The Lee Three

The Lee Three

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Look Who Is a Big Boy

Someone no longer has a crib but a big boy bed. And he helped me take the side off yesterday (we plan to take the second side off when we move).His first excited wiggle in his "new" bed. And yes, Mr. Shorty-pants needs a bit of a boost to get up in his bed.
Loving it!
Daddy giving Abram "the talk"" about needing to stay in the bed.
We put some cushions down just in case. (The lights were actually off when I took this picture.)
The morning report: He did GREAT! When he woke up this morning, he still called for us to come get him. I'm sure that will change soon though.

While Abram is doing great with the change, I'm not sure how well his mama is doing with it. :) The first straw was taking the tray of his booster seat downstairs to put away a week or so ago. And now the crib is gone.

The problem is that even when we get our three kids from Africa, Abram will still be my baby. And my baby is no longer a baby. And I don't know if we'll ever get another baby again. I dream of adopting another baby (DOWN THE ROAD!), but I don't know what God's plans are for us.

What I do know is that God is faithful and His plans are far better than what I could ever come up with on my own. I'm glad I can trust Him with all of these sad and mixed feelings I have at times when I realize we are moving out all things "baby."

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Christian Alliance for Orphans

Over this past weekend Jason and I decided to attend the Christian Alliance for Orphans Summit VII on May 12-13 in Louisville, Kentucky. We are so excited! Since our kids won't be coming home until July or August we felt like this would be a good time to go. However, we will have JUST moved into our new house so I know it will be hard for me to leave with so much to do. But I know it will be worth it!

Jason is excited to network with some of the guys he follows from Christian Alliance for Orphans and Together for Adoption. I'm looking forward to hearing Dr. Karen Purvis and some of the other great speakers. We got to choose five diffferent break-out sessions to attend - they are going to be great!

SO . . . who else wants to join us??!! There are a group of Salt Company students going but we would love to have some other community people come along! You can check out the CAO website for more info or email me.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Crazy Math

My friend, Julie Masson, passed on a great blog post to me last week called CRAZY MATH. I wasn't able to post it directly to my blog so you have to go to the link to read it. But, please do it read it! It is short and such an awesome explanation of how it is that ordinary people with not a lot of money - like us and most of the people I know who are adopting - are able to end up paying for an adoption. It very much explains how we are able to pay for our adoption - all $60,000+ of it!


Friday, March 25, 2011

Time to Meet Katie

If you do not yet know about Katie, a young girl who lives in Uganda and has adopted THIRTEEN orphans, then you need to get to know her by following her blog. (She actually has one more daughter who is not living with her anymore. You can read that heart-wrenching story here.)

I do not know Katie personally and I do not even know her whole story. But her life and faith inspire me like no one else. She is living out the gospel everyday, clinging to Jesus each and every minute.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Last Weekend

First I need to make a little disclaimer about the last post I posted on Adoption & Assumptions. I have realized that the author's tone was quite strong and even a bit angry/bitter and I do not share her same tone. I share some of her points, but overall I want to make it clear that I don't feel that on edge about the topic. Just want to clear that up!

Onto some pics from our past weekend . . .

It started off with the monkey first taking his pants off when I wasn't looking.Then climbing into the sink when I had my back turned for two seconds.Then giving himself a bath with his socks and shirt on. Oh, to be a little boy! I love it.
The weather was beautiful on Friday so we went to "Aunt Kake's" house. Mya taught Abram how to blow bubbles but I'm sure he ate more than he blew.
Swinging in the hammock. Abram is a big Mya fan. He says her name at least 20 times a day and has for several weeks.
The paddle boat even made an appearance since it was so nice out.
Dad took us to breakfast at Hy-Vee Saturday morning.
Mr. Monkey found someone to climb on.
On Sunday we went prom dress shopping with Jason's mom, aunt and cousin at Jordan Creek and Abram got to walk around the pond.


And look at all the "pish."
Lots of fun with Grandma "Rhon-na"
There was also a very fun party in our honor. Many friends and family came to celebrate our adoption and gift us with some things we still needed.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Adoption & Assumptions

I'm posting another great post I found at Rage Against the Minivan yesterday. It was a guest post by Kathryn about adoption and assumptions. So much of her post rings very true for my life and I know the lives of my friends who are unable to get pregnant. The only part of her post that is not true for me is that I don't mind people asking me about our adoption or if Abram was adopted. Those are always good opportunities to tell of God's faithfulness (and to help promote adoption!).

What I want you to know is that I’m tired of the assumptions people often make about us as a transracial adoptive family and the choices that we’ve made. Mainly, I’m tired of people assuming that we chose adoption because our "Plan A" – having biological children – didn’t work out for us. Adoption was and always has been God’s Plan A for us. Whether or not we can or can’t have children is irrelevant to the conversation, and I cringe to think of what my son will think when he’s old enough to understand what people (typically strangers) mean by the question, “so you adopted because you can’t have children?”

I want you to know how upsetting it is when someone tells me a story about a friend they know who got pregnant after adopting, and how that could happen to me, too. If I had a dime for everyone who said “Oh, just adopt, and you’ll get pregnant!” I would have… well, a lot of dimes. We did not adopt our son as a last resort, or as a Plan B, or in some weird scheme to get pregnant; and I never want him to have to hear this and think that we did. Assuming that we would rather have had a biological child instead of our beautiful, joyful, animated little boy implies that he was not part of God's plan for our family. It implies that if we were to get pregnant now, that child would be more loved or more legitimately our son or daughter than our adopted son. My little boy is my son, and I am his mother.

I want you to know that I’m tired of complete strangers assuming that it’s OK to ask us questions about our reproductive capabilities, or why we chose international adoption instead of domestic adoption, or how much our adoption cost (no, we didn’t choose international adoption because it’s “easier”, because we didn’t want an open adoption, or any of the other reasons people often assume). These are personal questions that people shouldn’t assume we want to share. This also goes for questions about our son’s history and his biological mother, as well. I’m still looking for that polite, yet firm, reply that communicates that no one should ever be asking these questions of an adoptive parent because it’s none of their business.

I want you to know that sometimes, I would like to go somewhere and meet new people and introduce my son and not have to talk about how he was adopted. I would like him to be able to go to a play group or a park or the mall and not have someone ask a question that then labels him as my “adopted son.” I would love it if people would look at him as just my son, because that’s who he is. I wish that he wouldn’t have to feel the weight of that label everywhere he goes as he grows older. That the history of his first six months before he came to us would be valued, but also placed appropriately in the master scheme of his life story.

I want you to know how discouraging and isolating it is to be in a group of women exchanging pregnancy and birth stories and talking about the first few weeks and months of motherhood, and to be completely left out of the conversation because of the assumption that I have nothing to contribute. I may not have a graphic pregnancy and labor story, but I did labor in other ways to bring my son home.

I want you to know how absolutely infuriating it is to hear someone refer to adoption as the “easy” route to parenthood over a traditional pregnancy. As if eight months of intense paperwork and intrusive home study visits added to nine months of interminable waiting just to see our son’s face, plus an additional four months of waiting and court dates (and failed court dates) all before we could even hold him were somehow easy or easier. I realize that not having had the option to refuse an epidural doesn’t give me much street cred in mom’s groups, but really – do people actually think that adoption is somehow easy?

There were days when I did nothing but cry out to God to move heaven and earth to bring our son home to us. Days when I was capable of nothing but of thinking of him and longing for him to be in my arms, and praying that he was safe and healthy and loved until I could go and get him. Days when just the sight of the crib waiting empty in his room was enough to make me burst into tears. Months that went by when friends became pregnant and had their children in the space of time while we waited just to find out who our son was. He wasn’t in my womb for nine months, but God placed him in my heart and mind and soul in the years that we waited for him.

And those first few weeks once our son was home? Even though he was six months old when we brought him home, we were essentially caring for a newborn because of his developmental lags. I’ve experienced the sleepless nights, the feedings every three hours, the waking up in a panic throughout the night just to make sure he’s breathing.

I wish people would ask me about my first few weeks and months with my son, rather than assuming that because we adopted him that he somehow arrived to us exactly as he is now. I would like to be able to share about how my husband and I learned how to be parents in another country, in a tiny hotel suite shared with another couple and their two children that they had also just met. How we managed to make it through our first week as a family with rolling electrical blackouts and no heat (yes, Africa can be cold), or a pediatrician to call, or hospitals with first-world-level care, or access to family members or friends or even Google for questions or help. How we flew almost 24 hours on no sleep, with flights full of witnesses watching our every parenting snafu, with a sick baby that we had only just begun to understand and parent. How we made it through our first few weeks of breathing treatments and atomic green poo and frequent bottles to make sure our tiny baby gained weight. How even when he was asleep, I had trouble sleeping because I was so worried about his health.

Maybe it’s conceited to think so, but I believe that this is our ‘labor story’. I believe it’s a crucial part of who we are as parents. But outside of our friends and family members who know our story, people rarely ask. Instead, they ask the intrusive questions - the questions about his birth mother, and why we chose international adoption, and whether or not we can have biological children. They often assume that because I didn’t give birth to my son, I have little or nothing to offer to a parenting conversation.

I want you to know that I’m not bitter about how people respond to us as a family, or the questions that are asked, or the stares that we get when we’re in public. I’m working hard to make every annoying or hurtful assumption become a gentle learning experience for the person who makes it. Before we began this journey I made many of the same mistaken assumptions, and I'm sure that I made hurtful comments unwittingly. I wish that someone who had adopted had communicated what they were going through to me so that I could have come alongside them and helped them bear the burden, rather than making things more difficult.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Spring Break with the Kids

Jason had to go to a Cedar Rapids Roughriders Hockey game on Saturday night because it was ALS night and they were raising money for ALS. We left Abram with some friends and took Brady and his best friend, Ben Ward.
We got to sit in a suite, which made it more fun!
Needless to say, the boys had a ton of fun and spent the night at our house since we got home at 1:00am.
I don't have pictures from Monday, but my good friend, Beth, and her 8 and 10 year old kids came to hang out. We hung out at Kate's and the kids played outside the entire time and had a blast. Chloe, Beth's 10 year old, took complete care of Abram so I didn't have to watch him while he ran around with all the big kids.

On Tuesday, Kate and I loaded up all the kids and headed to Iowa City to visit the Bodins. The Bodins used to live a few houses down from the Ehresmans so the kids are all great friends. And Kate and I missed Holly.

Lots of mouths to feed at lunch (one Mr. Caleb Bodin is hiding from the camera!)
But, I caught him the next time!
They did lots of jumping on the trampoline. Abram had a blast!

Lots of kids playing and women chatting. It was wonderful!
Hard to say goodbye!
I have been squealing with excitement at the fabulous weather and fun we've been able to have outside. I feel like a new person. Bye-bye late winter blues!

Monday, March 14, 2011

Kingdom Hoops

I recommend reading this great article from the Des Moines Register about our friends, the Sullivans, and Jake's Kingdom Hoops program and vision. They recently adopted a 6 year old boy from Africa. I love what God is doing in and through them!

Friday, March 11, 2011

Children of God

If you have five minutes to spare, this video is well worth the wait to the end of the video. It is powerful. It makes me cry out to God that our kids will understand what a beautiful picture their physical adoptions are of God's adopting them.

Inspired

Have you heard of this show? It is my favorite show on TV. I don't get to watch it much, but when I do, I love it! Nate Berkus is a designer and his show is all about decorating, design, organizing, painting, DIY projects, etc. Right up my alley! We don't have cable so it is the only design show on "regular" TV (Channel 13/NBC at 2:00p).

I have been inspired with many fun ideas from Nate that I'm hoping (if I have time) to incorporate into our new house. One of them is to try to re-upholster a chair and paint it a fun color (instead of black, like I would typically do).

Since we bought our house, I have become a regular at the ISU surplus sale (Wednesdays, 1:00-3:00p in the warehouse building back by Ag Leader off of Airport Road). This past Wednesday I picked up this funky chair for a whopping $3. I figured that was the right price to try a new idea on.
The more I look at the chair, the more I actually really like it. I wouldn't even mind leaving it brown, but it needs touched up in many places.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Little Gangster!

Abram saw me wearing this "hat" yesterday and wanted to try it for himself. Too stinkin' cute!He is checking himself out in the mirror.It has been awhile since Abram's girlfriend, Jaida, has made a blog appearance. Here they are eating snacks together last Friday. I swear if we took them out in public together people might think they are twins!


Sunday, March 6, 2011

Womanhood - A Stamp of Approval

While infertility is not a regular struggle in my life anymore, I will always have a heart for those in the midst of this struggle and a desire to help fertile people understand and love those going through the painful struggle of infertility.

It is for that reason that I am posting this great quote I recently came across:

(Regarding adopting their daughter) . . . "Yes, her arrival filled the void we felt in our family and we were so grateful for the gift of adoption, however, a successful adoption does not erase the pain of infertility. When a woman is pregnant it is like a great confirmation of her womanhood - a stamp of approval that she is worthy to create life. I still had that lingering feeling of being passed over, of somehow not being worthy of that gift (that may sound severe, but I am sure I am not alone in this feeling).

No, the woman who wrote this is certainly not alone in this feeling. I almost felt a huge sigh of relief after I first read this quote. It explained something I've never been able to put words to. From time-to-time I still get a pit-in-my-stomach feeling when I see pregnant women or hear a pregnancy announcement. And it doesn't make sense to me because I am totally fine not ever being pregnant (I am quite happy to adopt any other kids God wants to give us). But this quote explains my feelings exactly - and the feelings of several other women who can't get pregnant that I have sent it to!

I also recently read this great article for friends of family of people who are struggling with infertility.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Adoption Update

I should have combined this post with the picture of Abram in his Africa shirt but I guess I was too excited about the shirt!

We finally received the first of many adoption documents we have been waiting for since December. It took our friends six weeks to get these same documents for their boys and it has taken us three months. BUT, you will hear no complaining from me! It seems God orchestrated this to allow time for Him to provide us with a bigger house. If we would have gotten the documents in six weeks, we would not have had time to buy a house and move before the kids come.

I'm waiting for the documents to be translated to English. Once we get the English translations (in a week) I can send everything in with the I-600. From there, it should take about three months (or so) for the kids to arrive. If it weren't for us needing time to buy and move into a new house I would be getting very antsy waiting. Fortunately, I have plenty to do to keep me busy until then!

We also received Isaiah's birth certificate and finally know his birth date. I have been looking forward to finding out his birth date (even though it is probably not accurate) to know how far apart in age he and Abram are. His birthday is in October 2008, which makes Abram and Isaiah only six months apart! And in the same grade (potentially). LOVE IT! It also means Isaiah is just one month older than my nephew, Greysen. Fun!

The. Best. Shirt. Ever.

Thanks Brian, Allie & Reese Wulfekuhle for the awesome gift!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Why Jillian Michaels is Leaving Biggest Loser

I couldn't resist sharing this (from MLJ Adoption's blog), especially since we are watching Biggest Loser and just read this news . . .

Jillian Michaels Announces Adopting From DRCongo

Once again, a celebrity is calling attention to international and transracial adoption. Have you heard? TV’s toughest trainer is taking on another role, that of motherhood. One of The Biggest Loser trainers, Jillian Michaels, is adopting from theDemocratic Republic of Congo.
Michaels, featured as one of the reality show’s key trainers, announced that she was leaving The Biggest Loser after eleven seasons to become a mother. She later shared that she would be adopting and was already in the middle of her process, "I want to start a family. I'd like to take a year off of television and really focus on - I'm in the middle of the adoption process - and really focus on that and hopefully becoming a mother in the next year and putting all my energy into that for awhile.” Like many parents, Michaels has found the adoption process to be “an incredible undertaking.” She has tweeted that she has completed her home study paperwork. She is currently waiting to receive the referral of her child.
We are thrilled that a role model like Jillian is bringing attention to adoption and the orphan crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo. We know many will be following her progress and cheering for her as she continues through the process. Since we opened our adoption program in the Democratic Republic of Congo, we have helped 15 children come home to the United States, and we look forward to bringing home many, many more in 2011. Married couples, single men and single women can adopt from DR Congo. Singles must adopt children of the same sex. To find out more about our Congo adoption program, contact Sonja Brown.

Towers

This is what Abram is really into these days.Building 'towers.'


He lost quite a bit of weight while he was sick. Fortunately, he had a pretty big belly and plenty of meat on his bones to spare. The way he is eating lately, I'm sure he will be back to normal in no time.