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Speaking a Blessing

July 25th, 2008

In the evenings when all is calm in our house I spend a bit of time going through a list of blogs that I enjoy following. A handful of these blogs are from fellow adoptive parents and friends who are reflecting upon raising their children and their current adoption journies. My husband looks across the room at me as I laugh out loud at their stories, as I shake my head in understanding at their experiences on the adoption road, and as I let out a sigh that communicates that thier words made an impact on my heart.
I want to share with you a glimpse of a blog that is written by a friend of mine who is currently in the waiting phase of the adoption process for a sibling set from Ethiopia, Africa. She and her husband along with their three children began the adoption process thinking they would adopt one child at this time and perhaps adopt again in the future. But, they have chosen to adopt a sibling set after considering how many children in the world need to wake up in the stable and loving arms of a family. They are prayerful, hopeful, exicted, and have open and ready hearts. Sherry uses her blog as a way to get her feelings out as she waits. It is a form of therapy that many a felllow adoptive mother has found!
She posted yesterday that although she knew the day would come she found herself unprepared at the first negative comment made to her regarding the adoption of her children. I do not konw the exact comment that was made to her, but I do know that it was an implied that by adoption older siblings of another race she was setting herself up for uneeded difficulties. The comments hit her heart and she was not able to simply let them go.
Words have power.
A day later a friend spoke another set of powerful words over her. This time the power of the words were not destructive, instead they fortified the stronghold of her dedication to her adoption, beliefs, and faith. Read slowly.

“Therefore, my dear brothers, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.” ~ 1 Corinthians 15:58

My friends wrote in her blog this that I want to share:
“And so I’ve been pondering on the power of the spoken word. It can be a curse or a blessing. How often have I failed to speak encouragement over someone who needs it? Do I only encourage when I sense someone is down and out? How often have I spoken careless words that have left a sting in someone else’s spirit? How often have I tried to encourage someone with my own words, when the Lord’s words would be so much better? Ask the Lord to give you a word for someone who needs to hear from Him. Your words are more powerful than you know! So I encourage first myself and then you – speak blessing and encouragement over those you encounter today.”

Today, after you take a sneak peak at the Semlow Adoption Blog I ask you to take some time to consider her words. Speak blessings to those around you. And, just for an added blessing to yourself if you know another adoptive parent give them a call and with your words lift them up. Your words will come back to them during a time when someone else may have spoken destruction.

The Top Adoption Friendly Workplaces

July 25th, 2008

The Dave Thomas Foundation has released their annual Best Adoption Friendly Workplaces recently. 100 workplaces have been chosen based on 919 surveys completed by U.S. employers. They are judged upon both the amount of paid leave given to adoptive parents and the amount of financial reimbursement offered.
As adoptive families advocate for benefits each year there is a increase in employers giving adoption benefits. If you would like to learn more about the top 100 workplaces and how to help advocate for adoption benefits from your employer you can visit The Dave Thomas Foundation and Adoptive Families Magazine.

The Day She Prayed

June 17th, 2008

A few months ago I met a woman named Deb. She and I are close in age, both have one son that share a name, and have a real love for sharing a chaotic cup of coffee as the boys run circles around our feet with their cars, trucks, and sippycups.
Deb called yesterday. They received their referral for a little Ethiopian boy. She was a woman who’s spirit was running over with joy. Although she had only seen this child’s picture she has claimed him as her son, completely and entirely. She has set her love on him and although he does not know it yet he has a family once more.
Deb told me a story that I must share. She said that a few weeks ago she felt conviction for not praying about her adoption process enough. Like most of us she was coping with the wait by putting it in the back of her mind. But, God spoke clearly to her. He told her to pray and she did. Deb sat down in her chair and began journaling. She wrote a simple prayer, “Whose ever heart beats closest to his, help them to love him and protect him.”
A few days later Deb received a call from her social worker. The very day that Deb wrote out her prayer for her unknown son a little boy had been surrendered to an orphanage in Ethiopia by a loving family member. That little boy is now her son and she knows fully that her prayer came to be. Her son was loved, dearly. Her son was cherished, dearly. Her son is coming home soon.

For Deb and all of those waiting~ keep praying! Cover your children, even if you know nothing about them yet, in prayer. Lift them up to the Lord, who loves them in a powerful way, so that they may be protected mind, body, and spirit.

Deb, we wait eagerly for your little son to arrive home on that airplane. We rejoice with you. We wait with you. We celebrate his family in Ethiopia, his life, and his future as a child that has been rescued by the love of Christ!

A Distant Grief

June 2nd, 2008

I am reading a book called, A Distant Grief. I was written by F. Kefa Sempangi. I am on page three and have already been busy using my highlighter and dialoging passionately with my husband about the words on the page before me. I feel as if I am having a cup of coffee with the author, he is talking calmly and confidently meanwhile my mind is being blown as I attempt to act non-challant at our table.
He writes about the reign of terror under Idi Amin in Uganda, about the church, about light diminishing darkness. What he says entirely I do not know yet as again I am on page three.

Many of us are sitting in our living rooms thinking about the people in China that have endured the earthquakes and aftershocks. We think of the people of Myanmar who have endured the recent cyclone. These two events alone have resulted in hundreds of thousands of people finding themselves in the midst of great loss and uncertainty, of pain and poverty, of disease and displacement.

Then there are those living all around us who are homeless, hungry, lost. There are people in the Sudan, Chechnya, Congo to name a few that are experiencing torture. There are children growing up not knowing what safety and security are like, entire generations being raised in nothing but bloodshed.

Within our communities there is human trafficking, child abuse, domestic violence.
We read beautiful books such as, The Kite Runner, and are deeply touched by the stories of those that have endured oppression. I watched the movie with my husband. When we turned it off I sobbed and sobbed. “This type of horror is happening to people in our world, honey.” I kept crying until finally it was time to move on.

But, that last statement right there is what keeps bugging me. “Time to move on….” when exactly is that? My heart tells me that it is never time to move on.

So, why is it that we do move on? That we turn our eyes onto our own agendas?
That we spend our money on fleeting fashion rather than helping our starving brothers? That we stay quiet rather than advocating for those that are not being heard? That we ignore what is truly going on around us?

Sempangi writes, ” In that moment I learned a new truth. I learned that just as there is a boundary beyond which human beings cannot comprehend the glory of God, so there is a boundary beyond which they cannot comprehend the evil in this world. There is a boundary beyond which everything is a senseless chasm. It is here in the nightmare of utter chaos that human feeling dies. It is here, where death and terror seem to have full dominion, that even the deepest sorrow becomes but a distant grief.”

I like this. It makes sense to me. If I could comprehend the glory of God in it’s fullness then I would have to turn the TV off. I think if I truly could comprehend all of God’s glory then I have to admit I would be a little crazy in my efforts to praise Him. Just the same, if I truly could comprehend the plights facing my fellow human beings, my brothers and sisters in Christ, on a daily basis I do not think I could function as a normal person. I think I would be a little crazy in my efforts to help them.

But, I have to ask…what is wrong with being a little crazy? Just because we can not comprehend his full glory does not mean that his Glory does not exsist. In fact, we miss out when we ignore it. Just because we can not comprehend all the pain and darkness going on around us does not mean it does not exsist.

There is grief around us. There is a need for Light to shine and take over the darkness. We are to be that Light. Turn off your TV, turn away from the computer, do what you must to help those that need help.

May the Glory of God shine on you as you shine Light on the darkness!

URGENT: Prayer for the Chapman Family

May 23rd, 2008

Just 36 hours ago, Maria Sue Chapman, adopted and youngest daughter of Steven Curtis & Mary Beth Chapman, was killed in a tragic accident in the family driveway. She was LifeFlighted to Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, but for only reasons God can explain, she went home to Him.

The news was like a shot to the hearts of tens of thousands of men and women, sons and daughters, moms and dads that have been impacted by this incredible family. Steven and Mary Beth are the founders of Shaohannahs Hope, an organization created to reach orphans and help remove the financial barriers of adoption. It’s impossible to imagine the grief that the Chapmans are feeling tonight. It’s beyond grasp.

For those of you that don’t know of the Chapmans, they are amazing. Just one year ago, I had the opportunity to meet Stephen up close. He flew in for one night to give a free concert to some of us attending an event called Adoption Summit III. As a top GRAMMY-winning, DOVE award winning Christian recording artist, this wasn’t a glory event for him. It was just a group of people who had given their lives to those considered least in the world. . . orphans.

Steven’s wife Mary Beth couldn’t make it . . . she was busy being a mom. But in classic fashion, she sent a video she made that morning. It was her and their three adopted daughters. They encouraged us all to not give up and continue fighting the good fight.

Right after that, Steven shared a song with us that he had never played publicly before. It was simply called “Cinderella”. As my own adopted daughter plays with a pink ribbon right next to me and in light of this tragedy, Stephen’s lyrics carry new and even more profound meaning today. We’ll never listen to this song the same again.

“So I will dance with Cinderella
While she is here in my arms
‘Cause I know something the prince never knew
Oh I will dance with Cinderella
I don’t wanna miss even one song,
(even one song)
Cuz all to soon the clock will strike midnight
And she’ll be gone”

The Chapmans are a family that will make it through this incredible tragedy. Their life is based on a deep devotion to the one true God. They will never waiver. But right now, more then ever, they need our collective prayers.

When we search for words at times of great loss and heartache they often seem lacking in power and depth. We ask ourselves if there is something we can do to convey our heart, our shared sadness, our support for a friend. We can pray. Prayer is powerful, real, raw. It is not cliche’, but alive and active.

Today, we ask that you pray for the Chapman family. Despite believing fully that their sweet daughter, Maria Sue, is joyful and safe in Heaven we know that they have heavy hearts and carry a deep grief within them. Please embrace the Chapman family now through your prayers. We desire to have them covered night and day in prayer.

———————–

Jesus,

May guilt not be allowed to abide in the hearts of this family. May you, Jesus, give them full confidence in your promises, plan, and unfailing love for Maria Sue and their family.

May they know, fully, that they have not said goodbye. May they be a comfort to one another, bind them together Lord, speak to them continuously of your love for them.

Fill them, Jesus, with the peace that passes all of our understanding.

Amen

———————-

We invite you to post your prayer for the Chapmans right here. Please take a moment and do so. Simply click on “Submit Comment”.

* In lieu of flowers, the Chapmans request any gifts be directed to Shaohannah’s Hope.

National Foster Care Month

May 22nd, 2008

Take a moment and learn more about foster care as the Seattle based Casey Family Programs celebrates twenty years of May as National Foster Care Month. There are more than a half a million children in foster care. Casey asks us to turn our attention to the needs of these children and to salute the foster care families, social workers, and advocates who care for them.
There are over 12 million foster care alumni living in the United States at present. Currently, there are over 513,000 American children in fostercare. They average 10 years old and will remain in the foster system over a year. Each year 20,000 children age-out of the foster care system.
Many of the children in the American foster care system have experience great loss, abuse, neglect, and exposure to addictions and instability. These children are in desperate need of every day adults to believe in them and care for them to empower them to overcome their troubled childhoods.
Thank you to all the unsung heroes of foster care children, to the foster parents, mentors, teachers, pastors, advocates, and friends. We salute you!

Please visit the foster care month website to learn more.

Mother’s Day

May 12th, 2008

I became a mother in Ethiopia, Africa. There was no pushing and panting that led to a climax of delivery. There was no hospital or full round tummy or maternity clothes. There was no ultrasound or hearing a heartbeat for the first time.
My motherhood journey began two years before I ever set my eyes on a little child sleeping in a tiny metal crib. It began with an conviction, then prayer, and paperwork. It continued with waiting and trips to Chicago and fingerprinting. We had days full of wondering and nights we stayed up asking questions that we may never have an answer for entirely. The time passed slowly and in this time many of my friends became pregnant, carried their sweet babies and delivered them into this world. Jason and I would go and visit with them, we would rejoice in the new life, and we would return home to wait more, to continue on with our journey.
I knew that somewhere in Ethiopia a story was taking place. In this story would be loss and tragedy and sickness and hurt. I knew that a day would pass by in which a child would be somehow and someway become without a family. I would sit on my front porch and sob. I would pray a covering over each day asking God to be in the unfolding story, to protect this child. What would I be doing the day that my child is abandoned? I wanted the answer to that question to be ‘praying for him’. And, so I did.
After we received our referral call our social worker sent me an email that had two pictures of Mussie attached. I opened them, my heart beating faster than it ever has before. I sat there in silence looking at his face, his eyes, his cheeks. I can not tell you what it feels like to receive an email, which normally delivers such ordinary news, and have it display the face of a child you have longed for. My child.
I remembering clearly thinking in my head, “You made it baby boy. Whatever happened to you, however horrible and hard, you made it.”
We printed off his pictures and would sleep with them next to our bed. At night we would cry together and talk to his little face. “We are coming for you!”, we would proclaim. Weeks later I boarded a flight that would take me on the first leg of my journey to Ethiopia. It was all a blur. The night I landed in Ethiopia the sounds of the Mosques and animals filled my head. I slurrped down some tea and a roll and crawled into bed. I was just moments, just a ten minute walk, from my son who had previously been across the world from me. I wondered if he knew at all down in the deep parts of his tiny spirit that his life was about to change, that he would once again have a family?
He was asleep when I arrived at the orphanage. I did not want to wake him. I waited and waited, just watching him. The years of waiting overtook me and I scooped him up into my arms, pulled him close to me, and when he began to whimper my voice comforted him. Imprinted in my memory, treasured, is that moment when he curiously glanced over my face as I said to him, “I am your Mommy….”.
I had a son. He had a mommy. Jason, thousands of miles away, was a father. Through soft singing, kisses, lots of hugs and holding him close trust was born. Each day that I returned for him, that we built memories, that my hands fed him that trust grew into reliance and affection and eventually the deep bond between a child and a parent. I will never forget the day that I walked into Layla House and the look on his face spoke that he knew I was coming for him, that to me he was the world, he was chosen, spoken for, cherished.
There was a time that he would not sleep unless we were touching. First, he had to be on my chest, tightly wrapped in the covers with me. In time he would sleep laying beside me as long as my arm was around him. More time passed and he would sleep holding my hand tightly. One night he clung to my hair and slept above my head on the pillow. Now we give hugs and kisses and smiles and songs to one another. He sleeps confidently in his own bed and wakes up cheerful, not afraid or alone or uncertain.

I have never once, not even for a moment, mourned that I was not able to give birth to him. God delivered him right into our arms, there is nothing more powerful than this.
I have mourned, at times, for what took place in his life before we became us. Today, especially, as he is sleeping happily in his bed with Grover snuggled next to him, thoughts of his birth family are in my heart. I want them to know that he is happy, safe, and adored. I want them to know that he is intelligent and compassionate and funny…that he loves to run around naked…that he pulls the cats tail…that he can count to ten. I want them to know that he snores at night when he sleeps and that he wakes up talking about Elmo and cars and Daddy. I want them to know that he loves to garden and watch airplanes fly by and he run in open spaces. I want them to know that at night as we prepare for rest we pray for them. I want them to know that pieces of them live on in his face, his eyes, and his features and this makes us proud and so eternally grateful for their lives.

Motherhood is the absolute hardest thing I have ever done. But, being Mussie’s mother is the best part of being me. He is my treasure and I truly am boastfully proud that he is ours and we are his.
Happy Mothers Day, me. The journey, the waiting, the travel, the adventure made me the momma of a precious child who’s kisses and giggles and boo-boo’s and love is mine each and every day. What a special celebration today that my husband and son gave to me. My heart is overjoyed.

Happy Mothers Day also to a woman somewhere in Ethiopia. Thank you. If ever those words held true gratitude and emotion they do now. Thank you. Thank you.

Day of Prayer for Guatemala

May 9th, 2008

I received an email this morning from my friend Lisa. In her email she asked me to do all that I could to encourage people to pray today. Lisa has every reason to ask this. She is one of the 2000 families in limbo while her heart waits in Guatemala to come home. Lisa, like the other 2000, was grandfathered into the old system and is awaiting news that their case has been released.
I called Lisa. She has recently returned from her third trip to Guatemala where she visits with her child and takes every opportunity to love on the other children. “What would you ask people to pray for today specifically?”, I asked her.
Just like a mother who has a full heart and mind she began spitting out thoughts and heartache and hopes a mile a minute.

For Lisa and the other 2000 families, for the birth families in Guatemala, and for the hundreds of thousands of children in Guatemala I ask you to stop now and join us in a day of prayer.

We pray for the children, who have no part in corruption, who are innocent and deserve only to be united with their forever families. We pray that they will be protected and that their bodies and spirits will be kept safe and nurtured as they wait. We pray that God would send his angles to watch over them. We pray that they would know that they are indeed cherished and loved.

We pray for the birth mothers and fathers of the children of Guatemala. For those that surrendered their rights, out of love for their child, and now may find themselves at risk we ask that God would watch over them, that they would find arms to embrace them, and forgiveness from their families and communities.

We pray for those women and men who have been deeply wounded by the corruption that has taken place, for those that may have lost children unfairly or through coercion. We ask that God would sustain them and comfort them. We pray that they would be reunited with their children and that this type of activity would cease to exist.

We pray for the 2000 families who are waiting eagerly for their children to come home. Lord, they have rooms prepared and their hearts are open and vulnerable with love for your children in Guatemala. As they continue to be “in process” we ask that you give them great confidence that their children will come home and the process will indeed end.

Lord you are greater than nations, you are more powerful than governments. The orphans of the world are cherished by you. Lord we ask that you would intervene on behalf of the orphans of Guatemala, for those that have been matched with families and those that have been left behind. Lord you have placed officials in governments for a reason. We pray that their hearts would be softened to the plight of the children in Guatemala and that they would actively work to do what is best for the children.

God, you who deliver us from bondage, you who delivers nations out of slavery, we ask that you deliver the children of Guatemala into the loving arms of their families.

Please take a moment today and participate in praying for the people of Guatemala, for the birth and adoptive families, and for the children. May they not be delayed anymore, may they not be forgotten.

Vietnam Closing Adoption Program with U.S.

April 28th, 2008

At this time the government of Vietnam has chosen to not renew their adoption agreement with the United States. The agreement, which is set to expire on September 1, 2008, was being renewed between the two governments in hopes of keeping the adoption doors open between the two countries. The United States has asked the Vietnam
government to set up regulations to stop pervasive corruption in the adoption field and to make sure that adoptions are in the best interest of the children and families. At this time Vietnam has refused to comply and will be shutting down forty-two U.S. adoption agencies within their country.
Vietnam has agreed to process all adoption applications submitted before July 1, 2008 if a child match has been made. But, The State Department has issued several warnings about adopting from Vietnam at this time and is highly encouraging American families to not adopt from Vietnam until further notice.
Please read the United States issues Adoption Warning published April 25, 2008 and the Summaries of Irregularities in Adoption in Vietnam. Both of these may be found through the Department of State website on Intercountry Adoption.

Ethio-American Kids Community Culture Camp

April 22nd, 2008

The Ethio-American Kids Community has just opened registration for their annual Ethiopian Culture Camp. The camp is open to families that have adopted children from Ethiopia, Africa or those that have a connection to Ethiopia and desire to share in the celebration and learning.
There are several options for lodging and meals, including a traditional Ethiopian dinner!
The event will take place at Wesley Woods Camp in beautiful southern Wisconsin from August 1st-3rd. For more information about the Ethiopian Culture Camp, registration, and the EAKC visit the Ethio-American Kids Community website.


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