In record time, and very unexpectedly, we got our LOA yesterday! It came only 12 days after our PA, which is crazy fast.
If you have no idea what I'm talking about ...
PA = Pre-approval from China
LOA = official Letter of Approval from China to adopt Collins
We
are so excited with how fast things are going. The reason we got our
LOA this quickly is that we did all of our waiting before we were
matched. Our dossier moved through translation and review during the 6
months we waited for a referral.
We have a series of steps to go through now on the U.S.
side of things before we can get our Travel Approval from China. It
usually takes about 8 weeks (if no roadbumps) to get TA from this point.
So, we are hopeful for December travel ... just like with Lia Kate.
Can't wait to meet our sweet girl in a few months!
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Red Threads ... and Road Blocks ... To Collins
My friend Rushton
wrote a very memorable post after they were matched with their daughter
last year, about all the "stones of remembrances" that God gave them
for their daughter ... signs and ways they knew the little girl in the
picture was their daughter. The "stones of remembrance" term comes from
the Old Testament when Samuel set up a stone to remember where God had
moved on their behalf in a miraculous way to defeat the Philistines.
In that same vein, in China, there is an ancient legend about a red thread...
"An invisible red thread connects those destined to meet, regardless of time, place, or circumstances. The thread may stretch or tangle, but never break." - Ancient Chinese Proverb
So, here are the red threads ... the stones of remembrance ... the things that I want to remember about how it was so confirmed that this precious little one was meant to be in our family.
Stone #1:
We started this adoption in July of 2011. Normally, special needs adoptions from China take about 12 months from beginning to end. But not our adoption. The two friends I started this process with are already home with their children! We have hit some paperwork snags along the way and had a long wait for a referral. Our biggest snag was with U.S. Immigration. After waiting 78 long days for our case to get to an officer's desk, we were issued a RFE (request for evidence) because I spent a summer in Washington DC in college and failed to get a background clearance from there. Oops. I was very upset at first because our agency was waiting any day for the files of some precious little ones, any of which I was hoping to adopt. And I needed my papers to be in China so that we would be eligible to get one of their referrals. The minute I got the email about the RFE, I knew those children I had my eye on were not mine. I knew my daughter was out there somewhere, and, despite being sad, I had to trust that this roadblock happened in order that we would find our way to the sweet child meant for us. I immediately applied for a background clearance but DC is not the fastest place to get one from. Thanks to the dogged persistence of my adoption agency, it only took about three and a half weeks to get it. Record time. My social worker Karla emailed me on February 2 saying "I got it!".
Little did I know that on that same day -- February 2 -- halfway around the world, a tiny newborn baby girl came to live in an orphanage in southern China. Soon, that little baby will belong to me.
When I was so desperate to get my paperwork to China, our daughter hadn't even been born yet. I am praising God for roadblocks.
Stone #2:
Back when we got Lia Kate's referral in 2009, I opened up her file and the very first thing I saw was her birthdate, which is July 31, which is also my birthday, which is also my younger sister's birthday. It was pretty much a done deal from that point on. So, imagine my surprise when Karla calls and tells me about Collins' referral, saying her birthday is also a 31st (different month). On top of that, she shares a birth month with our son, Britton, and my brother who just passed away and lots of other people in both of our families. It's a little thing, but considering that 3 of the 5 in our immediate family will have 31st bdays, it is significant. And I love how both of my Chinese daughters have a 31st birthday, and that their birthdays were part of the confirmation that they were ours.
Stone #3:
This is kind of a silly one, but I don't want to forget it. I rarely dream, but at some point this summer, I had a very real dream about getting our new child. We were in China, and they placed the littlest baby in my arms, not the toddler I was expecting we would get. She was precious with dark hair and beautiful skin and blue eyes. Yes, blue eyes. That part was strange, but the dream was so real and I woke up with my arms aching to hold our next child. It made the wait for a referral that much harder. When we got Collins' referral and saw that she was only 7 months old, I remembered my dream of the tiny baby in my arms. And just last week, as Lia Kate and I were looking at Collins' picture, she said "Mama, when you stand back a little bit, her eyes are blue!" She knew nothing of my dream and I'm not sure what she was thinking, because Collins' eyes are most definitely not blue. But the blue eyes comment meant something to me!
Stone #4:
This is the most significant one of them all. We had decided on the name Caroline Collins for our next child a while back. They are family names and we loved the way they sounded together. After we got our referral and called Danny's parents to tell them about her, his dad said, "I'm going to call her CC". Appropriate, I thought, because it rhymes with the pronunciation of her Chinese name, "SheShe". What I had forgotten about is that in Collins' province they pronounce things differently because they speak Cantonese, not Mandarin. For example, Lia Kate is from the same province and they pronounced her name "Jing Jing" as "Gang Gang." I listened carefully to the video of Collins that a sweet mama who visited the orphanage sent me. And as clear as day, they call her "SeeSee". Yes, CC. The sound of her Chinese name and her forever initials are one and the same. I am absolutely floored by this. She was so meant to be our Caroline Collins.
And it was February 2, when she came to the orphanage that they gave her this name ... the day that our "road block" was finally cleared up and our paperwork could be on its way to China.
Today, I am praising God for road blocks. I just love seeing how it all comes together. Yes, He has done great things for us and we are filled with joy!
In that same vein, in China, there is an ancient legend about a red thread...
"An invisible red thread connects those destined to meet, regardless of time, place, or circumstances. The thread may stretch or tangle, but never break." - Ancient Chinese Proverb
So, here are the red threads ... the stones of remembrance ... the things that I want to remember about how it was so confirmed that this precious little one was meant to be in our family.
Stone #1:
We started this adoption in July of 2011. Normally, special needs adoptions from China take about 12 months from beginning to end. But not our adoption. The two friends I started this process with are already home with their children! We have hit some paperwork snags along the way and had a long wait for a referral. Our biggest snag was with U.S. Immigration. After waiting 78 long days for our case to get to an officer's desk, we were issued a RFE (request for evidence) because I spent a summer in Washington DC in college and failed to get a background clearance from there. Oops. I was very upset at first because our agency was waiting any day for the files of some precious little ones, any of which I was hoping to adopt. And I needed my papers to be in China so that we would be eligible to get one of their referrals. The minute I got the email about the RFE, I knew those children I had my eye on were not mine. I knew my daughter was out there somewhere, and, despite being sad, I had to trust that this roadblock happened in order that we would find our way to the sweet child meant for us. I immediately applied for a background clearance but DC is not the fastest place to get one from. Thanks to the dogged persistence of my adoption agency, it only took about three and a half weeks to get it. Record time. My social worker Karla emailed me on February 2 saying "I got it!".
Little did I know that on that same day -- February 2 -- halfway around the world, a tiny newborn baby girl came to live in an orphanage in southern China. Soon, that little baby will belong to me.
When I was so desperate to get my paperwork to China, our daughter hadn't even been born yet. I am praising God for roadblocks.
Stone #2:
Back when we got Lia Kate's referral in 2009, I opened up her file and the very first thing I saw was her birthdate, which is July 31, which is also my birthday, which is also my younger sister's birthday. It was pretty much a done deal from that point on. So, imagine my surprise when Karla calls and tells me about Collins' referral, saying her birthday is also a 31st (different month). On top of that, she shares a birth month with our son, Britton, and my brother who just passed away and lots of other people in both of our families. It's a little thing, but considering that 3 of the 5 in our immediate family will have 31st bdays, it is significant. And I love how both of my Chinese daughters have a 31st birthday, and that their birthdays were part of the confirmation that they were ours.
Stone #3:
This is kind of a silly one, but I don't want to forget it. I rarely dream, but at some point this summer, I had a very real dream about getting our new child. We were in China, and they placed the littlest baby in my arms, not the toddler I was expecting we would get. She was precious with dark hair and beautiful skin and blue eyes. Yes, blue eyes. That part was strange, but the dream was so real and I woke up with my arms aching to hold our next child. It made the wait for a referral that much harder. When we got Collins' referral and saw that she was only 7 months old, I remembered my dream of the tiny baby in my arms. And just last week, as Lia Kate and I were looking at Collins' picture, she said "Mama, when you stand back a little bit, her eyes are blue!" She knew nothing of my dream and I'm not sure what she was thinking, because Collins' eyes are most definitely not blue. But the blue eyes comment meant something to me!
Stone #4:
This is the most significant one of them all. We had decided on the name Caroline Collins for our next child a while back. They are family names and we loved the way they sounded together. After we got our referral and called Danny's parents to tell them about her, his dad said, "I'm going to call her CC". Appropriate, I thought, because it rhymes with the pronunciation of her Chinese name, "SheShe". What I had forgotten about is that in Collins' province they pronounce things differently because they speak Cantonese, not Mandarin. For example, Lia Kate is from the same province and they pronounced her name "Jing Jing" as "Gang Gang." I listened carefully to the video of Collins that a sweet mama who visited the orphanage sent me. And as clear as day, they call her "SeeSee". Yes, CC. The sound of her Chinese name and her forever initials are one and the same. I am absolutely floored by this. She was so meant to be our Caroline Collins.
And it was February 2, when she came to the orphanage that they gave her this name ... the day that our "road block" was finally cleared up and our paperwork could be on its way to China.
Today, I am praising God for road blocks. I just love seeing how it all comes together. Yes, He has done great things for us and we are filled with joy!
Friday, September 14, 2012
We Finally See Her Face!!
I am thrilled to introduce our newest daughter...
Caroline Collins
Our
sweet Caroline Collins, whom we will call Collins, is *seven* months
old and living in southern China in the same province that Lia Kate is
from. We are so in love with our beautiful girl already and we can't
wait to travel to bring her home forever.
Here is the story of how we were matched with her...
We
have been waiting for 6 months now to be matched with our daughter. Our
dossier was logged-in in China on March 1, 2012, and we have just been
waiting for files from our adoption agency's new orphanage partnerships
to come in. But nothing really moves fast in the adoption world. We
thought the files would be here in July, but they weren't. Then, August,
but no. Then September rolled around and I was getting anxious.
On
Thursday, September 6, our awesome social worker, Karla, called and
said she might have a file for us. She told me a little bit about her. I
told her we were definitely interested and I asked how old she was.
Karla hesitated and said she needed to check and would get back in touch
with me. We were really wanting a young child (under 15 months) because
we want some space between our older two and the next one. When she
hesitated, I thought she might be older, but we were not going to pass
up looking at a file. That afternoon she called back and said she had
gotten the file together and was ready to send to me. She told me a
little bit about her and then said, "Now, hold on to your socks because
she is SEVEN months old!" I was in the car driving two sleepy children
to gymnastics, and all I remember saying was, "No way! Holy cow! No
way!" over and over. Seven months is *very* young for medical needs
adoptions from China. She told me she was emailing me the file right
then. I happened to be stuck in a massive traffic jam, so I checked my
email and there was the file. I opened it up, saw her sweet face and
started screaming. I immediately called Danny and told him I had just
seen our daughter's face. This is verbatim what happened when we got Lia
Kate's file. Danny is a little more even keel than I am, so he was like
"Okay, send me the file." I did. Then I texted our social worker back
and said "Oh, Karla. I'm done. She's the one. Hope my husband is on
board!". Just like with Lia Kate, I knew right away. No doubts.
Danny must have known too because he came home a little bit later with Chinese food and a bottle of prosecco.
The first picture I saw of Collins. |
We
sent her file to be reviewed by the International Adoption doctor who
had visited her orphanage in April and did a physical on Collins, and
waited for her to call back. Since we were going out of town bright and
early the next morning, I spent that night writing a care plan so that
our agency could send our Letter of Intent (LOI) as soon as we were
ready to officially say yes. I may have gotten about three hours of
sleep that night. I was just so giddy and excited. The next day at noon,
even though we hadn't talked to the adoption doctor, we decided to go
ahead and have our agency send LOI. We knew she was our daughter and
there was nothing the doc was going to say that would change our minds.
One
week later on September 13, we got our Pre-Approval from China. We have
a few more months of paperwork to get through before we can travel. We
are hoping to have her in our arms some time in December, but after
Christmas/January may be more likely. She will be 10 or 11 months old. I
can hardly believe it. Praising God for our sweet girl. She was so, so
worth the wait!!!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)