Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Sifted

I really can’t count the number of times I have started this post.  I get a few lines in...a paragraph...and then I stop.  And erase it.

I’ll just tell you now--there’s a lot to say here.  So I’m guessing that once I get the words out there will be a lot of words.  You’ve been warned.

When we reached the decision to adopt in April 2012, I had an idea of how this whole adoption thing would go down.  Paperwork, lots of waiting, a few hiccups, referral, boom! Family of four!  We wanted to share the journey with you because we assumed God would do some crazy awesome things and we wanted people to know how crazy awesome our God is.  We felt compelled to be real and raw and honest in our posts because we believe that as Christ followers we should be honest.  It’s easy when you are a pastor/pastor’s wife to look around and find yourself placed on a pedestal simply because of the job title---not because you have done anything special to earn that place.  Kyle and I are blessed to be a part of a small group that has seen us as we truly are and still seem to like us.  I mean, they keep coming over week after week, so that’s a good sign...right?  These people have been in my home when it is at its cleanest and dirtiest.  They have seen us sacrifice for each other but also argue with each other.  They’ve been around for our parenting wins and major losses.  They have seen us place our faith in God again and again and they have listened to us when we’ve asked the hard questions about His plans.  They’ve been around when we laughed until we cried and they’ve been there when we’ve cried until we laughed.  I can tell you that we couldn’t have made it through the last year without these people holding us up.  

We are real people when our small group is around, and I try to keep it real here on this blog, too.  Not because I want to, though.  To be clear….I am quite the introvert.  If I know I’m going to be in a situation where I have to talk to a lot of people that I don’t know well I actually make a mental list of conversation topics!  Yes, I’m serious.  Yes, I know I married a pastor and people I don’t really know talk to me all the time.  Small talk is hard for me!  But one on one deeper conversation?  That I can do.  So this whole sharing my heart with the Facebook world bit is not easy for me.

So why do I keep doing it?  Back to the being real thing.  Just because Kyle is a pastor and I am his wife does not mean that things like faith and wisdom and understanding the Lord come easier to us.  It turns out that faith is hard sometimes.  It turns out that God’s ways are confusing and complicated and trusting Him often looks crazy.  I really prefer to update this blog when there is something positive to say, something that at least points to hope.  It’s much harder for me to write when hope seems lost.

These past few months have been very difficult for our little family.  Bad news has been rolling in and updating has seemed too hard.  But it is time for us to open the window and be real with you.  So brace yourself...I’m taking the “church face” off.

In August while on vacation at a secluded cabin in the no cell phone service woods, we managed to receive an email and a voicemail from our adoption agency.  We learned that for a third time we would need to find a new agency.  Our agency was too small to maintain the financial requirements outlined by the Hague agreement.  That wasn’t the only implication, though.  The other issue is that there was no other agency that has an adoption program in Azerbaijan.

The end of the line.

As we drove home from that vacation, we discussed our options.
Give up?
Try to have a biological kid?
Adopt from China?

We began to look at other agencies and wondered how to explain all of the Azerbaijan stuff in our home.
The puzzle with a photograph taken in Azerbaijan by an Azeri-American.
The canvas painted by a friend with an outline of Azerbaijan.
The vase, slippers, hats, and snow globe purchased for us in Azerbaijan.
The ornaments with the Azerbaijan cut out inside.

Were we wrong all along?  But it always seemed so clear!

Within a week we got a call.  There was another agency.  If we still wanted to pursue Azerbaijan, the agency we worked with in 2013-2014 was opening their program again.  And they wanted to talk.

Trust had been broken before with this former agency, but after a lengthy conversation, many things were cleared up.  They couldn’t guarantee any progress would be made, but they would try.

Perhaps another week passed...I’m not sure.  And the phone rang.

We want to tell you about a little boy in Ethiopia.  You are home study ready...he could be yours if you just update your home study to say “Ethiopia.”

And they sent us his picture.  His sweet face with liquid brown eyes and short, curly hair.  Wearing pink in every picture.  They sent us his name and his history and how could we say no?  How could anyone say no to a child in need of a home?

But the road would be long because Ethiopia is no walk in the park.  

So we said yes and emailed our home study agency.  We explained the situation and what we needed to make a match official.  Just change the word “Azerbaijan” to “Ethiopia.”

Nope.  The answer was no.  You see, the adoption situation in Ethiopia is very fragile right now.  Laws are changing.  Very few agencies have programs in Ethiopia open right now.  And each agency is matched to a specific orphanage in the country.  Our home study agency and our placing agency both have programs in Ethiopia...but they are matched to different orphanages.  And the home study agency has a policy against providing home studies for Ethiopia for families using different placing agencies.

Which means we would need a new home study agency.  Which means we were not “home study ready.”  Which means the liquid brown eyes needed to be passed along to another family who would be ready more quickly.

It is probably weird to admit this, but although this situation should have devastated us, it really didn’t.  It was disappointing--absolutely.  Annoying, sad, frustrating.  Feeling like we came so close only to have it taken away.  But deep down, in the deepest parts where we think and feel things but we are afraid to say them out loud---in those places we never really thought he would be ours.  His face never haunted my dreams.  

So as September rolled in, we took a deep breath and turned our attention back to Azerbaijan...where nothing was happening.  Nothing at all.

And then we got some good news.  Great news!  The best kind of news---a plus sign!  A positive pregnancy test!  And perfect timing, too!  Baby would be due in June--just as the school year draws to a close here in Virginia.  Matthew was thrilled!  So much to look forward to!

And unlike “adoption pregnancies,” these kinds of pregnancies...the biological kind...have expiration dates!  Give or take a week or two, you know that kid HAS to come out!  Praise the LORD!!!

It didn’t last long, though.  I don’t know why these things are so very hard for women to talk about, but can I tell you, until I experienced a miscarriage I had no idea that I was surrounded by other women who had experienced the same?

I had suspected for a couple of weeks that something was wrong.
In the midst of my happiness, my joy over expecting new life, I always wondered if God would really say yes this time.  Wondered if it would end this way.

And as I helped a group of my 5th graders work on their book reports, I knew it was over.  I knew I’d have to leave early.  Call my doctor.  

After an ultrasound it was confirmed.  The words are permanently burned in my mind.

“Your womb is empty now.”

The anger.  The confusion.  Lord, WHY was this even necessary?!?!  Have I not proven to you time and again that I will follow you?  I am so angry, so very angry the words aren’t even available to explain the anger!  But I still choose YOU.  You know I do.  I don’t much want to talk to you, but I still choose You.

That was all I could pray for a while there.
I still choose You.
I don’t understand You.
But I still choose You.

That was about a month and a half ago now.  And sharing this with Facebook land scares me to death.  I tried to convince myself that this isn’t really part of our adoption journey so I shouldn’t include it at all...But the thought won’t leave.  It’s as if the Lord keeps whispering it in my ear.  Be Real, Be Raw, Be Honest.

Can I just say something that some of you learned a long time ago, some of you are with me now, and some of you will learn in the future?

Sometimes the road is long.  Sometimes the journey is hard.  Sometimes the light is dim and the dark is scary and you feel lost.  Sometimes the next step has to be taken in pitch black darkness and you don’t know where your foot will land.  Sometimes you yell at God.  Sometimes you tell Him you don’t understand.  Sometimes you yell and you scream and you cry and you beg and you try to turn away.  Sometimes you find yourself holding your only child who is sobbing in your lap because he was so excited to get a sibling and you demand that the Lord tell you WHY.

And sometimes

He doesn’t.  Sometimes he doesn’t tell you.  Sometimes all you can hear is that still, small voice saying, “One more step.  Trust me.  Take another step.  Trust me.  Keep going.  Trust me.”

And when you cry and yell and scream---He lets you.  And then he sends people to you with stories like yours...stories of adoption and miscarriage and anger.  Stories of hope and redemption and unexpected provision.  He sends people with Chinese food and Chick fil a and groceries and the Melting Pot and a cozy scarf and cute earrings and a coloring book and and and and.

Can I do a shameless plug for small group?  Be in a group of people who you can be real and true with.  Cause the ones who stick around for your crazy are the same ones who stick around for your heartbreak.  

So here we are.  Our hearts are healing.  We are trusting the Lord.  We are hanging up that extra stocking for the 5 time this year.  We have an ornament on our tree.  We are updating our homestudy to adjust the age range...and the number of children.

We are willing to adopt two kids up to age 5 ½.  

Thank you for clicking on this post...for still following along after four and a half years!  Send prayers our way---we certainly need them!

I’ll leave you with this verse that God laid on Kyle’s heart the day before our miscarriage:

“Satan has asked to sift all of you as wheat.  
But I have prayed for you...that your faith may not fail.  
And when you have turned back,
strengthen your brothers.”

Luke 22:31-32

We’ve been sifted, are still being sifted, but our faith has not failed.  

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Be Still

I know I need to write an update on our adoption, but it is hard when there is nothing to report.

Nothing.

If you’ve been following along, in February we learned that things are essentially at a stand-still in Azerbaijan.  That hasn’t changed.  We did attempt to move things along by asking for permission to send the agency’s liaison to visit an orphanage in hopes of identifying a child available for international adoption and requesting that child be registered.  The answer was a big, fat NOPE.  So, we’ve been waiting and praying and living.

We have decided--with Matthew starting KINDERGARTEN in the fall that I will be returning to work as a teacher (YAY!!!!).  I’ve had a few people ask if I’m nervous about my little one starting kindergarten and I tell them--Nope!!  I’m just going to go with him! ;)  I’m so very glad the Lord saw fit to bless Kyle and I with that little bundle of awesomeness five years and one week ago.  He has had us smitten ever since!  We still look at him every.single.night. before we go to bed...is that weird??

So I’m keeping myself busy around the house trying to complete all the projects I know I won’t have time for during the school year.

Discouragement over the adoption definitely pops up occasionally.  But God has this incredible way of knowing what we need when we need it.  I wasn’t really planning to share this whole story but here my fingers go typing it…

Last week--the day of Matthew’s birthday--was one of those days where lots of people wanted to know how things were progressing with the adoption.  I got to share several times during the day that nothing, no, nothing, nope, not a thing is happening.  Please don’t misunderstand me here, guys, I don’t want you to be afraid to ask how things are going with our adoption!  When people ask I know they care about us and our little one and that means the world to us!  But giving bad news repeatedly is still difficult, in spite of the encouragement of knowing how many care!  So by the time we went to bed that night I was feeling the discouragement pretty heavily.  As I was trying to sleep, I was essentially yelling at the Lord in my heart.  Why? When? How LONG, Oh, LORD?  I asked if he just wanted us to switch to a different country.  One that processes adoptions more frequently, one where we would be less likely to have such trouble.  Just tell me!  Just make it clear!  Just lead our hearts to another country and we will do the stupid paperwork again if you ask us to!!

I fell asleep somewhere in the midst of that pity party prayer.  The next morning it was wet.  AGAIN.  Cause this year in Virginia spring really means RAIN EVERY SINGLE DAY.  I was trying to get a couple of things finished in the morning before heading to the church where I am the Middle School Ministry’s very best volunteer (it helps that I’m married to the MS pastor, too…).  And I got a message from a sweet lady I knew through my teaching days a few years back.  She wanted to bring me something.  
You guys.  The way the timing of all this worked out was such a proof of how sweetly and gently God can correct and love my wandering heart.

She told me she knew someone who had been in Azerbaijan recently and she asked them to pick up a few things for us.  She tried to tell me it was no big deal...but to us it was everything.   We needed that encouragement desperately!  I fell asleep asking God to make it soooo clear where he wants us to adopt from.  What country?!  Lead our hearts somewhere!!!  And there, the very next morning standing in my driveway on a rainy day was the answer, clear as a bright sunshiny day.  A snow globe of a famous Azerbaijani monument, an exquisite vase handcrafted in Azerbaijan, a pair of knitted child’s slippers, and two traditional hats.  Sweet gifts from a sweet lady, used by God to whisper to our hearts “Wait for the Lord.  Be strong, take heart, and wait for the Lord.”
And so (as you’ve heard me say a bazillion times over the last four years) we wait.  We hope.  We move forward living life and serving the Lord the best we can in our broken, weak way.  We pray.  We wonder.  We imagine.  We surrender.  We sit back and let the Lord work through this process.

And He?  He loves.  He loves us, Matthew, our little one.  He draws us to Him.  He reveals himself to us in the wait.  He shows us the dark spaces in our hearts that we need to surrender to Him.  He encourages us.  He is fighting for us.  And what is impossible for us is easy to Him.  

It could be years.  It could be months.  It could be days.  However long this takes, we will continually, daily open our hands and give the plans in our hearts and minds up to the Lord and allow him to choose the path our lives take.  Thank you for checking in on us.  We are so thankful to be surrounded by so many family, friends, and I’m realizing--strangers!! who encourage us and pray for our little one daily.

Monday, February 29, 2016

I Will Only Sing Your Praise

I so much don’t want to write this update right now.  But I’m sitting here in my too quiet house trying to spend time with the Lord and drink my coffee and I can’t seem to get the post out of my head so I figure maybe that’s the Spirit telling me to get it done.  So.

Ah, where to start.

Well, a few weeks ago I had this dream. So vivid.  I had a paper in my hand--the referral! And there was a picture in the top right corner...a little girl.  She was four years old.  White shirt.  Holding a stuffed animal.  Dark hair, dark eyes.  Even her birthday was there--June 24th.  Two days before mine.

But then I woke up.  It wasn’t real.

Aaron (our worship pastor) talked about dreams that are better than reality at church yesterday.  That sadness you feel when you wake up and find it was just a dream.  But then reminded us that whatever plans the Lord has for us are better than we could ever dream.  Lord, please?

A couple of weeks passed with very little communication from our agency.

I wrote a letter to our little one.  I told our sweet child how very much the Lord loves him...her…(stupid pronouns).  Claimed some verses for our kiddo:

Psalm 139
1 You have searched me, Lord and you know me. 2 You know when I sit and when I rise; you perceive my thourghts from afar. 3 You discern my going out and my lying down; you are familiar with all my ways.

5 You hem me in behind and before and you lay your hand upon me.

7 Where can I go from your Spirit? 8 If I go up to the heavens, you are there; If I make my bed in the depths, you are there.

16 Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.

I take comfort knowing that although I don’t know my child, I don’t know when I’ll meet my child, I don’t know the plan--God does.  None of this is surprising to Him.  And the Lord is watching over our little one.  He knows all of the days.  

So Thursday morning (last week) I was drawn back to this verse that I have visited so often in the last few years



Wrote it out on pretty paper and hung it above my kitchen sink.  A reminder that I am forced to look at every time I wash my dishes.

And I started listening to a new song...but I’ll get there in a minute.

Finally after a few weeks of very little and very vague conversation with our agency, I got a call that afternoon.

Aida is moving on...we’ll be working with a new contact in AZ.  That’s ok, I don’t love change, but that’s ok.

And an explanation--The orphanages in AZ aren’t registering their orphans with the central authority (state committee) like they are supposed to.  You see, when a child is available for adoption, the orphanage is supposed to register them.  But if a child gets adopted, the funding for that orphanage decreases--they get funding based on the number of kids they care for.  And I get it--they have a budget and an enormous task--to care for so many children.  So the state committee has no way of knowing what children are available for adoption, and the orphanages have no motivation for registering kids, and there is no one enforcing the system.

I’ll spare you all the details of the conversation, but suffice it to say it is likely to be a while.  Sure--God can bring a miracle whenever and however he wants.  But miracles aside, we are waiting for a random orphanage to randomly decided to register a random child who happens to fit our profile.

The question was put before us--do you want to send your dossier to another country?

I’m sorry---I know some of you probably think we are crazy.  But we just do not feel released from Azerbaijan.  Maybe one day the Lord will send us to a different country...but right now we don’t feel a draw anywhere else.

So with the home study expiring in May we are preparing to go through all of the paperwork and background checks, medicals, etc. again.  

It’s hard.  It hurts.  I don’t understand God’s plan.

But I trust it.
Finally I am at a point where I can tell you that it breaks my heart that we likely have a lot more time ahead of us to wait----and yet I trust the Lord.  I believe that He knows what is best.  He can see what I can’t.  Doesn’t change the hurt.  Doesn’t take away the tears.  But we won’t sink.

And the day I learned all of this--that morning--I started listening to this song on repeat.  And I’ve been listening to it all weekend.

"Even When It Hurts (Praise Song)"

Take this fainted heart
Take these tainted hands
Wash me in Your love
Come like grace again

Even when my strength is lost
I'll praise You
Even when I have no song
I'll praise You
Even when it's hard to find the words
Louder then I'll sing Your praise

I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise

Take this mountain weight
Take these ocean tears
Hold me through the trial
Come like hope again

Even when the fight seems lost
I'll praise You
Even when it hurts like hell
I'll praise You
Even when it makes no sense to sing
Louder then I'll sing Your praise

I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise

And my heart burns only for You
You are all You are all I want
And my soul waits only for You
And I will sing till the morning has come

Lord my heart burns only for You
You are all You are all I want
And my soul waits only for You
And I will sing till the miracle comes

I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise
I will only sing Your praise

Even when the morning comes
I'll praise You
Even when the fight is won
I'll praise You
Even when my time on earth is done
Louder then I'll sing your praise

I will only sing Your praise

PS If you haven't noticed it, I added an adoption timeline on the right side of the blog webpage. You won't see it if you are reading on a phone or tablet unless you scroll to the bottom of the page and click "view web version."

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Just an Update

Seems like it is time for an update!


  1. The Ornament Fundraiser was a huge success!  Thank you to everyone who contributed and prayed for our little one over the holidays!  We still have a handful of ornaments left...not sure what to do with them.  Let me know if you have any ideas!
  2. We had to file for an extension on our approval to adopt from USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services).  In order to do this we had to meet with our social worker to update the home study, submit the updated home study along with a short application for extension and a large check, and get fingerprinted by an immigration office in Alexandria.  But it is done and we received the approval yesterday!  We are now approved by our government to pursue an international adoption from Azerbaijan through April 2017 (Lord, PLEASE before then?!?!).  I’m waiting to hear for sure, but I’m thinking we will have to get this notarized, apostilled (when the Secretary of State of Virginia’s office double checks the notary), and translated...then sent to AZ to replace the expired one they currently have. Money, money, money.
  3. The next big bump on the horizon is the home study.  Our home study is good for three years...which means it expires May 22, 2016.  I thought that was a ridiculously long time in the future when we first got this thing!  We have had to update it twice, which basically means we have addendums with updated ages, dates, job status, etc.  Unfortunately the original document expires in May.  Virginia law requires that we have a current home study when the adoption is finalized (which I think means court in AZ).  Sooooo if no progress has been made between now and March(ish) we will have to start the home study process again.  Medicals, CPS background check, FBI background check, DMV records, updated financial information...and more things I’m not going to even try to remember right now.  Money, money, money.  I am secretly (loudly, not at all secretly, just afraid to say it out loud...but here I am saying it out loud) hoping we can get a referral before March so that we can avoid the home study madness.  Will you secretly (loudly, not at all secretly, boldly say it out loud) hope that with me?
  4. Through a long series of events that I won’t go into right now, I’ve decided it is time to make Matthew’s bathroom look much cuter than it currently does.  So last week I went to the store and bought a new shower curtain, rugs, towels, etc. I bought new towels for Matthew and brother/sister.  And towel hooks.  And it made me smile to buy something specifically for our little one.  Because we are adopting a kid, OK?  This is really truly happening and I might lose my mind in the process, but seriously--we are going to adopt this kid cause God sent us on this journey and yes, I realize that April will be four years since we started but what is four years to an eternal God? (Yes, teacher friends, yes.  That was a terrible run on sentence but I’ve been cooped up in this house for almost a week because of the snow and it’s making me a little crazy).
  5. I think that is all the update I have for you today.  But I’ll leave you with these amazing pictures we had taken during the extended Kelley family photo shoot over the Christmas holiday.  Photos by Alexandra Davie