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The Nelson Chronicles

~ Family, Marriage, Adoption

The Nelson Chronicles

Category Archives: Adoption

Diets and Doggies

05 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Dan Nelson in Adoption, Dogs, Family Life, Paleo

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Adoption, Dog Adoption, Paleo

We did the paleo thing, and to moderate success. It was great… while it lasted. I lost weight, I felt better, but once the holidays hit, I couldn’t stick with it. There’s just too much good food laying around. Food that only comes once a year. So come Christmas Eve, we had great food, and some left. The with Christmas Day, we had great food, and even more left. So I extended the paleoless period until after the new year, and after four false restarts, remain paleoless to this day.
The biggest reason is the problem with my brain feeding me lies and the rest of my brain me agreeing with it. Somewhere in the recesses of my mind something whispers… “It’s so hard…”  and the new the rest of my brain, in the voice of Forrest Gump says, “Oka-ay.” and I give up on the paleo plan. Then the one part if my brain (we’ll call it the Lie Center of the brain- everybody has one) says, “We’ll start this over tomorrow.”

The rest of my brain knows this is a lie, of course, but unfortunately doesn’t care enough to do anything about it. But I’m trying. I’m rallying the rest of my brain to overcome the Lie Center. (Yes, there is a sermon in there somewhere.)
I’ve decided to follow a simpler eating plan. Shannon will keep on a more paleolike plan. Benny will stick with the low color low wheat low dairy plan we have been doing.

Now. Dogs. We have a dog. We always said well never have two dogs again. So 1 dog, 2 rabbits, and a cat later, we’re going to get another dog.
Now let’s be clear. I do not adopt animals. I understand the idea behind this. I get to the whole Take Care of Your Animals thing and I Love My Schnauzer concept. But I don’t adopt animals. I’ll play along, and signed “adoption papers”  when I got the cat, but there is a serious problem when we equate animals with humanity. I adopt children. They become a part of my family. They become a part of my inheritance. My dogs, love them as I do, get nothing when I die.
For the majority of human history, we had dogs for reasons beyond just a friend to hug. We used them for working, for security, for pest control control. We still do. We used police dogs because should something bad happen, it is better that a dog should fall rather than a man.
Ultimately, adopting animals does more than raise the level of dogs, it lowers  humanity. I can’t go there.
But we got us a dog. We’ve got to wait 3 agonizing weeks while the “little” thing gets weaned from its mama.
We chose it for its size, for its gentleness and personality. So be looking for lots of pictures soon, probably of it sleeping in our bed, or in the middle of other family activities.
Out task now is to come up with a name. Oh, the options for names!  We’ve got a list of names on the chalkboard trying to decide. Nutmeg? Olive? Ginger? (Are those paleo foods?) Lucy, Maggie, or Olga? Stay tuned.
As Nafe would say, “We’re sikey.” (That’s “excited,” for those not in the know.)
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Gotcha Day +374

16 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by Dan Nelson in Adoption

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Adoption after one year, Dye allergies

We chose not to celebrate Gotcha Day.  I’ve heard that a lot of families celebrate that day.  But we decided our celebration would not be Gotcha Day, but the day our family was finally together.  The time between Gotcha Day and the day we arrived back home was more of a time of limbo.   It was a new life for them, and for Mom & Dad, but there are two more in this family, and we are all in this together.

We debated on how best to celebrate Family Day, as we have been calling it because we aren’t very creative.  I suggested going to the airport and biting one another (since that’s what happened a year ago today) but that was, after some thought, shot down.   We’ve decided just to hang out.  Maybe in future years we will have a joint birthday party for the boys and invite everyone (it’s about half-way between both birthdays!)  But for now, we are celebrating with a Facebook video and a Blog post.  (Really, we aren’t creative!)

We have a LOT to celebrate, though!   It has been a difficult year, no doubt, but all of those difficulties have given us ties to one another in ways we never could imagine.  As I type this, I am reflecting on what I was doing a year ago today.  I was on an airplane, somewhere over the Atlantic Ocean.  Shannon was somewhere else in another aisle trying to keep Ben in his seat, unsuccessfully.  Nathan was mostly sitting and talking in Russian.  I had no idea what he was saying, but I’m sure it was random observations that have not ceased, except during sleep.  It was a difficult week  as the posts communicated pretty well back a year ago.  I am the kind of person who doesn’t like facades, and I hate it when people pretend like everything is great when it isn’t.  (Go Holden Caufield!)

So this will tell of some epiphanies we have had, some helps; where we were and where we are now.

The first few months were torture, really.  We had two children in our house who a) hated us b) feared us c) feared us leaving them.  They had no idea what to do or think.  They couldn’t say anything because it was in Russian and we responded in English.  We had many problems that we later realized were not behavioral problems but language or development problems.  They don’t have a real age, which makes it very difficult to figure them out.  By birthdate, Nate turned 5 last month, and Ben will turn 5 in another month.  When we got them they could get dressed and were potty trained.  They could run, talk, and feed themselves.  Yet they were as uncoordinated as an infant who was learning to walk.  One of them spilled their drink EVERY SINGLE MEAL for at least the FIRST SIX MONTHS.  (We went to sippy cups).  Their thought process is closer to a 3 year old, and their ability to process information is that of a 2 year old.  They were the size of a 2-3 year old.  Yet we had trouble discerning this for awhile.  We were given a 3 year old and a 4 year old.  But that is not what we had.  Most of the struggles were caused by us, the parents.  I often responded to a 4 year old.  Yet I should have been responding to a 2 year old.  Now we know.

So let me describe them.  They are VERY different than they were a year ago.  And I suspect they will be very different a year from now.  They are both very different boys , from very different backgrounds.  They arrived at their respective orphanages for very different reasons.  And so the problems we have dealt with in them are both, well, very different.  (That’s my creative side coming through with that very heavy reliance on the word very.  It’s a very good word.)

Nathan is a child who feared everything.  He hated sleep, for reasons we can’t really understand.  And he really believed if he wasn’t good enough, we would send him back.  He still doesn’t sleep well, but it seems like he’s sleeping better than he was.  He used to rock a lot in the middle of the night but we haven’t noticed it much lately.  Our biggest problem with him is that he doesn’t cause any problems.

That isn’t normal.

I think that is for two reasons.  First of all, he lived in a magical place called Nathanland.  He’s the only one that lived there, and he was surrounded by things that he collects in order to escape from the life of the orphanage.  Gum wrappers, receipts, tires off of toy cars, and the coup de grave: drinking straws.  They serve for an escape.  They are his toys.  He would go into his room and just hang out in the closet and play with these things, especially if there was any noise (and with four kids and two dogs in the house and four kids next door… there’s noise in the house.)  It was his escape from life, it was the safe place he could go.  Nobody will hurt him in Nathanland because there is nobody to hurt him.

Except himself.

That’s why we systematically attacked and destroyed Nathanland.  It was hard.  It was a special place for him.  But he doesn’t live in this life by himself.  He has a Father and Mother who love him, and will sacrifice and see to it that he joins us.  Because having a Family is infinitely better than being alone, even if it is all you have ever known.  It may hurt, but that’s part of life.  A life of ease is not a life.  It is a shell of a life where living is not happening.  Nathan is beginning to live now.  I think sometimes he tries to go back, but he sees… that place isn’t nearly as good as this one.

The second reason for the lack of problems is that he really was afraid we were going to send him back.  There was an instance early on where he got into really big trouble for lying.  And he was terrified that he was in trouble.  But I explained that no matter what, we would never send him back.  He instantly stopped crying.   The fear of this didn’t go away until just a couple of months ago.  He finally realized that this really was real.  “I not go back to groupa?” he asked Shannon back in July.  “Never.  You will never go back to your groupa.  You have a Mom and Dad now.”  And it clicked, and he understood, and for about a week he said, “I never go back to groupa,” about every hour or so.  He has been a different kid since.

Benjamin is different.  We might even use the word special.  He is on the edge.  He isn’t quite special needs, but then he is kind of special needs.  He is in therapy, and we use many of the same techniques and treatments as we do for an autistic child.  But he isn’t autistic.  He has a perfect memory (Shannon put on a shirt and he said, “You wear-la that shirt when you pick me up in Russia,” and he can tell us what he ate on the plane, and describe things that I don’t remember until he describes them.)   Ben is different in his day-to-day life.  Most of us operate on multiple speeds.  (Happy, slow, sad, tired, angry, pre-caffeinated…) But Ben is on three.  This is a HUGE improvement from the beginning where there were only two speeds.  At first his two speeds were “I am being chased by an ax murderer” and “I’m asleep.”  There was NO in between.  He was in a constant state of not just anxiety or even fear, but sheer and utter terror.  And sleep wasn’t really an escape.  If he heard a noise in the living room while he was “sound” asleep, he would be in out of bed, down the hall, and in the living room- and I’m not exaggerating- in under 2 seconds.   For the record, his three speeds now are “Asleep”, “Danger: High Voltage”, and “Sweet Benny”, and mostly we get “Sweet Benny.”

My wife is the  master of observations.  She is the kind of person who will have a “feeling” about something, and be entirely right.  Usually I think she’s crazy when she brings these “feelings” up, yet I have learned to accept them as just being true.  Some of the observations she has made are:

1) Ben can’t handle full moons.  We always say that there are crazy things that happen during full moons, but Ben becomes a different person.

2) Ben can’t handle new situations.  This actually is common for adopted kids, especially out of an orphanage.  So many that it isn’t a keen observation she made, but she did make it and it is true.  And Ben tends to take things to an extreme.  (Flying on an airplane was new to him, as was being with new parents, and spending a week in Moscow, and yes… he really did bite me all the way from New York to St. Louis.)

3) Ben can’t handle weather fronts.  If the temperature changes, Ben can’t handle it.  And when I say these two things, many will say, “Oh yes, I know.  I have  classroom full of kids who just can’t keep it together when a cold front comes through.”  But trust me.  Ben isn’t like that.  When a front comes through I would rather have that classroom.  Any day.  “Extreme” only touches the surface.  The exception to this is:

3) Ben doesn’t have a problem in a group setting.  This week he had some major attacks: Full moon, going to his very first parade, a major cold front, and colors.  Yet his teachers at Mother’s Day Out said he was a great kid.  It came out once he got home.

4) Ben’s stomach doesn’t work right.   We say he’s “allergic” to colors, especially Red and Yellow dye.  But it isn’t a real “allergy” (I’m a pharmacist, so trust me on this one), yet they definitely affect him.  A piece of candy is usually okay, but much more than that and he looses his ability to reason.  He also does this sort of “extreme fidgeting.”  They seem to trigger something that just exists in him as it already is.

5) Ben is great when he’s great, but we are able to predict when he’s about to “go downhill.”  There is a cycle that occurs before spontaneously resolving.  We’ll call it the “Benny Triad.”  He stops eating regardless of his hunger, he sleeps poorly, and he tries doing things he isn’t supposed to do.  I include that last one because it is not just a part of “being downhill,” it’s actually part of the cycle because the more he is told no, the less he eats, and the less he sleeps.  We aren’t sure where it starts- we suspect sleep, but then we don’t know what causes him to not sleep sometimes.  Even when he’s tired.

At first we only had the “Bad Ben”  I’ll refer to “Bad Ben” as “Poobah” because when things get extreme, he starts mentioning Poobah.  Long ago I said I wanted the “Real Benny” back- not this “Bad Ben.  Who is the Bad Ben?” and he said “Poobah”.  This week has been an exceptionally difficult week, and he brought up “Poobah.”  Does it mean something in Russian?  I don’t know.  It’s a mystery. I hate Poobah.

But I can deal with Poobah.  We have discovered triggers, understood how much our responses affect him, forced him to eat food when he isn’t hungry (all kids have a weakness and we figured his out…), given him medication (we’re pharmacists and we have no qualms about this sort of thing, and after finding a couple medications that we found one that was literally life changing), and altered sleeping arrangements (via sleeping in a room alone and a weighted blanket and fan and room darkening curtains).

I’ve discussed a lot of the bad.  Partly because I want others to know why my wife is too tired to wear makeup most days, and partly to let others who are adopting know that there are others going through unpleasant things as well.  There’s all these blogs that construct these perfect little adoptions where everything is great.  They only share the “good stuff.”  The happy times.  But like I said earlier, life is about living, not “being happy.”  (Those who are happy are those who are blessed.  Those who are blessed are those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness,” and that is not a painless process).

So I want to say, the boys are really good kids.  The longer they are in our home, the more they are playing with both one another and with the older two kids.  The troubles we experienced were in the beginning non-stop, then after about 3 months we started to have a good day every once in awhile.  After another 3 months we had more good days than bad.  And now we have a bad day every once in awhile.   Most of the bad behaviors just sort of disappeared, and when we look back and reflect we realize that nobody has been bitten in quite some time.  Ben no longer pesters the dog (after being bitten for pestering- it happened early on and it was our first hope, since we saw for the first time he could learn from his mistakes).  We are no longer told we are “little” because he is angry.  Nate no longer screams like he got his leg pulled off just because someone took a toy away from him, nor does he stalk that person with the toy for hours.

We are a happy family.  But that isn’t our goal, and I want to make that clear.  We did not adopt these kids because we were lacking something in our lives.  We had our perfect family- a boy and a girl- just like we had planned even before we were married.  Our goal- at least of the parents is not happiness, but righteousness.  I want to be like Jesus, and every time I see Ben or Nate or Sam or Erin fight against me, I see myself fighting against God.  I have witnessed first hand the results of being without a father from these two.  Many problems we encountered were because of my own pride and my sin- not theirs.  It’s been hard lessons, but we are in this for the name of Christ.  Not ours.

The bible says we must be  adopted into God’s kingdom as sons of God.  And I have seen so many parallels between God’s sovereignty over us as I have examined adoption.  God elects.  These boys had no choice in the matter.  We chose them, and no matter what we are not letting go.  We will rebuke, chasten, and love them unlike any other person.    And we do love them.  It sounds odd to some that somebody wouldn’t instantly love a little orphan who has come in to their family.  Trust me, those people have never adopted.  But in reality in the beginning we didn’t like them at all.  It took a lot of self examination and realizing my failure to love them had nothing to do with them.  It had everything to do with me.   Yet I can say that I do love them.  I am their father.  They are no less my children than my other two children.

We wouldn’t trade this year for anything.

And we can’t wait to see what the future holds.

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Dealing with Adoption Difficulties

29 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Dan Nelson in Adoption, Family

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Adoption help, International Adoption, Post adoption, Sovereignty of God

I want to post a bit about what kind of help we have gotten with our adoption.  Not the help we got when preparing to adopt, but how we have dealt with some of the difficulties after the court date with two scared little boys.   Because even though adoption is awesome and fulfilling and fun and enjoyable, it is also difficult.  We hear tragic stories of international adoption with deaths and being sent back to the orphanage.  Yet these are extremely rare- and reported worldwide-while the tens of thousands of other families are living out their lives unnoticed.

Parenting is difficult, but there are unique things that go with adopting preschoolers.  We have two kids already, we thought we had seen it all.

We had seen it all.  At least, almost all.  Almost every problem that the boys deal with we have seen in our other children, just in a more mild form.  The difference is that when our other children were four, we had dealt with them step by step over the course of four years. Many of the problems the boys have now were addressed before the other two could even sit up. Now we have four years of life that have happened and all the habits and opinions and coping mechanisms and ways to get attention in a world of neglect that go with it.  (I say neglect because even the best orphanage is still… an orphanage.)  Either way, both had become Masters of Manipulation (on the level of grand master ninja), though in different ways.  One’s style is sort of Big Eyed Sad Lost Puppy Dog.  The other one’s style is more like Squeaky Wheel Hamster Fueled by Much Caffeine.

Many of the struggles we dealt with were over language. My how seven months months change things! Ben is speaking pretty clearly- still some problems, but for the most part Russian is gone save for a few words. Nathan is not speaking pretty clearly, and most times we have no idea what he’s saying, or even if he’s really saying anything at all- BUT it is improving.  Surprisingly we had few problems with idioms.  I learned the problem with speaking in idioms when I was giving my testimony in Lithuania during a mission trip.  Nobody could translate that I “broke my habits.”  All of the translators stopped and said, “did what?”  So I should have known that saying that we would “break him” of  some of his behaviors might cause problems.  We never considered the reaction when he realized that we throw away broken toys!

You’ll notice that through this post I will tend to refer to a singular boy.  That is because one boy has given us far more difficulty, so when I say “boy” and not “boys” I mean it that way.  And I want to point out that what we experienced was not what every adopted child’s family faces.  (If both children were both like the other, less um, “behaviorally disoriented,” this would have been a far easier journey.  On the other hand if they both would have been like the difficult child… well, God knows what we can handle and we’ll leave it at that. Which is of course where we are supposed to leave it!)

As I mentioned in my last post, the biggest issue faced was not being bonded.  This is something that everyone in adoption deals with-and more so with older kids.  But beyond that was us not viewing them beyond their behaviors.  It’s hard to NOT look beyond the behaviors because it is all that you see in them at first, but the behavior that they come with is not really reflective of the boy that is really there.  What we have found through trial and error and advice and sometimes tears is that behind these walls they have built- so that nobody can come in and hurt them anymore- there is a very sweet little boy.

Help One: Godly Counsel

We certainly weren’t the only ones to adopt, and we weren’t the only ones to have any troubles.  So we found two couples who gave us great encouragement.  We got reassurance when we thought things were Not Right but were.  We were corrected when things were not right when we thought they were.  So if you are adopting, seek others who have been through it.  For the most part you will get honest and helpful information.  Don’t try to live and seek advice solely through the internet.  Blogs and facebook feeds tend to be deceptively happy.  Look at this blog.  Most of what you read about is fun times and pictures full of smiles.  But don’t think that is all there is.

Many people came to us during this time and told us how great is was that we were doing this, and how great we were.  And the whole time I only could think, ‘You have no idea what I’m thinking right now!’  Neither of us found the first 4 months to be an enjoyable experience.  And the biggest struggle was that we didn’t love them. You may think, “How could you not love them!  They’re so adorable!  You spent so much time preparing for them!  They are just poor innocent little kids who have been turned away!”  And I would say Yes, that’s why this is so hard. Why shouldn’t we love them, especially when we are called to love our enemies?  If I can’t love a little orphan boy, surely I can’t love an enemy!

It turns out, these feelings are not all that uncommon.  In fact, one of the first bits of advice my wife got from someone in Vladivostok who knew what was going on by the look of despair on Shannon’s face said, “It’s okay to not like them.”  We discussed this with others who have been through the experience, and they said that they felt the same way in the beginning.  And they always got through it to the point of love.

As we now have as well.

But the internal struggle of our relationship with them and with God was the most difficult part of this.

They Respond to Us

If you are adopting, I highly recommend a book by Karen Purvis called The Connected Child.  It has been a tremendous help to us.  The biggest thing we were doing wrong is that we were treating them like we treat our own children.  But we couldn’t do that just yet.  They have to realize that we are Mom and Dad.  Most importantly that there is safety here.  So raising our voices didn’t help, in fact, it was more like throwing gasoline on the fire.  When we realized this, and what the boys had been through, and remembering at all times no matter what or who was bitten or what was broken or who was screaming that we must remain calm.  Once we began that, we had an entirely different child.  This mass bundle of horrible behaviors began to melt away and we began to find the real little boy beneath.

We Aren’t Alone in This, Part I

Don’t be afraid to ask!  We knew that we were having troubles, and we are ones who tend to not be afraid to ask for help.  So we went to our doctor, to the social worker, to other families for more advice and info.  We ended up going to the International Adoption Clinic at St. Louis Children’s Hospital to see if there was anything else we could to.  We learned quite a bit, had good conversations and got some good advice from them.  The greatest thing was when we were told, “It sounds like you are just the right family for him.  You are doing everything you can to meet his needs.”  I say that not to brag, but to say that we never felt like we were “just the right family” for him for most of this time.   But whenever we despaired we remembered, this is what God had led us to do.

If you have not yet read the book Adopted for Life by Russell Moore, please do so.  That’s not for those who are adopting, this is for anyone who reads.  He does a great job of describing the church’s role in adoption.  Not just the children and parents involved, but everyone.  And shows a wonderful view of adoption in the light of the gospel.  Tim Challies (a master book reviewer) said that it was one of the best books he read in 2009.

We Aren’t Alone in This, Part II

At every moment of despair, I would remind myself that God is sovereign.  He knew from before time that these two boys would become ours.  As we were enjoying our happy little lives and they were living theirs in the hell of permanent institutions, He knew that they would be coming to us.  The world is full of orphans.  (Think California’s big?  For every Californian, there are roughly four orphans out there.)  So out of all of these millions of children, he chose Ben and Nate to come to us.  He chose me to be their father.

Through this we have learned to rely on God.  Saying we believe in him is entirely different than believing.  Thinking we trust in Him is entirely different than trusting in Him.  And it takes a trial of refining fire to realize this.  So despite the hardships we were never without hope.  When things seemed hopeless (and there were many points of apparent hopelessness in this) we remembered that God is in charge.  We trust in Him, and follow Him.  And everything will work out.  (Rom 8:28).   Just as “A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax he shall not quench,” (Isa 55:1) so “we need bruising so that reeds may know themselves to be reeds, and not oaks,” as Richards Sibbes has stated so well.  And through these trials we have come to know ourselves better in the view of Christ’s holiness, grace and mercy.

That’s what this entire journey of life is all about.

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Six Months as a Family

25 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by Dan Nelson in Adoption, Christmas, Family

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Christmas, Jumpoline, Pekin, Six Months of Adoption, Unmommy time

Brothers with SissyFirst of all, my other two kids didn’t learn English nearly as quickly as these two did.  We won’t say that the boys have a thorough command just yet, but they understand about 80-95% of what we say (depending on the boy), and we understand 20-80% of what they say.  Both boys are very different, so one is speaking English-we think- and the other is speaking rather well.  Both are doing Very Well for just being introduced to it 6 months ago.

What this post will do is give you a plain ol’ family update.  The next time I post I will discuss some of the problems and places we have gotten help.

So how have the last 6 months gone?  Very difficult.  But very worth it.  Things are getting better each week.  But before you think, "Oh, I’m just not cut out for adopting because it’s so hard," let’s look at all the information.  I certainly don’t want to discourage anyone from adoption!  But I don’t want to pretend like everything is perfect and happy, too.  Nothing in life is perfect and happy, at least not all the time.  Plus, while not everyone has the same struggles that we have had, I know that some do.  I know this because every problem we have faced we have come across someone who has told us, or read a book or article about similar problems. (Yet I find blog after blog of people with happy perfect experiences, with nary a tear.  And I can only think "they must be lying!".  But the reality is, I think we started out with more problems than average.)

It does get better.  Just as I was typing this paragraph I told the kids (our four and the neighbors’ four) that we’d pay $5 each to pick up all the gumballs out of our yard, and all eight of them are happily raking, and filling buckets, and whistling while they work!

I can’t believe it’s been 4 months since I posted!  I had planned on posting each month, giving little updates, and a few pictures.  But then all these other things got in the way and you can see just how fruitful that plan turned out to be.  So let’s take a look back at some of those moments.  We’ll stick to mostly fun things in this post.

The Big Daddy of Events: Christmas

Christmas at ChurchIt may be odd to post Christmas pictures in March, but of our three Christmas celebrations, we actually celebrated one in March.  The boys were not ready for a Big Trip to my parents house in December.  So we waited.

Christmas at our house (which we did celebrate in December) was honestly like none we had experienced.  We enjoyed it thoroughly, even if the boys didn’t know what to make of it.  And while they had never gotten so many gifts before, they played with them for a short while and left them in their closet or floor to play with the cardboard boxes just like the other kids did.  Partly, they don’t know how to play with toys.  Ben does pretty good, but Nathan turns everything (whether a toy or not) into either a steering wheel or a windshield wiper.  (Every lego, car, popcicle stick, bottle cap…“Look!  I drivfing” or “I cleaning!”).  (And the toys that don’t involve "drivfing" or "cleaning" he just doesn’t play with.)  On January 3rd my facebook post was: “The kids had lots of fun opening their Christmas presents, but right now they are playing with a rope tied to an Easter basket and a marble.”Happily Bewildered-Ben with a few of his presents

We had family over at our house, and the presents and the food (“Noga food!” Nathan kept saying) kept coming.  It was far more than they could have ever fathomed, let alone actually experience.

We weren’t sure how well Christmas would go.  We had made a lot of progress, but about the week before we started having more and more “problems”.  It was one of those discouraging moments that we went through several times.  Things seemed to be going so well, we felt like we were beginning to bond with them, then it was like we lost them.  We had one of those moments of losing one of them right before Christmas.  Yet, in retrospect it worked out for the better.  Because through the struggles and animosity, bonding occurred.

Christmas Eve and Christmas and Christmas in March were very fun.  They both had struggles with being overly stimulated, but all-in-all they did pretty well.  But things were different with each.  One of the boys enjoyed getting presents, opening them, and the clothes and toys that he got.  The other of the boys was so looking forward to opening presents, that opening presents was sort of the big moment.  And he couldn’t enjoy it for all the anticipation.

But for the family as a whole, it was so great.  The four of us spent the Christmas before (2009) wondering what it would be like to have two more little boys.  We knew things would be different, but it was really more rewarding than we had imagined.

The Big TripAll the Cousins

A couple of weeks ago, we went and visited my family for Christmas in March.  My parents and brother had visited before that, but we hadn’t been to Pekin in almost two years.  (Note: Pekin didn’t change) (Ooh, except Avanti’s.)  We didn’t go because we were saving every bit of money we could and took three trips to Russia, well, you probably can see why.  Also, we’ll say this was their first Big Trip.  Visiting Moscow for a week… we won’t count that one.

The trip went shockingly smooth.  It wasn’t without flaw.  My family is Very Loud, and the boys can’t handle that.  (Imagine living in a nice, quiet, neutrally colored environment for your entire life and then be taken out all of the sudden).  Loud noises, wind, driving on the highway; all are rough for them.  But this trip overall was good.  Excitement was through the roof, and there were problems calming down each night.  That’s normal for all kids, but a bit more exaggerated in our case.

The boys got to meet their cousins who they kept talking about.  But their talk was about someone who they didn’t know, based on a picture on the refrigerator.  Actually meeting them was much better.  They also got to meet Uncle and Aunt and Great Grandma.  Plus the presents.

Some threats just don’t work

We tell our kids logical things, like, “If you can’t keep your toys picked up we’ll have to just give them away.”  Not to be mean cruel parents, but because really, if you have so many toys that they can’t be kept behind a closet door or in a toy box then there really are too many.  But it loses its motivational factor when you say it  and one responds. “We can give them to my groupa?”

Daily Walks

"Look at me jumping"I work an odd schedule, but when I’m off I would take the boys to the park.  All winter long.  The rule was, as long as the temperature is above 20 degrees and the windchill isn’t in the single digits, we would go to the park.  And they loved it.  My main motivational point was to get Mommy some Unmommy time, and to get them to take a nap.  Because on those walks I became very good at getting them worn out without wearing myself out.  Plus, it got us some time together for bonding.  And they got to play on cool playground equipment, throw things on the ice in the park, pretend they were "drivfing" on the big pile of wood.  Yeah, it was really great.   Now, with the advent of spring we have spent more time out on the trampoline.  Another great way to wear them out.

There is so much more I could say!  But I will close it there, and I promise to post before six more months.  (I already have the next one written, in fact.  I’ll be posting it soon!)  But I want to close with thanks to everyone for all of your prayers.  I hear from many of you that you like reading about our experiences, so thanks for keeping up with us.  It’s been a long journey, and we have a long way to go.

 

Sissy sporting her new Christmas PJs (we have a serious affinity for footies in our house)

Sissy & PJs

 

Nafe in the Snow.

Nafe in the Snow

 

Our First Family Picture (Taken by Sue Belcher)

Family Portrait

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Two Months and Going Strong!

25 Thursday Nov 2010

Posted by Dan Nelson in Adoption

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Adoption, Halloween

Two months already? And a productive two months it’s been, too.Brand New Blankets!

I can’t say that each day gets better, but I can say with all confidence that each week gets better. Shannon does an amazing job with the boys during the weeks that I work (and during those weeks I am around very little). Each week they learn just a little more English, and we understand them just a little bit better. They, for the most part, understand us pretty well.

Overall, they are acting like normal little 3 year old boys. (Yes, they are technically four, but they have a LOT of catching up to do!) We are trying to introduce them to things little by little. Both respond to things very differently. Ben has some trouble with stimulation. He doesn’t do all that well with going places (like the grocery store or Wal-mart), but he is doing better. Nate does pretty well and has none of those problems, although he did think that he could talk to Ben while we were watching a video on the computer- but we will get him there!

We are all still learning. We try to put all four kids together and essentially leave them to themselves when we can. Mama and Papa get lots of bonding time with the boys all day long, but the kids need to bond with each other, too. Right now the two older kids and the two younger kids will go separate ways.

Family Pumpkins

Halloween
Halloween was really fun. We didn’t do much-they dressed up and went to a few houses around our house. But at that first door when they rang the doorbell, and people gave “confietta,” it was obviously one of the most amazing things that had ever happened to them. The looks on their faces were just priceless. Learning that we can only have “some” candy vs. “all” the candy that night did cause problems, but I’m okay with that.  We have dealt with that behavior many times over the past 9 1/2 years.  Our clan was looking good with Cleopatra, Mario, “Scoody Boo,” a duck (the duck costume has gone through three Halloweens now!), Mama, and the Papa the cameraman following behind.

(More after the pics…)

"Ya Scoody Boo!!"

Eta Duck!

Carving Pumpkins

Duck, Cleopatra, Mario (actual mustache), Scoody Boo

Well-Being
The boys are growing. A lot. Every little kid grows at this age, but I really think they have puA Stronger Little Boyt on some much needed weight. Nathan, who’s strength was more like an infant-literally– when we brought him home, is growing stronger and stronger. (The trampoline is helping greatly!)  His body weight has increased 17 percent since he has arrived in our home. We wonder: Did he EVER eat? Or is it just that we are working with him and finding things he likes?  Ben is getting stronger and putting on weight, too. Both of their hair is growing more. Their hair was very sickly when we got them; it literally was peach fuzzy like a newborn child’s, not a four year old. But with enough good fruits and veggies (and chicken nuggets and hot dogs) we’re coming along quite well.

So is everything great? Of course not. We still have many issues to work through. We have issues with selfishness (don’t we all), and now we have added lying into the mix. For the record, though, Ben shares better than any child I have ever seen.The Siblings

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