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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Ease-dropping

I have said this before, I do not believe in coincidences, I believe we are where we are supposed to be when we are are supposed to be there. Rob and I were in Boston this past week and let's just say, I do not plan to go back anytime soon. It was "OK" but since I am not an American History buff, I found it boring and lacking "Fun" things to do.

Anyway, we ducked into a funky little jewelry shop while at Harvard Square. I overheard the clerk telling the other one about a friend of hers that was adopted from Korea. Of course, my ears perk up and I pretend to be admiring this goddy piece of jewelry so that I can ease-drop. She goes on to say that she has a very close friend who was adopted from Korea. This friend was searching for her birthmother but not "really" searching for her. The friend had the birthmother's name and had had it since highschool. Apparently this friend had been talking about this for a while since the clerk looked as though she was in college. So, this friend had gotten bored because the clerk had to work so she went one day to go get lunch. She decided to stop at a Korean/Asian restaurant, she saw an Asian women and started asking her about the food. The woman asked her to sit with her and they chatted for a while and the woman explained some of the food to the friend. So, the woman started asking the friend questions about where she was from and so forth. The friend told the lady Korea and then went on to say that she was a little disappointed that she knew nothing about the food and the culture of Korea. She went on to tell the lady about how she wants to find her birthmother, the lady started asking questions about the info she had and so forth. What I took away from the conversation was that this "stranger" was asking the friend all the right questions and was listening to her and giving the friend things to think about.

So........why I am blogging about this? I learned from this conversation many things. 1) Culture is important, although a child may act uninterested or resistant, later in life, they WILL want to know. 2) This friend sounds like she was searching for something that seemed to be much more than a birthmother but a sense of self. 3) Sometimes a stranger listens more than our own family and friends. 4) I want to prevent my child from feeling this way, I want them to come to me anytime they feel like it, feel that they can be open with me about their feelings and I want to be that "stranger" with all the "right" questions.

Just some food for thought!! Thank you God for allowing me to listen to such a conversation and be able to take many lessons away from it!!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Good Day

Today was a good day. I heard back from our agency in NY and now I have a better grasp on how things will proceed in the future months. I am happy to have that straight in my head now.

Big things.......I have big things brewing in this brain, just gotta figure out how to get where I want to be. I will post more about it as things progress. If I can pull this off, I will feel like I am contributing to the adoption world.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Reflecting

Today was a hectic day, it did not help that I was exhausted either. I am sitting here reflecting. I am reflecting on the events of last night and the stories I have heard over the past few years. It seems like everyone has a story to tell about their adoption. I have heard all kinds of stories and it made me reflect on our story and our lives over the past few years.

We got married a little over six years ago. We decided that we would start trying to get pregnant about 6 months after we were married. We did like most couples do, tried for a few months and then we went to the Dr. to see what we were doing "wrong". After dealing with what I think of as an insensitive and incompetent staff at my then OB/GYN, I decided to find a new office to go to. I finally found a Dr. that knew his stuff.

He is a pull no punches, tell it like it is type of guy. We did the tests, I had surgery, but he was upfront, he told us if it did not happen in 6 months to start checking our options. I think I hung upside down, wiggled around, layed still, did all the crazy stuff I could think of. I tried acupuncture, nothing was working "naturally". So, I went to see an infertility Dr.

This Dr.'s office was as bad if not worse than my first OB/GYN. They wanted to schedule all these treatments and appointments and tell me what "I" was going to do with "MY" body. You see, that is the WRONG way to approach me. It was like I was on an assembly line or a cattle call and I was "next" in line. I promptly told them, "I will decided what I'M going to do with MY body!!" I picked up my purse and left. Never looked back!!

I was able to "mourn" the loss of possibly never getting pregnant, I thought heck that's overrated anyway. Who wants to squeeze a bowling ball out of your body? NOT ME!!! I started researching adoption and doing the informational meetings. I was able to get my hubby on board and we went for it.

We got all our paperwork to China, that was a bit time consuming and so on but it was done. Then, the wait starting growing and to this day, a little over a year later, it continues to grow. So, I thought let's go for Korea. Here we are, paperwork in Korea and now we wait. I am not a patient person but here we are just waiting.

The point in all this is reflection. I felt like reflecting over my journey so far and felt like sharing. I Thank God we did not do IVF, I thank God for putting adoption in our hearts, I thank God for leading us to China , I thank God for pushing us towards Korea and I thank God for helping my friends and family understand where we are coming from and about our adoption. So, in closing, sometimes we need to reflect on our lives and see that from despair comes hope, anger can breed love and life is what we make of it.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Reminder.....

I will be taking our blog private. It will go private on Wed., if you still need to email me your email address, please do so at heathercelliott@aol.com, just put add me in the subject line!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

The day we get our child......

Rob and I have been discussing different holidays and family days we want to celebrate when we get Ethan. (I usually say our baby because we put down either but today I am going to use his name because we will more than likely end up with a boy) One of the days we are going to celebrate is the day he is placed in our arms. I have been going back and forth on the different names that day could be called. "gotcha day", "adoption day", "forever family day", up until now, I just wasn't sure. As I was doing some of my many research which I do to pass the time and find things I think will be pertinent to our adoption and the raising of our child, I found this book. The title says it all "God found us you", we will use The day God found us you. How perfect is that?? Who could argue that as being a day to celebrate?? No negative connotation, no "you should feel lucky because we "gotcha"". I think this is what we will use. I am going to ask the hubby what he thinks when he gets home!! Anyway, if you are interested, here is the link to the book. God found us you. Opinions please!!

Friday, October 9, 2009

going private

So... I thought I was going to just wait until once we got the referral to go private but in light of some new info, I have decided to it sooner than later. If you would like to be sent an invitation to my blog, please email your email address to Heathercelliott@aol.com and put add me in the subject line. I don't want to do this because it will be a pain and may cause some to have to set up an email account with google, I not sure if you could get to it from yahoo or not, but I think it is best to do it now.

Sorry for any inconvenience but the info is quite convincing of the need to be private.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

NY Times Article

I saw this article on one of the Yahoo groups and wanted to share. I have printed this out to use as a tool to help educate our child about their birthparents and the stigmas that come along with being an unwed mother. I feel this will help the child to understand the circumstances around their adoption and realize hat sometimes things are beyond our control. I want our child to know that their birthparents (at least the mother) had to endure a lot and that she obviously loved them to make an adoption plan for them.


Group Resists Korean Stigma for Unwed Mothers

Jean Chung for the International Herald Tribune

Mok Kyong-wha, with her son, said that she broke up with her boyfriend while she was pregnant and refused when he asked her to have an abortion.

SEOUL, South Korea — Four years ago, when she found that she was pregnant by her former boyfriend, Choi Hyong-sook considered abortion. But after she saw the little blip of her baby’s heartbeat on ultrasound images, she could not go through with it.

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Related

Times Topics: South Korea

Jean Chung for the International Herald Tribune

This 29-year-old woman, nine months pregnant, has decided to keep her baby instead of setting up adoption. More Photos »

As her pregnancy advanced, she confided in her elder brother. His reaction would sound familiar to unwed mothers in South Korea. She said he tried to drag her to an abortion clinic. Later, she said, he pressed her to give the child up for adoption.

“My brother said: ‘How can you be so selfish? You can’t do this to our parents,’ ” said Ms. Choi, 37, a hairdresser in Seoul. “But when the adoption agency took my baby away, I felt as if I had thrown him into the trash. It felt as if the earth had stopped turning. I persuaded them to let me reclaim my baby after five days.”

Now, Ms. Choi and other women in her situation are trying to set up the country’s first unwed mothers association to defend their right to raise their own children. It is a small but unusual first step in a society that ostracizes unmarried mothers to such an extent that Koreans often describe things as outrageous by comparing them to “an unmarried woman seeking an excuse to give birth.”

The fledgling group of women — only 40 are involved so far — is striking at one of the great ironies of South Korea. The government and commentators fret over the country’s birthrate, one of the world’s lowest, and deplore South Korea’s international reputation as a baby exporter for foreign adoptions.

Yet each year, social pressure drives thousands of unmarried women to choose between abortion, which is illegal but rampant, and adoption, which is considered socially shameful but is encouraged by the government. The few women who decide to raise a child alone risk a life of poverty and disgrace.

Nearly 90 percent of the 1,250 South Korean children adopted abroad last year, most of them by American couples, were born to unmarried women, according to the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs.

In their campaign, Ms. Choi and the other women have attracted unusual allies. Korean-born adoptees and their foreign families have been returning here in recent years to speak out for the women, who face the same difficulties in today’s South Korea as the adoptees’ birth mothers did decades ago.

One such supporter, Richard Boas, an ophthalmologist from Connecticut who adopted a Korean girl in 1988, said he was helping other Americans adopt foreign children when he visited a social service agency in South Korea in 2006 and began rethinking his “rescue and savior mentality.” There, he encountered a roomful of pregnant women, all unmarried and around 20 years old.

“I looked around and asked myself why these mothers were all giving up their kids,” Dr. Boas said.

He started the Korean Unwed Mothers Support Network, which advocates for better welfare services from the state.

“What we see in South Korea today is discrimination against natural mothers and favoring of adoption at the government level,” said Jane Jeong Trenka, 37, a Korean-born adoptee who grew up in Minnesota and now leads Truth and Reconciliation for the Adoption Community of Korea, one of two groups organized by Korean adoptees who have returned to their homeland to advocate for the rights of adoptees and unwed mothers. “Culture is not an excuse to abuse human rights.”

In 2007, 7,774 babies were born out of wedlock in South Korea, 1.6 percent of all births. (In the United States, nearly 40 percent of babies born in 2007 had unmarried mothers, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.) Nearly 96 percent of unwed pregnant women in South Korea choose abortion, according to the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs.

Of unmarried women who give birth, about 70 percent are believed to give up their babies for adoption, according to a government-financed survey. In the United States, the figure is 1 percent, the Health and Human Services Department reports.

For years, the South Korean government has worked to reduce overseas adoptions, which peaked at 8,837 in 1985. To increase adoptions at home, it provides subsidies and extra health care benefits for families that adopt, and it designated May 11 as Adoption Day.

It also spends billions of dollars a year to try to reverse the declining birthrate, subsidizing fertility treatments for married couples, for example.

“But we don’t see a campaign for unmarried mothers to raise our own children,” said Lee Mee-kyong, a 33-year-old unwed mother. “Once you become an unwed mom, you’re branded as immoral and a failure. People treat you as if you had committed a crime. You fall to the bottom rung of society.”

The government pays a monthly allowance of $85 per child to those who adopt children. It offers half that for single mothers of dependent children.

The government is trying to increase payments to help unwed mothers and to add more facilities to provide care for unmarried pregnant women, said Baek Su-hyun, an official at the Health Ministry. But the social stigma discourages women from coming forward.

Chang Ji-young, 27, who gave birth to a boy last month, said: “My former boyfriend’s sister screamed at me over the phone demanding that I get an abortion. His mother and sister said it was up to them to decide what to do with my baby because it was their family’s seed.”

Families whose unmarried daughters become pregnant sometimes move to conceal the pregnancy. Unwed mothers often lie about their marital status for fear they will be evicted by landlords and their children ostracized at school. Only about a quarter of South Koreans are willing to have a close relationship with an unwed mother as a coworker or neighbor, according to a recent survey by the government-financed Korean Women’s Development Institute.

“I was turned down eight times in job applications,” Ms. Lee said. “Each time a company learned that I was an unwed mom, it accused me of dishonesty.”

Ms. Choi, the hairdresser, said her family changed its phone number to avoid contact with her. When her father was hospitalized and she went to see him with her baby, she said, her sister blocked them from entering his room. When she wrote to him, she said, her father burned the letters. Last year, about three years after the birth, he finally accepted Ms. Choi back into his home.

“That day, I saw him in the bathroom, crying over one of my letters,” she said. “I realized how hard it must have been for him as well.”

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Thanks Grandpa

I am dedicating this entry to one of the my most favorite men, unfortunately he has been gone for about 21 years now but I think of him often and miss him very much.

So, my grandpa was this awesome man, he fought in WWII, he was a prisoner of war, he was lucky to survive. His best friend and him dug their way out with a spoon, one ran one way and one ran the other. They made a pact, if one heard any shots fired or anything, they would keep running and not look back. My grandpa made it out alive, his friend was not so lucky.

This was a man that adopted my mom and uncle, he was an upstanding person. He believed in helping others but also believed that people had to help themselves so, his generosity would only carry you so far, what you did after that was up to YOU. I LOVED this man, I never knew he was not my biological grandfather until after he passed, he thought if we knew, we might somehow love him different?

Today is his "real" birthday, his records were switched somehow when he was young so not until many years later did he find out that today was his "real" birthday. This is something not a lot of people knew so this is why I know his hand is in our adoption.

Today, I got a call from our agency in NY (SC) and they said our paperwork was in Korea and we are "officially" in line!! Yipee!! I of course ask, how long is the wait. They explained it was a case by case situation so depending on what medical needs we put down for consideration and the babies available, it could at just about anytime to 6 months if things stay at a constant with Korea. With an average being 4-5 months. Then it could be 2-4 months to travel with 3 months being the most likely.

So...... I am thinking anywhere between the next 6-9 months, we should be staring into our new babies eyes and holding him in our arms.

As I was thinking about the conversation with the agency and the date, I had flash backs of my wonderful grandfather. When I was little, he use to set me in his lap and ride the tractor around the yard with me. He used to get the lollipops that were together with wrappers so it made like a string of lollipops, he would neatly fold them and put them in his shirt pocket with one dangling out. The highlight of his day and my sister's and I were when we would go over to their house and see those suckers, we would pull on the first one and they would just keep coming out of his pocket, our eyes would get real big. You would of thought we found a pot of gold, we ended up with about 12 suckers.

Anyway, Grandpa, thank you for the memories and I could never of loved you any less, you were my inspiration, my protector, my hero. I love and miss you, this baby will know about you and thank you for helping God and having a hand in this adoption. I know you are working your magic from the other side!! Love always, your little girl!!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Talking to family and friends about adoption

I have seen many people who are having a hard time talking with their family about their adoption and have gotten mixed reactions from different members of their family and even friends. I just wanted to share our experience and tell what we did. Not that what we did was the one and only way but I felt it helped our family a great deal and thought it might help others.

When I first told my mom we were adopting, she was happy but not thrilled at first like we were. I think this is a natural reaction and looking back now, I should of expected it. The first questions she asked were, why not domestic, why not a country where you can get a child that "resembles" you, why China (later it was Korea). So, below I will give my answers to these questions. I would like to preface this with we have had a lot of support from everyone and very little negativity (that sometimes comes from strangers).

1) Domestic: freaks me out!! All I could think was I did not want to pour my heart and soul into a child to have a birthparent come back 8 years later, on my doorstep and taking my child. I hear the laws have recently gotten better but I was not comfortable and do not think I still am comfortable with the thought of a complete stranger taking my baby. "No, I will not be your permanent baby sitter for 8 years while you get your life together! No, it is not ok to decide you are all of a sudden ready to be a parent." These do not work for me and I WILL NOT take that chance.

2) Resembles: I do not NEED my child to "resemble" me. I am not scared to raise an adopted child and their adoption will not be "hush, hush". All I want is a child to love and that baby does not have to be caucasion or have my chin and his nose or his hair and my fingers.

3) Why China (Korea): Why not?? I know where God is leading me and it is to an Asian country and I know where my child, possibly children are. I will be a mother, we know where our hearts are and we have intuition enough to know where to go to get them. I will go to the ends of the earth or in this case half-way around the world to get my baby.

How to talk to family:
Let them know about your decision. EXPECT questions, they want to make sure you know what you are "getting yourself into", or what they will be getting into. Understand that they may not have the positive language to use to ask the questions they want and some may shy away from asking questions at all. Ask them if they have any questions or concerns. When they ask a question that you think is offensive or upsetting, remember they are expressing themselves and this would be a great oppurtunity to start teaching them positive language and how to use it. Let them express themselves, be prepared to answer some hard questions, let them know that if you don't have the answer that you sure will find one for them. Remember you do not have to convince them of your decision, it is yours to make, not theirs. It is easier though if you address all questions and concerns they have. Bring them into the process and help them understand what you have to do along the way. The more they know, the more they feel included, AGAIN this is your decision, not theirs!! You can always speak to a rep. from your agency and ask if they mind if you bring your family to one of the informational meetings, this will give them the opportunity to ask questions on their own.

I have done the things above and my family is fully on board and are now "comfortable" with OUR decision to adopt. We are all anxiously awaiting our referral. Our family now asks where we are in the process and what the wait time is. If you find your family doing this, don't get annoyed, just know that this is their way of feeling "included" and is an excellent time to talk about the adoption. It is all second nature now with us and you want it to be that way before you bring your baby home.

Like I said, this is what worked for us and our family, each family is different. You MUST show that you are "comfortable" and "excited" about your decision, it rubs off!!

Also remember, family will TRY to UNDERSTAND what you are going through but unless they have been there themselves, they CAN'T. Having a chat group or an adoption support group is great because they KNOW what you are going through and can help GUIDE you in the right direction.

Friends:
All of our friends are excited for us and cant wait to meet our little one once we get them. They too will have questions, these you can field differently based on your friendship and if they are really a friend or more like an aquaintance.

Strangers:
Keep in mind they too may not know the positive adoption language to use so be cautious and see where they are going with the conversation. Many are clueless to the process and may actually be considering adoption themselves, I have found this a lot!! Some can just be a little nasty or rude but you know, they are a stranger and it in nun-yah!! You don't have to tell your business if you don't want to, you can just walk away if you feel the urge. I would not recommend that you make a habit of it as you will have even more questions and strangers to deal with once you get your child but again, it really is NONE OF THEIR BUSINESS!!!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Our I-171H

It came today!! WOOOOHOOOO!!! I may be the only person loving USCIS (immigration) right now. Every time I have had to deal with them, they have been awesome!! They also sent a little note back saying to send our renewal paperwork back in in Feb. as we still have some time on the current paperwork!!! Rock on!!!

I, of course, contacted the agency in NY and faxed it over right away. I am thinking the paperwork will go either tomorrow or Mon., I have a strange feeling we will be "officially" in line as of Oct. 7th. If that is the date, I know my Grandpa has his hand in this along with God. That is my grandpa's (who adopted my mom) birthday. That is also the LID we have for China, 10/7/08. I have to tell you, SC (Spence-Chapin) rocks too!! Or atleast my SW there does. I got an auto reply, out of office from her but within five minutes, I got an actual email from her saying she had passed everything along to the Korea program director and that she would be getting our package finished up and shipped out!! Once we get our baby, I will have to get her a great big thank you!! She has been awesome!!

We were told the condo will wait until Oct. 16th to close.

What an awesome day, now just to get everthing over to Korea!! Our baby is one very important piece of paper closer to coming to his FOREVER FAMILY!!!! The stars are alining for this baby!