For Such A Time As This (2)

Rest of the storyPaul Harvey coined a phrase, “The rest of the story”, and indeed with my son’s adoption story there is more to it.  I was too ecstatic with the thought of bringing my son home from the hospital and getting the adoption finalized to give too much thought at the time how God had brought this all about.  And it is only a story God could so masterfully have put together, so here’s ‘the rest of the story’.

While my husband and I were lining up an adoption agency and going through the home studies etc., our next door neighbour, Dana* was going through her second bout with cancer.  A beautiful young woman, she had two children already and Laurelle (my daughter) would babysit the little girl.  My neighbour discovered to her dismay that with the cancer treatments she was too exhausted to give the children the care and attention they needed, so she hired a day nanny to come in on a part-time basis and help with some of the household chores and look after the children.  After my neighbour went into remission and was recovering nicely, she still had the nanny come to help periodically.  I would often chat with my neighbour; I knew her struggles with cancer and she also knew of our dream of having more children and wanting to adopt.

My friend, Colleen, who was my Bible Study leader at church, had a cousin who acted as a birthing coach to young unwed teenaged mothers who were facing crisis pregnancies.  At the time, Margo* was counselling and meeting with a young soon-to-be Mom who had already decided she wanted to place her child up for adoption after the child’s birth.

One day three women met together over coffee to make Christmas crafts together.  Colleen (my Bible Study leader), her cousin Margo, my neighbour Dana, and her nanny.  (“Wait a minute”, you’re saying…”that’s four women…not three…do the math!”)  Well, the cousin and the nanny were one and the same person.

As the three are chatting, Margo, who had invited Dana to join her that day to make some Christmas crafts and to meet her cousin, gets to talking about what she does when she’s not playing nanny to Dana’s children.  She talks about a young Mom who is about ready to deliver her baby and is looking for a couple to adopt her baby.  Colleen, thinking about us, mentions that she knows of a family at her church who is looking to adopt.  She starts to share a little bit more about us but does not mention our names.  Then Dana pipes up and says that she has some neighbours living right next door to her who are also looking to adopt.   When she shares that her neighbours have a little girl who sometimes babysits for her children, Colleen and Dana look wide-eyed at each other, and realize they are talking about the same family…us!

Without knowing it, we have just received our first and second “endorsements” for approval as prospective adoptive parents, and the next time Margo meets with the young expectant Mom, she excitedly tells her about us.

Now, we are blissfully unaware of this conversation until we receive that phone call from Colleen a couple of weeks later saying “A baby boy has been born in Calgary, the family is looking for an adoptive family, are you interested?”

You can read what happens next: https://lynndove.com/2013/11/22/for-such-a-time-as-this/

And that’s the rest of the story!

*names are changed

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For Such A Time As This

Corrie Ten Boom QuoteBrett will turn twenty-one today and everytime he celebrates a birthday I remember vividly the day God brought him into our lives!

My oldest daughter, Laurelle was in preschool when I was told I was expecting again.  My husband and I had been trying for years to conceive after the birth of our daughter and finally we were referred to the infertility clinic who diagnosed us with secondary infertility meaning they didn’t understand why we weren’t getting pregnant and basically said we’d likely not ever have more children naturally.  Well, when we discovered I was expecting, we rejoiced.  Little Laurelle was told she was going to be a big sister and she went to her preschool and drew a picture of her family…stick figures mostly, the three of us holding hands and a tiny little baby stick figure growing inside “mommy”.

A week later I miscarried.

I phoned my husband at work and frantically told him I was bleeding and we raced to the doctor who sent me for an emergency ultra sound.  The tech didn’t need to tell me, I knew by her expression that at seven and a half weeks into the pregnancy my little one was gone.  We were attending a church in Calgary at the time and while Charles picked up Laurelle from our friends who had sat with her while we went to the doctor, I wept and cried at the foot of the Cross.  I asked all the questions of God that any Mom asks when she loses a child.  Why?  Why?  Why?

Fast forward…My husband and I discovered I was expecting again.  This time, Laurelle was nearly eight and we had all but given up thinking we would ever have another child.  I journaled excitedly that Laurelle would be a big sister and we would welcome a new baby into our home on November 25th, 1992 (my babies’ due date).  Two days later I miscarried.  For the next few weeks my journal was filled with writing about my journey with heartbreak, grief and overwhelming loss.

After the loss, my husband and I started to talk about adoption.  It was something we had talked about before but this time we actively pursued the idea.  We contacted a Christian adoption agency and registered with them, and after several months of classes, home studies and the like we were approved to be put on the list for expectant mothers to see and review our profile as a prospective adoptive family.

We had moved to the country by then and we were attending a church in Cochrane.  For months I had been involved in a Bible Study for women at the church and of course the ladies all knew of my desire to have more children.  In the middle of a blizzard in November I got a phone call from Colleen, my Bible Study leader.  “A baby boy has been born in Calgary, the family is looking for an adoptive family, are you interested?”

Words cannot adequately express our excitement or how we reacted at that moment.  Within hours we had been in contact with the birth family, our adoption agency, (who would be representing us throughout  the adoption process) and the very next day I held my new son in my arms for the first time…and it was love at first sight!

When we brought our son Brett home, I walked around the house with him in my arms and “introduced” him to his new surroundings.  Practically overnight we had to scramble to borrow baby furniture, and buy baby essentials and as I showed Brett his “new” stuff I was overwhelmed with thankfulness and emotion!  Laurelle tagged along on the house tour and finally said, “Mom!   Will you please let me hold my baby brother?!”   (Did I say it was love at first sight when she held her baby brother for the first time?…well it was!)

Months later I happened to be looking back in my journal.  Brett was sitting in his little “bouncy chair” as we called it, giggling and laughing at his big sister while she made faces at him.  I turned in my journal and suddenly my heart skipped a beat.  I had turned in my journal to the pages written after I had miscarried for the second time.  Grief and loss expressed poignantly in pen and ink on the pages.  Then I turned back to before the miscarriage, when I had written about my excitement at being a Mom again and that we would “welcome a new baby into our home on November 25, 1992.”  Tears welled up in my eyes as I looked at Brett.

We brought him home on November 25th, 1992.

Proverbs 16:9  “In his heart a man plans his course, but the Lord determines his steps.”

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Pack a Shoebox with Si Robertson

Operation Christmas ChildEveryone knows that I am a huge Duck Dynasty fan.  I’m also a huge advocate of Samaritan’s Purse and in particular the Operation Christmas Child shoebox campaign they do every year.  Bringing JOY to a child at Christmas!

Fill your shoebox with a well-balanced variety of items from the following categories:

  • School Supplies – Items such as pencils, pens, pencil crayons, note pads, and picture books
  • Toys & Other Gifts – Items such as stuffed animals, small musical instruments, hair clips, toy jewelry, t-shirts, socks, and candy (loose, individually wrapped hard candy in a sealable bag)
  • Hygiene Items  – Please place soap in a sealable bag
  • Personal Note  – Include a personal note and/or a photo in your shoebox (not inside the donation envelope)

Do not include:

  • Toothpaste (due to customs regulations)
  • Food and any chewy, crumbly, or soft candy: Including gum (due to customs regulations)
  • Used items (due to customs regulations)
  • Playing cards (other card games such as UNO are allowed)
  • Liquids or items that could leak, melt, freeze, or break – Shampoo, creams, lip balm, bath gels, mirrors, or glass, etc. (these can damage other items in the shoe box).
  • Items that can scare or harm a child – War-related toys, knives, and toy guns, etc.

But hey…

Watch this short video and see how Uncle Si packs a shoebox and then, hey…”PACK A SHOEBOX, JACK!” 🙂

 

 

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