Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Waiting for You and...Nesting?

Before you read on...

Some prayer requests:
 - the mountain of paperwork to climb and complete for the home study (post about this coming your way soon)
 - the mountain of paperwork to complete for the mortgage approval
 - two more home study visits
 -for our future children and their birth families. For whatever reason, circumstance, or situation they will come into our lives and home forever. Pray for protection, comfort, adjustments, and that the Father may use this difficult time for good and His glory.
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There have been some changes taking place and I'm not entirely sure how to explain them. A change of reference? A change in perspective? A change in heart? All of these and something more.

The good man and I filled the forms and licked the seals, dropped the package in the slot with a prayer. For a child, a family, a little one waiting. A nerve-wracking task -- lay it all bare before another to be weighed and measured as parents, when teen moms are on primetime and daytime talk shows. And I wondered, how could this be fair? And it's not.

Last bits of hope for more in our nest packed neatly and crisply in manila and love. It echoes a thud as it hits, and the heaviness is more than apparent to us. This is it. The moment. It's all come to this, the beginning of an adventure or the beginning of the end. Hands held together, linked and clasped with fingers intertwined -- a most natural movement now carries so much more -- comfort, unity, strength and courage and we hold tight to each other, hold up the other, and nod together. It's done. And it's all up to them, to Him.
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Days later and I am deep in the valley. Aching and longing and hoping again, useless hopes of two blue lines, a plus sign or a happy face on that stupid stick. And again, I am disappointed. Yes, we chose adoption. Yes, we chose it long ago, but the realization that this is it, our trying is over, is hitting hard and it won't quit. I've battled it over and over again. We could keep it up, this charting and trying and taking temps and eating all the right things (can't there just be one fertility diet plan? No, there are hundreds, of course) and struggling and working so hard for that perfect moment when the heavens open and the time is right and the earth is spinning at just the right speed and the air is just the right temperature….and finally…

We could keep doing it, again and again, but we decided enough was enough. Enough stress and worry and regret and blaming and shame and tiredness. Enough. Besides, we're buying a house and completing an adoption, isn't that enough to juggle already? And I'm tired. It would be nice to just hang out and not count days and let a stupid piece of graph paper rule our time together!

So we stop. And focus on adoption. And I am mourning, because it is a loss. For the time being I give up hopes and dreams of that coveted swollen belly and maternity pics, the family all gathered in the waiting room and ultrasound pics, baby showers without awkward encounters because I am normal, just like one of the others. I'm giving up the life we expected, the story we expected.
And I am saying goodbye to what could have been. These children who would be created out of us, our love, our stories, our selves -- our eyes and noses and toes and smiles and ears and everything parents look for when they first unwrap the wriggling new life set in their hands. We're giving that up. And will I always wonder, "Who would they have been? What would they look like?" I am relieved the pressure of perfection is gone, but grieving the loss of the expected, the could have been, the what if of our children. Will I always wonder, "Could we have tried harder?" I wrap my arms around my empty womb, flat stomach that I hate so much, and try to imagine a life inside. Feet pushing and kicking and turning. Hiccups bouncing and making us all giggle. And it is sad. Sad to think that something so natural, so easy and normal, so ingrained in the circle of life, this something I will only ever watch before me, and never experience. And I mourn that. I cry until the heaves stop and the tears are dry. And I am done crying. There is a new path to forge, a new adventure waiting and I don't want to wish it any different.
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Weeks later, the process officially begun. Application accepted. We are both not surprised and surprised. I guess hopes soar with elation as if surprised when the first of many mountain tops has been reached and survived. You knew you could do the work and make the climb and take the time to breathe and rest and make the trek, but knowing these things change little the fact that you celebrate with honest, unashamed, unabashed excitement when it's complete. Celebrate like a fool. And you just don't care. So we celebrated good and long with dinner and some of the best, and most hopeful conversation we've ever had -- finally relaxing and allowing a little talk of dreams of the future with children. Sheer joy to dig out and dust off the long lost hopes and expectations from years past, from different lives. Finally.

I am doing the simple, the ordinary -- picking up the well worn clothes of the week and counting quarters, two loads in -- and it crashes over. Mighty and quick and strong and I am taken aback. Tidal wave, earthquake, tsunami all at once. And I am not quite sure what it is or what to make of it. All I know is for the first time, and how do I explain this to you?: These babies are MY babies.

These little ones we wait for and long for I now know are mine. Does that make since? Haven't even laid eyes on or heard a name, yet I know in my heart they are mine. And I burst into tears.

For so long I cried one cry -- of despair and hopelessness mingled with weary and tired. And now…I don't know what this is! I cry and it is lit, this flame blazing, unstoppable. Suddenly I will move mountains, I will fill out a million papers, I will be the fool, stark raving mad if it helps this process along. I will jump through hoops of burning flames and land into a pit of lions. I am that woman who lifts a car. I am that woman who takes a bullet.

I pick up a sock and think simply to myself with a guarded smile, one of these days his socks won't be the only socks I gather up. I think this simple thought, this dream and it is at that very moment, steps closer to reality, and my heart overflows. I mean, how silly and simple and common is that? "There will be more socks." But it is in the imagining of little feet that fill the socks, and where those little feet wander, and what adventures they wander into…the little toes I will kiss goodnight and tickle good morning. The little feet.
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When does one become a mother? A father? Is it in that moment of fists gripping and teeth clenched tight, when the wriggling new life comes into the light and the joy is on everyone's faces? Is it in that moment when two blue lines appear and what has been created in secret is finally known? Is it in those first few days of sleeplessness, sacrifice and baby cries? Is it with the first kissed boo-boo or the first time out?

I became a mother in that moment of socks and dreams and hoping and praying.  And woe to anyone who gets in my way. And I wonder, as tears puddle and spill over my cheeks, Where are my babies? What is happening to them? How did they get where they are? Where are those little feet wandering?Are they hungry? Warm? Do they know love? And I am angry for what may happen to them for them to be brought to me. Because, if they are in foster care and waiting for a forever home…we know something happened. I am scared for them. And I want to know what and beat someone up! 

The process is now no longer about approval or weighs and measures. It's about bringing my babies home. My babies No longer is this about applying for a child, but rather a step to getting our child. No longer are we adopting another's children, we are finally bringing home our little ones. Because if God planned this all out and made the things Satan meant for evil into good, if God was really here all along, these little ones we adopt were always the ones we were meant to have. These are our little ones. There are our babies! (Birth mothers and birth families are important and I will address my thoughts this later, just in case you are wondering. Yes, they are extremely important.)

And suddenly the paperwork is not daunting. The process is not tiring. The finances are not towering. I will do anything to bring my babies home. I will do more than climb mountains, I will move them. And if God had this all planned out, and He does, He's with me. He's with them. And because the future is His, He's already there too.

Suddenly this entire journey and adventure takes on a new urgency and I am lit up with love and passion and fierce commitment. Is this my nesting? I can't plan a room or buy the clothes...so I become this protective, brave, fierce mama bird? Well, alright I guess. I'll take it.
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The good man and I sit down and pray for these little ones, for their families and their circumstances. We pray for protection and comfort, healing and hope, we pray that they will find a home with us and make smooth adjustments. We pray that His hand would be upon them and keep them safe, whispering love to them. And I feel they are already mine, wherever they are, whoever they are, whatever they look like, and wherever they come from. I love them strongly, fiercely, deeply.

And I want more than anything to write them a note, a message in a bottle, or tied to a bird or, can I scroll it on a billboard?:

 "We are waiting for you. We love you already, loved you for a thousand years! We are bringing you home...

And others are waiting too! A whole community and family, who love you already for you. Uncles and Aunts and Meemaws and Pop-Pops. You are loved deeply, through and through." 

And I know when I see them, I won't be grieving the loss of the children we could have had. No, I will be thinking, Look! Those are our little ones, the ones He always had in mind. Aren't they the most beautiful sight you've ever seen? And, yes, I will count fingers and toes and marvel at eyes and noses, and never stop. 

1 comment:

Thank you for stopping by. I'd love to hear your thoughts and words!