This week, we celebrated one year as a family of five. On November 14, 2016, Brooks joined our family in China, and we will never be the same. All week I've wanted to think of something I could post to share with you how much he means to us, but I think the guest post I submitted to "No Hands But Ours" last week sums it up perfectly, so if you didn't catch it there, you can read it now. I hope it encourages you to trust the Lord in wherever He's leading you because His plans are ALWAYS better and for our good.
One year.
I still can’t
believe it’s been an entire year since Brooks became ours. One year since a
tiny, pale, very sick little boy reached for two strangers in a musty Chinese
conference room. One year as a family of five. One year of learning and
adapting and fighting for a little boy born over 7,000 miles away from the
place he now calls home.
I’ll never
forget my husband tapping me on the shoulder that day as I was completing yet
another form where I promised to take proper care of Brooks. Very calmly and
quietly, he simply stated, “There he is.” I looked up as three women breezed
through the door carrying our 17-pound baby boy and headed straight for us.
They knew exactly who they were looking for and within ten seconds of entering
the room, one of his nannies was standing next to us. I barely had time to
throw my husband’s phone at our guide so she could record the moment. He then
reached his arms out for me to hold him, and a collective “Awww!” filled the
room from the nannies and other adoptive parents waiting to meet their
children.
His nannies smiled and reassured him as he began to interact with us.
He had been dressed to the nines in a beautiful four-piece panda suit, and it
appeared that they had even dressed him in new shoes and sent along a favorite
rattle. The nannies giggled as they shared with us that he had been saying
“mama” and “baba” on the van ride to meet us, and they beamed with pride as our
13-month-old son showed off his skills as a new walker.
Fifteen
months of paperwork, prayer, and tears were behind us, and our whole lives as
his parents were beginning.
If I’m being
honest, up until that hand-off, I’d been terrified of this moment. I’d spent
the last four months staring at the two pictures we had, re-reading all six
pages of his paperwork, and trying desperately to create meaning out of each
and every word we knew about him. I spent many countless nights staring at my
bedroom ceiling worrying about whether or not his medical issues, which,
according to the file, seemed so incredibly minor and insignificant, were
actually accurate. I had read so many stories of families who brought home very
different children than they had expected, and I worried about all the things that
his orphanage could’ve missed.
Would he attach easily?
How many therapies would
he need?
Will his brother and sister accept him as their brother?
What will
people say when they see a Chinese child with Caucasian parents?
How will we
communicate with him?
The list went
on and on.
I knew we’d
been called to adoption, and I had a peace in my heart that this child was my
son. None of that had ever been in question, but the fear of the unknown
consumed me. On that day, in that stale conference room that reeked of burnt
coffee and cigarettes, something in me changed. As that bundled baby boy
accepted puff after puff after puff out of my hands, I felt myself slowly
exhale. In that moment, I realized that he, just like my other two, was just a
normal baby. He was going to do all of the typical baby things his brother and
sister did, even if it looked a little bit different or happened in a different
timing. Developmental delays, premature birth, anemia…or not…he was just a
little boy who needed a family.
Why had I been so afraid of him?
Over the last
year, we’ve learned a lot about the little boy who once kept me up at night. He
sings a mean “Wheels on the Bus,” points out every airplane that passes, and
throws half his food on the floor, just like his older brother did. He loves
candy, hates milk, and fights us getting strapped into the car seat, just like
his big sister did. He lives for goldfish and cars and says, “Mine!” if you try
to take his toy, just like every other toddler I know.
The past year
has been one of growth and change. We now manage Brooks’s asthma, which was a
surprise to us, but after our initial few months home, we seemed to get in a
groove with his medications. His head circumference, once a little bit of a
concern to doctors, has leveled off and his anemia is completely gone. We are
medically stable for the moment, and for that we are so grateful.
Today, Brooks
is thriving in preschool and has begun naming colors, shapes, and engaging us
in games and songs. He knows his mommy, daddy, brother, and sister, and we look
forward to enrolling our strong little guy in gymnastics in the spring. He is
the happiest and friendliest little guy you’ll ever meet and excels at greeting
everyone he passes, stranger or not.
I think the
biggest thing I’ve learned this year is simply this: we needed him. Not just
another child…but him. When God called our family to adoption three years ago, I
don’t believe it was for any other reason than for this boy. Brooks completes
our family in a way we never knew we needed, and I thank God every day for not
letting my fear be bigger than my faith. He is our peacemaker, our funny guy,
and lets his big sister smother him like the living baby doll she always
wanted.
There were so
many moments throughout our adoption process where I wanted to throw in the
towel. There were moments when the agency was invoicing us for an amount larger
than what we had available to give them, or when the doctors told us his head
circumference could indicate a neurological problem, or when we were asked
yet again why we weren’t just trying for “our own” baby. It would’ve been easy
to say no and walk away when things got tough, but I think back now at all we
would’ve missed and am so glad we stayed the course. Many people like to
applaud us and tell us how lucky Brooks is to have us, but the truth is that we
needed him much more than he ever needed us. H
e’s a gift to us who is
going to do BIG things in his life…we’re just the lucky ones who get the front
row seats.
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