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7.30.2009
Smackintheface
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Orphan
Sweet round face.
Big brown eyes.
Teeny as a peanut.
Two lives.
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$10,000 vacation, over in 2 weeks?
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Clean, life-giving, disease-free water for an entire village.
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I was completely wrecked.
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Forever.
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Sure, I had heard the stories about "starving children in Ethiopia," and I may have even finished a few plates of food in honor of them (for which I'm sure they are just eternally grateful). Eyeroll.
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But this small child before me woke me from long and colorless slumber. She made my heart beat in unison with God's heart. She made me care about the things that God cares about. She demonstrated strength and forgiveness for life to a degree that I simply could not have imagined existed in any person.
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And then she took my hand.
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And she looked into my eyes.
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And she gave herself to me.
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And I was her mother.
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And I was stronger.
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And better.
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And braver.
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And no longer asleep.
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And alive like never before.
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Empowered.
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Enlightened.
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Passionate.
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Changed.
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"It is a poverty that a child must die so that we may live as we wish."
-Mother Theresa-
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"...once our eyes are opened, we can't pretend we don't know what to do. God, who weighs our hearts and keeps our souls, knows that we know, and holds us responsible to act."
-Proverbs 24:12-
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p.s. Warner Bros., SHE IS MY OWN!!!!
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Join me in defending the cause of the orphan...From Tom Davis' blog:
This is an opportunity to defend the cause of the orphan. But instead of cursing the darkness, lets put the truth on display.
Tom is challenging his readers and friends to write 500 positive blog posts about how an orphan has impacted and changed your life. Post this on your own blog so that when people search for the movie, they are flooded with positive messages about adoption and orphan care.
Just finish this sentence: "Warner Bros. new horror movie Orphan proclaims that it must be hard to love an adopted child as much as your own. Let me tell you about how an orphan changed my life..."
This is the heart of defending orphans. Help push back the darkness and deceit here by holding up as an example the powerful love that adoption and orphan care can unleash.
Here's how you can defend the orphan:
7.27.2009
May Showers Brought Wildflowers!
7.22.2009
Doctors & Camping & Bears, Oh My!
Memories by Moonlight
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7.16.2009
And Now For a Completely Shallow Post...
7.15.2009
Finally, an update!
Then for the really big news...LUCA TURNED 4!!!!!! This was actually her 1st birthday, as birthdays aren't celebrated in Ethiopia, so we were all pretty excited for her.
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It was so fun to be able to give Luca a "first," as many of her firsts happened before we met. I wondered if it would be strange celebrating my child's birthday and not reliving every excruciating hour of her birth (like I do on Brenin's birthday and my mom does on mine...we're sick, I know!). These are details of Luca's life that I'll never be able to share with her...what we felt on the day she was born, what her pregnancy was like, who was the first person to hold her, and for some moms that can be a hard pill to swallow (not this totally put together one though). ;-)
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What I've come to realize throughout this process though is that every person has a different story...and that's okay. Some people have video and pictures of their birth. Some people have funny stories about the day they were born and getting to the hospital in time. Some people have scrapbook pages dedicated to their labor and delivery with little heart stickers all around the picture of the epidural-giver (okay, that one was me). And some people have the knowledge that they were born to a different mommy and came to find their forever mommy a little later in life. And that's okay!
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Luca has already asked me if she was in my tummy after she saw a friend of ours with a baby in her tummy, and oh how I wanted to tell her that she was, but I knew it simply wasn't true and more importantly that it was okay that it wasn't true. In the end, it is my job to raise a whole child, and in order for her to be whole, every single part of her has to be acknowledged and okay, even and maybe even especially the painful parts. I imagine we'll have this conversation many more times over the years, and each time I'll tell her her story with great pride so that she can embrace it for what it is, a part of her.
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I'm so grateful that God brought this precious girl home, that He gave me her future, and that the rest of her story is yet to be written.