Sunday, April 20, 2008

5 ... 4 ... 3 ... 2 ...

Last we heard our LOI is still processing happily along, and we are still on schedule.

It's hard to believe we are really this close. We are still very calm, although we are definitely abuzz with tying up loose ends, dotting i’s, crossing t’s, making lists and checking them thrice. You wouldn’t believe all the minutiae of getting ready to walk out that front door. We are 95% there. Most of what is left to do are things that can only be done once we receive that golden ticket.


POX ALERT
There has been an outbreak of Chicken Pox in one of the Aqtobe orphanages! We think it is confined to the toddler house and that the children we will be meeting are in the baby house, but I’m not sure. We were told it won't delay our LOI, but it's up to us if we want to wait until the outbreak is over. Um....no freaking way, Jose!


I already had Chicken Pox (a mild case as a child and a bad case as a teen.) Frank thinks he only had a very mild case as a child, but he isn’t sure. To be safe he got an antibody test to check his immunity level. If need be, he will simply get a vaccine and should be fine. Of course, we will be bringing some extra meds for Habibi just in case he/she becomes ill after we get custody. He/she might be sick at our first meeting. What an interesting first sight that would be! We would have to do a re-write of the song, The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face. Let's see, what rhymes with "your blisters were just starting to crust over..."



WHY I CAN’T STOP HUMMING A CERTAIN DISCO SONG
I recently joined Charleston’s Freecycle Yahoo group, and within 3 days I had picked up a free, child’s outdoor roller coaster. A new one costs $100 bucks at Toys R Us. This one was in excellent condition, except for the plump black widow spider I found hiding under the step, alongside her large egg sac! We're not the bug killer types, but Ms. Widow and her brood quickly met their doom.

The stickers had peeled off the little car, so my nieces, Kirsten and Gabrielle, did a beautiful job drawing new designs on it with different colored permanent markers. On the front it says “Rolly Ruopoli Coaster.” I love it -- even with the extra L in Roly! It certainly serves as a tangible little metaphor for the adoption process, although not nearly a wild enough ride.


We have been trying to buy toys that are made of natural or organic materials such as wood and cotton, and are built to last (we felt this way even before the news was splattered with China product recalls.) We know our it’s very idealistic, but we can always try. But it has already been hard to resist the plethora of plastic junk from China because it’s cheap and convenient.



GOT BENEFITS?
Not long ago I had a meeting with the president and HR director of the company I work for, where I made a proposal requesting that they provide employer adoption benefits to employees, and of course me in particular! I essentially asked for benefits comparable to what biological moms are offered. I've been told that they have approved a new policy, and I should know the details this week!


Anyone out there who would like to encourage your employer to consider adoption benefits, there is a boatload of helpful information at http://www.adoptionfriendlyworkplace.com/ and http://www.davethomasfoundation.org/.


I must mention that both of our employers and colleagues have been incredibly supportive and caring throughout this process. Without their flexibility and willingness to accommodate our needs we could not be doing this. We extend our deepest appreciation to them! We promise to bring Habibi into the office soon after we are home, and thoroughly disrupt workflow and halt productivity like a good new parent should. Start practicing your ooohs and aaahhs!



REGISTRY
We have been asked a lot lately if we have a registry. We are registered at Babies R Us, and I added a link to our links section in the right column. We will try to update it from Kaz once we know more about our child. We're very excited that our family/friends are planning a shower when we return, as well as my co-workers. They wanted to wait until we have our child so they can be more targeted in their gift-giving.




TODDLER PONDERINGS
With the big possibility of adopting a toddler, we are preparing ourselves to spend a long time on focusing on attachment and bonding even more intensely than before. The first year home will be important in laying a super-solid foundation for our strong family connection, as well as helping our little one have healthy relationships in all areas of his/her life. It will take an elevated degree of mindfulness, but we are up to it.


I do wonder if we will sometimes wrongly attribute normal behavior to adoption-related issues. Maybe this goes away after the first year or two, or maybe not. But we will trust our intuition, as I think we are both reasonably perceptive and certainly devoted to getting it right. The educational courses and self-study we’ve been through in preparation have been invaluable. There are so many great resources out there.


It also has helped, and will continue to help, to have the insight of intelligent and sensitive parents who have been in our shoes. I’m not exaggerating when I say that the adoptive parent world is full of some of the kindest and most generous people on earth!


Speaking of which… I want to send out a special thank you to Jennifer M (Gigi’s mom) for sending me this great article on attachment. Here is an excerpt: "Do not believe in Insta-Attachment. It is a fairytale that ultimately prevents you from really seeking out the deepest part of your child's heart and searching for true healing instead of proper behaviors. It is worth the search. It may take much longer than you had hoped for. Your emails to family and friends may be lacking in the instant gratification. But the long, slow simmer of true attachment in the end is stronger, more deeply satisfying and more healing."



CAFE PRESS STORE
We set up a Cafe Press Store a while back to create some custom tees and such for our child. I thought I'd share it with other Kaz families in case they see something they like. Check it out: http://www.cafepress.com/kazadopt


12 comments:

Susan said...

I love the rollercoaster-how fun is that....and extra fun cuz it was free! thaT IS SO COOL!!!
It's hard to not get sucked into the toy buying craze, but kids seems to prefer boxes, toilet paper rolls, and sticks to toys. I think I had more fun with Sean's toys then he did.
You are so right on the sweet adoptive parents out there. The resources are GREAT, but talking to "real live parents" who "been there, done that" carry so much weight. It just helps for someone else to say, OH YEAH, WE WENT THRU THAT.
Heck, I do that often with my son. I am like, man, his focus is nill-and all the other 4th grade mom's (especially of BOYS) CHIME in and say 'Oh you are so on" and we all commisserate togehter. :)
Other moms are so helpful. :)

I am super excited for you to meet Habibi.

Good for you for getting adoption benefits at your company. You are a mover and a shaker girl!
I have NO doubt that you will form an unbreakable bond with your child. :)

Our Family of Bloggers said...

I am so excited for "Blastoff!" You guys are so close! The chicken pox were in Astana when we were there. They use this crazy green ointment to keep the spots from itching- it makes for quite a site. I love the roller coaster- especially the name. How cute and creative of your nieces. That is great that your company was so progressive and receptive to your efforts- I tried with my old job, but was not successful at all. And as far as the attachment goes- you know my two cents/ $20 on that already. You two will do great in forming a meaningful, deep, secure relationship with Habibi. I am a big believer is common sense and instinct in reading the child's needs. Don't let ANYONE (no matter how well trained they are) tell you what to do if you feel like you are reading your child's needs. Use the tools you were given as a foundation, but most of all, follow your instincts with reading Habibi's needs and you guys will do beautifully. And as far as the struggle- it is never ending. Let me know if you figure out a solution!

Kaz Blog Reader said...

Regina, Haven't been by in a while...4 year olds take up alot of time! Sounds like the countdown is here. Love the t-shirts...probably will have to get one! We have the rollercoaster...hand-me-down but oh, so popular!
And, yes, it is hard to tell the difference in normal toddler behavior and adoption related issues....all are crazy at time! ;)
You will learn your child and be patient with yourself. They may be acting like normal toddlers but we are not normal parents...we are newborn parents....it is all new...we havent had 1,2,or 3 years to "know" them and their cues...so it won't feel normal (I actually started to resent people that said that but I am over it!) ha! But, you will feel so great and so accomplished the first time you realize, oh, he is just tired, or hungry, etc. So, Just be ready when someone says "oh that is so normal, or my child does that too", those words may not help how you are feeling! :) These sweet kids are very schedule and routine oriented and you will be surprised at how they do so much better with routine or I guess I should say, how much more chaotic things can get if you don't stay on a routine? lol! It is harder in Kaz because they are so overstimulated once leaving the babyhouse but just plan ahead in all of those free hours not at the baby house and get right to a routine once home. It worked great with Nick and it really helped an otherwise chaotic year! ;) I am so thrilled for you both. It is the greatest journey ever!
Karen (Kitzkazventure blog)

Jennifer said...

Oh dear! I wrote a comment yesterday, but clearly it did not take. Must not have liked something I said. :-) I will try to re-create:

I love it! "No freakin' way, Jose!" Too funny. And oh my gosh, I almost spewed my beverage all over my monitor when I read your um... very descriptive song lyrics. :-) I will pray Habibi doesn't have the chicken pox soley due to the song! :-)

Thanks for the shout out. I'm totally with you on attachment. It's not always the easiest digging deep, but it is SOOOO worth it.

Your work place is awesome! What a wonderful group of people. Mine was good, but Jim's offered nothing. Not a thing. And they weren't open to changing either. Very disappointing.

L-O-I! L-O-I!! (I'm chanting.)

Very cute roller coaster! It looks like so much fun. That was very sweet of the girls to decorate it all up for Habibi.

Kaz Blog Reader said...

My comment from this morning didn't take either, but I attributed it to little helping hands :)

Isn't freecycle great! We are part of the SD one and I can't believe how generous people are. what a great way to share stuff and not deal with yardsales.

Good luck on the natural toy front: my mom ruined this for us the minute we walked in the door. Sigh.

We are very excited for you guys! Toddlers are fun - as Karen said, though, we are all new parents and the kiddos are ready to roll. You guys will do fabulous with the child who is meant to be in your family - regardless how old.

Kaz Blog Reader said...

Oh- I forgot to sign my name above, sorry!
_Julie

Alysa said...

I love that rollercoaster! So very cool and so much fun!

Wow! What a post! HR benefits to chicken pox. Congrats on getting your HR department to consider adoption benefits. My company had a benefit, we moved our HQ to a different state and hired an entirely new HR department. When I called/emailed about the benefit, heard nothing for about 2 weeks, then the benefit suddenly reappeared, but in a different form and a lower amount. I think I prompted a change. Sigh.

Lots going on in your world! Hang in there!

Alysa

Catalina said...

Glad to hear you are still on the schedule with your LOI, it means it should arrive pretty soon. The Roller-Coaster seems so fun, as Susan said, I am looking at all kind of toys that we have for Yulia and Gabi, and not sure about them, but I can`t wait to play with them:). It will be fun.
I can not give too many advices on attachment and bonding. Reading many books, consult specialists or ask other parents for their opinion, but most important as you said build a relationship with your child, spend time together, love him/her and build her/his trust and the attachment will come. I dont think you will have big problems with a child younger than 2 year old, though.
Just trying to put myself in Gabi`s shoes, it will be very difficult for him. Its going to be a completely different world, of course he is going to need some time until he gets attached to us. I am sure he did not understand too much in those 2 weeks we spent together and I wish I could stay for the whole trip. Honestly I am so scared of the attachment issues.
I love the Cafe Press store, great ideas.

Chrissy and Russell said...

Regina, I love your latest 2 posts... I so appreciate your feeling of sadness about the adoption process not going smoother. As I was complaining about that to Russell one day, he said, "You sound like you feel you've been cheated somehow." I guess it's like that... I can't relaly put my finger on how I feel. It's tough coming face to face with the reality of adoption, rather than the fantasy we all start out with.

Also - big congrats on getting your company's benefits changed. I used the Adoption Friendly Workplace materials to make numerous presentations to my employer. It took nearly a year, and they were less than understanding the whole time... but they finally changed their policy to allow adoptive parents to make use of their maternity leave policy. My agency even invited me to be a guest speaker at one of their parent education seminars a few months ago, speaking on "How to Lobby Your Employer for Adoption Benefits"! :^)

And finally (sorry for the long comment post here...) "LIMINALITY" is such an awesome word. I taught a 2-week writing course for freshman a year or so ago, and the theme was "Liminality". I don't know why I never attached it to this process... this is clearly a liminal time for us. Perfect description... niether here nor there, but on the threshold of change. Thanks for reminding me of that.

cindy said...

Regina and Frank,
Will you be my parents? You are so amazing at realistically thinking these things through with grace and patience. I am in awe. When we went through our process with China lo these four years ago, I was a freakin' mess! I tried to hold it together primarily through excel spreadsheets. I am so excited that you are thisclose -- we are coming up on a year from your graduation when we first talked about our respective adoption plans! We are now, we hope, fingers crossed but of course it all could change any second (how is that for a caveat) PROBABLY about 4 weeks out from our referral for Ethiopia. Much love and luck on your once in a lifetime trip to find your forever famly. xo, Cindy, Matt and Astrid

cindy said...

Oh - and I have to second that I loved the post on liminality since, as you know, I spend my falls teaching that course about thresholds and rites of passage :) .... Cindy (again)

Kelly and Sne said...

Wow - where do I start? You've been busy! The motivation really kicks in once you know it's going to be on you any minute! I love the rollercoaster. I've been perusing garage sales, craigs list, etc. for second hand finds too. My latest is a swingset/jungle gym combo (maybe I'd better check for spiders!) and Sne wasn't real thrilled because he'll have to put it together! Glad that you're doing your homework too. I think it is so important to know what you're potentially dealing with. Better to be overprepared than under. Of course, you have the whole Kaz adoption community to fall back on for support though...

Glad that things are still progressing as planned (seems like a miracle these days!). Yea, and good luck with that chicken pox thing! Sne hasn't had them yet so we'd probably have to avoid that scene. I had them so bad as a child they were in my ear canals and up my pee-pee. No fun!

Thanks for the cafe press tip - I'll check it out.

Happy packing and planning and acquiring and preparing!