Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Invitation to Rest



Last December I snuck away with two of my dearest friends for a rare, overnight get away.  We spent the evening worshipping, celebrating the beautiful anticipation of the Advent season, and simply enjoying each other's presence.  While the time with them was precious, I had no idea that weekend would become transformational for me in ways I could not even begin to imagine.  As we worshipped through music and words that brought fresh wonder to the reality of God made flesh - I felt the tears slip down my cheeks.   I was hurting and exhausted and so desperate for God to heal my wounded heart. 

That November had marked the 3 year anniversary of a devastating trauma in my life.  I had taken some time earlier in the month to reflect on those years and I found myself bogged down with deep disappointment and discouragement.   Three years later the pain was still intensely present.  While it no longer overtook me on a daily basis, it was always there in the background - dulling my ability to fully embrace joy.  I was constantly waiting for the other shoe to drop, unable to live fully into any good moment knowing that the possibility of pain was always around the corner.  And I was angry and frustrated that after three years I was still such a mess.  I had done all the work - counseling, journaling, praying, begging God to bring healing and restoration.  I had processed and confessed, grieved and been compassionate with myself.  I had worked hard at forgiveness and taken responsibility where I needed to.  Why was I still so broken?   

As I sat in that concert I felt God's intimate, quiet invitation to Sabbath - Rest that had the power to restore and mend my shredded soul.   I had done all the work I could do on my own and it was time to allow Him to do what I could not.  I felt the invitation to truly heal.   I did not fully know what it meant in that moment, but I have spent the last year saying yes to that invitation - yes to rest, to redemption and restoration, yes to delight and joy, yes to wholeness and trust, yes to the goodness in this moment despite the pain of the past and the inevitable hard that will come.  This one yes has produced one of the most incredibly transformative years of my life!

In recent months I have been overjoyed to see the growing awareness of our desperate need for rhythm and Sabbath.  Maybe it is simply that this is where I have been camped out with the Lord, but everywhere I look I see books and blog posts, hear sermons and podcasts that are inviting us into the practice of this most holy gift.    I believe that God is calling us back to one of the greatest lacks in the modern church.  It is no secret that our greatest deficit is rest.  We are over-worked, over-stimulated, over-indulged, over-committed.   We are running toward who knows what and we have no idea how to get out of the rat race.   

This deficiency is costing us more than we could imagine.  Without the rhythms of rest, solitude, silence, and recreation in our lives we are operating from a dangerous scarcity rather than the abundant sufficiency God offers. We are sick physically, mentally, and spiritually.  We lack the deep spiritual wisdom that comes only from spending significant amounts of time simply waiting in God's presence, and we are not sure why the promises of peace, joy and abundant life continually remain just beyond our grasp despite our frantic efforts to chase after them.  

This last year for me has been an incredible adventure in exploring the gift of Sabbath.   While I have only scratched the surface,  I would not be exaggerating to say that apart from my initial commitment to follow Jesus in my early 20s, this has been the most profound and life-changing transformation I have experienced.

So what does this look like for me in practice?  While my exploration has included extended days of silence, solitude and retreat, the most foundational change we have made in our family is both incredibly basic from a Biblical perspective and extraordinarily difficult from a logistical one - a 24 hour period of time set aside to practice Sabbath.  For us this begins at sundown on Saturday night and continues through sundown on Sunday evening.  We have defined this time by four principles outlined in much greater detail in the book Sabbath by Wayne Muller and by Pete Scazerro in his book The Emotionally Healthy Leader  - both works I cannot recommend highly enough.   The four guidelines are as follows:

     Stopping Work - In short, setting aside any activity which is, at its core, motivated by a need to be productive.   In stopping work, we choose to trust that the world will not stop spinning if we cease to be productive - that we are really not that important.
   
     "Sabbath disolves the artificial urgency of our days because it liberates us from the 
     need to be finished.   Stop now.  As the sun touches the horizon, take the hand off the
      plow, put down the phone, let the pen rest on the paper, turn off the computer, leave 
     the mop in the bucket and the car in the drive.  There is no room for negotiation, no 
     time to be seduced by the urgency of our responsibilities.  We stop because there are 
     forces larger than we that take care of the universe, and while our efforts are important, 
     necessary and useful, they are not (nor are we) indespensable.  The galaxy will some-
     how manage without us for this hour, this day, and so we are invited - nay commanded
     to relax and enjoy our relative unimportance, our humble place at the table in a very
     large world.  The deep wisdom embedded in creation will take care of things for a while.
   
                                       Wayne Muller, Sabbath

     Resting - And no - resting is not the same as stopping work.   Stopping work is an act of trust that God will provide all that we need to accomplish what He has called us to if we will just embrace our finite ability which gives way to His infinite sufficiency.    Rest is a beautiful invitation to experience the fruit of that trust.  Stopping enables room for rest, but entering into the true extravagance of rest is another thing altogether.    The delious sensation of drifting off to an afternoon nap with no alarm to wake you beyond your body's natural rhythms, the luxurious extravagance of a long bath, an afternoon of games while the dishes sit in the sink, smoothing a hand over the crisp page as you settle into a new novel, sitting on the porch to watch the unmatchable artistry of a sunset from start to finish - these are some of the gifts of rest.  

     Finding Delight - This has become one of my favorite and most indulgently joyful ways to practice and celebrate Sabbath.  What constitutes for me activities appropriate for a Sabbath day?  Anything that brings delight and nothing that does not!  

     "After finishing his work in creation, God pronounced it 'very good'.  (Genesis 1:31) 
     This was not an anemic afterthought - Oh, well, it's nice to be done with that - but a 
     joyful recognition and celebration of accomplishment.  As part of observing Sabbath, 
     God invites us to join in the celebration, to enjoy and delight in His creation and all
     the gifts he offers us in it.  These innumerable gifts come to us in many forms including
     people, places, and things."

                              Peter Scazerro, The Emotionally Healthy Leader

The answer to the question, "What brings me joy and delight?" will differ for everyone.  For my husband this often means puttering in the barn or mowing - but without pressure from me to accomplish something on the to-do list.   This is truly delightful for him.   For both of us it involves being out in nature, taking walks, tossing a frisbee with the kids, or even watching America's Funniest Videos and howling with laughter together as a family.  (We do try to limit screen time, but for this we make an exception.)

     Contemplating God -   For our family this starts with worship with the Body of believers we have committed to do life with, worshipping with our hearts and voices through music, our minds and intellect as we take in teaching on His word and our souls as we fellowship in community with others who are journeying alongside of us.   Interestingly for me, this does not incorporate the discipline of reading Scripture.   I spend time daily reading, meditating on, and memorizing the Word.  On Sabbath, I allow the fruits of this discipline to flow more organically as I simply allow my mind to slow down enough to express gratitude and wonder at creation and the way God's character is manifest through nature and the gift of relationship.  This is a simple and intentional awareness of His goodness in all things. 

There is SO MUCH MORE I could write.  I could write pages about how Sabbath requires sacrifice, and preparation. . .disciplines of their own.   I could write about all the beautiful fruit in my soul, in my marriage, in my family, that has come as a result.  More than anything, the practice of Sabbath in my life has created the environment necessary for the healing I was so desperate for.   I have shared with several friends over the last months that somewhere along the way the frantic quality which often characterized my life, my mind, and my emotions, has begun to melt away.  In its place there is growing a profound peace - a soul deep sense of well-being that is so sweet I cannot quite find words to describe it.  Perhaps it is called Shalom.   In moments, it slips away and I can feel the unrest creeping back in. . . the reminder that the choice to accept the invitation to Sabbath has to be made over and over.  Still, it is always there, the quiet call to let go of all that encumbers us and find rest for our weary souls.  







Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Dear Momma...Here is My Pledge



Dear Momma,

I see you.   I see you afraid and alone and desperate.  I see you feeling like you have nowhere to go.  No one to wrap their arms around you and tell you that it is going to be okay. 

I've been there.  Scared.   Ashamed.  Desperate to be free from the weight and the impossibility of the path lying in front of me.   Isolated and terrified and unable to face tomorrow...much less the reality of devoting the next 20 years of my life to providing for another human.

I have felt the suffocating weight of disappointing the ones I so desperately wanted to please, though I failed over and over.  I have contended with the idea that the life I was carrying inside of me would legitimately be better off terminated than born into any kind of world I could provide.   I have felt the shame and the scorn and contempt.   I know the fear that keeps you up at night, trying to imagine your future when every outcome seems absolutely unbearable.  I have felt choked by hopelessness and shame and despair. 

But beneath all of that was the faintest of hint of desire...expectation even.  The slimmest thread of expectancy that what was to come might not be shameful or disgraceful...but good.  Beautiful even.
Not just okay.  Beautiful.    The truth pushing against despair...that little life inside of you, it could redeem you in ways you did not believe were possible.   If you allow it, God will use that tiny life to breathe life into your broken places. 

I know.   I walked that broken, beautiful road to redemption.   It was terrifying.  It demanded more of me than I had to give but it brought beauty and humility and compassion and joy in measures that flooded out the despair and washed hope and grace into my faltering steps. 


If you are standing on this ledge.  If you are measuring the gap between despair and hope...please choose hope.   There is beauty on the other side - more than you can ever imagine!   And here is my pledge.  Here is where the rubber meets the road.  I will walk this with you.   Personally.   And if I cannot, I will find someone who can.   I will speak hope and life.   I will pray with you and for you and for that precious child who is going to bring light and beauty to this world, to your world.   I will love you and your beautiful child.  I will believe in you and your unique ability to parent the child that God gifted to you.  I will fight for you.  I will fight with you.  You. Are. Not. Alone.   My phone number is 217-652-0952.     You can call or text.  I will answer.   You are not alone.

There is no greater gift than life, and this life is not a mistake.   You are not the sum of your mistakes...and if you will choose life, I promise you that God will  make something more beautiful than you could ever imagine.


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Some Back to School Reflections



1.  $300 on school supplies.  THREE.  HUNDRED.  We did not deviate from the list.  (Okay, my husband bought a .50 crayon sharpener but that was the extent of the contraband.)  This is insane.  This does not include registration fees, yearbooks and all the other extras.  What in the actual what?!

2.  That insanity in the kitchen would be the death of me if it were not for my husband who is patiently making sure every glue stick makes it in the right bag.  This is the one time of year I absolutely love that he is a control freak.  Okay, also when he does the stockings at Christmas.  And the Easter baskets.



3.  4 kids at 4 different schools this year.  4 different pick up and drop off times.  4 different schools to attend concerts and volunteer meetings and to chauffeur to extra curricular activities.  (Okay, who are we kidding - I do not actually attend volunteer meetings.)

4.  Chromebooks coming home are causing me actual anxiety attacks.

5.   I am already dreading the "All About Me" posters and questionnaires that will inevitably come home the first week of school asking for baby pictures and answers to questions that are difficult, awkward, and sometimes painful for my kiddos.

6.  Hair cuts, dentist appointments, physicals, first day of school outfits, gym shoes, back packs, locker supplies, lunch boxes, bus schedules...I am having stress dreams about these things and all of the other things I am forgetting.

7.  So. Many. Emails.   

8.  All the good intentions - for reading logs and agendas and signed notebooks.  For starting the morning 15 minutes early and having good routines and chore schedules.  For holding it together like all of the other sane families.  This is the year, people!

9.  This year I have already been added to 4 different Facebook groups for 4 different children.  This tool is supposed to be helpful in disseminating information regarding their schools and classrooms and my brain is going to explode if I am expected to absorb information from any more sources.  When did this become a thing?   

10.  This is the first year that I am not dancing and shouting for joy that my children are going back to school.  If you know me well, you might be picking your jaw up off the floor right now.   Don't get me wrong.  There is some relief and I am SO looking forward to six straight hours without hearing any of the following:  "Moooooooommm!"  "I'm bored."  "I'm hungry."  or "Can we play electronics?"  😑😔😒😠    But for the first time since four amazing kids turned our world beautifully upside down through fostering and adoption, I feel like we have found a new normal.

It has been nearly five and a half years.  We have prayed and fought hard and long for joy and connection...and while there have been seasons and glimpses of that over the last years, this is the first summer that has been characterized by it, and I am sad to see it end.

I am sad to see the long, slow days give way to hectic schedules and too much homework - sad to trade late nights catching lightning bugs and sunsets on the porch for earlier bed time routines.  But what a joy to be sad in this way!  I wasn't sure we would ever get here.   I know there are still battles ahead, but I feel like we have been given a reprieve from the trenches and the tide of the war has shifted.



For you mommas who are feeling the EXACT opposite, who are longing desperately for that first moment they are out the door because you are just done - worn and frayed to the point of breaking - because these last 3 months have taken every bit of energy you have just to survive...just to get through.  SOLIDARITY Sister!   You are so not alone.   Take a breath.  Tomorrow will come and the trenches do not last forever.  You are fierce and brave and you can do this.  You didn't have to.   You CHOSE to stand in the gap for someone who was not big enough or strong enough to fight for themselves.  I see your courageous love and so much more importantly, Jesus sees you and every wound you have taken on the field.  He knows how weary and war torn your heart is and He is so proud...because you look just like Him.

And He promises that when you are too weary to stand for one more battle, He will fight for you.  In truth - isn't this really where the war is finally won?

In the name of full disclosure and all of this said, tomorrow you will still find me drinking coffee, playing too loud (kid inappropriate) music, and doing a happy dance in my blissfully quiet and empty house.    CHEERS TO BACK TO SCHOOL!

Share your best/worst back to school moments in the comments!  

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Not Negotiable




"It is time for parents to teach young people early on that in diversity there is beauty and there is strength."

 Maya Angelou


One of the first things you are asked to consider as you go through adoptive training is what types of children you are willing to foster and/or adopt.  This is a difficult, but absolutely vital, conversation. When the call comes from your agency, you don't have the luxury of days or even hours to mull over the decision and these issues need to have already been wrestled through.

What ages are you comfortable with?  Infants?  Toddlers?  Teens?  What about babies who are born addicted to crack or heroine?   Will you welcome into your home children who are medically fragile? What about children on the autism spectrum or children who have been victims of sexual abuse?  Are you willing to take a sibling group so that they can remain together, and if so, how many?

I will be honest and say that, in light of all of these questions, for us personally,"Would you adopt a child of a different race?" was not really even a blip on the radar.  It probably should have been.  Despite already having two biological, mixed race children, transracial adoption has brought joy, insight, and beauty into our family as well as some very real challenges.  That is not to say I might reconsider the path we have taken - in fact, quite the opposite.  The gifts have far outweighed the struggles!  But as is always the case, had we done a little less romanticizing and made an effort to understand other perspectives in this conversation, I think we could have been more prepared for the road in front of us.

Even same race adoption is very hard on adopted kids from a cultural perspective.  You add to this the large cultural differences between families of different races and for the sake of our children we must be willing to acknowledge and talk about the significant loss and struggles that come when they are ripped from all that is culturally familiar to them.  This cultural gap is challenging for the adoptive family as well.  Here is a quote from a much earlier blog, The Rhythm of Trust:

      "We've discovered something interesting about families:  we each have our own family culture.
      You know, all of those things that make your family 'home' for you.  Foods we like to eat, games
      we like to play, t.v. shows we like to watch together.  For the most part, we laugh at the same kind
      of humor, enjoy many of the same activities and just. . .get each other.  I hadn't considered what it
      might be like for cultures to collide when we added four new people, with their own rhythms and
      and culture - not even taking into account the genuine cultural differences that are inherent in 
      transracial fostering/adoption.  The realization that we would need to let go of some of that 
      culture to make space for God to build something new, and the letting go?  It's hard."

I realize now, with more than a little shame, that in large part I simply expected our children to adapt to us and our culture.  How incredibly short sighted and selfish!  The honest truth is that is has been painful to let go of what was familiar to me to allow for the new.  I can only begin to imagine that grief for them.

But here is the other side of the coin - the new is beautiful.  It is rich and diverse and full of stretching and growing.  I adore the lovely hodgepodge that makes up our family.  What a beautiful picture of the Gospel and of reconciliation.  Our family is a vivid illustration of the Creator's love for diversity -- so apparent in the beautiful medley of the one human race, made in His very Image.

     "For in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith. . . There is neither Jew nor Greek,
      there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."
                                                                                                                                     Galatians 3:26-28




There is so much more to this conversation.  So much to be said for being intentional about keeping adopted kids connected to their own cultures, and if possible, even to their birth families.  (We intend to write more on that next week).



As of late race, a topic we are very comfortable discussing, has become an even more prevalent conversation around our table.  The intense media coverage of race related violence, Black Lives Matter, and all of the racially charged conversation swirling around the upcoming election have made this a necessity in a family that looks like ours.  I am choosing not to dive into those topics here because there have been so many who have addressed them more thoroughly and thoughtfully than I could hope to do.

I do however want to leave this on the table:   Whatever form this takes in your life, the work of truly reconciling with our brothers and sisters who look, think, act, talk, play, and live differently can seem overwhelming.  Sometimes it seems impossible.  But if you belong to Jesus, not only is it possible.  It.  Is.  Not. Negotiable.   For those of us who have chosen to submit our lives to the Lordship of Christ, the act of loving one another -- and doing it well -- it's not up for discussion.   It does not matter how difficult the conversation, how polarized the politics, or how racially charged the atmosphere. We keep trying.  We keep listening in humility, slow to speak and slow to become angry. We understand that we cannot make things right with God until we are willing to leave our gift at the altar to go make things right with our brother and sister.  We keep laying down our lives as Christ laid down His life for us.  If the Church would genuinely give itself over to this kind of work, can you imagine the impact we would make in our culture?

As always, I am so thankful to Sammy for sharing her honest and insightful perspective on a tough topic.  This blog has offered us some incredible opportunities for stretching and conversation that might not otherwise take place.  Thank you for taking this journey with us!

From Sammy:

Do you think this is a hard topic to talk about?
Yes, because I don't want to offend anyone or give them the wrong idea.  That maybe, "She doesn't like white people." or something.  

Do you think it's an important topic?  
I think it's important because I want people to know that you don't have to be the same color to be a part of a family.  It doesn't matter what your skin color is, you're still part of that family.  At the same time it makes a difference.  It can be an obstacle to feeling like a part of the family

I think it's important to talk about with all the stuff that's going on...the Black Lives Matter...all the racism.

Do you have any idea how many of your placements were with black families and how many were with white ones? 
There were 4 black families, 2 of them were my biological family, and the rest (about 23 others) were with white families.

When you first met us, you told me you were expecting us to be black.  What were your thoughts the first time we met and you realized you might be adopted by a white family?   Honestly?  I thought that ya'll were just taking some black kids to get some attention.  I thought you were rich.  Then the first time I got really mad at you guys. we were at Grandma's and I laid down in the middle of the road and you said you wouldn't give up on me because we chose you as part of our family, or something like that.  Usually when something like that happened they would call my agency and have me go somewhere else.  We went home and I packed all of  my stuff because I thought you would do the same thing as my other foster parents and have me leave.  But you didn't and I thought, "Oh, they actually want me here."

Did you believe we wanted you from that point on?  
Sometimes I did and sometimes I didn't.  When I did good I thought ya'll wanted me.  Then when I messed up I thought you didn't want me.  I still feel that way sometimes. 

What do you think are some of the down sides to interracial adoption?
The first time I met your whole (extended) family I felt like they might think, "Why did they adopt these black kids?"   I felt like they talked about us when we weren't around.  I felt on the outside and like I didn't fit.

I felt, sometimes I still feel, like I was judged by other white people when our family all went somewhere together.  When we first went to church it felt like everyone was looking at us because we were the only black people there.  

It used to be hard for me to constantly explain to my friends that I am adopted and my parents are white.  It forced me to talk about the adoption, which I hated.   It doesn't bother me as much anymore because I've talked about it so many times that it just feels normal.

It seems like you guys (biological family) click more and I miss being with my family who gets me because they are black.  I miss the soul food (laughing)  I do!

I think it's harder to fit in because I come from a whole different culture.  We have to work harder (to connect) because we are so different.

What do you think are some of the positives of interracial adoption?
Other people get a chance to see that you are not just a skin color.  I feel like families like ours can be an example to other people.  Even though we are different and we are not perfect, we struggle but we stick through it and get through it as a family.  We don't let it define us.  

Even though it's hard that we are so different as a family it's cool to be so different too.   We are a little bit of each . . .black, white, mixed. . . it's cool to go out and people ask, "Are you guys friends?"  And we're like,  "No, we're a family."  It's funny to see people's reaction when they ask my parents, "Are these all your kids?"   People are like wow!

I like that we all have different personalities and it's fun that we are different and have different views even thought that makes it hard sometimes.

What advice would you give to someone who is adopting a child of a different race?
Don't let the child's skin color define who they are.  Love them anyway.   If you don't know anything about your child's culture you should take the time to learn about it and understand it.  

Some people think that white people should not adopt black kids and vice versa.  What do you think about that?  
I think it doesn't matter as long as the kid is happy.  It shouldn't matter if they are white or black or Asian.  If the kid is happy then it shouldn't matter.  A family can love a kid that is a different color.



*****This blog is a part of a series that my 17 year old daughter Sammy and I are writing together.  The blogs are a window into some of the greatest joys and most difficult challenges we have navigated on the adoptive journey.  

Sammy's words in this blog are her own!  I have helped her clean up some of the grammar for the sake of clarity and asked questions to help her flesh out her story but the vernacular and vocabulary are hers and hers alone.  I have added a few parenthetical statements of my own for clarification. These are the pieces she is bravely choosing to share that someone else might be encouraged, challenged, or moved by her story.   The first blog in the series can be found here.***
  

Monday, September 19, 2016

The Imperative of Pain - The Undiminished Gospel

Off to get coffee and write a blog!


We are very selective when we talk about adoption.  We like to talk about the beauty and redemption inherent in successful adoptions. We like to talk about the believer's call to care for orphans.  We love to talk about adoption as a powerful illustration of the Gospel - in fact Scripture draws this parallel
in Romans 8:15-17.

While each of those statements are beautifully true, the problem is this --- those true statements are only part of the whole and as long as we remain selective in our conversation we create a very dangerous, romanticized view of adoption which has significant consequence in both the lives of adoptees as well as the families who choose this path.   There are many reasons that we must resist the temptation to romanticize adoption by remaining silent about the deep pain that accompanies this journey.  Here are just a few:

1.  Pain is not our enemy:  We live in a society that avoids discomfort at all costs.  Physically, emotionally, psychologically...we have completely lost sight of a very important truth:  pain is not an enemy, but an incredibly valuable alarm system.  Without pain, we have no idea when something is wrong.  Pain is a messenger that tells us to pay attention --- to stop and assess before further damage is done.  When we ignore pain or deaden it with medication, we risk further injury.  It is much more difficult to find it's root and work toward healing the cause rather than simply treating the symptoms. When we refuse to acknowledge and talk openly about the pain and loss that always precipitates adoption, we rob our children of the freedom to express grief over that loss and grief is an absolutely vital part of the healing process.  Adoption should be painful.   The rending of a family that God Himself knit together should be painful.  This pain should sound a glaring alarm for us as the Body of Christ!  God created families to be permanent and we should seek with all of our might to keep families together first.   And when this is impossible, we should grieve deeply alongside of the precious children who become collateral damage in the wake of sin or tragedy.

2.  A romanticized view of adoption sets adoptive parents up for failure.  
I understand the dilemma.  How much do we share?  And how do we share openly and truthfully, without turning someone away from this path when what is desperately needed is for the church to step up and DO SOMETHING!  There are tens of thousands of children in THIS COUNTRY --- one of the wealthiest and most privileged in the world --- waiting for an adoptive family.  Waiting for someone to step up to the plate and answer the call.   Waiting for someone to say, "I choose you."   Each year, approximately 20,000 children in the U.S. will age out of the system. I deeply understand the dilemma.  I want to beg people to run toward this call.  To lay down their own life and choose the life of a hurting child.  The temptation to whitewash the challenges and pain, that are so closely intertwined with the joys and triumphs, is great.

It is also dangerous.  The realities of walking alongside children who have suffered so much at such a young age can be devastating.  Parents who are considering coming alongside children from such hard places must be better equipped for the challenges.  How in the world can we prepare for a battlefield when we have no idea what is coming?!

When we romanticize adoption, the Church has no idea how desperately we need her to come alongside of us.  This call is too big for any one of us.  Our kids need a village to step into their lives to speak grace and love and truth.  We, as adoptive parents, need rest and reprieve from the day in day out of this difficult walk.  I need other believers to sit in the muck with me and simply grieve the damage that sin and tragedy have wrought in the lives of my kid's and, by proxy, my heart.

3.  When we avoid the reality of grief, pain, and loss as an inherent part of the adoption story, we diminish the Gospel.
Sin causes tremendous separation and damage.  It wreaks havoc on our world and in our lives.  But this is the absolute power and beauty of the Gospel!  To quote from an author we are reading in our Sunday night study at church:

"Christianity, unlike any other religion in the world, begins with catastrophe and defeat.  Sunshine religions and psychological inspirations collapse in calamity and wither in adversity.  But the Life of the Founder of Christianity, having begun with the Cross, ends with the empty tomb and victory."
                                                                                                                      ~Bishop Fulton Sheen

This is hope!  This is the grace and redemption of the Gospel...of Jesus Himself!  To deny the pain and challenge is to cheapen the beauty of the Gospel and it's power to redeem and triumph over even the most vicious schemes of the Enemy.  What begins in catastrophe and defeat is, in Christ, resurrected to power and victory!

In light of this, I asked Sammy to speak into some of the challenges over the course of the coming weeks:

Do you think it is important that adopted kids have the freedom to talk about the pain they have experienced and do you feel free to talk about your feelings about foster care and adoption?
Sammy:   I agree that's really important.  I feel like I have that freedom but I usually don't express myself because I don't think people will understand.  Sometimes I believe I can work through them by myself.  My heart feels like that's true but my mind knows that it's not.

Sometimes I think if I ask for help, I will be judged for it.

What are some of the things you do to avoid emotional pain:
Sammy:   I try not to think about it, shut everybody out.   I've spent a lot of years doing everything possible to avoid talking and thinking about the adoption and foster care.  I just push it to the back of my mind and don't think about it because I know if I think about it, I will have an emotional breakdown.

The problem with avoiding the pain is that the more you avoid it the more pain it causes and the more I get frustrated by it.

Do you think you're making progress in talking about your past?
Sammy:   I can talk about it without getting as emotional as I used to.  I don't like when I don't have control over emotions.  I feel as I get older I can think about things more and not just act on impulse.   The more I think about the things I went through, the more I realize I don't want to be 21 and still have all these problems I haven't worked through.  I feel like I have the resources and I might as well use them instead of trying to keep it all to myself because in the end that doesn't work.

Overall do you think adoption is a good thing?
Sammy:   I wouldn't say it is a bad thing or a good thing.  It depends on the people you're with.   Some foster parents are bad and some are the kind you need to be around.

What are the best parts of adoption?
Sammy:  There are a lot more resources and people willing to help you.  You can stay in a good school and better environment than you were.  You know there are people who are willing to help you and want to see you succeed and will do everything they can to help you.

What are the worst parts of adoption?
Sammy:  Even though you're happy that you're in a good foster home there is still a part of you that just wants to go back to your mom and home.  When you feel happy you feel like you're betraying your biological parents. . .they might think you don't want to come home.  It feels exhausting all the time to feel like if I'm too happy here, my  mom might get mad.

You feel like you have to compete with their biological kids and live up to those expectations
It's just so confusing.  You want this to be your new family and feel like you have someone to count on but but then at the same time I just really want to be home with my mom.

I am so thankful for Sammy's willingness to express her heart here.  Please continue to pray for us!  The enemy is not happy about the progress this beautiful girl is making and would love to see her fail!  We are so encouraged by the initial responses to this blog!  Thank you for coming with us on this crazy journey!


**This blog is a part of a series that my 17 year old daughter Sammy and I are writing together.  The blogs are a window into some of the greatest joys and most difficult challenges we have navigated on the adoptive journey.  

Sammy's words in this blog are her own!  I have helped her clean up some of the grammar for the sake of clarity and asked questions to help her flesh out her story but the vernacular and vocabulary are hers and hers alone.  I have added a few parenthetical statements of my own for clarification. These are the pieces she is bravely choosing to share that someone else might be encouraged, challenged, or moved by her story.   The first blog in the series can be found here.***

Sunday, September 11, 2016

The Beginning

**This blog is a part of a series that my 17 year old daughter Sammy and I are writing together.  The blogs are a window into some of the greatest joys and most difficult challenges we have navigated on the adoptive journey.  

Sammy's words in this blog are her own!  I have helped her clean up some of the grammar for the sake of clarity and asked questions to help her flesh out her story but the vernacular and vocabulary are hers and hers alone.  I have added a few parenthetical statements of my own for clarification. These are the pieces she is bravely choosing to share that someone else might be encouraged, challenged, or moved by her story.   The first blog in the series can be found here.

Sammy's Story:
Hi, my name is Samantha.  I am sixteen years old.  My favorite color is blue.  I love to sing and dance, and I love Justin Bieber.  Don't hate.   I just got my driver's license a couple of months ago.  I was ecstatic!  

I have a lot of siblings (ten that she knows of, between her adoptive and biological families).  I have a crazy family because I am adopted.   I was taken into foster care at age 12.  I was extremely angry that they took us from my mom.   The night they took us away--there were 6 of us--we had to spend the night at the agency because they didn't have anywhere for us to go.  The next day we were split up.  Three of us went to our aunt's house and the rest of us to a cousin's house.   At first it wasn't too bad because we were with family.  We still got to see our cousins and people we had ties with.   We knew our family wanted to help us.  We stayed there for a few months and then they started to have family problems.  It was too much for them to handle with all of us and we had to move.  That was when it got really hard because they started to split us up.  In the next two years I moved 17 times.  (Sammy's adoptive and foster records actually indicate that she moved 26 times in 24 months.)   I never had a connection anywhere.  I wanted to be with my mom.  I could never really settle down and I never really fit anywhere.   I was so angry at everyone all of the time and it was hard for me to get along with people. 

I used to get in trouble a lot.  I thought maybe if I got in trouble enough, nobody would want me and I could go back to my mom.  Sometimes I wouldn't get to see my brothers and sisters for a long time.  The only time we got to see each other was at visits at the agency, maybe once a moth.  It was always really hard to leave those visits.  It would make me so angry and afraid that I might not see them again.  A couple of my placements were with some of my  sisters and those were the best ones. 

After about 2 years of bouncing around foster homes, I met the Daniels at the agency.    I was excited because I knew that I might get to stay in a place or even be adopted with some of my siblings.  I thought it was weird that they lived in the country and I was a city girl.  I wondered why they wanted to adopt us.

Moving to their house was hard.  There was a lot going on.  I had to change schools again.  There were four of us moving in.  They already had three kids.  It felt really weird to think about a home that actually wanted to adopt us. 


Our adoption was finalized about a year and a half ago.  I was really conflicted about it.  Part of me wanted to be adopted and part of me didn't. I still feel that way.  (That's a whole other blog we will write later!)  We have had a lot of ups and downs since then.   I want to write this blog because I think it might help other kids who are going through this process so they can know they are not alone.   Even though they are going through it, they can know there is light at the end of the tunnel.  Even if they feel conflicted at the time, they can know it might end up being the best thing for them.    This is why I want to tell my story.
Chris, Sammy, Shanita (Sammy's biological mom), and Tashiana


Chris' Story
In August of 2012, my family took a vacation to Florida.  This is what our family looked like back then:

 As we do on most of our vacations, we drove.  We love the spontaneity and adventure that comes along with a good road trip.  In our years with our children, much of our best conversation has happened in the car...maybe because they are a captive audience. 

On this particular road trip, after some incredible conversations about faith and what it looks like to really live this thing out for our family, our two oldest posed a really challenging question.  It went something like this, "Mom and Dad, we have talked about God calling our family to adoption for as long as we can remember.  Are we just going to keep talking about it, or are we ever going to be obedient and just do it?"

Sheesh.  Talk about accountability.  We spent much of the rest of that drive home worshiping, praying, and seeking God.  With great excitement, we started the process to become licensed for foster care shortly after returning home from that vacation.

It is so interesting to look back on the process now.  In fact, it is quite jarring to recognize the gulf between the process for us, which was filled with joy and anticipation, and the process for our children, filled with grief and pain and loss.  

As we jumped through all of the hoops to get our home licensed, prepared and rearranged bedrooms, and did our best to prepare our hearts for the major adjustments to come, we were overwhelmed with the support and encouragement of our church family.  Once again, while we experienced the joy of family and community, our kids were drowning in separation, alienation, and rejection.

Still, we did anticipate the growth of our family with great joy as we learned of 4 siblings who needed placement together (Two more sisters were already in permanent, stable placements.)  We knew this would stretch us beyond our capacity, but we trusted intently that God would provided what we needed if this was where He was calling and by April of 2013, our little family had grown to this:
This picture, by the way, was taken in the same place in Florida where God moved our hearts more firmly toward adoption.  Full circle.  It took nearly 2 1/2 years to finalize the adoption, but in July of 2015 we took these photos in the courthouse downtown.  (Getting a good, functional picture of our family requires an act of God.)


Again,this day was filled with conflicting truths and emotions:  joy, and pain, beginning and end, separation and union, anticipation and regret, sorrow and hope.  It is strange how these emotions can simultaneously inhabit such close quarters, but they absolutely do and for kids who have already been drug onto a roller coast ride of emotions that they never asked for, it can be incredibly confusing and overwhelming.  When they asked Sammy if she consented to this adoption (as they do with children 14  and older) I held my breath.  I was honestly unsure what she would say as she had wavered many times in the preceding months.  She said yes.  

The gravity of that 'yes' was not lost on me and as I sat in that courtroom with some powerfully conflicting emotions of my own, I begged God for healing, connection, and peace for her heart and for our family.  Every day since then has been a step toward His answer to that prayer.  The answers have not come as quickly or completely as I would like to demand, but as they unfold they are more beautiful than I could have ever imagined.  

The adoption has been finalized for just over a year now and sometimes I think we are beginning to find some solid footing.  Other days I wonder if we have gained any ground at all.  But every moment, He has been faithful, and more than this story is ours, I pray it will be His.

Friday, September 9, 2016

An Adoption Story

A couple of years ago, my then 15 year old daughter, Samantha, expressed that she would like to write her adoption story in hopes that it might help other kids who were struggling through similar circumstances.  At the time, I was not sure she was ready to examine her own past that closely, much less share it with others.  Over the course of the last two years, Sammy has grown in some incredible ways.  This warrior of a girl has fought through more grief and loss in her first 16 years than many of us will face in a lifetime.  I have watched her muscle her way out of some terrible pits...some she dug herself, some that she was pushed into by no fault or choice of her own.  She is learning what it means to be loved - by herself, by a family, and most importantly by the only One who can redeem every bit of brokenness and loss.

So we have decided to write a series of blogs.  Once a week we will address the topic of adoption. My hope is that this blog will give Sammy a voice.    We are writing for us--to process, vent, reflect and gain some empathy and understanding for the other's perspective.  We are writing for you--that perhaps our own struggles and successes will encourage someone else on this journey.  There is such power in simply knowing that you are not alone.

If you are reading this blog in the hopes of a feel-good success story that has a tidy ending, all tied up with a neat little bow, you may be disappointed.  The last 3 1/2 years have been incredibly challenging for us.  We have had some mountain highs and some rock bottom lows.  If we are honest, there has been more of the latter than the former.  We have cried and screamed and fought and struggled.  Steve and I have made many mistakes, often causing more hurt in our clumsy efforts to help.  Sammy and I have struggled tremendously to find solid relationship and connection.

Neither is this as story of defeat or failure.  We are still fighting, and we are gaining ground.  This process of healing is painstakingly slow and often my perspective is skewed.  But when I back up and look at how far she has come, how far we have come, the truth is that there has been amazing progress and incredible victories.  Our story is not over and we are looking toward the next chapter with great hope and anticipation!  Our story is messy and hard and uncomfortable and amazingly beautiful and our prayer is that our life would declare the praises of Him who continues to call us out of darkness and into His marvelous light!  (1 Peter 2:9)

To be continued...

We would love to hear about your experiences as well!!   This journey is meant to be lived shoulder to shoulder!   Share some of your story in the comments!