Amazing Grace

Since committing to Ray I have had a feeling that is difficult for me to come to terms with. It’s so awkward that I’ve never even tried to convey it to anyone. An attempt will be made here.

There is a woman named Holly on Waiting China Family (our List Serve) who, along with her husband, has been Journeying to Josiah, their two-year old boy. What I know of her is limited to the postings, but in them you see such testimonies of Christ in her life. All is good, all comes from God Almighty – her faith is the size of a mustard seed, the kind Jesus spoke of in the Gospel of Matthew, allowing “you will say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you (Mt 17; 21).”

So three days before her family is to leave for China to bring their son home she recounts of falling off a stool while changing a light bulb, twisting her ankle, having it start to swell immediately. Her husband, who had heard the scream, elevated the now-hurting-quite-badly ankle immediately and got ice on it right away. But after that her family gathers around her and prays over her asking for a healing miracle (who can’t take one step, let alone a thousand of them, at the Great Wall of China with a bum ankle).

Within minutes she’s up and at em’ and there is no mark, swelling, or pain – as if she never fell. To quote her at this point, “You can believe it or not.” But it was her following line that registered with me: “I feel like Peter- as long as I keep my eyes on HIM, I can walk on water!

I can relate to Holly’s last line. No, I can not walk on water like Peter, and don’t start thinking I think that! On the contrary, in the next Bible verse about Peter’s defiance of physics, he sinks due to a lack of faith; that is more like me. But, my growing realization – and acceptance – that God has had His Hand in this whole process is an article of faith, actually. And if that is the case, it must then be acknowledged that God has protected Rose and me and Ray to this point. To share further, and more pointedly, I have felt physically safe since committing to Ray.

Okay, what does this mean? No, I do not feel invincible, like the teenage dope of yesteryear doing 75mph in a 30mph zone. But I do feel protected. I know that things can harm me, yet have felt as though they would not harm me.

I am not being presumptuous of God’s love, only acknowledging His Grace in the moment. Which leads us to a slight alteration of the third stanza of the song Amazing Grace.

Through many dangers, toils and snares...
we have already come.
T'was Grace that brought us safe thus far...
and Grace will lead us home.

Together.

This is where we’ll stop before traveling to bring our son home. May peace and prayers be with you; and may your prayers be with Rose, Ray, my father, and me.

Yours truly,
Demian

The Final Push (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

Help up the Road, and Across the World (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

The Deep End of the Reflecting Pool (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

August 24, 2007 (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

My ListServe Sisters (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

Blessed Monroeville Bookends (HOLDER)

Holder for Pending Text

What’s in a Name?

To sponge from Shakespeare, since a Gift from God is a Gift from God by any other name, we set out to determine our son’s given name.

“How about Joseph Paul?” I asked. Rose said no, and I let out an inaudible whine. See, Elizabeth would have been Joseph Paul if she had been a boy, so I figured the name would be automatic if God blessed us with another boy, and Little Dang fit that bill perfectly.
She was nice about it; her main knock on the name was that he didn’t look like a Joseph. Even though I have never subscribed to the “doesn’t look like” angle with names (what does a Demian look like, ya know? Don’t answer!), in this case, well, I had to agree with Rose.

So we went forward, in no particular rush. There was no one from the Social Security Administration putting us under duress with reminders that we “couldn’t leave the hospital without naming the baby.” And, frankly, we spent time just cherishing his Chinese name, which we intended to keep in its entirety, albeit with modest changes. Plus, I enjoyed calling our son Little Dang, a term of endearment when considering he shared the same surname with Aunt Mary and Uncle Chi.

Even though it took ten days to make the final decision, the secret is that I offered up “Ray” just the day after the kibosh on Joseph. He was going to have a long name as it was, so one syllable was desirable (though it is short for Raymond). Most importantly, we wanted to name you after a family member if possible.

Coming into this – his – family Ray sports a healthy share of uncles. Heck, I learned that when marrying his mother. For him, there are ten uncles, and near twice that in great-uncles. They are all wonderful and choices, difficult as they are, must be made.

Ray is named after his Uncle Ray, the youngest boy is the Schissler family, and just 13 months older than Rose. He is one of those people God places in our lives to show you how much He loves you. Ray knows a ton of people and is treasured by most of them, be it as a son, husband, father, brother, brother-in-law, uncle, nephew, or friend. I trust his namesake will come to know and see him as amazing person; maybe our son will be encouraged to adopt his uncle’s “can do” attitude and endless care for fellow human beings, in good times and in bad, in moments minute and momentous.

There is other richness tied to our boy’s name. It is English, which is a part of our family’s heritage. Ray’s Great-Grandmother Seeley (aka Nana) was born and raised in England; she made her way across the Atlantic Ocean as a war-bride after marrying my Grandpa Seeley.

Also, Ray means “mighty protector.” Here, with reflection, we see appropriateness when considering his early life, and possibly a calling for later in life.

At a recent wedding, the mother of the bride said, “So tell me all about your son.” That question had yet to be posed to me, at least in the depth intended by this dear family friend. With no planned response these words came: “He is a survivor.” While there is likely a broader meaning to that, in an ordinary way it was meant to convey that he is a tough kid; certainly much tougher than me. Even so, to return to the meaning of Raymond, it must be acknowledged that he had mighty protectors to get him to this moment.

Here, and first, we find Ray’s birth mother. With stated uneasiness, we do not pretend to know her story. However, in our hearts we see a woman who valued the gift of life and who, without all the answers, had the courage to bring a child into this world. This courage then translated into a faith that fueled true sacrifice; knowing she could not care for any child at that time, she sought out a new line of protectors for him. Rose and I owe our gratitude to her.

Ray’s new guardians who cared for him did so physically, emotionally, and spiritually; they were close to him, as well as on the other side of the world. He had caretakers, social workers, administrators in China, and facilitators and prayer warriors over in the United States.

And, no doubt, our son had helpers in Heaven; who they were, is God’s knowledge, and yet your great-grandparents come to heart, save for Nana who, praise God, is with us and excited! Their names are Seeley, Idzik, Schissler, and Long; with pasts that molded Ray’s mother and me, their spiritual presence will shape his future. As much as those good folks valued family and the gift of life, they’d be tickled if they were still with us.

There is also the clear connection of “light” to Ray’s name. Maybe, however, it’s unfair to read into that, for fear of it unintentionally putting expectations on our son. Today we are simply grateful of the sunshine our Little Yellow-Tiger Boy has already brought into our home. Into his family.

Rejoicing in the Lord

My father once said that every love song is actually a love song from God to us. He just intended it as something fun to ponder and I’ve found it be so, particularly when driving around listening to the radio.
Love, love me do.
You know I love you,
I'll always be true,
So please, love me do.
Whoa, love me do.

Indeed, God is always true, and He wants our love in return. He knows you by name and thinks you are:

Unforgettable, that’s what you are
Unforgettable though near or far
Like a song of love that clings to me
How the thought of you does things to me
Never before has someone been more

Unforgettable in every way
And forever more, that’s how you’ll stay
That’s why, darling, it’s incredible
That someone so unforgettable
Thinks that I am unforgettable too

Sure, it’s a little odd to think the Creator Of All That Is would call you “darling;” but after you’re done with that point, you are left with the question of whether you think He is “unforgettable too.”

That Nat King Cole oldie was our wedding song, when Rose and I had our first dance as husband and wife. Even though I’m a step-on-your-toes kinda dancer, it was a moment to be cherished.

The afternoon we committed to Dang Fu He was also a moment to be cherished, as one would expect. We were all smiles, and all tears. Kate was overjoyed from 2,777 miles away in Oregon, sharing that she was “so happy for you guys!” We would later learn more about Little Dang, and come to understand why she was especially ecstatic for our little boy.

Our family had and has a song for Little Dang – I guess you could call it our “Adoption Theme Song” – and once we were done praising the Lord outside, we came in and cranked up He Reigns by Newsboys, a Christian rock band:
It’s the song of the redeemed
Rising from the African plain
It’s the song of the forgiven
Drowning out the Amazon rain
The song of Asian believers
Filled with God’s holy fire
It’s every tribe, every tongue, every nation
A love song born of a grateful choir

It’s all God’s children singing
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns
It’s all God’s children singing
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns

Let it rise about the four winds
Caught up in the heavenly sound
Let praises echo from the towers of cathedrals
To the faithful gathered underground
Of all the songs sung from the dawn of creation
Some were meant to persist
Of all the bells rung from a thousand steeples
None rings truer than this

It’s all God’s children singing
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns
It’s all God’s children singing
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns

And all the powers of darkness
Tremble at what they’ve just heard
‘Cause all the powers of darkness
Can’t drown out a single word

When all God’s children sing out
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns
All God’s people singing
Glory, glory, hallelujah
He reigns, He reigns

If you’ve never heard it, oh, how it stirs you with the sound. And which Christian can’t appreciate the line, “It’s the song of the forgiven drowning out the Amazon rain?” Asking for and receiving forgiveness is everything, for we are fallen creatures.

Well, we played that song several times that afternoon; and I play it nearly every day on the way to work. “Every day, and you don’t get sick of it?” Sure, and no! It reminds me to be grateful, both for what we have and do not have, as well as for what is yet to come.

Calls were made that day to share the news with my parents and Rose’s mom, but not before we took the children out to dinner – regardless of their age, they would be told first. We were unoriginal, and celebrated at a local Chinese restaurant.

It must have been a big deal, because any time parents with children the age of six, four, and 18 months go out, they tempt fate; the very moment you walk into the restaurant the timer starts ticking toward a meltdown. And you really don’t know when it’ll occur, so you try to order immediately, almost before the server gets to the table. It’s not the most calm of times; alas, that night we had a wonderful time, and Julia and Ben were excited to learn about their new brother! Confusion did arise, however, when Ben thought we were getting Little Dang “today;” also, Julia became disappointed when we shot down her choice of Joshua for the name of Dang Fu He. It’s a lovely name, we told her, yet it wouldn’t be chosen for her brother. It’d be another week or so before we figured that out.

Announcements were also made to friends via email. As an aside, how a family would get through the adoption process pre-email days is beyond me. We would have withered without it. Anyway, in Rose’s email she said, “We are thrilled to announce that our son, Dang Fu He, will be coming home (if everything goes well with the rest of the paperwork) by the end of this year!!!!”

The whole thing struck me since it wasn’t anticipated; in fact, I flat-out loved it, and responded to my dear wife:
It is LOVE that will keep us moving throughout life. And God has Blessed
you with the ability to love unconditionally, and your way is being taught to me
every day. When I see the line “our son, Dang Fu He, will be coming home” there is this sense of “absolutely he is our son.” Why is that? Come on really, there is no fabrication in that? No. And it’s due to Love and the Calling to Love.

Our son would be coming come; yet, we learned his journey had been a long journey.

With accepting the referral of Little Dang (by signing the Letter of Intent, or LOI) we officially then moved from the non-special needs path to the special needs, which Tiffany was in charge of; as a result, we talked to her several times that week. On one of these calls we asked why his medicals were so dated. Tiffany opened up, if not bared a bit of her heart.

It turns out this was the second time Dang Fu He had been up for adoption. Last summer (of 2006) he was in a group of special needs children that came into AGCI. And as it happens with boys, he was not being chosen by families (along with other boys). Yet, in early August a family called AGCI and committed to Dang Fu He, signing a contract and the LOI, and then moved forward. Well, to make a long (and unknown, on our part) story short, the family struggled in paperwork.

By the late fall it became clear milestones were being missed and AGCI had to press them. This continued until finally near the turn of the year AGCI essentially stated if they didn’t have their dossier done by said date the contract would be voided.

Mind you, this is not an easy thing to do for AGCI. They love their families, and want nothing more than for them to be united with a child – nothing more, that is, except for a child to be united with their family. And being the child’s advocate first is what prevailed in Dang Fu He’s situation. The delay had become unacceptable, and in the spring Dang Fu He came back up for adoption.

Tiffany is so passionate for the special needs children, and this could be heard when Dang Fu He’s situation was shared. It pained Tiffany that the family had their contract voided; it pained her Dang Fu He was getting older and older in the orphanage, for she knew it was going to be more difficult for him to be adopted.

Sitting and listening to Tiffany tell this story I didn’t know what to make of it, or how to respond. The sorrow – for the little boy – was there, in her voice…and out of downright desperation in the moment I said at the end, “And now Tiffany you are suppose to say you are THRILLED The Seeley’s are adopting him!”

Levity aside, June 19th really was a day the Lord had made, and we should rejoice and glad in it (Ps 118: 24). Others were rejoicing as well, folks we did not know, or know of.

Friday evening on the 22nd Tiffany sent us an email with a link to a travel journal of a family who just returned from China after adopting their little boy from the same orphanage Little Dang was in. What made them intriguing is that Tiffany said they our son; in fact, she said they actually mentioned him in the journal! After dinner and the kids had fallen asleep we checked it out. Their names were Jim and Angel, and they had four children, including Mario, who God had just folded into their family. He had the same last name as our boy; and they are just a month apart in age.

The first page we looked at was not the beginning of their trip, but the one which Tiffany said Little Dang was mentioned. It was the day after Gotcha Day for the family, and they had the opportunity to visit the orphanage. While walking around Angel said her “heart was beating a thousand miles a minute because I had a feeling I was going to see my ‘other son’…Then I saw him. I saw my other son. Jim saw him too. His big brown eyes met mine and he just stared at me. I could not take my eyes off of him as I just wanted to bawl! He kept looking right at me…no one else. It was so weird. Jim said ‘He’s staring at you!’ I knew it! I waved and he just stared as to say “What about me?”

Wow, how cool was that? We learned from Tiffany that Angel had a special place in her heart for our son, so much so had been praying and advocating for him at church, hoping for a placement for him. Which would explain the excitement in an entry on the family’s last full day in China – on June 19th, the day we said ‘yes’ to Little Dang:
“We are only 4 hours away from leaving and I got the greatest news ever.
My other son was placed! A family that already has their dossier in China has taken him! They will travel this fall to get him! I can't believe it! Many tears of joy about this here. Now I can leave China with a joyful heart, not feeling like I left this little one behind. God is so good and his timing is perfect. WOW! What a gift.”

Hey, that was us she was writing about! And they wrote so much more about their beautiful journey. The more we tried to process the timing of it all, the more amazing it became (China’s BIG; there was ONE AGCI family traveling that time; and they were traveling to our son’s orphanage, which had few adoptions). Someone had actually seen our son!

Quickly, though, they were transformed from "someones" into a family – The Bellante’s – we took to from afar. It may have seemed irrational, but there was something very special about them. They had a love for The Lord. Their eyes were gentle and genuine. Their hearts appeared huge. And to put a cherry on top of it all…they lived in Pittsburgh. We reached out to them with an email on Saturday morning:

Dear Jim and Angel,

The only appropriate place to start is to say THANK YOU. We have never met, and yet our families know each other through The Love that is Jesus Christ. This past Tuesday we said “yes” to God and to Dang Fu He, the little boy who you have been praying for to find a Forever Family.

It was such a blessing when Kate from AGCI said, “Wait, I think there is a family in Heilongjiang this week, getting their little boy who is in the same orphanage as your son.” “You can’t be serious!” was Demian’s response. Sure, God made All That Is, but sometimes His little surprises are too much! What an uplifting moment for us.

And then there was sweet Tiffany, who just last night sent the link to your Journey to Mario page. Rose read the entire beautiful journey in the wee hours this morning; Demian had trouble soaking up much after reading the heartfelt entries about Dang Fu He.

For now we just want to say hello to your beautiful family, especially Mario. As you have been blessed, so has he. Being just a short five hours away in Baltimore, we pray that one day he and our son will meet again. When appropriate, we’d love to hear anything about our Dang Fu He (his given name is pending!) and gain continued inspiration and tips as Demian prepares to go over later in the year.

Please continue to pray.

Peace be with you,
The Seeley Family

Rosalie & Demian
Julia (6), Benjamin (4), Dang Fu He (2), Elizabeth (18mo)

We waited with great anticipation for their response.

The Will of God, Discerned

June was approaching and that meant AGCI would be receiving the new group of Special Needs children. As exciting as that sounded, Rose and I had been praying for and about a particular little boy on the website. He was seated atop a little yellow tiger rocking-horse type toy, clutching its ears, seemingly trying to hold on for his dear life. And he was dear. We were drawn to his innocence, to his huge (read: huge) brown eyes.

But while May was supposed to bring flowers, the anxiety and confusion nonetheless still stemmed from our episode with Li. We were uneasy in our ability to figure out God’s Will. It would be a lie to suggest we didn’t ask God and ourselves questions. What did we do wrong? Do we even know how to discern Your Will?

In that place in time we couldn’t find answers with any certainty. So to a degree we felt the need to wait for the June group of children; Tiffany and Kate of AGCI had never called us about this little boy – maybe they knew us better than we did? Mostly, though, we were longing for a sign from God. And somewhere in the mix this email was sent to my parents:

The head spins, the heart pounds. We would ask that you pray for our ability to discern God's Will for us. That is all.

It's at this moment that one finds clarity - and, dare it be said naively, a general ease in implementation – in a good portion of the Ten Commandments. Don't kill anyone? Sure, no problem. Oh, don't steal anything? Got it. Love our parents? That's easy – we've been blessed with the best.

And then there is Jesus and His perspective. First, to love God with all our heart, mind, and soul. That is not purely possible when swirling in worldly ways; and He knows our great failings there. Second, though, is to love thy neighbor as thyself. That shouldn't be hard, yet that is where help is needed, for right there rests our
child.

Time and prayer will tell which neighbor we are to love so much that we fold him or her into our family. Forever.

To say the least, it was awkward possessing a desire to commit to this little boy and not taking action. I remember questioning our motives initially…were we waiting for a ‘better” child? I concluded a definite ‘no’ to that type of question. We hadn’t adopted yet, but we had been through enough to know it doesn’t work that way. And Rose and I don’t work that way.

Generally human beings do not set off to expose their hearts and souls to never before-seen depths, only to then take superficial action. We had always had the infant/toddler age in mind, and this young boy would turn three near the end of summer, making adjustment and attachment more complicated. In that context, though, we couldn’t shake Li; she certainly wasn’t an infant/toddler.

In hindsight with Li, we may have placed too much emphasis on “saving” or “rescuing” a child due to her age. When regrouping, Rose and I had to remember we did not enter adoption for some noble cause; we simply did so because God called us. Maybe, then, He called us to Li for a reason. Remember little Sunny, who moved my heart onto the path of Special Needs? We now thought Li was possibly sent just to push us off the picture of the perfect age.

All in all, and at that time, it is fair to say we merely determined that discernment was difficult.

In the Gospel of Luke Jesus tells of the disciples of the persistent widow (Lk 18: 1-8):

Then he told them a parable about the necessity for them to pray always without becoming weary. He said, “There was a judge in a certain town who neither feared God nor respected any human being. And a widow in that town used to come to him and say, ‘Render a just decision for me against my adversary.’ For a long time the judge was unwilling, but eventually he thought, ‘While it is true that I neither fear God nor respect any human being, because this widow keeps bothering me I shall deliver a just decision for her lest she finally come and strike me.’” The Lord said, “Pay attention to what the dishonest judge says. Will not God then secure the rights of his chosen ones who call out to him day and night? Will he be slow to answer them? I tell you, he will see to it that justice is done for them speedily. But when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?”

We were praying, but was it being done always and without becoming weary? My prayers had changed, having added “Why are we waiting Lord?” to the already-present “Who Lord?” Maybe because we had made such a quick decision with Li, which – if we were honest with ourselves – was the wrong one and produced great angst, the Lord knew our weaknesses, and would attend to our needs and wants in the final throws. If we were making a Forever decision, we never wanted to question it.

Further, and probably more to the point, maybe God wanted to share with us the peace which comes from waiting for Him. If we had in fact accepted that God was in control of our journey, why then didn’t we trust Him to control our journey? Did we not believe He would see to it that justice is done? And could we not relinquish a tenuous sense of time if for but a second, and avoid defining the speediness of the journey for Him? Commitment to a child wasn’t the end anyway; it was the beginning.

We needed to remain faithful. So we let go as best we could.

As expected, this wasn’t easy at all. What we would discover over the next two months, however, was that God was about doing things in perfect and uncanny timing. In addition, we would be reminded that the God who knows the number of hairs on our heads (Lk 12:7) is indeed a personal God. And oh, how He ever is! He would slowly unfold details that were to a depth of care we could never have dreamed or conceived. God did it for our child, for us, for others, and, frankly it seems, for the sheer fun of it.

But we weren’t there yet.

On June 4th Tiffany sent out an email to the Special Needs distribution list sharing that they “received a wonderful gift this morning at the agency, a large DHL package from the CCAA containing 27 beautiful new special needs children for placement!!!!!” There were 14 girls, and 13 boys in it, ranging from seven months to eleven years old.

The families were essentially told (definitely in a nice way), “Don’t call us, we’ll call you.” To be fair, the office would have a ton of work to do now translating, making copies, getting referral packets together, and getting all the children’s information into their computer system. As Kate once described it, “These kids show up and it is like we don’t have time to breath!” It would be up to two weeks before anyone really heard anything. To be sure, the wait would get to AGCI as well since, as Tiffany shared, they were “so excited to see if you will possibly be one of their forever families!”

I would still lapse into my unfaithful mindset. Any given day of the week, any hour of the day, a family could have called AGCI and inquired about our “Little Yellow-Tiger Boy,” as we now called him. It was crazy, foolish, and a bit scary. But was it? It was actually none of those if we believed through and through that God was going to personally place our child in our family. For if He was, and Little Yellow-Tiger Boy was not our son, then he would be taken anyway, like Li. But – BUT – if he was meant to be our son, God would be The One to put our child’s file “on hold” this time, and then help us move forward at the proper time. That is why we were excited when Kate called on June 15th with referrals. Rose and I felt this would provide the impetus for action, finally.

It was Friday, and it was hectic. Julia’s birthday was that day, and so she had her friends over for an assortment of fun and games, and cake and ice cream. I’m not sure she’s ever actually heard the famous song “It’s My Party” but, alas, she took the opportunity to cry – who knows if our dear wanted to, but not winning “Pin the Pentagon on the Soccer Ball” put her over the edge. Oy. Adding to the stress level, we also had Pre-Cana on the schedule. No, Rose and I were not preparing for marriage – we are the coordinators of our church’s marriage preparation program, and it was our team’s second night with 20-plus couples. The second night is highly emotionally charged, to say the least.

So we had a lot going on in our minds when Kate’s sweet voice came clearly across the communication lines. She had three children that fit our profile, which put more on our minds. There was a little girl, just shy of a year, with congenital heart disease; a second girl, this time four years old, with a cleft lip and cleft palate, repaired; and a little boy about 15 months old, also with a cleft lip and cleft palate.

We probably only talked for about ten minutes, but covered a lot of ground. Then Rose had to jump in the car and head up to church to prep for the evening. My job was to hang out at the house until Kate emailed the medicals and then head on up to church. It was a lot of running around for a serious period.

(Exhale)

The emails hit the Inbox one at a time, each with “Waiting Child” in the subject, followed by the child’s name. They were quickly printed and stapled separately; and I jumped in the car just as quickly.

It would be a 12 minute ride up to church, and Minute One I took a peek at the children. Oh, goodness, were they cute. The sweet girl with the heart condition was all bundled up in traditional Chinese garb; the four-year old had pony tails that galloped all over the place; and the boy, well, he had cheeks that rivaled mine from way back when – the kind that squirrels regularly had leading up to winter.

And yet all I could think about starting Minute Two was the boy whose medical report we didn’t have. Little Yellow-Tiger Boy. I called Kate from the car, but hit voicemail. I sent her an email via the Blackberry: Kate - We have a quick question (really). Can you call my cell? I’m sure Kate knew better than to think she could have a quick call with me. In many aspects of life I am not much of a talker. With adoption, I am.

She called anyway, bless her.

“Hi Kate – I promise this will be a short call! You always hear about people looking at a picture and knowing this is the child God is sending them. How often does that really happen?”

“Well, to be honest with you Demian, it’s about 50% of the time. I have families who just say, ‘Oh, this is the one God has in store for us.’ And then others just walk with the Lord.”

“Thank you Kate, that’s beautiful the way you said that.” I was thinking to myself, I like when both ways are blended. “So, what’s up with Little Yellow-Tiger Boy?”

“What?”

It had been the first time we had ever brought him up to Kate or Tiffany.

“You, know, the two-year little boy on the website, sitting on the yellow tiger. He’s got big cheeks and is wearing that yellow jacket.”

“Oh, him, he is adorable, isn’t he? That little guy’s been up there for a while. He has a cleft lip and cleft palate. Let’s see, he…”

Kate proceeded to pull his file and give a little bit of his background. We hadn’t realized he had a cleft palate; it wasn’t up on the website. But at least now we knew. Either way, it felt so wonderful to listen to someone talk about him.

“What’s his name?” I asked.

“Dang Fu He.”

Dang? I said it in my head again. Huh. I wasn’t going to go into the whole story about my Aunt Mary, who I am forever grateful for setting me and Rosalie up on a blind date 12 years ago. The same Aunt Mary with the last name of Dang.

I promised the call would be short so we ended it about a minute later. Kate had asked if we wanted his medicals to review over the weekend. I declined, knowing already it wasn’t necessary.

The car pulled up to the back of the Portico building, and it was necessary to get my tail inside and see what was still needed for Pre-Cana set up. The food trays were well underway, and the sodas and water were already icing down. The tables and chairs were in need of some shifting around. Oh, stop with the distractions – where was Rose?! I found her in the foyer.

“Hi dear. I brought the printouts of the children.”

“Great. Once Tom and Teresa get their talk going let’s sit down and look over them.”

“I called Kate and asked her about Little Yellow-Tiger Boy. Guess what his name is.”

“What?”

“Dang.”

Our eyes were frozen in the moment. I smiled. And I smile now, still able to see my dear wife pause, momentarily oblivious to the swirl of activity around her. And then – in a flash – it was Sunday evening. Two sessions of Pre-Cana completed; a team wrap-up meeting wrapped up; Church prayerfully concluded; dinner done; three stinkers sleeping.

It was only right to give respectful attention to the children we had information on, and to the overall process. This had started after Church, standing outside with the sunshine squinting our eyes. Our friends Sam and Jenny were gracious to take the time to talk to us and review the medicals. They are the parents of three beautiful children, and are both doctors; their insight was very helpful, particularly on the little girl with the heart condition.

That evening, we asked for the time of my Uncle Chi. He is amazing, first for being married to my Aunt Mary (who set Rose and me up!), and then for being an M.D. and PhD, holding a prestigious position at Johns Hopkins Medicine…all the while staying humble. And, yet, he didn’t get where he is today by being wishy-washy; Uncle Chi candidly shared that the girl would be a challenge to parent if she were our only child; then he reminded us we have three young children. That night, he was both an uncle and a doctor.

The sun came up…and we waited for it to do so in Oregon. It was directly overhead by the time we connected with Kate of AGCI. We let her know about all what we had done over the weekend, where we were in our discernment – and that we wanted Little Dang’s file. And for the first and only time we asked for a child’s file to be placed on hold.

Little Dang’s report came across and we took it all in. He was born August 24, 2004 and entered the orphanage at one week old on September 2nd. It was in Harbin City Children’s Welfare Institute in the Heilongjiang Province. He had bilateral cleft clip, both repaired: Surgery area healed nicely, with basically no scars. No change with cleft palate. Oh, and after napping, what does he do? He usually goes out for sunbathing with other kids, watch TV or play some games in his bed. What’s up with that?! The Seeley’s don’t even have a TV under the roof, let alone in the bedroom. Some adjustments would need to be made!

One thing that jumped out was Little Dang’s medical report was from October 28, 2005, making it nearly two years old. It also meant the three pictures sent were when he was 14 or so months old. It would have been nice to have updated information. Turns out, Kate said that AGCI had asked for the updates on him but never received anything from the CCAA.

Kate also shared something else interesting in email: “There is a family in China right now and in fact Tiffany got an email from them this morning. They tried to take some shots of this little boy but they were not allowed to do so in the orphanage.” The woman there apparently found him to be very sweet with a darling personality.

Wow. We had discovered that less than an armful of adoptions have been facilitated by AGCI through Heilongjiang Province, so it was amazing timing that a family was at the Harbin orphanage, at that very moment. But it was also amazingly confusing we couldn’t get an updated picture. I thought maybe the good lady could put her child in front of Little Dang and click away. Oh, well, she was in a foreign country and it was prudent to follow the directions of those in charge.

Tuesday came and brought us promise. We would be taking Little Dang and the other boy to the pediatrician to review the files. There was a faint feeling of guilt here, since we felt the 15-month old was somehow “losing a day” of having other families consider him for adoption. This faded, since frankly he was entirely too cute not to catch the eye and halt the heart of a family; plus he was just 15-months, a perfect age.

It was a quick 20-minute ride over to Dr. Gonzales office in Eldersburg, and we arrived around 8:30am. One nice thing is that because it was a consultation, he met with us right away since patients were not being seen at that early hour. Julia and Ben played in the waiting area and Elizabeth hung out with us and the good doctor.

What a challenge it must be to make assessments on just a few pictures and dated medical reports. There was nothing in the files, however, that would raise a flag. We really ended up talking about the schedule to follow after we brought our son home – the evaluation, the immunizations, the visits, the interdisciplinary teaming between a variety of doctors and therapists. And then just like that, we gathered the kiddos and headed back home.

The excitement was building up. We had learned from our previously hastiness, and knew this was a monumental decision that needed to be savored. While only the future lay ahead, the past was now clear as it flashed before us – the conversations, the encounters, the contract, the crying, the paperwork, the prayer.

We entered the adoption process with all kinds of thoughts and pictures. Recall the “healthy” child. Recall the “infant, under 18 months old” child. It’s not easy to move out and off of yourself, toward God. You pathetically search for an equation from way-back-when math class, to plug a given child and all the myriad life-variables into, hoping the answer pops out. But it doesn’t work that way.

It is so appropriate and so beautiful that God sent us children to help us find our child. He sent Julia, Benjamin, and Elizabeth to show the love that children bring into the home; He sent Liam to get us moving; He sent Sunny to open my heart to Special Needs; and He sent Li to mature Rose’s thoughts about age. Each prepared us for the decision God wanted us to make.

Our path to this point had not been long compared to other families; however, it had been just long enough, for us and for God:

The Lord is not deaf to the wail of the orphan, nor to the widow when she pours out her complaint. The one who serves God willingly is heard; his petition reaches the heavens. The prayer of the lowly pierces the clouds; it does not rest till it reaches its goal, nor will it withdraw till the Most High responds, judges justly and affirms the right, and the Lord will not delay. (Sir 35: 14, 16-19a)

It was June 19th and we were to walk in faith; for in the beginning and the end that is all one has. We were elated on that warm day. Rose was sitting in the threshold of the back door of the garage, watching our children play in the yard. I was standing above her, looking down into her eyes when we formally said “yes” to the Lord and Dang Fu He, our Little Yellow-Tiger Boy. The clarity of the moment gracefully paralleled our engagement from ten years prior; only our physical positions were exchanged this time. Both moments were absolute.

We sent an email to our adoption partner Kate with the subject line Commitment to Love; inside was a request for her to give us call that day, as we had prayerfully come to a decision. It was 3:05pm when the phone rang. I was working in the office; Rose was outside with the Julia, Ben, and Elizabeth by their kiddie pool. Walking outside, I handed the extra phone to Rose. We chatted for about two minutes on how the sky was bright, blue, and beautiful; finally, there was a pause, and the polite small talk was interrupted with life-altering words from Rose: “Well, we found a home for this little guy.”

The Will of God, Concerned

The weekly update from AGCI came on Thursday during Holy Week, since the office was off on Good Friday. With Easter upon us Emily of AGCI asked all of the families to pick one child to pray for so that they may find a Forever Family. Here are excerpts from her words:
“There comes a point each time we receive our special needs children when the days that we have them is drawing closer to an end and we start to feel anxious about placements. This group has been especially so due to the new restrictions that China has placed on families wanting to adopt. We have had to say no to families that in the past we have not had to and it breaks our hearts, to have rules and regulations stand between a child and a home. As we look at these little faces we are now faced with a dwindling time frame of placement and a large number of kids.

“…Prayer is a powerful thing, in the tangible world of today I think we often jump to the ‘practical action’ that we can do to make things happen. I find myself wanting to do that often with the placement of these kids, but it is powerful for us in our hearts and for these kids to continually give this to God. I want to extend an invitation of prayer for these kids. Over this weekend of Easter celebration, choose one of the children on our list and pray for them specifically. I would ask that you be very purposeful and specific about the child you chose, one that has rested on your heart, one that has caught your eye, one that you continually go back to see if they have been placed and pray for them. Focus your prayers on one child, on their placement, on them right now this day, for their birth mother, for their future adoptive family. Pray for open hearts. Lift them up and concentrate your prayer on that one child and their story.

"We are the advocates for these children, we are their voice and we must do all that we can. A defining and common theme in the stories of these children is that they have been left – our prayers can be the stronghold and shelter for these little ones. For some of these precious children this may be the first time anyone has prayed for them, this may be the first time that anyone has taken them on and stood in the gap for them.”
Words can move us, and these did. “Lift them up and concentrate your prayer on that one child and their story,” she implored. Stand in the gap for them, she enjoined. That is powerful. How could one not follow? Hey, if one is too busy to pray, one is too busy.

Writing today it is sadly shared I can no longer picture in my mind all the children on the AGCI Waiting Children website during that April weekend. Yet I clearly see a flat-out beautiful seven-year girl, with the biggest smile going. She apparently had "little dark spots" all over her body as her special need. Her name was Li, and that’s who I chose.

Staying focused in prayer is a challenge for me, and I tried my best for this little lady. Thursday. Friday. Satur…um, what was going on here? Seriously – what? I found myself falling for picture of a girl hanging onto a jungle gym 13,000 miles away. But it just couldn’t be. Li would be eight in late summer and Julia wasn’t turning six until a few months from now. Rose and I had talked at some point in the distant past before all this started that Julia would remain the oldest.

Easter Sunday came – Praises for the Risen Lord! Between getting pretty, getting into The Word of God, getting The Word of God into us, and getting around town, the day went quickly. I was still silently pondering what stirred in my heart by the time we visited my Aunt Rose and Uncle Matt’s for dinner. Their family’s fabulous food and benevolence bought me time. But was that a good thing? Upon piling in the car later to go home, it dawned on me time was running out.

The seat next to me was empty as we drove home in the dark. Rose was in the back seat of the mini-van letting Julia play with her hair, in hopes that she would fall asleep; Ben and Elizabeth were right behind me. It became apparent that sharing was necessary. It was an awkward now-or-never situation.
“Rose, what do you think about that little seven-year old
girl?”

“What are you talking about?”

“The girl on AGCI’s website. I’ve been praying about her.”

“Yes?”

“What about adopting her?”

“What are you talking about?”
The radio had been turned down within these 20 seconds. Over the remaining 20 minutes back to Finksburg we talked it out. This would be a big step to say the least. Sure, I had joined Rose on the path to Special Needs, but neither of us had budged from the baby-age.

It is interesting how really practical points come into the discussion. “She would have a great start on being bilingual.” “We wouldn’t have to worry about changing diapers.” In a way, even though brought up sincerely, they are so superficial. Decisions needed to be anchored into the deep. Rose said she would need prayer about it.

She shocked me less than seven hours later when we awoke by saying ‘yes’ to committing to Li. And as excited as I was, it was necessary to tackle the task of confirming the commitment of hers. I left the house for work, with both of us assured. Less than a minute later we were talking again, on the phone, almost in disbelief at what would happen in our lives this very morning.

For the geographically-challenged, Oregon is on the left coast and Maryland on the other one; this actually presented a challenge in patience for us due to three-hour time difference. At best AGCI would be open at 11:30am our time. Either way, we called Kate of AGCI and left an early-morning voicemail letting her know we wanted to talk about the little lady; this was immediately followed up with an email requesting a 12:15pmEST conference call.

Work went by, as did time. No response from Kate. 12:15pm? Passed by. At 12:30pm we called into AGCI looking for anyone. Tiffany picked up and said she’d let Kate know we wanted to talk. At 12:36pm another email was sent just requesting availability. Hey, it can be tough for a family in our emotional state to remember the Copernican Revolution, as there were many moments we thought all rotated around us. This was such a moment.
Less than 20 minutes later another call was made to AGCI, and I asked for Emily. Rose’s response six hours earlier was unexpected, and so was Emily’s: another family had this little girl’s file on hold.

On hold?

On hold?

I believed her message, but could not comprehend it. My business mentality emerged…even if it remained internalized. What was she talking about?! It had been just two business hours from her email! TWO!!! I mean, we left a voicemail and sent an email well before the doors opened. What, did someone call a minute after the email was sent on Thursday?

I still pushed forward, somewhat pathetically and quietly. “How does the process play out when a child is on hold?” The family has five business days to submit a contract to AGCI, I was told. “When did their five days begin?” Thursday (I had my answer).

Oh, God, what was I going to tell Rose? How do you tell a mother about a child she will now not have? What does a doctor say to a mother and father when the Doppler doesn’t detect a heart beat, and the sonogram confirms it minutes later without a sound? How do mothers heal from miscarriages?

I won't go into the silence on the phone when we connected. As the phrase goes, it was deafening. I was staring at “Li’s” pictured tiled all over my laptop’s wallpaper, while my dear wife was staring into nothingness. Our hearts had risen together, and now had fallen together, eliciting the kind of emotions that you physically feel inside your body.

The quiet was difficult. The whole thing was difficult. The AGCI conversations were supposed to elicit screams of joy from the mountaintop; the talks were to be brisk and full of next steps. Yet we were sorrowful in the valley, and only had repeated pain with our strides. We held out hope each day.

Hope is one of the Big Three in Christian virtues, that with Faith and Charity (1 Cor 13:13). Alas, we misapplied it. We took the gift of rejoicing in “sharing the glory of God” (Rom 5:2) and reduced it to selfish thought and selfish behavior. Where, exactly, had our focus been? By the time Kate called us on Thursday with the expected update it would be nice to say our focus was not on us, and rather on an orphan finding a Forever Family.

We would move to that state with time.

Entering a New Phase

The plane with cherished cargo took off from BWI Airport into the midnight and made it to Portland, Oregon the next day. You can look it up – the FedEx tracking number was 791646518225 dontchuknowit. The March 7th date was hit and we were thrilled about it, as was Kate of AGCI.

What was next? Yet another authentication of course! It would be the final layer, this time from the Chinese Consulate in Washington D.C. As a parallel effort, one of our complete dossier copies was expressed mailed by Kate to Benjamin in Beijing (AGCI’s resident China employee) to begin translation. Net this all out and it would be another three to five weeks before our dossier was sent to China. None of this would require us to lift a pinky. The Friday Weekly emails from AGCI that would faithfully have a “paperwork” section with tips and strong reminders no longer applied to us!

Rose and I had always heard about the wait period, that it was apparently the most difficult time; for us, the adjustment came easily. Frankly, we needed the break from the ever-present avalanche of adoption activity; while it’s all doable, it was no doubt taxing. Probably the most telling reason we did okay, though, was that we didn’t have a specific boy or girl tugging on our heart. We had plenty of distractions in our life, three trouble-makers in particular; so as the sun is wont to do, it came up and went down faster than we could say our daily prayers to the Lord for “the China Child in Your Heart.” Further, having moved into the path of Special Needs, we now felt the possibilities for adopting in 2007 or early 2008 were real, and we needed as many days on the calendar as we could get to prepare.

Three weeks later the entire dossier was returned to AGCI by the consulate authenticated! That day was the 29th, and looking at the fancy green and red seal it was authenticated on the 22nd (and apparently by an Irish fellow no less, named Patrick O. Hatchett? Hah.). Just like that Kate sent out everything to Beijing and we were DTC, or Dossier To China.

There are some key acronyms to accumulate along the way, and this was a satisfying first for Rose and me. To date, it had not gone unrecognized by us that through it all – the emotions of discernment and pursuit of precious paper – The People’s Republic of China did not have a clue about us. Not one. As a result, on May 3rd, when Kate sent us a document that had “Demian & Rosalie Seeley” and a bunch of Chinese lettering on it, it meant the world that a part of us was now in China. Our official LID (Log in Date) was April 15th.

Moving Forward

As the wait for the FDL continued we got all of our ducks, er, documents lined up in a row. If you recall, nearly everything needed to be notarized; this is all before to a “State Notification.” Well, there is yet another step in the middle of that (are you confused yet?). Not only was Maryland the seventh state to ratify the U.S. Constitution, it is one of only seven states that requires notarizations to be county certified by the Clerk of the Circuit Court where the notaries are commissioned. So the running around included extra trips to court houses in Baltimore, Carroll County, Montgomery County, and Anne Arundel County. Ahhh, thank you Old Line State.

The trip for Anne Arundel County was actually a good thing, as it allowed for a “dry run” of the state certification. The capitol of Maryland is Annapolis, which is not only America’s sailing capitol (of great interest, I’m sure, to dear natives of North Dakota), it also temporarily served as our nation’s capitol back in 1783. Anyway, there is a lot of government ongoing in Annapolis so both the county and state offices are there; as a result, after getting papers county certified at 7 Church Circle, I walked over to 16 Francis Street, the home of the Office of the Secretary of State, and checked things out.

I wish I could recall the ladies names in the Jeffrey Building since they were so very welcoming and nice. When, how, and how long were questions the inquiring visitor wanted to know. 8:00am-4:30pm, Monday through Friday; just show up with your documents; and the process takes no longer than 15 minutes. Great, since the moment the FDL hit our mailbox, we wanted to get right back here and do just that.

But all was not yet great. We had been trying to track general progress on FDL requests and the CIS website indicated they were still processing requests from back in October. What, October?! Website, schebsite, can we talk to someone live? It turns out that was possible and on February 7th we got in touch with the office. We wanted to know where we were in the pile, and if we could move to the top of the pile.

After my 30-second introductory spiel to Ms. Carol, she responded saying, “Yes, I have your file.” Yes, she knew who we were! Well, as it turns out, we were going to have one of those “don’t ask a question unless you want an answer” moments. Ms. Carol said there was information missing in our application and CIS would be sending back an “Intent to Deny” notice. That status would change to “Denied” if the issue wasn’t addressed within 30 days. Information missing? Could be denied? I felt like a man with a pace maker having just hit the bottom of the first big drop on a roller coaster.

It is the only time in the entire process that we were disappointed with our agency, and we were extremely so. This was awkward and tough since everyone is so darn nice; but the niceness didn’t help in the application when it was attention to details that were needed. In verbal and contractual language with AGCI it was and is stressed (over and over) that Rose and I are responsible for the outcome of the adoption, and AGCI is exempt. That legalese is understood; yet there is no question that in addition to the emotional support provided by AGCI we rely on them to ensure we are following the process and, most importantly, dotting the proverbial i’s and crossing the t’s.

Regardless, it was necessary to move on. We are all human; plus we knew everyone had the best of intentions and actions for Rose, me, and the child we did not yet know. Our adoption partners were very apologetic, and more importantly, very confident in the approach to rectify the situation.

The troops rallied and two weeks later on February 21st we received the updated home study to send off to CIS. A quick if not lucky scan of it showed, however, the documents were dated for 2006. Goodness. It was not a cliché: the Devil – who does despise adoption – was in our details, to the point of partying in our problems. And, maybe, that Wednesday being Ash Wednesday, it was a symbolic and humble reminder that Lent had started.

Another two days would be needed to fix the date issue, and the updated plea was delivered to CIS on February 26th. We waited, again.

But, we would not be in the desert for 40 days – just three days later we were resurrected! March had come in like a lion, delivering our FDL! Praises to the Lord, and to Ms. Carol of CIS for taking care of us. The United States of America had determined we were “able to furnish proper care to an orphan as defined in Section 101 (B)(1)(F) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.” Whatever that section says, super, we were approved, and a plan was put in place to have our dossier done (by done, I mean done) and delivered to AGCI by Wednesday March 7th. We prayed it was God’s plan, too.

Katie came through once again with last-minute notarizations, and the clerks did too with the county certifications. We decided I should go to Annapolis for the State Certification, as it would have been too much for Rose and the kids; so I took off work on that big day for us, Tuesday the 6th.

It didn’t start off smoothly because I took the wrong exit and, um, got lost. To boot, I also did the guy thing and did not ask for directions (it’s important to be consistent). So that cost a good hour plus; but the parking was cheap when the Honda finally pulled into the garage a little before lunch.

The day was clear and crisp, and my short walk to Francis Street past all the redbrick bedecked buildings began the swelling of a celebration for our family. There was no guard at the door this time, and this guy wasn’t going to wait for one either. I signed in, though, and opened the same door I had opened a month prior on the dry run. It was quiet and not a soul was in front of me; there was no red carpet, but it was as though I was expected.

Greeted with a courteous manner once again, I explained the need of our family and handed a stack over the clerk that was 16 documents high. Then I moved a few feet over to the waiting area and tried to take the moment in. I must not have taken much in because the details of the open room escape me. Of remembrance, however, was a wall lined with items from about 10 foreign countries. Each nation represented was part of the Maryland Sister State Program, which oversees an array of international exchanges, promoting a balance of business, educational and cultural interests. The Anhui Province of China was there, and though I knew nothing of the area it comforted me during the wait – yes, people worked together.

I could hear the sweet sound of the printer kicking out paper (no jams please!), and then – then – I was called back over to the desk. Everything was complete, and with all that was riding on this moment, that promise was double-checked by me.

Indeed, a gold-sticker version of the Great Seal of Maryland was on each one, featuring a plowman, a fisherman, a shield and a coat of arms. In the seal one finds the Italian words, “Fatti maschi, parole femmine,” or Manly deeds, womanly words. It turns out some prefer the translation of strong deeds, gentle words. Okay, that’s fine, but that modest controversy pales to an activist atheist getting a hold of the present-day testimony on each certification by the Secretary of State:

“In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto set my hand and have caused to be affixed the official seal of the Secretary of State, at Annapolis, this sixth day 2007 of March, in the year of our Lord.”


The end emphasis is mine. It’s warming to see our state not yet having abandoned Anno Domini for the delusional Common Era designation.

There was nothing common in the moment of me stepping outside of the building, and I immediately called Rose to rejoice with her. It was really true: we had all the documents necessary for our dossier and, symbolic to that of a child, they were clutched tightly to my bosom.

Needless to say, the ride back was much smoother than the ride down. And on the way home I did what any other boy does in moments like these and called my mother. Parenthood is all about sharing, and she of course was elated. Rose and I would also one day want to share the triumph with our child; as a result, after painstakingly making four copies of the 68-page stack at a stop at Staples, then making it through the front door of our home, the dining rooming table was cleared, the documents were laid out side-by-side, and a mini-photo shoot ensued.

As the papers were gathered back up into a pile up, the one on top stood out the most in our eyes and our hearts. It was our Application Letter to the China Center for Adoption Affairs. It was to be written by the husband, and cover a few key points about abuse and abandonment; otherwise, the letter was our opportunity to present our family to the earthy entity that controlled our adoption.

To Whom It May Concern:

Hello, my name is Demian Seeley. I have the honor of introducing our family to you and respectfully applying for adoption to the People’s Republic of China.

I was born in Washington D.C. (USA) on October 11, 1969, and grew up in Maryland (USA) as an only child with my mother and father. My parents provided me with a wonderful childhood, teaching me to respect others, and to value education. I have a bachelor’s degree in engineering, and will complete my Master’s degree from Johns Hopkins University this spring. Throughout my 16-year professional career I have had both technical and managerial positions, and currently serve as a director of a business unit for a communications firm.

My wife Rosalie is an extraordinary woman who was born on December 16, 1970 in Maryland (USA). Growing up as one of twelve children, she learned the power and importance of a loving family. Her parents stressed education and hard work as the path to independence, as well as the key to helping others. Rosalie used her bachelor’s degree in Early Childhood Education during her years as a teacher; and since achieving her Master’s degree in 2000, she has worked as a Pediatric Occupational Therapist, helping children with special needs.

Rosalie and I have been married since 1997, and have been blessed with three wonderful children, Julia, Benjamin, and Elizabeth. Throughout our time together we have frequently discussed our strong desire to adopt a child – to share our love, and to bring more love into our home. Today, we write to you, both excited and humbled, asking to adopt a boy or girl from China up to the age of twelve months at the time of referral.

Please know this child will never be physically or emotionally abused or abandoned once adopted and brought into the United States. Rather, he or she will be a cherished part of our family, and treated equally with all of us. Our first priority will be to make him or her a U.S. citizen as soon as possible. In addition, we will participate in and fulfill all post-placement requirements for the country of China.

Throughout life, our child will be blanketed with love and taught the values necessary for him or her to grow into a beautiful person. An important part of our child’s upbringing will be to learn about the amazing history of China, and to take great pride in the culture of his or her homeland. We, as a family, have already joyfully begun our journey of learning.

Thank you so very much for your time. Our family greatly appreciates your attention to and care of our application.

Sincerely,

Demian P. Seeley
Rosalie M. Seeley

That letter and all the other papers that served to say who the Seeley family was were sent to AGCI. Inside was a note to Kate of AGCI:
Here is everything, we pray. It’s your turn now. Thank you in
advance for your care of our family, near and far.

Minds Opened, Hearts Expanded

You grow during the journey. You must.

In his first Letter to the Corinthians Paul says, “Brothers, I could not talk to you as spiritual people, but as fleshly people, as infants in Christ. I fed you milk, not solid food, because you were unable to take it. Indeed, you are still not able, even now, for you are still of the flesh (1 Cor 3:1-3).”

As we moved positively toward our child we were, ironically, but children ourselves. In many respects we were and remain unaware. Okay, Rose has just a few things she needs to brush up on, and I am, to use the Great Apostle’s term, fleshy, maybe even a little doughboy-ish. Adoption presents so much: to consider, to learn, to reflect deeply upon, to prepare for, to experience, and…to accept on faith alone. God causes the needed growth, and He has his co-workers (1 Cor 3:5) to help in the process.

Did you pick up on the contents of the “Adoptive Child Desired” from a bit back? It included: Infant, under 18 months; and undecided on the handicaps. That is where we started out. We both wanted a baby. Rose was definitely open to a Special Needs child, and I definitely was not; hence, the undecided.

The age was important from two aspects. With a five, three, and one year old already in tow, and with the prospects of a two-year wait before bringing a child home, having a one-year old at the time of referral just felt and seemed right. Also, and probably the most important issue, is the attachment process. I won’t describe in detail what attachment is because it is very complicated for this space, and there are others who can explain in it much better than I ever could.

You may think of attachment as “bonding.” Bonding, however, is a one-way relationship that starts with the parent, fueled by the instinctive desire to protect the child (Melina, Lois [2006]. Raising Adopted Children. New York: Quill.). A cursory look to attachment, then, reveals a relationship where both parent and child acknowledge that the other is irreplaceable. Don’t be misled by the simplicity of that line: there are powerful and beautiful implications in the word irreplaceable when it is united with the underlying assertion of a reciprocal relationship between parent and child. Attachment can be more difficult, and take much longer, especially with older children.

Thinking back, my definitive no on Special Needs was such a primitive reaction. Part of it was due to sheer ignorance, as well as legitimate concerns about the dynamics of our family. Like most families, we have a lot going on in this household. And since in the beginning of all this stuff one has this noisy sense that I/we are “doing something wonderful for a child” you tend to – now isn’t this odd? – put limits on this wonderfulness. Seriously, bringing a healthy child into our family would be, well, you know, enough. I mean, wouldn’t it?

The deeper one gets into adoption the farther that aforementioned sense slinks into the background, and a subtle yet transforming difference emerges: you are being asked by God to participate in something wonderful for a child. When He is involved, the question begs whether we are open to Him. Sure, we respond – “Absolutely Lord, here I am!” That’s good, even beautiful, to hear. By the way, the question develops: to what extent are we open to Him?

This question is like a bubble wrapped around each person’s personal journeys of faith. It’s “unpoppable” (to offer a future entry for Mr. Webster), ever-present and unavoidable, like God Himself. Reaching toward it, rather than coiling up, brings us out of ourselves and nearer our God. One can see it is not a little matter of leaving some constructed comfort zone: We ponder what the Apostle Matthew was thinking when Jesus met him for the first time in passing and directed him to “follow me;” and we sit in awe because Matthew actually “rose and followed him” (Mt 9:9)!

Indeed, the whole matter can be unimaginably uncomfortable. In the Gospel of Matthew (19: 16-22) we witness a man who comes up to Christ:


"Teacher, what good deed must I do, to have eternal life?” And he said to him, "Why do you ask me about what is good? One there is who is good. If you would enter life, keep the commandments. He said to him, "Which?" And Jesus said, "You shall not kill, You shall not commit adultery, You shall not steal, You shall not bear false witness, Honor your father and mother, and, You shall love your neighbor as yourself." The young man said to him, "All these I have observed; what do I still lack?" Jesus said to him, "If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me."


Oy vey.

But let us not focus on the fact the man then went away sorrowful (nor that we would have beat him to the start). Did we miss that he actually approached Christ and had a dialog with Him?

Bringing us back to adoption and tying this into the journey, the earlier question of whether carrying a healthy child into our family would be enough was the wrong question. It has a bogus built-in assumption that families who do adopt Special Needs are doing something more than those who adopt Healthy children; or, for that matter, that families who do not adopt aren’t doing anything. Poppycock!

It’s a matter of whether you are sitting at the feet of Christ, asking what His Will is for your family, listening, and then responding. God calls folks and families to many different things in life, all of which can be accomplished by shedding your self. To aid in the growth He may send those co-workers we saw noted earlier in St. Paul’s writing. As a matter of fact, a little boy directly participated in leading us toward our child.

This past February, two days after Valentine’s Day, Rose called me at work and shocked me – hard. It was early evening on a Friday. She had just hung up the phone with Kate from AGCI, who called with “some potentially great news for you” – a referral.

What??!!!!

My heart raced like a greyhound; it was trying to pound its way out from behind my chest. Tear ducts opened. In the few seconds that passed I just couldn’t wrap myself around the news. Like the Virgin Mary meeting the angel Gabriel, I was perplexed more than anything. “How could this be” – we weren’t even out of paperwork yet (akin to Luke 1: 34).

We immediately decided to be open to a conversation with Kate, and so I called the Oregon office and conferenced her in with Rose and me. We listened, with breath held.

About every three months they receive a group of folders on Special Needs children, generally between 20 and 30 in number. The health issues with these treasures really range from minor to major, from correctable to uncorrectable. There are children with major heart problems to missing limbs; Hepatitis B to vision problems; port-wine birthmarks to cleft-lip. Also, a healthy child is considered Special Needs if, simply, he or she is older. Many people want healthy babies, and factors seemingly controlling a child’s adoptability create special needs.

During the placement of these children the AGCI China Staff goes through a discernment process of their own. They review forms completed by families open to adopting SN children, and through prayer and a practical approach they do their best to match children with their Forever Families.

Kate had what she termed a “gut” feeling about a little 15-month boy with cleft clip / cleft palate. He had been abandoned roadside in Huhehot, the capital city of the Inner Mongolia province. She continued to tell us items in his medical report: he was a good napper, had a good appetite, liked to throw balls…and he had long eye lashes with big black eyes.

While there wasn’t much more for her to share about him, she did describe the potential next steps. We learned that SN families do not need to be completed paperwork to accept a referral – in fact they don’t even need to have started! That was news to us, yet irrelevant if only because we were nearly done the paper chase. Kate stressed we’d be on a fast track – rather than receiving a healthy-child referral in late 2008, we’d be traveling to China in June or July. (That gets one’s attention.)

Rose and I didn’t have any time together to discuss the options, yet with only two at that moment we accepted the opportunity to prayerfully consider this child over the weekend. I requested that we only be sent the child’s medical report, and not his pictures. If this seems odd, it may be; but we didn’t want a photograph to play into the decision.

The call ended, and electrons moved at the speed of light across the county to place the report into our respective e-mail boxes moments later. His name was Sun Ya Yuan. Not having a clue about Asian names, I immediately called him “Sunny.”

It was a good thing the roads were clear on the 40-mile ride home that night, because my mind was not. A child – now? I’d repeat that as many times here as I did in my head if I thought you had the time (you don’t), or would humor me to that extent (you may be good people, but you would not.).

Rose and I embraced when I came through the kitchen door. Only a few seconds had to tick by before Rose asked, “So, what do you think?” Ugh, she had beaten me to the question! Regardless of our sharing sequence, within minutes we learned that I was focused on the cleft palate, and not the little boy with the cleft palate; she was focused on the child’s age.

What were we to do? How was the decision to be made? Cleft palate had not been checked on our form to AGCI, so in addition to prayer and discussion, we knew education was needed. And beyond the discernment and discovery issues we found ourselves facing a timer that had started the moment the connection dropped with Kate, and it would go off on Monday morning.

We wanted to give Sunny and God our all, and yet it was frustratingly clear we were operating in reaction mode. This weekend of all weekends! I was frantically racing toward deadlines for the capstone course of my Master’s program and reams of writing were required. Rose? She and the kids were booked in Lancaster, PA Saturday and Sunday, to celebrate her sister Clara’s 40th birthday party. We would be distracted – and apart.

It turns out the cleft lip and cleft palate are the most common birth defect in the United States, with one of every 600 newborns being affected by cleft lip and/or cleft palate (http://www.cleftline.org/). For a head-yet-unturned, however, it did not help to Google-across a woman in her late 20’s who had nearly 12 surgeries to correct her palate. 12! “Rose, 12 surgeries…are we ready for that?!”

The Lord knows whether we were ready or not. As with most questions, though, there are others right behind it. I have no idea if that surgery count is low, the norm, or high, but Sunny would have his own number. So why shouldn’t we be right with him while he goes through this trial? Why him, but not us?

This and more bounded around my brain and hung on my heart that Saturday morning while working out downstairs. Steven Curtis Chapman’s “Speechless” CD was blaring, and I was alone, teetering back and forth atop a wall of tears.


The long awaited rains
Have fallen hard upon the thirsty ground
And carved their way to where
The wild and rushing river can be found
And like the rains
I have been carried here to where the river flows yeah
My heart is racing and my knees are weak
As I walk to the edge
I know there is no turning back
Once my feet have left the ledge
And in the rush I hear a voice
That’s telling me its time to take the leap of faith
So here I go

I’m diving in I’m going deep in over my head I want to be
Caught in the rush lost in the flow in over my head I want to go
The rivers deep the rivers wide the rivers water is alive
So sink or swim I’m diving in.

That’s Chapman (from Dive) who heard the voice – what about me?

Well I got myself a t shirt that says what I believe
I got letters on my bracelet to serve as my ID
I got the necklace and the key chain
And almost everything a good Christian needs yeah
I got the little Bible magnets on my refrigerator door
And a welcome mat to bless you before you walk across my floor
I got a Jesus bumper sticker
And the outline of a fish stuck on my car
And even though this stuffs all well and good yeah
I cannot help but ask myself

What about the change
What about the difference
(From Chapman’s Change)


Yes, indeed, what about my supposed change helps Sunny? Or the tens of thousands beside and behind him?!

I was a man overwhelmed.

We weren’t out of paperwork, but for the first time I was transported outside of and beyond the coordinating, shuffling and the hustling. Sunny was in front of me now. I was co-partner in a choice that impacted a fellow human being on the grand scale. There – right there – was the core of my angst: a choice. How were we to choose? Never have I felt more uneasy.

Let’s cut into the intimacy right here. Rose and I are unabashedly Pro-Life…and we were choosing. I seemingly detected the start of this when completing AGCI’s SN form with Rose (“Please complete this form by stating YES, NO, or MAYBE next to each of the possible special needs mentioned below.”) and now here we were.

Being in this state does not negate the fact that abortion is horrific and an abomination to God’s Gift of Life. I will not turn this into (too long of) a sermon. A grown man, however, can only hear that life doesn’t begin at conception so many times. Never a greater routine of mental gymnastics has there even been (Answer the question: When did you begin to grow?).

It is freely admitted this painful subject is complicated for the woman in the moment, and somehow for society in this period of history. Yet, I had misjudged the situation with Sunny. My emotions jolted the matter significantly off, and I was wrong. We were decidedly not choosing – we were discerning.
When pregnant with a child it is a fallacy with consequences for the creature to craft the notion that a choice exists; the Creator has already revealed His Will for the family. When adopting, you are trying to determine His Will for you. A monumental difference.

The praying continued, and so did the phone conversations between Rose and me. On Sunday evening, with the whole family back home safely, Rose and I decided not to move forward with Sunny. He was not the child God had for us. At the time, we were incorrectly labeling bringing him into our family as “Artificial Twinning;” regardless of the term’s misuse, he was but a month older than Elizabeth. Our second daughter is a tremendous toddler who we love dearly and, well, we’ll leave it at that – two of her would have bordered on two too much!

Kate’s call out of nowhere what not for naught, however, for in his young life Sunny had already served God. Rose and I were now focused in desire. She had been asking God to open my heart toward a special needs child, and this had been satisfied. Being confronted by Sunny, even if only on paper, moved me off of paper – I had an imagination now.

Oh, and who could have imagined Sunny! We eventually saw pictures of him and, my, my, how strikingly handsome he was. On the first day of March Kate sent an update that a couple had committed to him. We were so comforted in this news! Or were we? Unquestionably we were, and yet the news generated a genuine sense of grief. For whatever reason, it took some time for us to clearly realize that finding loving Forever Families for each child was God's priority. Our challenges of that weekend in February were embarrassingly inadequate when compared to what Sunny had endured in his short life-time. And so he has a special place in our heart for helping us mature as adoptive parents-to-be, and as Christians.

Seeing the Light

This activity and excitement was coming at an already-busy time of the year. That we asked for it did not reduce the stress. When Dr. Kirschner knocked on our door that Saturday at 7:30am it was December 23rd – or “Christmas Eve Eve” for the child in you.

He spent the entire morning at our home, God Bless. He set up in our living room, plopped down in the old low-riding comfy chair, placed his laptop on the coffee table and generated our home study in real-time. In him, we found someone interested and integrated in our adoption. Our beloved friend Libby was as well, as she came over bright and early that morning to interview with Dr. Kirschner. We needed only one in-person reference interview and she graciously accepted. Had, however, she not been able to make it (Libby was all of seven full-months pregnant!) either one of our dear friends Dawn or Dordie were waiting in the wings to save us.

As splendid as our revival kicked off, we admittedly needed some saves even along this new way. To be sure, it was not peaches and cream. If Frank Adoption couldn’t start without the medicals, Datz couldn’t finish without all the forms (none of which were in their control). We knew of the well water and the notarized letters coming into the transition; a week or so later we learned Child Support Statements and Child Abuse Clearances were also needed.

The requirement for Child Support Statements was peculiar, since we’ve only been married to each other. The abuse clearances were more frustrating because we already had them….and couldn’t send them to Datz. More exactly, we didn’t personally have them, Frank Adoption did. For whatever amazing reason, an agency is not permitted to send this specific information between agencies. I looked for the law, and never saw the law; nonetheless, it is the law (at least in Maryland), supposedly for “confidentiality” protections. Humphff – never mind that it was we who wanted it shared.

Eventually, with some letter writing and “encouragement” we had those final documents come in, and on January 11th we received the draft home study report. Thanks be to God! Now it just had to be reviewed and accepted between our two agencies.

If there was a drawback to having two agencies it was being the proverbial middle-man, trying to facilitate moving the home study from draft to various revisions to the final version. It reminded me of a Dilbert cartoon with Dilbert standing at a whiteboard with only the word The on it. The caption said something like “few things are harder than having a group of people write a sentence.” And then the others within the single-paneled strip said: that’s a loaded word if you ask me; it all depends on what you mean by “the”; and this ain’t Shakespeare, let’s use words we can all understand. Hah!

Really, AGCI (thank you Chance!) and Datz were very good, and not surprisingly we all made it through without major casualties. Then on January 23rd – just a month and two days from the call with Matt at Datz – four notarized copies of the home study were delivered to our home!

A quiet guardian of this process was Ms. Jeanne, of Datz. Very knowledgeable and ever the professional, she should get a silver star for putting up with me (thank God a Purple Heart wasn’t necessary). Prompted once for feedback, she described me as “a little over-anxious.” That’s fair, and certainly kind, since she actually must have thought I was a nut. On top of the adoption process being personal and emotional, there are many “hoops” for the adoptive parents. Advice is available, support surrounds you, but in the end Rose and I were the only ones responsible for making certain we were thorough and that things are moving along. And by the Grace of God, moss did not grow on our rolling stone.

What does a family do with a notarized home study? They send it off to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, or USCIS for short. We took that very step that very same day, overnighting it for delivery on January 24th.

There are particular pieces of the adoption process that we either took for granted, or where ignorant of. It is fine and dandy that we desired to adopt a child from China…but the United States of America would have say in the matter. Months earlier we had started this process with USCIS by completing form I-600A, an Application for Advance Process of Orphan Petition. We in fact needed to classify our future child as an immediate relative and ask for him or her to be allowed to enter the United States. And while the form was sent to the local Baltimore office, the petition was actually filed with the American Consulate in Guangzhou, China. That kicked off the fingerprinting requirements, and now we were following up with the second half.

True to form, the goal of this process is another form – the receipt of an I-171H, endearingly referred to as a Favorable Determination Letter. If the “FDL” isn’t like gold to the adoptive parents, it is the golden key to the dossier, for it generally is the last item needed to complete paperwork.

And so we waited for a favorable disposition from the United States of America. Ours is a government of the people and by the people; we prayed – as it was further stated seven score and four years prior in Gettysburg, a mere forty-five minutes from our home – that it was also for the people.

Being Ministered by Angels in the Desert

The next hour was very frantic, painful at times, yet, thankfully, very productive.

I called Rose, not because misery loves company, but rather to share our predicament and discuss how to get back on plane. I quickly realized she needed her own time to process and vent since she was just hearing it, and put my “Guy Problem Solving Mode” in neutral. That, er, red light was short, though; with the noon hour approaching I wanted to get a call into Datz before folks went to lunch.

We agreed that I could make decisions on the fly where reasonable. If Datz would take us the main risk was possibly losing money. We’d have two costs floating in the air for the same service (the home study), and if by some strange chance Frank Adoption got their act together in the next several weeks and could finish significantly ahead of Datz we’d need to break from Datz…and their fee probably wouldn’t be returned. Knowing what we knew, the probability of that scenario occurring was low.

Before contacting Datz, however, we really needed to make sure this move was kosher with AGCI. The doors were just opening up on the left coast and fortunately Kate was available. After getting briefed she brought Chance, the Social Services Director, into the conversation. Within minutes it was clear they would not bless one particular path. I noticed, however, that neither Kate nor Chance were not saying “no” to a switch of home study agencies and ran with that. It nagged at me there was no previous working relationship with Datz, yet with Datz showing big and reputable on their website it seemed things would work out. And it was (about) time to find out.

Switching ears from Portland, Oregon to Vienna, VA…Matt picked up in the Datz office and I started telling and selling right away: here’s who Rose and I are, and here’s our big sob story, can you help? One can only imagine how it sounded on the other end. Probably not very composed, that is sure.

Folks working in the adoption arena know the cause they are involved in and almost by default they are so darn nice. Matt was that and then some, demonstrating customer service which, if bottled, would solve the ills of many organizations. Listening to his voice I probably had him by 15 years; indeed that voice kept the call calm, and the man behind it was efficient – and effective. Datz has a gem in Matt. Rose and I had a real life angel.

On the surface, Matt felt like we were in good shape. He put me on hold to check out a few things, and then came right back. Get this – with minor exceptions, they’d accept all of our documents! We did need our well water inspected; and our letters of recommendation needed to be re-done since the original ones were not required to be notarized (but they only needed three, not four). That was it!

Next we talked about the timeframe. Datz offered an expedited process which cost more, and with all the lost time we needed to go for it (I had half a thought to go back to Frank Adoption and try to get reimbursed for the extra money; it was a time, though to count our blessings.). Matt needed some time to review the schedule social workers in our area, but was confident we could get started toward the end of the following week. He’d let me know by the next day. In the meantime, we needed to FedEx a signed Home Study Agreement, along with the check.

I called my lovely bride with the update, one that was much better than just thirty minutes prior! Like Jairus’ daughter, we were resurrected (Mk 5)! Christ had heard the tumult and wailing, and He came.

And just after hanging up with Rose, Matt called back. “Someone is looking out for you. We have a social worker for you, and he may be available tomorrow. Dean is expecting a call from you.” Get out! No cajoling was necessary.

Dean was in fact Dr. Kirschner, who has a practice offering a variety of services related to bettering the individual as well as the family, and this includes home studies. During our short talk he relayed Matt had shared we were in a spot and he was here to help. Flipping through his schedule he said we could come in next Thursday.

Thursday? I was fresh off the call with Matt and his exciting expectation was etched in my mind. What was a boy to do? “Okay, we can make next Thursday, thank you very much. When I was on the phone with Matt he mentioned you were available tomorrow – is that still possible, or did he misunderstand?” We discovered the man works yeoman’s hours: Rose and I were set to meet at his office seven o’clock the next morning! Beggars can’t be choosers, but the eager can ask.

Someone needed to stay with Julia, Ben, and Elizabeth while we met with the good doctor, so at the pre-dawn time of six-twenty the next day, Rose’s sister Betty knocked on the door. Two of Rose’s sisters are local to us, and our three families have regular opportunities to bless each other, and babysitting is one way.

Rose and I left Lawndale Road in separate cars, as I’d need to go to work after the meeting. It was still dark as we traveled the back roads through the horse country part of Maryland. There are enough twist and turns in the 20-minute route that my mind was surprisingly focused on driving; this was good, since I was knackered from staying up well past two o’clock completing 11 page biography forms for both of us in preparation for the visit.

Our cars crossed over I-83, made a right on York Road, and within modest miles turned into the office parking spaces safely. For the first time ever, or maybe just in a while, we had five minutes to spare. If you are, by the way, keeping track of time it had been one week since we had our first home visit with Frank Adoption, and just less than 20 hours from calling Datz.

And here we were nervous again, with no kids available to distract and lighten the moment. But up the steps we went, through the unlocked door, and into the waiting room. Have no fear my dear, a smiling face greeted us – Dr. Kirschner shook our hands and took us back into his office.

His approach was one of warmth and education. The very first thing he told us to do was calm down. An adoptive parent of two, he had sympathy for our seat – hey, drop the need to be perfect. Then, the words he spoke next resonated into our bodies: “Your child will come home.”

To date we had never heard that before. Oh how difficult it was to sort through those five words while sitting in that chair. I was prepared to tell the doctor my birth date and where I worked, not contemplate a birth never to be known, and why I worked. They were personal. They underscored the essence of our actions. They were of love.

Less than a month later I would refer to Dr. Kirschner as one of the more dynamic individuals I had ever met in my life; for he was, and it was his endless energy and passionate belief that “every child deserves a safe, healthy loving home” which pushed us through the gate. But that’s getting ahead a bit.

During the remaining fifty minutes we were constructively challenged. I’m sure Dr. Kirschner saw a woman dedicated to loving children, in powerful way. In addition to gathering data for a report, he served us well by momentarily moving us into a relationship with a little child from China whom we did not know. I will leave the specifics of his approach confidential, if not a mystery.

We walked back down the steps and got in our cars. Rose backtracked through the road that splits farms, and I slowly wrapped around the now-busy Baltimore beltway. There wasn’t much time to decompress: the doctor would be at our home the next morning.

The Wheels Nearly Fall Off the Cart

While Wednesday was slipping by, it did not pass away completely without a call being placed to Frank Adoption. It yielded results consistent with the past. I then hit the website. What’s this, a notice? There have been changes and the contact for Martha was listed. Her name was Michelina, and she was out of North Carolina. North Carolina? Her number was dialed immediately and – I promise you – a nice message was left for Michelina, asking that she call me as soon as possible.

My cell phone rang the next morning a little after eleven o’clock. It was Michelina; she was familiar with our case and, in fact, had our folder. As the conversation from last year is pieced together, the thing to know is she was calling to say Frank Adoption did not currently have an Executive Director licensed in the State of Maryland. My mind raced, and my eyes probably got squinty, but this isn’t exactly recalled. Her next line, however, is remembered: no one was able to authorize/sign-off on a completed home study. (Oh, wait, my eyes did get squinty, a lot like Cool Hand Luke, actually.)

I didn’t bi-locate to NC like St. Paul roaming around in the Acts of the Apostles, but I was beside myself. “When will you be getting a licensed person?” No date. “I mean, are we talking weeks, or months?” Not sure. “Then it’s undefined?” Yes.

You always hear about the devil putting up road blocks in our lives; the Disgrace of Darkness is not one to lift us up. Candidly, however, aside from the frustration with getting the home study visits kicked-off we had felt things were going okay. But this surprise was so over-the-top bad. Nearly two months to the day after officially beginning this journey our home study agency wasn’t able to fulfill its contractual obligations. No home study, no adoption.

Fitting or not, the only person to turn to was the one who was delivering the bad news. What were we to do? Michelina offered to give us a full refund. I’d like to think I was calm throughout the conversation, but not raising my voice doesn’t translate into being calm. Exhibit A: “I know you are going to give us a full refund, but that’s too easy an out. I want you to keep our money right now; Frank Adoption needs to have some skin in the game.”

The business edge of me emerged, as can be seen. While one can argue over the suitable phraseology in that stressful spot, in the front of my mind there must have been a real solution, a solution that Frank Adoption had already considered. This perspective was shared with Michelina. With all due respect to our family, this problem of theirs was much bigger than “The Seeley’s.” We were just one little home study. What about the many others? What about folks using Frank Adoption as a placement agency? “You can’t just leave us all hanging – what is Frank Adoption’s plan?”

They had a potential one, at least for us, and why it only surfaced after pushing was unclear. Regardless, they had informally set up a bridge to an agency called The Datz Foundation, out of Northern Virginia. They apparently were licensed in Maryland and may be able to work with us – a family in limbo – for the home study.

If there was a silver lining coming to light I pretended not to see it. There was much unknown – would any of our documents transfer to this agency, or would all of it need to be re-captured? That said, though guarded, I was appreciative of the lead. Hope can be helpful in a tough hour. Michelina and I ended the call with several agreements, of which the key ones were we would stay under contract with Frank Adoption at least through the New Year; and she would FedEx our complete file to our home by the next day.

Before moving on it’s important to say some words about Frank Adoption. Rose and I were admittedly shocked and disappointed about the lack of communication from Frank Adoption. At the same time, we recognize that all organizations go through transitions, some of them being uncomfortable. While we are not able to personally recommend Frank Adoption, families must choose what is best for them and that could very definitely include working with Frank Adoption (in fact, they had previously been a wonderful partner to our friends, who adopted four or their eight children from Russia). And, specific to Michelina, we are sure she didn’t ask to be put in that spot. For us, she was extremely helpful and unfailingly professional throughout the ordeal, and for that we are thankful.