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6:26 am by Penelope

When a Mom’s Infertility Brings Her a Son

My Story: I was the single mother to two girls before I met my husband. The girls’ and I had been on our own with no emotional or financial support. It was tough. After meeting and falling in love with Ross, we were married and I wanted to have another child………oh, how I prayed for a son! We tried for months, and 2 years into our marriage decided to see a doctor. We discovered that I wasn’t making eggs on my own. I began medications, first oral and then on to injections and finally on to the fertility clinic where we had even more medical interventions and inseminations to try to conceive.

Month after month, I felt like a failure. Month after month, I wondered why I was denied a child when so many others were aborting babies or having them and abandoning them. I prayed, I bargained, I plead with God to give me a child. We went into debt to pay for more medications and more procedures. Until I finally said enough……the failure was more than I could stand. My heart was broken, my body had betrayed me…God had abandoned me…I was less of a woman and a failure as a wife.

A co-worker suggested that I become a foster parent since there were so many kids in need. Maybe it would help me feel better? So Ross and I attended classes and received our foster care license. I figured that I could foster kids until their parents got things figured out……..stay busy and keep my mind off of my own failure to conceive.

Why me? Why was I not good enough to be given another child?
I was scared…….confused…….and so very hurt.
My spirit was wounded and my heart pierced by loss.
And then I was given a child who healed me.

His Story: I was born to a mother who did not know how to take care of me. I spent my first 18 months in my room, in my crib without much interaction. I was not bathed regularly, and the medical conditions I had were not treated properly. I learned that crying didn’t get me what I needed, so I was quiet most of the time. I watched the shadows fall across my nursery wall each evening, and those same shadows disappear each morning. For 18 months I was given bottles, just enough care to keep me alive. Month after month, I waited and I wondered what this was all about. I could not evoke much of a response from those around me, so I stopped trying. The failure was more than I could stand.

Then one day, people came and took me from my nursery with the shadows on the walls each evening. And I was taken to a new place they called a safe house. It was noisy and there were people in and out. The lights and noise terrified me! I wasn’t used to all the movement, TV, radio, voices, crying, and the openness of the world outside my crib was more than I could stand. I withdrew into myself so I could get things figured out……..A car ride later I was in yet another place, and then another. The further I withdrew, the safer I felt.

Why me? Why was I not good enough to be loved like a son?
I was scared………confused……..and so very hurt.
My spirit was wounded and my heart pierced by loss.
And then I was given to a woman who healed me.

Boy-Running

Our Story: {{God’s amazing plan}}  Sometimes we pray for things to happen to us or for us, but we expect God to give them in the way WE perceive them.  Had you told me 2 years ago that I would no longer yearn for a baby in my womb – that I would no longer feel the pain of secondary infertility, I would have told you that you were wrong.  No way could God heal me through anything less than a pregnancy! Had you told my precious boy 2 years ago that he would have two adoring parents, two sisters, two big dogs and love to rival that of the wildest imagination – he probably would not have believed it, either. God is absolutely amazing in His gifts. He will give you more than you can ever dream possible if you allow Him the opportunity.

If I could trade my experience with my “forever boy” for a perfect, textbook pregnancy with a healthy son as the outcome – I wouldn’t. I know with every cell of my body that this child was made by God to be my son.  Although he did not pass through my body to enter this world, at the time of his birth he WAS born to me…but delayed in being with me……and we both knew it the moment he was placed into my arms.

I am not a public speaker, nor am I someone who could be pointed out as a “model Christian.” I fall short of the glory of God every day of my life. I am not worthy of the gifts bestowed on me.  But I can tell you that during my dark days of bargaining and pleading and begging God to give me a son, I made the promise to testify to His glory if my desires were granted. I would tell others of grace, healing, and the love of God. If you turn to Him, trust in Him – your cup will run over. I am healed. In so many more ways than I asked to be.  I know only joy. I Praise God.

Deirdre works for the Nebraska Foster Adoptive Parents Association mentoring, supporting and training Nebraska’s foster parents.  She and her husband, Ross, of 11 years have four children (2 adopted) and one teen under guardianship.  One of her children suffers from fetal alcohol syndrome and an attachment disorder.

7:00 am by Penelope

Infertile Is Just a Word

Infertile. It was never a word I thought would describe me. From the time I hit puberty, my cycle was like clockwork. The clockwork lasted until the moment my husband and I decided we were ready to start a family. Then everything went haywire.

Month after month for several years we tried and prayed. Every month our hearts were broken and confused. Then one month, it came. A positive pregnancy test. Finally! We were going to be parents! But the pregnancy was rough from the beginning and our Baby went to be with Jesus at a very early age. And the longings and confusions started again.

Our thinking then started to change. Late one night, my husband and I started the discussion about opening our home to children in foster care. We had the love and we had the home – why not? It wasn’t until we met our boys that we decided we wanted to make this a permanent adoptive home as God opened opportunities.

Our boys are not legally ours, yet, but the case moving in that direction. In our hearts, these children are as much ours as any biological baby could be. I still miss our biological Baby, but if I had given birth, I know I would never have met Lil’ Guy and Lil’ Mister! I wouldn’t trade that for the world.

It’s odd how things have changed. Now, every month, instead of praying that I will need to run and buy a pregnancy test, I pray and beg God that my period will come! Pregnancy has no appeal to me now – after a rough pregnancy, not wanting to put my body through that torture and knowing that we have a family in our 2 infants and whomever else God might have for us to care for – short or long term. They have our hearts. I am quite content and grateful for the family God has and is providing.

Infertile. Yes, it is a word to describe me. And I’m thankful for it.

Infertility does not have to be the end. You can love a child just as much through adoption.

Jeri was born and raised in Alaska.  She went to Azusa Pacific and the University of Northern Colorado, where she got her degree in Elementary Education.  After teaching 4th grade, she spent 5 years in Thailand as a missionary, working at an orphanage and teaching English at a local university. While in Thailand, she met and married her husband. They have been foster parents in Alaska for about a year.

You can read more on infertility and National Infertility Awareness Week.

11:40 am by Penelope

The Blessings of an Adoption Baby Shower

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Adoption is such a blessing! For those wanting to add to their families. For those birth mothers overwhelmed by motherhood. For the children who need a stable place to belong…forever.

This weekend, I was blessed to be part of a celebration of a child joining a family. I attended a baby shower of a close friend who received a call two weeks ago for a baby abandoned/relinquished upon birth at a Houston hospital. The birthmother went to the hospital because of extreme abdominal pain and was told she was in labor. She didn’t even know she was pregnant!

My sweet friend and her husband were in the last stages of their adoption paperwork when they received the call for this baby girl. They had to rush out to complete their fingerprinting before they could pick up their daughter.

The baby was referred to as a “drop” baby (as in unwanted) and placed in a foster home when she was released from the hospital.

The irony is that the adoption agency is Alternatives in Motion, the same adoption agency that my husband adopted his son, 21 years ago. Two other couples I know from Houston are listed as waiting families, although Amy & Tim recently added a baby boy to their family a few months ago.

This Christmas, in their newsletter to adoptive families, AIM sent a plea for help for birthmothers. Our Sunday School class sent a Christmas love offering.

Isn’t it amazing how blessings come full circle?

I am thrilled for my friend who is a natural at motherhood.

Last week, I asked fans on Facebook about gifts for an adoption baby shower. Thank you for your suggestions! Here is the haul (I did have to explain some of the items to this new mom!)

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7:47 am by Penelope

What Nia Vardalos Has to Say about Foster Care Adoption

Actress Nia Vardalos shot to stardom with her breakout movie, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, but at the time, she was secretly struggling with infertility. She eventually adopted her daughter through the foster care system and this is what she has to say about it and her book, Instant Mom.
nia-vardalos-adoption-daughter-book

7:58 am by Penelope

Chat with Foster Parent Nia Vardalos on Wednesday

nia-vardalos-daughter-adoption-foster-care

Writer and star of My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Nia Vardalos firmly believed she was supposed to be a mom, but Mother Nature and modern medicine had put her in a headlock. So she made a choice that shocked friends, family, and even herself: with only fourteen hours’ notice, she became an instant mom to a preschooler through foster care.

Instant Mom is Nia’s hilarious and poignant true chronicle of her attempts to become a mother. With her signature wit and candor, she describes her and husband Ian Gomez’s bumpy road to parenting, how they found their daughter, and what happened next. Nia includes a comprehensive how-to-adopt section and explores innovative ways to conquer the challenges all new moms face, from sleep to personal grooming. She learns that whether via biology, relationship, or adoption—motherhood comes in many forms.  Some families are created in different ways but are still, in every way, a family.


You can also view the trailer for Nia’s book, Instant Mom, here.

LIVE CHAT WITH NIA VARDALOS ON WEDNESDAY

This Wednesday, February 13th at 2pm EST/11am PST, you can live chat with Nia about her book on Twitter. Just follow @NiaVardalos and the #InstantMom hashtag.

You can win an autographed copy of Instant Mom by tweeting your questions for Nia in advance to @HarperOne with the #InstantMom hashtag. [Official Rules]

You can pre-purchase Instant Mom (due out April 2nd) via:  AMAZON, BARNES & NOBLE, BOOKS-A-MILLION, or IBOOKSTORE!

Do you “tweet”? Will you be joining us on Wednesday? Add your Twitter handle below!

8:00 am by Penelope

Why Race Matters

Dr. Martin Luther King had a dream. Transracial adoption is truly his dream realized – full integration.  Whites adopting black children to become forever members of their families.  As divided as our nation was at the time, could transracial adoption been fathomed in his dream?

This weekend, we attended a foster parent training entitled “Healthy Racial & Ethnic Identity.”  Race, as our instructor told us, is the white elephant in the room. Her words to us were: “Race matters.”

As an African-American mother of a gifted & talented African-American son, our presenter spoke openly about the reality of how race matters to our children, even today.

Teen filmmaker, Kiri Davis, explores the message that society gives African-American children in her video – A Girl Like Me.

Halfway into the 7 minute film, she shows African-American preschoolers 2 baby dolls, identical except for skin color.  Watch what happens when she asks: “Which is the bad doll?”

I can’t help but tear up when she asks the little girl why. “Because she’s black.”
Julian Abagond writes more about the Brown vs. Board of Education doll experiment.

Another heartbreaking point in the film is the African-American teen who began wearing her hair natural, then her own mother tells her that her hair looks too African. What?

Another good film about the importance of race and ethnicity, produced by the Casey Family Services, is Knowing Who You Are, where former foster children and birthfamilies openly discuss integration.

Skin color may not mean anything to you. You may truly be “color-blind;” however, at some point in our children’s lives, someone will point out their differences to them, as they try to fit in.  Skin color is just one of those external factors. We can’t ignore it.

Honestly, can your African-American son safely go for a walk in your neighborhood at night?  Or could he end up as Trayvon Martin, the African-American teenager shot in Florida last February by a neighborhood watch coordinator?

Our speaker even asked a friend that is an officer with the Austin Police Department about what route her African-American 16-year-old son should drive to school.  His words to her: “Take the interstate – your son will get stopped by the police if he drives through the neighborhood!”

The takeaway of the training was that race matters in society and as parents you have to be aware of that.

  • Realize that, at some point, your child will probably be stereotyped according to their race;
  • Give your child proactive and protective messages about their individual abilities and identity;
  • Help your child identify themselves as something other than race (“I am a girl who enjoys reading vampire novels”)

What issues or controversies have you encountered with transracial adoption?

 

7:45 am by Penelope

Adoption Tax Credit: What You Should Know

If you follow on Facebook, you know that Congress enacted the American Tax Relief Act of 2012 to avoid a “fiscal cliff”. Here is what the text of the actual bill (H.R. 8) says about the IRS adoption tax credit(1):

(A) ADOPTION CREDIT.—

(i) Section 23(b) is amended by striking paragraph (4).

(ii) Section 23(c) is amended by striking paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting the following:

‘‘(1) IN GENERAL.—If the credit allowable under subsection (a) for any taxable year exceeds the limitation imposed by section 26(a) for such taxable year reduced by the sum of the credits allowable under this subpart (other than this section and sections 25D and 1400C), such excess shall be carried to the succeeding taxable year and added to the credit allowable under subsection (a) for such taxable year.’’.

(iii) Section 23(c) is amended by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (2).

Clear as mud, eh??? {The American Tax Relief Act actually amended the Internal Revenue Code so the numbered references are to IRS Federal tax laws.}Federal-IRS-adoption-tax-credit

What happened to the adoption tax credit in this 2012 law?

The adoption tax credit was made permanent in the Federal tax laws!!! The adoption tax credit has only been around since 1997 and was reauthorized by a number of bills but now is permanently written into the tax laws. The adoption tax credit was fully refundable in tax years 2010 and 2011; however, it is not anymore.

What does it mean if the adoption tax credit is “refundable”?

Refundable means that you get credit for the entire amount of your adoption expenses, regardless of what you paid in taxes. Since tax year 2012, you can now only get credit for the amount you paid in taxes; however, you do have 5 years to carry over any unused credit from previous years.

How much is the adoption tax credit?

For tax year 2012, the amount is $12, 650 per child for qualified adoption expenses.

For tax year 2013, the amount is $12,970 per child for qualified adoption expenses.

For tax year 2014, the amount is $13,190 per child for qualified adoption expenses.

What are qualified adoption expenses?

Qualified adoption expenses include reasonable and necessary adoption fees, court costs, attorney fees, traveling expenses (including amounts spent for meals and lodging while away from home), and other expenses that are directly related to and the principal purpose of which are for the legal adoption of a child.

How does the adoption tax credit work if we adopted a special needs child?

With the adoption of a U.S. child with special needs, you may be eligible for the maximum amount of credit for the year of you finalize the adoption, even if you paid no qualified adoption expenses.

What is considered special needs?

A child is considered special needs for purposes of the adoption credit if all of the following conditions are met:

  1. The child was a U.S. citizen or resident when the adoption effort began.
  2. A state determines that the child cannot or should not be returned to his or her parent’s home, and
  3. A state determines that the child probably will not be adopted unless assistance is provided to the adoptive family.

Generally, special needs adoptions are the adoptions of children whom the state’s child welfare agency considers difficult to place for adoption, and most foster care adoptions are special needs adoptions, but few other adoptions are considered special needs adoptions.

What IRS Form do we file for the adoption tax credit?

To claim the credit or exclusion, complete Form 8839 (PDF), Qualified Adoption Expenses, and attach the form to your Form 1040 (PDF) or Form 1040NR (PDF).

Disclosure: I am not a tax professional. This information was compiled from the IRS website regarding the adoption tax credit.

9:00 am by Penelope

Did You Read These Most Popular Posts of 2012?

2012 was a fabulous year for our family! An entire year with our Lil Bit being officially our son!!!  This little blog had a good year too with a number of posts that had great dialog – also some were quite a bit controversial!  Here are the Top 12 of 2012:

#1. Easy DIY Disney Mickey and Minnie Mouse Costumes

When I had my “twin” 2-year-olds, I planned Halloween costumes as Mickey and Minnie Mouse. However, my Blondie moved to live with an aunt just 3 days before Halloween.  I had to scramble to become Minnie for my little Mickey.  This post was on the first page of Google search for DIY Minnie Mouse costume.

 

#2. Adding Foster Children to Your Family: How Will Your Kids Take It?

This popular post was written by a teenager with foster siblings and gives her personal view of how bringing children from hard places into her life at such a young age affected her.  A MUST-READ for potential foster parents with other kids!!!

#3. Did She Drink When She Was Pregnant?

This post discusses Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD), the first signs, physical features, and the sensory issues attributed to FASD.

#4. Why Does My Child Act Like This? Could It Be RAD?

Another informative post about Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD). My Stinkpot has been diagnosed with RAD. The most difficult issue with diagnosing RAD is that it has many overlapping characteristics of 9 other mental health diagnoses in children.

#5. Why We Fought To Keep Our Foster Child

What a controversy that this post caused with a group of birth mothers fighting the foster care system!

#6. Free Online Foster Care Training!

In the state of Texas, you can receive 2 hours of training for your foster home license with this online course on psychotropic medications. Will your state accept this course?

#7. Love From a Birthmother

Another controversial post regarding relationships between birthfamilies and foster parents. The comments from the birthfamily community are just ridiculous.

#8. My Struggle with Parenting a Difficult Child

attachment-style-parenting-discipline-criticism

 

Remember this controversial cover photo on Time Magazine? Here I share my struggle with how to parent my neglected child.

 

 

#9. Do You Celebrate Your Adopted Child’s Culture?

We did not celebrate Cinco De Mayo with our Mexican child. Some commentators think we are doing wrong for our child.

#10. Lil Bit’s Baby Brother – Isn’t He More than Just a Check?

We received a placement call for Lil Bit’s newborn brother born a week before our adoption. Here’s an update about how this baby is caught up in another crazy custody battle.

#11. You Can Tell He Isn’t Your Child

Yes, this is what a CASA worker actually said to me!

#12. Titties!

With that title I should have known! Since that title was the #11 searched term on this blog, I realize I have a number of elementary schoolboys that “read” this blog. haha! This post is actually about teaching our foster children appropriate words and behavior.

Which blog post was your favorite this year?

9:00 am by Penelope

My Confession: My Bad Habit as a Parent

“Mom! You’re not listening to me!” My strong-willed 5-year-old, JD, growls at me. And he’s right!

Sometimes I get so focused on the task I’m working on that I actually just don’t hear him.

I’m currently reading The Connected Child: Bring hope and healing to your adoptive family by the late Dr. Karyn Purvis.

Chapter 5 (“Teaching Life Values”) of this fabulous book discusses ways that foster and adoptive parents can teach their children appropriate life values.  Values that a child without a devoted caregiver may not learn – such as respect, kindness, obedience, and consequences.

Parents can best teach values by living them first!

My strong-willed son is the first to point out any inconsistencies between what I say and what I do. So my actions speak much louder than my words!

Because of my son’s Reactive Attachment Disorder, he struggles with empathy for others. He is extremely ego-centric (as many preschoolers are).  Teaching him that others matter is going to be a struggle. It already is.

One way we show we value others is by respecting and listening to what they say!

And when I get busy and tune him out, I am not teaching him about valuing others.

Many times when JD accuses me of not listening to him, I don’t realize that he’s speaking to me.  When he’s talking, I have to make myself stop what I’m doing and check in with him.  Amusingly, sometimes his reply is: “I’m talking to myself.“

What is your bad habit as a parent? What family values are you teaching your children?

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