For awhile now I have worked as both a Staff Writer and Content Copy Editor for Adoption.com.
I wrote this article awhile ago and every time I read it I am reminded of its truthfulness. I am still amazed, nearly 5 years later, that we assembled our family in part through adoption from Ethiopia. What an adventure! What a blessing!
If you have a moment, take the time to read. And if you ever have any questions about international adoption, specifically from Ethiopia, chat me up!
___________________________________________________________________
From start to finish, our adoption of two babies from Ethiopia took 1
½ years. During that 1 ½ year period, my husband and I carefully
studied and planned. We read up on malnutrition, life in Ethiopia,
transracial adoption and challenges facing institutionalized children.
We prepared our two older children who were seven and five at the time.
We prepared our hearts, our home, our extended families and friends.
When we took off on a 24 hour journey from San Francisco to Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia we turned to each other and said, “Ok. I think we are ready”.
My advice to you is this: Whatever you think is going to happen is
not going to happen. Whatever you think adoption is going to be, it is
not. You can only prepare to a certain extent and then you have to be
nimble and ready and humble to face what is in front of you. Be prepared
for the unexpected and decide to embrace it.
I was not prepared for the abject poverty of such a beautiful
country. Pictures did not do it justice. I was astonished at both the
physical and spiritual beauty of everyone we met in Addis. What a
stunning people.
I was not prepared when orphanage workers brought me my ten month old
daughter and she did NOT look like the happy little baby in our
pictures. She was very sick and her big eyes showed trauma. She was so
scared and small.
(Day 1 in the orphanage in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – Sadie)
I was not prepared when another orphanage worker handed us our eight
month old son and we quickly realized he had no muscle tone. At all.
(Sebastian in Ethiopia)
I was not prepared to have to force feed our daughter because she was
starving but did not know how to eat. Here we were, ready with food and
medicine and formula…but she would not take it. She didn’t know how and
had never been taught.
I was not prepared to have my daughter arch her back away from being
held or scream when we touched her head. Or wake up from naps completely
traumatized with big scared eyes.
I thought that if we adopted babies, so many of the terrible things I
had read about would not happen. I thought they would be able to thrive
and would have no memory of their time in the orphanage or of being
abandoned. I thought that because they were so young it would be easy to
undo all of the hurt. I thought I was prepared.
Unfortunately, I was wrong. Babies who have been abandoned feel
trauma. They feel abandonment and starvation and boredom. Their eyes do
not trust and they are not initially comfortable being held and loved
and cuddled. Malnutrition is horrible and even when their bellies are
full and their skin is healthy it has still disrupted early growth
patterns.
Every day at home brought something new that I was not prepared for.
It brought horrible diarrhea as their bodies got rid of the orphanage
parasites. It brought healing from bronchitis and scabies and staph
infections. It brought an intense fear of being around people and noise
and color. It brought a lot of sleeping as their bodies recovered from
their former life. It brought struggles with learning to eat and
learning what it felt like to be full. While family and friends marveled
at these two beautiful babies in their adorable clothes and
congratulated us on a job well done, we knew differently. We were in
triage and we needed to prepare for the new task at hand.
I had the pretty nursery and access to doctors, good food, formula
and medications. But in order to really prepare, to be fully present for
these children in acute need of help, I had to get rid of my
preconceived notions about infant adoption. I had to accept that my
children were hurt by their abandonment. They were hurt by traveling
between various intake centers throughout Ethiopia in the arms of
strangers and by living in a crowded orphanage with no consistent
caregiver relationships. They were hurt by neglect and sickness and fear
and many other things I could not see. Once I understood the magnitude
of what they had been through I could appreciate their struggle with a
new perspective and celebrate their milestones with gusto.
It took longer for my children to learn to walk. It took longer for
our son to really talk. It took longer for them to learn to feed
themselves and dress themselves and potty train and trust and really
connect and make it through a full day without a crisis. Everything took
longer. But they did it. They DID it. They are happy, healthy,
thriving and curious. They have vibrant personalities and killer smiles.
They each have challenges that will take time and maturity and perhaps a
little extra help to overcome. They are not challenges that I would
have expected or could have prepared for. But today I am confident that
we will get them through their next chapters.
(Sadie and Sebastian at age 4 with big brother and sister Simon and Sophie, parents Sam and Sara)
Whatever you think your adoption scenario is it is going to be, it is
not. Get rid of your preconceptions right now. You will not know what
you are up against until you are in it. That is the glory of parenthood,
not just adoption; it is a tremendous leap of faith. Prepare the very
best you can and then leap in. Before you know it, you will be prepared
in just the way that your children need you to be.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment