell you from seven months (2004-2005, and I doubt it's improved) in an Eastern European country not too far from Julie’s that gas is outrageously expensive in that part of the world. Expensive enough to make our highest US prices look (to them) like 99 cents a gallon would look to us.
  •  Not all facilities have missionaries close enough to work with them. Some directors want no part of missionaries or anyone else entering “their” institution, and refuse to grant them access even if they are close enough. 
Again, this presents a real dilemma to us humans. A dilemma that could easily send a potential family looking for “easier” kids – kids with frequently (or at least recently) updated information in their profiles, and lots of money in their grant funds. (I am sure there are people “out there” who would be glad to chip into Julie’s fund, once it is established.)

But then – none of this is Julie’s fault. None of this halts the clock, or puts one extra second of time between now and her 16th birthday. None of this changes her desperate need for a family to take a (larger-than-normal) leap of faith, and step forward immediately.

We do need to keep in mind that God sees a bigger picture than we do, and He may have reasons that go beyond our limited comprehension for keeping Julie’s information unavailable to RR, reasons we will never understand this side of heaven.

Is this is a complicated situation? Yes. (As I suspect dozens of adoptive families will testify, any International adoption is complicated!) Is it an impossible situation? NO. Is Julie worth whatever it takes to bring her home (or to at least give her the opportunity to come home)? Absolutely! We need to go forward on our knees, and, with every “roadblock,” first submitting our wills to God, and second, checking our lives against the blessing of His written word, to make sure there is nothing in us that would prevent Him from working in our behalf. After we have done this, we can rest in His wisdom, trusting Him to work things out however He sees is best. 

 God is bigger than this problem!

A family would also need to keep in mind, and be mentally and emotionally prepared for, the possibility that Julie might not be still available (for any one of many reasons outside Reece's Rainbow's control or knowledge), and that she might (as other older children have done), say "No" to adoption after a family does everything they can do, and actually meets her.

If you are even remotely considering inviting Julie, or any other "older child" to become part of your family, I would like to encourage you to visit Christie at Parenting that Heals. Christie and her husband, Mike have four adult sons. They have also adopted 4 older girls, one from US foster care (if I remember right), one directly from Eastern Europe, and two already in the US from disrupted International adoptions, one of whom was disrupted twice. I have read Christie's entire blog, start to finish, and I have been blessed. While every situation is different (and, with no personal adoption experience, I am definitely "on the outside looking in"), I believe she offers insights into the "whys" of behaviors that so often crop up in International adoptions, as well as some very practical "how to's" for dealing with them, to help you see that, with God's help, this is "doable."

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Julie -- a bit more information



I've added this information to the bottom of the post I made yesterday about Julie, but am also putting it in this new post, for those who have already read the earlier post, and might not go back to it.

Families with even the slightest interest in adopting Julie should start at the Reece's Rainbow Adoption Process webpage -- and they should start IMMEDIATELY! Even though the adoption process doesn't need to be completed before Julie's birthday, there IS a certain amount of paperwork that needs to be in place before she turns 16.

(I've never been down the adoption road personally, but I've read this in other blogs posts advocating for "about-to-age-out" children.)

If you can't adopt her, but you could help spread the word, I would really appreciate it -- and, I'm sure, Julie would appreciate it too . . . if she only knew . . . !.

I've contacted RR about a donation button for her, and will post those details (in another blog post, so check back) as soon as I can. In the meantime, the more people who see her face, the better chance she has of a family finding her before it is forever too late.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Julie




This picture has been posted ever since I first saw your sweet face . . . over 3 years ago.

That means you were no more than 12 when it was taken -- maybe younger.

About all I know about you is what is written in your Reece's Rainbow profile:

Julie (That's a pseudonym, to protect your real identity)
Girl, Born April 1998 (I don't even know what day your birthday is -- April 1 . . . or April 30 . . . I hope April 30, as it gives you a few days longer for your family to find you.
That means that, in roughly 4 months (depending on when in April your birthday is), you will turn 16. In the US, kids look forward to turning 16 -- they can get a driver's license. In your country, "16" has a totally different connotation, especially for "orphans"! It means that you will be forever unavailable for a US family. I don't know if other countries allow young people over 16 to be adopted or not.

Here's what your Reece's Rainbow profile says:
Love this beautiful Pippi Longstocking!    Julie is a sweet, quiet, but energetic, redhead with big blue eyes and freckles.  When she was placed in an orphanage a few years ago, she did not want to speak.  Now she expresses herself reasonably well, with an occasional stutter.    She studies and recites well in her orphanage, but she is about 3 years behind her agemates.  She controls her actions well, is calm, likes to work, draw and play with toys.  She came to a 3-week summer camp in America and lived with a family, who thought she might have brain damage.  Julie was very patient in adult company, played nicely by herself or with other kids, showed determination and stamina in learning how to ice skate mostly by herself, and loved the water park, descending the steepest, scariest slide with gusto.  Julie has a sense of humor and a hearty laugh.  With a good ear for language, she should be able to learn English just fine, once a loving family gives her that opportunity.  She wants a family of her own.

I just committed to being your Reece's Rainbow ("RR") "Guardian Angel." That means I'm supposed to try to raise money for your grant fund, and I'm supposed to try to find an adoptive family for you. 

The only problem is -- RR doesn't seem to be accepting grant funds for you right now -- something about your paperwork? Does that mean you can't even be adopted if a family steps forward for you? I really don't know. I've e-mailed them to find out.

Since I don't have any "social media" accounts (no FB, no twitter, no . . . ), and this is a brand-new blog, which very few people read, where do I even start? On my knees, I guess. I've been praying for you off and on since the fall of 2010, and seriously (every morning and evening) for over a year. 

God knows all about you. He loves you, even though you probably feel like He's forgotten you, if you even know about Him.

I guess I can ask any of the few people who might read this if they would help me out . . . share where ever and however they can. Maybe do a feature post on their blog, which probably has a lot more readers than mine does? (And then leave a link to their blog post in the comments below, so I can thank them -- and read what they wrote?) Advocate for you on FB, twitter, and whatever other sites they're on? Whatever other creative ideas they have?

Maybe I can ask some of the bloggers I regularly follow (who don't know me, or anything about my little blog) if they would shout for you?

Ultimately, it only takes one family to really see you, and decide that you belong in their family.

Since it's my bedtime, I guess I'll have to put this problem in God's capable hands, and see what else I can do . . . tomorrow.

Good night, sweet Julie.

Additional note, added Thursday, January 16:
Families with even the slightest interest in adopting Julie should start at the Reece's Rainbow Adoption Process webpage -- and they should start IMMEDIATELY! Even though the adoption process doesn't need to be completed before Julie's birthday, there IS a certain amount of paperwork that needs to be in place before she turns 16.

I've never been down the adoption road personally, but I've read this in other blogs posts advocating for "about-to-age-out" children.

If you can't adopt her, but you could help spread the word, I would really appreciate it -- and, I'm sure, Julie would appreciate it too . . . if she only knew . . . !.

I've contacted RR about a donation button for her, and will post those details (in another blog post, so check back) as soon as I can. In the meantime, the more people who see her face, the better chance she has of a family finding her before it is forever too late.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Karen

January 12, 2014



Karen.
(I know this isn't your real name, but it's the only one I've ever heard for you,
so it will have to do.)

18 today.
(Even though you were probably only 14 or 15 when this picture was taken.)

No longer adoptable in the US. 

Not even with your sister, Chrystyna.

Yet -- you are only one of hundreds, possibly thousands, around the world, who reached this grim milestone today. Permanent orphans. And not only today, but every day of every year, others join you.

You will probably never have the opportunity to read these words, but I'm going to write them anyway.

This is what your Reece's Rainbow profile (which will probably disappear forever in a few days) said about you. It was posted beside the picture at the top of this post:
---------------------
Girl, Born January 12, 1996
 Karen is the older, biological sister of Chrystyna.   She is a beautiful Roma girl with dark hair, dark eyes, and olive skin.  She is 17 years old.  She is healthy and smart and has no diagnosed special needs.    She goes to school and has no negative behavioral issues.  She is just a teen in need of a loving family!
 Karen and Chrystyna are living in different orphanages, but in the same region.  It would only be possible for Karen to be adopted WITH her younger sister.  Due to her age, she can not be adopted on her own.
If you might be seeking a sibling set, please inquire!  Both girls need a loving family!
---------------------

It's all the information I have about you. How I wish I knew more.

Even though at least a few Americans shouted for you, their voices, like yours, went unheard.

  • Here is the voice of one who did her best to find a home for you and your sister.
  • Here and here and here are 3 blog posts (of many) my daughter, Pam wrote about you.

And yet, there is hope. You do have a Father. You can't see Him -- not now -- except with the eye of faith, yet He sees you. He marks your every struggle. He reads and understands your innermost thoughts. He puts all your tears in a bottle, and writes their circumstances in His book. (Psalm 56:8.)

"A father of the fatherless,
and a judge of the widows,
is God in his holy habitation."
Psalms 68:5

"Can a woman forget her sucking child,
that she should not have compassion on the [daughter] of her womb?
yea,
they may forget,
yet will I not forget thee (Karen)."
Isaiah 49:15

"Behold, I have graven thee (Karen) upon the palms of my hands;
thy walls are continually before me."
Isaiah 49:16

"Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing?
and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father.
But the very hairs of your head are all numbered.
Fear ye not therefore,
ye (you, Karen) are of more value than many sparrows."
 Matthew 10:29-31

Even though humanity seems to have let you down, you have a heavenly Father who has watched over you since conception. He knows every detail of your life: How you wound up in an orphanage in the first place. How every single individual who has ever crossed your path has treated you, whether it be for good or for ill. What opportunities you have had -- and those you haven't had.

Karen, you might find this hard to believe, but God really does love you. He has a plan for your life. Your life is not in vain, unless you make it so. He died for you just as surely as He died for anyone born in more "privileged" circumstances. His plan for you is just as special as the plan He has for any of the rest of us. He has a special job that only you can fill, and He stands by ready and willing to show you that spot, and to help you fill it.

Contrary to what many people (even a lot of "Christians") believe, God is not the author of sin and suffering. Another being, created perfect by God, chose to rebel. He it is who is behind all the evil and misery in this world. You can read more about it here and here. These two chapters come from the first and last books of a 5 volume set, covering the entire span of earth's history from before Satan rebelled in heaven through the earth made new, sometime in the very near future. Volume 2 begins here; volume 3 begins here, and volume 4 begins here. Read them in order -- they are fascinating reading! (But don't expect to get through all of them in one sitting -- each book averages over 700 pages, for a total of 3600 pages.)

God might choose to bring people into your life who can help you find His plan for you. He might choose to lead you to a copy of His Word (if you don't already have access to it), and guide you to just the passages He wants you to read. He might even choose to speak directly to you. If you have access to a Bible, though, be sure you test every message that says it is from God against that word. There are many voices out there claiming to be Him who are really impostors, out to take advantage of you. (Including, but not limited to, those voices in your country of birth who have convinced parents that their precious children are "better off" in institutions than in families.)

I will probably never know, this side of heaven, what happened to you. I have been praying for you for a long time, and I will continue to do so. If we never have a chance to meet in person, on this earth, I hope we can meet in heaven, so you can share with me all the ways God worked in your life to get you there.

In the meantime, it behooves those of us with voices and media access to do all we can to facilitate the adoption of others before they age out. Even more important, though, each of us has a responsibility to live every aspect of our lives in such a way that we rightly represent God. To keep our minds full of His word, and to live by it, regardless of the (human) consequences. To share His love, in word and deed, with all those around us. To do whatever we can to hasten His coming, so that the orphan problem, and all the other problems this old world faces, come to a permanent and final end.

This battleground-of-the-universe we call "planet earth" is in its final days. Satan knows that he has but a short time (Revelation 12:12), and he is doing all in his power to make as many people as miserable as he can, in as many ways as he can think of, and to make sure as many people as he can deceive a little longer share his certain doom.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Welcome!

I've thought quite a bit about blogging over the last several months, and finally decided to "take the plunge," and start.

I've debated whether to have multiple blogs on different topics, or to combine several topics into one blog. For the present, I've decided to go with the latter.

Here are some of the things you will most likely find here in the future. These are listed in a more or less random order; different "subjects" will take "center stage" at different times.

  • Personal applications of different Scripture passages as I memorize and / or review them.
  • Impacts of thought-provoking books or articles I've read, or videos I've watched.
  • Lessons I've gleaned from the "common" occurrences of everyday life
  • Gardening (Even though we've had a garden a few random, widely scattered years, after an intensive week of training in WV last April, we're enlarging it and starting from scratch -- including the proper soil  amendments.)
  • Adoption information, especially as it relates to special needs international adoption. I've read a lot of adoption blogs and adoption-related web sites over the last couple of years, and have bookmarked pages that would seem (to me) to be helpful to anyone in the adoption process.
  • Advocating for 
    • specific children in need of families, 
    • specific families in the adoption process,
    • specific countries, especially those which do not allow pictures of their available children to be posted on the Internet,
    • specific diagnoses that can "scare" people out of adopting, along with resources for dealing with those conditions and links to blog articles written by families who have adopted one or more children with that diagnosis,
    • specific organizations that exist for the sole purpose of finding families for orphans through adoption, and (but not necessarily limited to)
    • specific individuals and / or organizations that are making a difference in the lives of unadopted children in the institutions they call "home."
  • Health-related information
  • Homeschooling-related information
  • Other random things that may pop up from time to time.
All of us grow by exchanging ideas -- and especially by discussing things we see differently, so I welcome comments and questions. 

Thanks for following along!

Kathy

P. S. I have had an interest in Special Needs International Adoption since November, 2010. One of the reasons I started this blog is to give me a platform to use to advocate for some of these special children who are locked away in hidden institutions in many countries, children who have no voice of their own. As you can see from looking at both of my sidebars, there is a lot of adoption info here, even if my blog posts don't always specifically relate to that topic.