Thursday, December 19, 2013

A CHRISTmas blog.......

One of my favorite Christmas songs right now is Audrey Assad, Winter Snow. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pi25lohx7Kw

The lyrics focus on the lack of grandeur in Christs birth.....when truly, He had the ability to come in the grandest of ways. That's not who He was. Our salvation walked the earth in peace and hope and light. He spoke life. He spoke truth. He embodied grace. He permeated mercy. His birth marks 1 of 2 of the most significant happenings in my Christian walk. And I LOVE CHRISTmas because of the reminders of that peace. Christmas music.....not the sad, lonely kind. But the triumphant kind. "Fall on your knees! Oh hear the angel voices! Oh night divine, oh night, when Christ was born". Victory!Hark the Herald Angels Sing, O Holy Night, Silent Night, Away in a Manger and on and on. Hope. A few years ago I started painting.....this was the 1st thing I painted.....and it sits in our home during this time of year to remind me of the gift we have been given....

Having said that.....this year is hard. There isn't a whole lot of peace in our house right now. I want to pretend that we are all adjusting beautifully in this very broken world......but we aren't. There is a little boy living in our house that deals with trauma issues. And it turns out, the holidays trigger a lot of those things. He hasn't learned yet that we aren't going to leave him. He has no concept of what a "family" means. He doesn't know what "mother" and "father" looks like. Somedays the crying is unbearable. Some days he laughs until he can't breathe. Some days he sings "Jesus Loves Me" at the tops of his lungs and some days he refuses to speak. Cole and Zella are stressed out. Cole's anxiety is through the roof and Zella has reverted to behavior that we tackled when she was 2. And I get it. All of it. Because they are small people and don't have the grasp that Jake and I have on life and more importantly, Jesus. There are days when all we do, all day long, is discipline. We had a day this week where all 3 of our children were in trouble for lying.....different incidents, same offense. Jake just looked at me and shook his head. I read this the other day........."I haven't had a day yet, where I didn't make it through."  That's us. Keep. On. Trucking. SO.......Jake and I are CRAVING CHRISTmas. We are yearning for the peace that surrounds the manger. We are longing for the stillness of a dark night with a north star. And it's offered to us. We just have to take it.

Jake is a lot smarter than me. He's been half boycotting social media for several weeks now (with the exception of a few posts about the Packers......because they are our team. And sometimes they are terrible and warrant a post) because his brain is tired. He's smart enough to know that we are under attack. When people stand for what they believe in......the devil gets mad. So that's us......we stood in the gap. We brought a child into our home that needed a home. We pray over him. Last week (tearing up over this one), Zella had a fever and laid down in my bed. David wandered in the bedroom and climbed up next to her and laid down. Without prompting (because I was spying from the crack behind the door to see what he was going to do), he put his hand on her and closed his eyes "dear Dedus, Tank you for Zella. Zella not feel good. Amen."  THE VERY NEXT DAY, Davids trauma was triggered and our home fell apart again for several days. The devil hates hope. He hates the promise of new life. He hates when people stand up and say they believe in something greater than what the world desires for them to believe. And we have to make the choice......in this attack, what do I choose to filter through my head. Will I choose to only put in the good, because really, in turmoil, there's no room left for the bad......will I choose to keep on letting ol' devil in through outlets that I least suspect?.....will I keep allowing him to distract me and separate me?  We have a choice.

I've noticed a trend......my FB feed is full of it. And that's the thing about FB. You can use it to push whatever agenda it is that you're pushing for that day. It can be breastfeeding or vaccines or Phil Robertson or adoption, abortion, womens rights, NObama, let your kids believe in Santa or don't, I mean....whatever you want, you can put it out there. And the people that choose to read it, are choosing to let that in. I am that person. I'm a person that gets sucked in. I will comment on your post about why its awesome to have six kids (it is awesome by the way) and I will comment on why everyone should support adoption and why pesticides on our vegetables should be illegal. And what has it done for me? It has distracted me. It has taken a small amount of my mental energy away from fighting the fight happening inside our home right now. It has stolen the peace that I am desperate for.

Am I going to say that I am going to boycott FB? No. I'm not that strong. Who am I kidding?  I would have to go through detox if I deleted my account. But for now, for this season (holiday and metaphorical) I have to make a choice. Fight the fight inside my home, for my marriage, for my kids, for my peace.....for my God. Or choose the battles that don't effect us. I am choosing Christ, this CHRISTmas.

I choose His peace. I choose to rejoice in His birth. I choose to take every ounce of what He is handing out. Because it is a choice.

Merry Christmas and God bless you all!





Wednesday, December 11, 2013

I may regret this post......

I may regret this post. Wait, no I won't. I love blogging because I'm not forcing anyone to read my thoughts. I'm just putting it out there and if you decide to read it, that's great. If you don't, I don't regret posting. So here it goes.....

Last weekend at church we had a family of 10 (GASP!!!) come spend some time with our church family. They have adopted all 8 of their children in different scenarios and are now full time missionaries with the Assemblies of God. They travel from city to city advocating for foster care, adoption and the need for a movement in the church to follow Gods command to care for the orphan and widow. So Saturday night they shared their hearts with the adoption ministry in our church. There we were, in a room full of kids....biological, adopted, fostered. TONS of kids! And there were only like 10 families there! LOL! And that room was full of hope. It radiates through these people. The ones that are struggling through trauma issues, the ones that have multiple small children at home and desperately need a break, one whose husband is deployed and she handles 4 kids under the age of 6 every day! One family with 9 kids, three of which are deaf. Can I just tell you that watching their mom sign every word of the sermon on Sundays for them just explodes my heart? And you know what the world says? They say we're all crazy. They say it's irresponsible to have that many kids. They say that the orphan crisis is God's problem. Here's my take......

We are crazy. We are crazy enough to take a chance on a God that demands chance taking. We are crazy enough to trust Him to walk us through it. We are crazy enough to say "yes".  There need to be more crazy people. More crazy, Jesus loving people in this world would mean children with full bellies. It would mean closed orphanages. It would mean children being brought up in a home that speaks life and prays truth. It would mean a generation of change. But change is a fight........

On Sunday morning the father of this family delivered a sermon that just gripped me. There were so many points that I walked away with my mind blown about.  But here's the one......the one that got me. It's also the one that has caused a fair amount of controversy in the FB world (this makes me laugh).  "Making abortion illegal won't prevent unwanted pregnancy. It won't increase a woman's desire or ability to parent. If we, as a body of Christ, desire and pray for abortion to end, then we have to start now and be prepared to care for the 4000+ children a day that will live."  Here's why that got me......

I have always been against abortion. I believe that every child is a gift. A perfectly planned gift. It was hard for me to not think that when I have two insanely adorable biological children. Of course they are gifts! Of course I want abortion to end. Not just be illegal but to end. And of course we advocate for adoption and orphan care. But until Sunday, as David snuggled on my lap through the sermon, I had never considered this.  I am the parent of an unwanted child.

At two years old, David was sent, via ambulance, to a hospital, alone. We don't know why, but he was there for 7 months. Alone. Eventually his mother was found and rights were signed over to the government. A huge part of me hates her. How could she just send him off in the ambulance and never look back?! And the much larger part of me, is thankful for her. Because until this weekend, it never occurred to me.....she could have chosen death for him. She could have chosen abortion. But she chose life. David is the result of choosing life.

Before he was born, David was an orphan. He was unwanted. He was the baby in the womb that we picket for. He was the baby that we push for legislation to protect. He had 10 fingers and 10 toes and a viable heartbeat as early as 5 weeks. In every country around the world there are activists fighting and dying and being arrested to end the murder of children inside the womb. But what happens after they are born? Do they become less important? Where are the picketers in front of the orphanages and group homes? Where are the churches and the 2 billion Christians? See......we are willing to fight for the end of killing children, but we aren't willing to fight for these children to truly live. 

If we want to end abortion......because it's murder, no? Then we have to stop turning our heads away from the children dying every day in orphanages, group homes, on the streets, in brothels, in institutions. If the argument to end abortion is that its a child from conception......then the argument continues, is a child after birth not of the same value to God?

Which leads me to this. This isn't God's problem. As Christians, as adopted members of Gods family, this is very much our problem. He commanded us to love one another as He first loved us. He died for us. Sacrifice. Time, space, money, luxury.........adoption and foster care are a sacrifice. But the result of Christs sacrifice for us was redemption. We are redeemed and offered new life because He chose us over His own life. THAT is what He calls us to do. He calls us to offer redemption to the outcast. He calls us to offer life to the otherwise dead. He calls us to give them a life, and life to the fullest. The same life that He afforded us. 

So what if you can't adopt or foster? On Sunday morning our speaker asked everyone in the congregation that had been adopted or fostered or had been part of adoption or foster care to stand up. There were people standing all over the church. I bet every person knows someone with an attachment to orphan care. Talk to them. If its a family that has adopted or fosters......do they need help? Maybe an hour to sleep or shower without trauma? Is there a womens shelter near you? Did you know that so many girls choose abortion because they don't know what their options are? They choose the only thing they know how to choose? What if we offered them education to learn to be a mom? What if we offered them a ride to church? I can promise that God will meet them there. Do you have any extra change laying around? Maybe God has blessed you tremendously in your finances. Did you know that there are organizations that build funding for special needs to children to be adopted? I can think of 4 different adoption fundraising auctions happening on my FB feed right at this very moment. Families willing to step out and say "yes" to the fatherless but they are still waiting on their financial miracle. There are SO MANY WAYS to step up and step out. God does not call every single person to adopt. Let's just be honest. Some people shouldn't have kids. BUT.......everyone can do something! Pray. Advocate. Sign the petitions. Buy from the auctions. Keep taking those names off the giving tree. Keep donating to Toys for Tots. Keep your ears open to what the Lord would have you do.

Here's my bottom line.......

my son, in his brokenness, is a gift. He is an arrow in the quiver. God has GREAT plans for him. And because his mother chose life for him, God's kingdom will be enhanced and those plans will come to fruition. And Jake and I, in our brokennes, are blessed to be the ones to extend grace to sweet David. We are blessed to watch God heal him. We are forever changed. Because one woman chose life.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

A Day of Firsts.....

To my sweet friends that so delicately reminded me on the last post that David hadn't been added to the blog.....please note young Davids picture is now on the blog :)

We have been home for almost 2 months now. We have had some good days and some bad days and some "meh" days in between. Every day brings something old and something new. Sometimes a few steps forward and sometimes a few steps back. But we are still stepping. And that's what counts in this house.

David. Oh little David. Can I tell you that David is SMART? I'm not saying "smart" like when your baby rolls over or crawls a little early and you swoon "he's so smart". I'm not talking about counting to 5 a gazillion times and then your 2 your old counting to 5 after you kind of smart either. I'm talking about been home less than 2 months and has a ridiculous understanding of English and an expansive vocabulary under his belt. We went to the pediatrician last week for the nasty of all nasty coughs and he started chuckling at David talking to him......partly because he does very much sound like the Count from Sesame Street and partly because doc was blown away by Davids progress. He can count to 20 in English now. We spent countless hours in the orphanage learning ABC's and identifying them. I thought certainly he would forget. He didn't. He's got colors and body parts down too. He's a sponge.

Having said that.......he is SUPER strong willed. We know what he's capable of. He has shown us how smart he is. But there are days when he literally refuses to speak. He shuts down and clams up. We will ask him a question and he will just stare at us and we will say "are you going to use words?" and straight faced he will say "nope!". Well, alright then. Yesterday was day two of his not speaking protest. How can we fix it if he won't speak? So last night, Jake and I had a little chat with David. We decided to use a reward instead of threatening to take something away. Here's how the conversation went:
Jake - does David need something?
David - yessir.
Jake - what does David need?
David - Daddy hug me.
Jake - is that all? What else does David want?
David- Daddy pick me up, put in bed.
Jake - Ok, Does David need something from Mommy?
David - Yes. Mommy pray for me.

People. I'm teary eyed writing this. At the time it didn't hit me. It did after he was in bed and sleeping soundly with a smile on his face, but today it has hit even harder. Two days he refused to speak to us. TWO DAYS. And a hug and a prayer fixed it. A hug and a prayer.

Last night I was talking to a friend that said the hardest thing about adoption, if she were to adopt, would be the unknown. I agree. We face it every single day. The first two and a half years of Davids life are unknown. His medical history is unknown. His triggers are unknown. We are learning day by day and piece by piece to the puzzle that his life at the orphanage was not the fairytale that they painted. We are realizing exactly how deep and vast the hurt is. We are learning how big the developmental delay is and trying to piece that together with the giant gaping hole in his medical records. But just imagine this........have you ever been so overwhelmed with life and emotions that you feel numb?  You have felt so many things that you literally can't feel anymore? I believe that's where David is on days when he refuses to speak. He has felt oppressed most of his life. He has had food withheld and been beaten and slept for days in his own waste and been attacked in his sleep and has spent months upon months in a hospital. On days when David shuts down.....he's responding. His body is defending itself. He's coping. He literally cannot stand to feel anymore.  But he just needs a hug. And a prayer. And the numbness will fade.

This morning David went to speech therapy with Jake. He came home bouncy and full of energy. Usually therapy days are BAD because he's overstimulated and exhausted. Not today. Today, David was riding on a hug and prayer. And we had a huge day of firsts. Today, for the first time in two months, after ignoring our prompting for 2 months, David:
 - spoke loudly and clearly all day long. No whining! No whispering!
 - He was playing upstairs and came all the way downstairs and said "mommy please blow my nose".
 - while we were out today, he told me he was hungry. He has NEVER asked me for food. Ever.
 - While eating dinner, he said "mommy, drink all gone. more drink please"
 - when he finished dinner, he asked for more! He has NEVER EVER asked for food!
 - he burped during dinner and completely on his own said "excuse me I burped"
 - he specifically asked for a certain type of food (that was out of sight)...."mommy, please have grapes?"
- I was walking up the stairs tonight and he said "where are you going, mama?"
 - Jake and I have joked that David utilizes about 1/24th of his twin size bed. He would only move about a 1/4 inch every  night. Tonight, he is sprawled out across the bed, sideways. He's FINALLY comfortable.

I could go on for days, but seriously, who is this kid?!!!!!  I have been absolutely blown away by his speech and actions today!!!!!

I am thankful for the joy in Davids voice today. That's a joy we haven't seen in quite some time. And its refreshing. Its refreshing to hear his joy, when it hurts me to know just a fraction of his pain.

I have SO much more to say.......but tonight, I'm stopping it at this........

Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good. His love endures forever. Psalm 107:1


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Obedient

There have been lots of phases in my life. I went through a lengthy tomboy phase that included a bowl cut, Umbro shorts every day and dreams of joining any and every professional sports organization as the first female player to infiltrate their fraternity. I went through a phase in college where I had NO dreams or direction (thus, the lack of a diploma).  But somewhere in between those two very awkward times in my life, I started writing. I dreamed of writing a book once. For a people pleaser like myself, publishing a book would classify me as a glutton for punishment. If you put it out there, someone is bound to read it.....and chances are, they might not like it. Once I realized that most of the characters in my book are still alive and would surely excommunicate me if I published their stories, I started blogging. And it turns out that publishing each and every blog post is much like publishing a book. There is a raw vulnerability that overwhelms me with each post and there are days when I have SO much to say, and not enough fight left in me to sustain the opinions of some readers. There are a lot of topics that I will never touch because I don't feel that I have anything constructive to say about them. But when I do write, its because I don't feel like God gave me these words to keep to myself. He didn't afford me the ability to form sentences just for me to scribble in a notebook. So tonight, I don't want to write this. I tell God, "these are MY emotions and MY gut wrenching struggles and MY jump around triumphs!" and God says "no. They aren't YOURS". I have written and deleted and mulled over and reworked this post for a week, each time walking away and saying "tomorrow". Each "tomorrow", God taps me on the shoulder and says "today". Tonight, I'm posting out of obedience. Because the reason we breathe, is to tell of His glory.

My last post talked about our closeness to God on our first trip to Ukraine. Jake and I both felt closer to God than ever before. We came home and started preparing our home for David and in the blink of an eye we were back on a plane, and subsequently a train, and headed to Bene, Ukraine once again. The second trip was harder for me. I cried through most of the travel (ask Jake. I promise he remembers LOL). I was in mourning. I mourned the ease of a family of 4. I mourned the simplicity of praying over children that weren't broken inside. I mourned the routine that I had established just me and Zella and my paintbrushes every day. If there was anything that we found comfort in at home, I wept for its' loss. And now I know, I was weeping for the loss of my self. And that's not a bad thing. God made it very clear to me that He did not intend to send us across the world and bring back the same people. I knew the hard stuff was coming, and I was right.

There were days in Ukraine after Jake left that felt like my 40 days in the desert. I spent a lot of time fighting God. I spent a lot of time questioning why He left me in this tiny village alone and why He would separate a family and hurt two children for the sake of another. I would lay in the bed in the apartment and just talk to God. Talk talk talk talk talk and then nothing. His silence was absolutely deafening and maddening and heart breaking. One morning I woke up to another day of rain, facing another day at the orphanage with workers that didn't like me and didn't want our adoption to happen that were filling our sons head with who knows what and my clothes that had dried on the line outside by the chicken coup smelled like sewage and I broke. I stood there completely naked with clothes in my clenched fists shaking them at God and yelling at Him "why did You do this to us? Why are You SO quiet? I'm here aren't I? Isn't this what You told me to do? You told me to go and here I am being obedient and nothing from You! What do You want from me?" And in my screaming, He whispered back. "THIS is not what I asked of you. I don't want anything from you. I want you."  I spent that day silent. As conviction washed over me I became painfully aware of the sin in my misery and grand expectation. It occurred to me that Gods purpose in isolating me was to draw me closer to Him.....not to push me away. A sweet friend of mine and prayer warrior for our family said to me "McKenzee. Its time for you to cut out all the noise and just BE STILL."  I sat in the middle of the bed and closed my eyes and turned on praise and worship music.  "The more I seek You. The more I find You. The more I find You. The more I love You. I want to sit at Your feet, drink from the cup in Your hands, lay back against You and breathe, feel Your heartbeat. This love is so deep, its more than I can stand. I melt in Your peace, its overwhelming." And there He was. Just sitting with me. Being quiet. And in the following days, as things got harder, and the loneliness got deeper, He began speaking to me and revealing all of the things He was working on inside of me. The more I began to seek His face, the more I found Him. And the more He began preparing my heart for this long road ahead......

 At some point in our marriage, Jake became my only lean-to. He became my safe haven and my voice of reason......my first safe haven and my first voice of reason. And the very first thing that God revealed to me in that apartment in Ukraine was that His desire for our marriage is for God to be a resting place for each of us FIRST, with one another as the earthly supplement. Jake cannot possibly complete me, when he, himself, is incomplete. The only acceptable codependency, is codependency on God. BURN.

Next, God began showing me the ways that He had so perfectly taken care of me in Jakes absence. I was staying in an apartment, attached to a house, owned and lived in by the nurse and the groundskeeper at the orphanage. They fed me fresh fruit and vegetables directly from their garden. When the orphanage director said she wanted to appeal our adoption because we didn't believe we love David, these people, strangers, went to bat for us. When my loneliness was overwhelming, there would be a knock on the door and little 2 year old Bogy would march in with her pigtails and pacifier and plop herself down in my lap and hug me. When they caught me one day with tears in my eyes, they prayed for me. They prayed for me. God put me in an apartment with people that love Him, that cared for me just as they would have cared for their own family member. His love is global. And every morning when they woke me up with coffee, I was reminded of that.

We did the paper chase and God showed off HUGE in every goverment office we entered. He was proving to me that He had not left me, I simply had to seek His presence. And then our orphanage visits were over and Gotcha Day came and went and we hopped a train to Kiev........and the refiners fire got hot hot hot. Kiev was cold and rainy. Cold as in, too cold and wet for a little boy that NEEDS to stay healthy kinda cold. So we stayed in the apartment. A lot. And the transition began.

I need to say this before I get into the transition.....we could have had another baby if we wanted to just expand our family. We did not at all feel like that's what God was requiring of us. Yes, of course, there is emotion and yes, David is our son and no, we wouldn't change any of this, but for our family, adoption is an act of obedience. There are no rainbows or flowers or fluffy kitty cats in obedience. Its HARD. For families that keep it real and don't glamourize or romanticize adoption, thank you!

By the time we got to Kiev and our transition phase started, I was spiritually empty. I was maintaining all I could maintain with praise and worship and prayer alone.  It felt like every day was a new battle. I was being shaped and molded spiritually while trying to be patient and handle a very scared and stubborn little boy....while hurdling a language barrier. He would have a meltdown that would last hours and when it was over, I would go take a hot shower and have a meltdown of my own. We had been there 6 days when I finally said enough is enough. Sunday morning came and we had no idea how long we were going to be in Kiev. David was bored and tired of looking at me and tired of looking at our apartment and I prayed "God. Give me the courage to go to church today." I picked up the phone and called our translator and asked her to call us a cab. She tried to talk me out of it. She tried to tell me that the church I wanted to go to wasn't a REAL church.......I told her to call the cab. I prayed the whole way there.....Father, here I am. I have absolutely nothing left. Sustain me. We walked into Hillsong Church Kiev and the tears started running down my face. Worship was full of hand raisers and aisle dancers and "Amen"ers. I felt FULL. Before we left, the church provided translator laid hands on us and prayed for us. I cried again. Just to be among believers......I felt at home. We walked out of there so peaceful. I didn't know when we were leaving Ukraine, but I knew God would carry me through that time. And when I looked to my left, at those big brown eyes staring up at me, the parallels began to hit me. David didn't know this peace or fullness. He fought me just as hard as I fight God. His tantrums are no different than mine. He fights me over bedtime and baths.....I fight God over pride and selfishness. The difference is this..........Gods PERFECT love for me, casts out my fear of being abandoned. David doesn't know Gods love, so he looks to me to cast out that fear......and my love has been far from perfect.  I began to realize that God parents every one of us as His hurt children. He binds up our wounds and heals our brokenness to prepare our hearts to do His work. He doesn't parent us as healthy children and then get frustrated when our brokenness shows through. 

And that's where we are today. We are working our hardest to emulate that perfect, fear casting out love. And we fail. A lot. A whole lot. We knew that this would be hard. We knew that there would be a ton of adjusting to do for every member of our family. We didn't know that God would break us down to our knees in humility. We didn't know that God would redefine "love" for us. We do know that God is working. In the midst of words like scabies, poop accidents, speech therapy and tantrums.....God has purpose. He doesn't waste anything. He teaches us to find the rainbows in little things like after being home for almost two weeks, the fear of bedtime has subsided enough for David to say "good night mommy. i duv you too!". He teaches us to look forward to dying to ourselves.....because that means we can finally live for Him.

We have been quiet. We haven't been on FB much. The TV has gotten lots of rest. We haven't answered tons of phone calls (sorry about that). There are a lot of opinions and lots of noise that happens when families struggle. And if we learned anything AT ALL in Ukraine, its that the ONLY noise we need to hear, the only advice we need to seek, the only voice we need to rise to, the only book we need about adoption, is breathed by God.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

The Wrecking Ball

We've been home now for 8 days. Back in the land of excess and women that wear tennis shoes. The FIRST thing that happened when we landed in Detroit? An Einstein Brothers Hazelnut Latte. That's what happened. And then my stomach said "hey! You haven't had dairy in two weeks!" and yeah, that happened as well.  Both of our cell phones exploded. We were thrilled to be able to answer and chit chat and know that after just one more flight, our arms would be wrapped around Cole and Zella. And then the flight in Detroit got delayed (you can laugh. Its ok). We walked through the door of our house at 7pm. I don't think any of us stopped smiling that whole night. It felt AHHHHH-MAZING to shower and shave my legs and actually feel ok about touching the walls of the shower and to sleep in my very own bed that was not suspect of anyone elses' germs. And while I was basking and wallowing and rolling around in all of my home sweet American home glory, I was missing something......

On our flight from Detroit to Savannah we were talking to a couple that had considered adoption as a solution to their infertility. They asked SO many questions and I could tell by their reactions that even though they had JUST found out that they were pregnant with twins, parts of their hearts were still in adoption. I was explaining to the husband some of the experiences we had with children at our little man's orphanage. The husband was on the verge of tears as I confidently sat there, stoic. He just kept saying "that must be the most heartbreaking thing ever". And it occurred to me that I had not, at all, even come close to beginning to process what Jake and I had just walked through.  The morning after we arrived home, we walked into church, and my mind began to process. It began to work its' way around the sights and the smells and the emotions and the tragedy and the HUGEness of our two week whirlwind.......and that was my wrecking ball. And it hasn't stopped swinging for 8 days.

I thought that when God called us to adoption, He was wrecking us. When God whispered "Ukraine" in Jakes ear and we learned that there was no pre-selection I thought surely that was God's final wrecking. When He told us to leave Cole and Zella behind, oh and you might be gone for 6 weeks but its all kind of up in the air, I thought, "oh ok, God. THAT's the wrecking ball." I was wrong. On all accounts. THIS, the part where He has convicted us and laid the control in our court, THIS is Him wrecking us.

Jake and I advocate for adoption. When people ask us about adoption and we give them our pretty little packaged up answer in our sweetest little Southern voices "The Lord really touched us for orphans....." they just smile and nod and "oh good for you! The world needs more people like you!" and Jake and I walk away feeling ashamed as if we've taken credit for something that we deserve NO credit for. We feel like we failed. "I don't want you to think I'm a good person! I want you to look at their faces! I want you to imagine poverty so tragic that you're forced to leave your little girl in her smocked seer sucker dress and her pink bow the size of Texas at a state run orphanage and pray and beg God to send someone to adopt her so that at least she can live even if its without you! I want you to look at your own life and realize that you are NO different than the faces of these 20 pound 10 year old, dirty, African children.......except for this one thing. When you were starving. When you were thirsty and begging for a drink at the well, your Father didn't turn away as if you didn't exist. He DIED. He bled. He rose from the dead. For you. But you pretend like these children........just as naked and ashamed as you are under your clothes, you scoff and say 'its someone elses problem. Someone else will feed them. Someone else will give them the same life that I have and don't deserve.' I don't need your high five. I need you to care".......that's what I want to say when they tell me they admire what we're doing.  And every time we DON'T say this, which is every single time, God drives the hurt a little deeper. It's easy to cover it up here. It's easy to be here in the land of plenty and push all of that deep, deep down.......it's that same place, deep deep down, that's where God is. I never could figure out why I couldn't hear Him better. I would pray and pray and pray and "God why can't I HEAR you?! I seek Your face and Your presence and feel so out of touch!" and all the while, He was there.

I'm just going to put this out there.....I'm an inner circle kind of girl. I like my "people" and I LOVE my home. Inside these walls it is safe and cozy and with the push of a little button I can control the climate in 3 different zones in our house. We are overwhelmed with luxury and I can't even lie, I like it. I enjoy this life. Ukraine was not the place for me. I'm more of Caribbean traveler. You know, white sandy beaches, crystal blue water, a random man repairing a thatched roof hut while another serves you fruity stuff in a coconut. That's me. Ukraine was not that. I was uncomfortable there. It was beautiful. It's a totally different landscape than I've ever seen before. And I was uncomfortable. I was out of place. I was tired. I felt dirty because my hair had this grossish film thing happening. My feet had blisters from walking in the wrong shoes. And there's not a whole lot of dedorant use happening there. Have I mentioned that I have a smell issue? I do. Terrible predicament to have. But bottom line......I was uncomfortable. We showed up with NO idea of what was going to happen. We had NO idea what God's plans for us entailed. We had an extreme communication issue with the language barrier. And Wi-Fi was hit or miss (the horror!!!!!!). And in that country, in all of the physical discomfort, my soul rested. For the first time in a really really long time, I wasn't fighting Him.....because He won. I could HEAR GOD CLEARLY. The breeze would blow and it was like I was walking hand in hand with the Holy Spirit. We talked all day. We talked all night. He was there, just like He always is, and I was finally present. FINALLY. Because that was where God wanted us. Completely reliant on Him. Completely dependent on Him for guidance and companionship. Completely in His will. If for only 2 weeks, we were there...........and we miss it. And we know God is calling us to voice those thoughts that we push down. We know God is calling us to step out. We just don't know how......I can start here.

Adoption is hard. It just is. Not everyone is called to adopt. Not everyone is called to give to adoption. But I think we are all called. We are all called to something. We are all called to that place of "uncomfortable". Every single persons "uncomfortable" place will be different. But I guarantee that if you're in Gods will in going to that place, you'll find Him there. And once you find Him, you will hunger for His presence like you never have before. You will race back to that same horrible discomfort, just to find Him again.  And maybe adoption is for you. If you fall into that category, let me say this to you........don't ignore the call. Pray about it. There is NOTHING that God won't equip you for in the process. You might feel unequipped. You might feel like you aren't a "good enough parent". You might play the age card. You might have concerns about how your bio kids will be effected. Just pray about it. Because there are millions of children that are just waiting for someone to say "yes".  When I look at our son and hear his story (I so hope to share this with you one day!) I realize that he was perfectly designed for our family. And I see his friends, literally clawing their way out of classrooms at the orphanage and throwing themselves at our feet and taking us by the hand and trying to run away with us, those children were perfectly designed for someones family. But someone has to say yes. If not you, who? Who will turn toward them instead of away? Who will SHOW them the love of Jesus? If not you, WHO?

Our wrecking ball is still swinging. God is calling us to levels of discomfort we've never known......and if it gets us closer to Him, we're going. All 5 of us. Because if not us, then who?

Friday, August 16, 2013

Update!

Since I last updated......so much has happened!!!!

On Monday, August 12th, Jake and I traveled 14 hours across Ukraine to Mukacheve. From Mukacheve we went to Beregovo where we found the ONLY hotel room in town. From there we immediately picked up the SDA inspector and traveled to a teeny tiny town, Bene, to the orphanage where our sweet D lives. We were warned ahead of time of the condition of the orphanage. His was supposed to be one of the poorest in the country. Jake and I spent most of the morning preparing our hearts for what we would see that day. But we pulled up to the orphanage gates and they were painted a bright, fun, turquoise. The gates opened to a long rock drive lined with greenery and flower gardens inside painted tires with kids' hand prints all over them. To the right of the driveway was a sprawling play area. Hand carved wooden swings and a pirate ship and a choo choo train. Monkey bars and a gazebo and weeping willows offering shade to the children in the hot summer sun. We were ushered into the orphanage directors office and (she's amazing by the way) we started chatting. Again, Jake and I were very unsure of what to expect. We were told that D had some health concerns that led us to believe that he could be quite sick. After about 30 minutes of Q & A with the inspector and director, we saw a tiny little face poke around a corner. And then we saw his grin. His giant, toothy grin. He told our translator that he has been waiting for us (melt my heart).

He's a VERY affectionate little guy. He hopped up on the sofa next to Jake nuzzled his head right under Jakes arm. We brought a photo album with us with pictures of our family, home, the beach, and a few of our sweet chocolate lab Brandy. D opened the album and the first picture he saw was our family picture. He gasped. He ran his hand across the photo at least 10 times. Then he moved his hand so it was resting on Jakes leg as he belly laughed his way through the rest of the album. He's healthy. He's smart. He's beautiful. He has been praying for a family.

Jake and I had limited time with him this week. The orphanage only allowed us to visit each day from 10-11 and from 4-5. We spent the time in between that doing a literal paperwork chase. Our translator is amazing (seriously.....if anybody has ever considered Ukrainian adoption, lets talk because this woman LOVES children and works her absolute hardest to get them into families). She did two weeks worth of paperwork in 3 days in an effort to get us home from Coles first day of school.

Here's the super hard stuff.......D doesn't understand what takes so long. He doesn't understand why he can't leave with us. He doesn't understand that we are coming back for him. It hurts my heart to know that he cries for us at night. 3 weeks is going to be a very very long time to be away from him. I considered sending Jake home and me staying in Ukraine......but God answered those thoughts when there was NO lodging anywhere for me after the day that we left. We prayed for an answer, and we got one.

SO, in about 2 and a half weeks, Jake and I will return to Ukraine for our official court date that says D is a Kubnick! Then, I will stay in Ukraine for a few more weeks while we wait out some of Ukraines 10 day wait periods and birth certificates and passports and medical exams and Jake will return home to be with Cole and Zella and well, lets just be honest, bring home the bacon. There are lots of emotions today....LOTS. But I'm saving them for a shorter post - you're welcome.

I need to make a couple of PSA's......

1. We have had SO many people say to us "you guys are amazing! We need more people like you!". Jake and I were talking the other night and we don't know what to say when people say that. We aren't amazing. We are Jill and Joe Schmoe. We're just a couple of kids that love Jesus and really and truly seek Him and to hear Him. We agree that there need to be more people adopting, but we are no different than anyone else. We struggle with selfishness. We struggle with letting go of the money that God raised for this adoption. We struggle with extending ourselves outside of our comfort zone and parenting not just another child, but a broken child. We believe, 100%, that no parent is perfect, but that there is a perfect parent for every child. They just have to say yes. In our brokenness, we were rescued by a Father that loves us in our ugliness. John 13:34 "this command I give to you; love one another as I have loved you." In D's brokenness, we will love him. Anyone can do it. Everyone can do something. The orphan crisis gets minimized every day by people that say the numbers aren't REALLY as bad as the reports indicate. From a woman that has seen the faces of the children in the files in Ukraine and has felt the touch of their tiny hands at an orphanage in Bene, Ukraine, the crisis is real, and you are needed. Pray about it.

2. We are VERY well aware of the struggles that we will endure when we get D home. Please, save your horrible adoption stories about your cousins friends uncles best friend that adopted once and their child burned their house down and suffered from severe detachment disorder. People. These children are broken. Do you think they ASKED to be treated so poorly that they developed these issues? And do you truly think that everyone saying no to adoption because of the sharing of these awful stories that its going to fix the issue? If you have those stories, don't share them with us. We don't need your negativity. We choose to surround ourselves with people that will pray about an issue and not just talk about it. We choose joy....even in the storms, and they will absolutely come, we choose joy. If you have something other than that to deliver, take it somewhere else.

We are in a beautiful hotel in Amsterdam tonight as we missed our connector in our effort to get home to Cole and Zella today. Tomorrow morning we board a flight and God willing, land in Savannah tomorrow afternoon. We CANNOT wait to squeeze our babies!!!!!!

More updates to come....AFTER I get some sleep :)



Friday, August 9, 2013

We are the Griswolds.....

I have been tempted more than once during this trip to call Jake "Clark". I am shocked that there hasn't been an international incident yet....I am also incredibly grateful that we are not "locked up abroad". I remember a friend that has been through the "interesting" process of adoption in Ukraine telling me to keep them laughing....so here's our humor.

When we arrived here in Kyiv our facilitator (we'll call her G) rented an apartment for us. Its a great price and great location. A studio apartment with a little washing machine and clothes line on the balcony with a market right across the street - perfect! Our SDA appointment was Wednesday. Thursday morning our translator (we'll call her R) called us and said to meet her in an hour, we needed to get to the notary office and start our paperwork. As we were walking out the door, R called and said that G had called and said we had to move apartments. Now. We frantically packed all of our things and then R said, "no no. It can wait until 1. We MUST get to the notary office. At 1, the landlord will meet you to get the key". So we went to the notary office. And waited. And waited. And waited. 3 hours later (way past 1pm) we were headed back to the apartment. We arrived to find 3 backpackers sitting on the sofa guarding their bags and staring at ours, as well as the cleaning crew giving us nasty, angry looks. Turns out, G just assumed we would travel to our childs region on Wednesday night so she only rented the apartment until then. No biggie! We moved to another apartment in the same building for the same price. After we waited for 3 hours at the notary office we headed back to the SDA to pick up the referral that allows us to visit our little mans orphanage. They said we could pick up between 4 and 5. We arrived at 4:10. At 5:45 they allowed us to pick up our documents. We got home last night and all we wanted was to wash some laundry and go to bed. After loading the washer, downloading the users manual to my phone, troubleshooting, turning this knob and that knob, water valves on and off, and almost breaking the washer to get our clothes back out, we realized, the washer is broken. So I used the Google translate app on my phone and typed in "our washing machine is broken. help." Jake took the phone downstairs to the VERY angry lady at the desk in her nightgown. He stood there and just held the phone out. (I'm laughing just writing this). She read it and said "NO!" then a whole bunch of Ukrainian and then "Manager!". So Jake laughed and retreated to the apartment. Language barrier wins again. First thing this morning we called our translator to see if she could call the facilitator that rented the apartment and find out about the washer. She called back and said "ooooooh yeah. G said the washer is broken. But she said she will come to you and get your clothes and take them to her house and wash them. Her son is here right now so he can help her." So right now, in Ukraine, there's a woman (that we have known for 4 days) and her adult son, washing our underwear for us. Never a dull moment.

Today we did  A LOT of walking and through the whole day we were scoping restaurants for traditional Ukrainian fare. I mean, you're only in Ukraine once, right? And I don't think I brought enough mouth bleach to try Borscht but we passed this little place with an English menu under the Ukrainian menu and decided to take a look. Meat pie. Rabbit & mushroom pie. Herring pie. Green onion and egg pie. Jake was feeling froggy. That was our dinner joint. So Jake ordered the chicken pie and I ordered the blueberry pie. They came out in big slices. Cold. Jakes was like chicken saladishy. With rice and cabbage and parsley. Mine was blueberry and perfect! Jake is already feeling the effects of his pie adventure :). 

There is never a dull moment with us. I can't document all of them because my writing doesn't provide the proper setting that would make it funny to readers. But we spend lots of time laughing and joking and that's just how we have always been. We could have easily chosen to allow this place to defeat us....but we won't let the devil win.

We will leave on Sunday afternoon for a 14 hour train ride to a city near the Carpathians, not far from the Hungarian border. There is no option but to have a sense of humor on a 14 hour train ride. For real. It will be worth it when we see his sweet face. We are continuing to pray for Gods favor. Our translator has been an AMAZING blessing and we thank God for her. She is working her very hardest to get our paperwork done as quickly as possible. There are still people with the authority to tell us "no". Through this process. There are still people that can hold this process up by taking their precious time with our documents. We are praying that God lights a small fire under them :). Seriously though, we are praying for an expeditious process and for favor, favor, favor. We know that so far, God has shown off big for our boy and for the strengthening of our faith, I have all ideas that God does not intend to stop showing off any time soon.







Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Ukraine and the SDA

FINALLY, an update!

We arrived in Kyiv, Ukraine on Monday, August 5 at 11:40am. Our flights were very smoothe (with the exception of the first flight whose pilot was clearly an ex-F-18 pilot). Customs was way too easy. Our luggage popped right out in the front of the line and our translator was waiting right outside the airport for us. It was seamless. It was GOD. God knows that I am a little uncomfortable out of my surroundings. Having babies and making a home has created in me an inner circle. When I'm away from my people and my home I am easily overwhelmed. That's why God gave me Jake :). He adapts easily and blends in and makes jokes the whole time. I cannot imagine travel without my best friend.

A few fun Ukraine things. So far, we've learned how to quickly convert Celsius to Fahrenheit. We've learned that Jake is the largest, most muscular man in all of Kyiv. He could fit these guys in his pocket! We've learned that women wear dresses and sandals. And if you wear shorts and tennis shoes you get stared at. We've learned that Ukrainians love American music. Ghostbusters, Depeche Mode, Justin Bieber, and yes, Freebird. Everybody smokes. We've second hand smoked at least two packs a day since we've been here. We love that Americans love deodorant and all of its chemically by-products ;). Ukrainians are much less concerned with time and schedule than Americans. Everyone is super laid back. Beer at 1pm? Sure! At any given moment there are throngs of people having a cold one in Independence Square. 84 degrees is hot. The weather has been amazing. Its been in the 80s with almost no humidity and a nice breeze. Everyone keeps saying "its so hot!!!" and us Southern folk are skipping down the street like its the first week of Spring. The architecture is beautiful. The cathedrals are breathtaking. The cobblestone streets and gold plated monuments look just like they do on the Pinterest travel page ;).  Seriously, Kyiv is a beautiful city. We are staying in an apartment that is very close to Independence Square and the SDA. Everything we need is within walking distance. The language barrier has proven....ummm.....funny. Yesterday we bought mystery frozen ravioli at the market. We had no idea what was in it. We still aren't exactly sure but it smelled porkishy and Jake refers to it as 'suspect" and "needing some Sriracha". There are Ford dealerships and Honda Civics and Range Rovers a plenty. We are kind of in shock. If it weren't for the language barrier, its almost like we're in NYC. We really like it here.....but there are a few things missing. And they are small and blue eyed and they give really great bear hugs. We miss our babies. Horribly. Deeper than deep.

Things have been good so far. The down time has been hard on this mama's heart. I can't lie. I feel completely incomplete without them. We have Skyped twice and saying goodbye is so so hard. Talking to them and holding it together is even harder. I know they are well taken care of and loved and prayed for.....we miss them. It hurts.

Today we went to the SDA. The door to the office is off on a side street and made me feel like I was doing something illegal. Considering the HUGENESS of what happens in that office, the entrance lacks its deserving grandeur. Our appointment was at 12 and we arrived 20 minutes early. Then the appointment before us ran 20 minutes over. 40 minutes of waiting and staring at this tiny door worked wonders on mine and Jakes nerves. We were pacing and praying and pacing and praying. They finally called us in and asked us to introduce ourselves and tell why we decided to adopt from Ukraine. I love Jake's boldness. He immediately said, "we want to expand our family and we believe that God has called us to expand it through adoption. God led us to Ukraine." I also loved that the lady in the office didn't seem at all surprised by his answer. She has clearly heard that before (praise God!). We were given 4 files of siblings first and we did not have peace about any of them for various reasons. After the sibling files were presented the office worker got on the phone and we thought those were all the files we would receive. But we kept praying, both of us, nervously praying for that perfect file. And she hung up the phone and gave us 3 more. A 7 year old girl, a 6 year old boy and lastly, a 5 year old boy. She laid that last file down and Jake and I looked at each other with tears in our eyes. That was him. Total peace. Holy Spirit kind of peace. His file arrived at the SDA this morning. Gods perfect, divine, timing. I have chills just writing this. SO, we accepted the referral for a 5 year old boy! We will hopefully travel to see him on Monday.

Jake and I have been overwhelmed through this entire process with the number of people pouring themselves out to God in prayer on our behalf. We know that so many of you, this morning before the sun woke up, were on your knees praying for us. Please know that we felt your prayers for peace. We felt your prayers the whole way with us. And we are humbled and beyond grateful to have each and every one of you walking this journey with us. The journey is not over. We have a lot of travel in our future as our sweet boy is a very very long train ride away from Kyiv. His orphanage has never completed an international adoption so we are swimming in uncharted waters. Our facilitator is wonderful and has done this before (with an orphanage having never done an international adoption). Our prayers, right now, go like this:

For Jakes back. Having a plate and screws in your spine isn't exactly conducive for international travel. So far, he has done very well. The train ride we are looking at to get to our boy is about 18 hours. That's 18 hours to the orphanage. Then 18 hours back to the airport. Then a lot of flying. Please pray for him as he pushes his back to the limit in the next few weeks.

For our paperwork in our little guys region to be completed expeditiously so that BOTH Jake and myself can get home to our kiddos for a few weeks while we wait for a court date. And if not both of us, at least Jake. We are praying to have at least one of us home by Cole's first day of school on August 19th. It means the world to us to make him feel so special on his big day of 2nd grade.

For all of the financial stuff to fall into place. We have a lot of expediting fees and big travel costs coming up. We know that God raised this specific amount of money for us for a reason.

For Cole and Zella to continue being awesomely strong as we are gone. We are SO proud of them!

For endurance for myself and Jake. We could REALLY use a hot shower and a starbucks right now, but that's not what God wants from us. He wants us uncomfortable. Please pray that we remember that without less of us there cannot be more of God.

Please pray for our sweet boy. I can't share his details here yet, but please pray that he knows we are coming and that when we get there, we will bond immediately.

And now this......because some have asked. Yes, we thought that we were bringing two children home. We've thought that through this whole process. But......."many are the plans in a mans heart, but its the Lords purpose that prevails." Proverbs 19:21. We can't question the peace that washed over us when we saw him today. We can't say to God "but wait, there should be two!". Maybe not right now. Maybe this isn't the end of the adoption road for us. Maybe God has greater plans. Maybe, just maybe, His plan, for just one child, is the PERFECT plan. We are grateful for a God that has plans greater than we can imagine for our family. One child, two children, 37 children....God's purpose prevails!

Thank you all for your love and support and words of encouragement and for your PRAYER! There is never too much or enough. Thank you and we love you all! We cannot wait to post again....with more news of God showing off!

With love from Ukraine,
McKenzee

Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Enemy

I'm going to try and be as short about this as I can. I know I need some sleep (who are we kidding) but I also know that God is taking Jake on this crazy journey not only to grow us as Christians, but as a testimony to someone that's quietly struggling. I couldn't keep this to myself. Not today.

John 10:10 - "The enemy comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.".

Jake and I have been praying for a vision. We've been praying for a vision that would help us in our decision process when that time comes. A face, a name, gender, ANYTHING! I spent Friday night of last week pleading with God. Pacing the house, desperately seeking His presence. I haven't ever prayed so urgently before. I haven't remembered a dream in a long time, and that night, I did. We were walking into our house after returning home from Ukraine. We came home empty handed with no children. Cole walked into the house before us and when I walked in, there was a HUGE rattlesnake, in our kitchen, coiled and ready to strike Cole and the rest of us. And that was the end of the dream. I know what snakes represent. That dream served as my warning. The enemy is lurking, waiting to strike. And he will use some of our greatest fears to cripple us. He struck today.

We have known from the day that God led us to adopt in Ukraine that a lot of the children available for international adoption aren't deemed "healthy". In adoption world, the word "healthy" is very loosely used and I think it's safe to assume that children living in orphanages will have some issues, whether they be social, mental, physical, whatever. These children are broken and hurting and living in less than desirable conditions. Right now in Ukraine it is almost the perfect storm. Apparently a ridiculous number of people are on vacation, paperwork is getting back logged up back logged, referrals aren't being processed the way they should be, etc. We received a call from our facilitator today telling us that due to this "perfect storm" there are "no good referrals".  A good referral would be a child a mild or correctable medical condition. So you can imagine what a "not good" referral will be. She gave us options. Options to request a rescheduled appointment date and a few others. She reiterated that their goal was to make sure that we bring home an addition to our family, so if we wanted to reschedule that was ok.  We had to make a decision by tonight if we were going to move forward with our appointment on the 7th or not.

Here's what I know.....the enemy comes to distract. To separate us from what we know to be truth. And today, that's what he did. He took a mustard seed sized non-issue and used it to play on some of our greatest fears. And what is that fear? That God will take us even further out of our comfort zone. When our facilitator first gave me the options I knew the answer. We go anyways. She calls it taking a gamble. I call it walking in faith. And then I told Jake and yeah, we were both discouraged. And the first thing we did was pray. I don't even think Jake knew the words that were coming out of his mouth. 20 minutes later Jake read to me Phillipians 3:12-14 -"12 Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already arrived at my goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. 13 Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, 14 I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus."  Yes! We press on!  Why? Because God called us to adoption. He went WAY out of His way to first call me and then Jake and Cole. He raised $26,000 for us. We didn't do that. God did that. He surrounded us with people that have a heart for God and a heart for orphans to pray us through this tough stuff. God has created His very own perfect storm in us. We press on.

So what? What happens if we open the file and there's a disability? When I was pregnant with Cole and Zella and they offered us all of the testing for downs syndrome and spina bifida, etc. we declined. Why? Because it didn't matter. EVERY child is a gift from the Lord. We knew that God was blessing us with the perfect children for our family. And we know that still today. We will show up on August 7th. We will pray without ceasing. We will be especially sensitive to His soft whispers. We will choose the file that God has chosen for us and we will love those children, without hesitation, because they are gifts from the Lord and He chose them for our family. They are ours just as much as Cole and Zella are ours. Perfectly crafted. Will it be hard? Yessir. Will we be stretched to limits we never thought our faith could go? Absolutely. BUT unlike the enemy, GOD and His promises and His truth, just as it says in John 10:10, those things bring life and life to its fullest. I choose life. I choose life for our family and all of our children. There is no room for the enemy's lies in this house so get under my feet!

And you can take that to the bank, devil!

Monday, July 29, 2013

6 more sleeps and FAQ's

6 more sleeps!!!!! People. The preface to this journey began in May, 2012. 6 more sleeps until we get to write the book. I can't wrap my brain around this. I can't wrap my heart around it. So I'm just going. I'm just packing all our stuff up and going and not trying to process it because who can really do that? Who can really walk into an orphanage, process what the word "orphan" really means, choose to love children that are hurt and broken and have been forgotten for so long, and really and truly understand it all? I know I can't do that. And that's why I have God. He never asked me and Jake to understand. There are no red letters written in the Good Book that say "please, brethren, overanalyze every one of My plans for you until ye have full understanding and wisdom". He did say, "So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand." Isaiah 41:10. So we'll go in 6 more sleeps. We'll cry when we leave Cole and Zella and we'll cry when we see the faces of our new children for the first time. We'll chew our nails off as we wait and we will pray pray pray pray. But we will not fear. 6 more sleeps.

So to answer a lot of questions, here's what will happen when we arrive in Ukraine. We arrive on Aug. 5th. Our appointment with the SDA (Ukrainian adoption authority) is bright and early on Aug. 7th. When we arrive at the appointment we will be handed anywhere from 1-10 medical files. Each file can contain either 1 child or up to 2 children. They will select children from their database to fit our criteria. Our criteria were: Age 7 or under, boy or girl, healthy or mild, treatable/correctable health issues. We will have approximately 30 minutes to choose 1 file. Once we choose a file, the paperwork will get started for a referral. We can pick the official referall up the next day and then we travel to the region of the country where the child(ren) are located. It could be as close as 20 minutes and as far as a days long train ride. Once we meet the child(ren), if we feel that "yes, this is it!" then we accept the referral and paperwork will get started to file for a court date. If, for lots of different reasons, we choose to NOT accept the referral, we travel back to the SDA and give them a written explanation of why we are turning down the first referral. We must then wait for another appointment (usually takes about a week for an appointment). You are allowed to turn down 3 referrals. That's it. 3 strikes and you're out. BUT, we are having faith that God will very clearly reveal the child(ren) He has chosen for us at the first appointment, without question, to both of us. The average time between meeting child(ren) and court is about a month. Once the court has officially named us legal guardians there is a mandatory 10 day wait before we are allowed to check the child(ren) out of the orphanage. After the 10 days are up and we beat feet, we head back to Kiev for passports, medical exams and Visas and then HOME SWEET HOME! Sounds easy, right? Well that's what we're praying for. We're praying for easy peezy lemon squeezy because this has been a wild ride and we are all ready to have our family together, complete, on US soil.

So what do we need? We need prayer! If you're tight with Jesus then we need you on our team! Seriously. I believe there is NO such thing as too much prayer. Blanket us from top to bottom and all around. Here are our main prayer requests:

1. For Cole and Zella to be so distracted while we're gone that they won't have time to miss us.....but if they do, for them to find comfort in prayer and in the amazing families that will be loving them while we are away.
2. For our flights to be on time, land safely and for us to get through customs with NO trouble.
3. For our appointment to be successful and for God to reveal, clearly, 100 % without a doubt, to both Jake and myself, which child(ren) He has chosen for us.
4. For us to be able to make decisions prayerfully regarding coming home in between meeting and court.
5. For us to bond quickly with our child(ren) (((this one makes me cry!))).
6. For us to pray without ceasing.
7. For there to be NO hold ups with paperwork, passports, visas or medical exams.
8. For us to be changed by what we will walk through. God does not take us through this heavy stuff with the intention of us walking out the same way we walked in. He has purpose. Always. Please pray that we seek Him first and that we are sensitive to His voice and His lessons.

We know that we are surrounded. Our God goes before us, walks along side us, and brings up the rear. We will not fear as we walk into this crazy, amazing, Kubnick sized journey!

Thank you all for your love and support......but mostly, for your prayer.

God bless and good night!
McKenzee

Sunday, July 14, 2013

A Sparrow

When I was younger (not as young as you'd like to think) and far more delusional, I, like most of America, thought I was a singer. And not just a church song singer. I was a Mariah Carey, Lauryn Hill, Whitney Houston singer. I can still feel the walkman in my hand as I pressed rewind and flipped the "I'm Every Woman" tape over and over again. Around that same time the movie "Sister Act 2" was released and the incredible Lauryn Hill made her debut. I watched that movie ALMOST as many times as I watched "Adventures in Babysitting". While "Adventures" was watched with grandiose dreams of one day being old enough to babysit and make money doing it, "Sister Act 2" was watched for only two scenes. I would watch, then pause and try to sing it just like her. God bless my mother for never telling me how horrible I was. I can hear it in my head. Her voice is weathered and worn and scratchy and convicted and she sings "why should I feel discouraged? Why should the shadows come? Why should my heart feel lonely, and long for heaven and home? When Jesus is my portion. A constant friend is he. His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches over me. His eye is on the sparrow. And I know He watches me..."  The song goes on as she plays piano and my mind wandered to me standing on a stage belting out those lyrics. As I got older I FINALLY learned that I am extrememly tone deaf and the stage I dreamt of performing on disappeared but that song still resonated in some of my very lonely, very very dark times. When my children were babies and my audience became blue-eyed miracles and we spent countless hours in the rocking chair I would sing this song in their tiny little ears. I wanted them to know these things above all else. And I think that what happens sometimes in our determination to ensure that I children grow up knowing that they are loved by God regardless of any doubt they have, I think that sometimes, as parents, we forget that we too, are His children. And we too, are loved without condition. We, with our weathered and worn voices, scratchy and broken and rough and weary, can sing out to Him, tone deaf and all and sing "I sing because I'm happy. I sing because I'm free. His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches me."

Jake and I have struggled this week. Adoption is good for lots of things. One of those things is this.....any time you say "yes" to God, the enemy calls up his army. He knows the things that will throw you off course. For us, its financial issues and stress and anxiety. Turns out, adoption is knee deep in all of those! And this week we have worried and stressed and counted dollars and then the roof started leaking and there was an unexpected adoption fee and it piles up and the stress mounts and suddenly we found ourselves at a point where the problems seemed so big, so insurmountable, that solutions were literally unforeseeable. We had talked about them so much that our stomachs were in knots and our palms sweaty and our tones were very coarse. Our patience was thin and tear ducts dry. And in my ear I heard His whisper, "pray". 

I woke up this morning feeling hopeful. I remembered that last week at church our pastor had mentioned "next week we will talk about stress and anxiety and what the Bible says about that". Jake and I laughed at each other last week. We always know God delivers His messages with direct purpose and so it was hilarious that this sermon seemed so perfectly designed for us. And that was last week, before our lives changed a little.  And so this morning I woke up and I said "God, give us what You got. Cause You're all we have to stand on."

"Then Jesus said to His disciples: 'Therefore I tell you, do not worry about what you will eat; or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothes. Consider the ravens: They do not sow or reap; they have no store room or barn; yet God feeds them. And much more valuable you are than birds! Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to your life? Since you cannot do this very little thing, why do you worry about the rest? Consider how the wild flowers grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you, not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today, and tomorrow is thrown in the fire, how much more will He clothe you - you of little faith! And do not set your heart on what you will eat or drink; do not worry about it. For the pagan world runs after all such things, and your Father knows that you need them. But seek His kingdom first, and these things will be given to you as well." Luke 12:22-31

This is the scripture that opened our sermon today. I heard Jake chuckle. Indeed, chuckle away. We had forgotten that to our Father, we are more valuable than the ravens or the sparrows or the wild flowers. We had forgotten for a minute, as we journey to bring our children home, that we too, are children. We are children of a God who is with us and goes before us and reminds us not to fear because we are His. In our attempts to raise our children to be obedient and listen and always pray first and trust God, we forgot this week that their greatest lesson is to be taught through example. By parents that always pray first, by parents that are obedient to their Father, by parents that trust Him for everything from the food on the table to the clothes on their backs, by parents that allow their Father to comfort them in times of discouragement and by parents that praise God regardless of the extremity of their storm. 

Today, we are reminded that our problems are so much smaller than His greatness. Sometimes we just have to hit our knees and sit back and let God work......all the while singing, in our weathered and scratchy, tone deaf, been ugly crying for a week voices "why should I feel discouraged? Why should the shadows come? Why should my heart feel lonely, and long for heaven and home? When Jesus is my portion. A constant friend is he. His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches over me. His eye is on the sparrow. And I know He watches me. I sing because I'm happy. I sing because I'm free. His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches me." 



Tuesday, July 9, 2013

A little of what I've learned as a SAHM.......

I've officially been a stay at home for just over 2 months now. I've spent more time with my family in the last two months than I have in years. And it can be frustrating.....and there are times when I want to just go for a run to get away from it (I HATE running).....and then there are times, many many more of these than the aforementioned, where I stop, breathe it in and thank God for the moment, for the sunshine, for the nothing to do-ness of a summer day, for little children that actually like me in spite of my monsterish tendencies, for the chance to soak them in, for the opportunity to love my husband without being pressed for time....because this season will pass just as quickly as the last and the next. Jake and I sat on the beach two days ago talking about God and our dreams. There are days when I feel like we aren't doing enough for God. Surely we should be acting and sacrificing and serving more outside of our home right now....and Jake, my steady, said to me "maybe right where we are, is where God wants us for right now. Did you ever think that He gave us this time, to just be still?"  Oh how I love this man.  I know Jake's right. This time is teach us. This time is to force us into stillness. I don't want to miss the lessons that are being taught in every single day.  Here are a few things that I've learned as I've really really stopped and paid attention:

1.  The hardest, absolute hardest part of my every single day is fighting selfishness. Any Mom that says that she doesn't occasionally think to herself "there's nobody cutting the crust off my bread and putting my clean underwear away. there's nobody serving me dinner first and there's nobody allowing me to have quiet time for 2 hours every afternoon.....why should I do it for them?"  Its a fight being a good Mom. But what's the result? My prayer is that the result is children that grow up knowing the Lord, and never depart from His ways (Proverbs 22:6).  My prayer is that one day my little girl will remember that Mommy wore hot pink jelly bracelets and Minnie Mouse ears and ate her fake cookies in leiu of a hot shower. Or that my son will remember that when Mom really really needed to paint those jars for a little extra money, that we went on a bike ride instead. My prayer is that one day my son will lead his family in Bible study each morning at the butt crack of dawn as his kids complain about having to do it. My prayer is that one day my little girl will smile as her family gags down a terrible meal that she spent all day long cooking.....and the next day, in spite of her failure, she will provide a meal for them again.  My prayer is that they remember our hands touching them in the middle of the night and the whispered prayers for guidance in parenting and that when they fail, because they will, just like we do, they know how to ask forgiveness, and have full knowledge that they are covered by God's grace.

2. I made a lot of mistakes in my early parenting days. I look at some of Cole's OCD tendencies and I think to myself, "I did that to him". I believe that. My over-obessive first time Mom, over mothering completely screwed up the little boy in him. He never had on dirty clothes, never had dirty hands, always had a clean face, never had a scraped knee, the list goes on....because I was there, every single second, making sure that he was "perfect".  Here's where I screwed up. He was perfect anyways. He still is. None of that outside stuff matters. I never ever let him be little. And now my Zella is 3.5. And her first year of life was tumultuous with her tummy stuff and before I knew it she was 1 and then 2 and now 3.5 and really and truly, I've missed it. Almost all of it. If I had to do it all over again......I would. This time, as a Christian. I know that our values weren't in the right place when we bought a house contingent on two incomes and sent our kids off to daycare. I'm not knocking any mother that works - good for you! - but for our family, we were driven by greed, not by contentment. And now that I'm here, at home, my prayer has shifted to making up for lost time. I pray that Cole and Zella will give me a few more years before they don't need me anymore. I've missed so so much. I'm praying that God blesses us with a few more "arrows in the quiver". They are truly blessings. Even when they drive me insane.....its a blessing. Psalm 127:3-5

3. I am not as organized or time efficient as I once thought. This explains itself. I struggle to get more than one scheduled task accomplished each day. Homeschool Moms, you are my heros. For real. FOR REAL. Last night we played UNO and Jake held the number 4 card up and said "Zella, what number is this?" she replied "22!!!". So there you go. Anybody need an extra student this summer? LOL. Also, God bless the women at daycare, the pre-teachers, that teach kids how to read, write, count and wipe from front to back. You are saints and your heroic efforts on a daily basis are not lost on me.

4. There is no end to housework. How did I EVER do this when I worked? Seriously. If my dog blows one more winter coat I will have vacuumed up enough hair to make a parka. The dust is endless. How is this possible? It. Never. Ends. BUT........Proverbs 31:26-27.

5. I've lost friends. I have changed. Everything has changed. And while it's painful, it has to be ok. I can't be one foot in, and one foot out. And you know, I might be doing this all wrong. I might be throwing myself way too much into my family and not focusing on myself and every woman needs alone time and all that jazz. I do believe that all women need time to regroup. Sometimes just a pee break with no one needing a snack in the middle of it is the most refreshing part of my day.....the real friends are the ones that understand that I have chosen to be a Christian, wife, and mother before all other things....the real friends are the ones that call anyways. They're the ones that don't judge me even when our beliefs don't line up. They're the ones that when I'm a flaky friend and haven't called in two months because well, there's that time management thing again, they're the ones that still love me for me, not what I can or can't do for them. You know who you are. Thank you for being faithful.

I've learned more about myself in the last 2 months than I thought possible. Its been humbling, and hard, and there were days when I cried and cried thinking that I made a huge mistake in leaving work. Sure, there are things that we still struggle through every day. We are human. Some days are better than others. Some days are sunshiney and butterflies and rainbows and some days I'm on my knees all day just praying that bed time will hurry up because mama's last nerve is almost broken. But with every fight that we throw ourselves into.........nobody ever said it would be easy, but it will be worth it.  Phillippians 1:6



Saturday, June 29, 2013

Timing is Everything!

I've been sitting on this long enough. I've wallowed and been in denial and realized that no matter how much I pretend that this isn't the scenario or how many times I sneak a good cry in the closet, the reality doesn't change. We heard from Ukraine. And its NOT BAD. Its also not what we expected.

Tuesday morning, while Jake and I were mid-furlough discussion, naturally, I got an email from our facilitator. She informed me that no they hadn't forgotten about us (guess she picked up my "vibe" in that last email I sent), and that our contact at the SDA in Ukraine said she expects us to receive an appointment date in.......wait for it......September. Yes. September.  She explained that a lot of the children in the age group we've selected (under 7) are blessed enough to be sponsored during the summer months and they either attend summer camps in different regions of the country or they are hosted by families for several weeks in the US. In order for us to meet our children, and select them, they would actually need to be present, and a lot of them aren't. She also said that a lot of the workers take all of their vacation time during summer so things at the SDA move slower (huh. Didn't realize everywhere had the Bluffton State of Mind :)). So all of that makes sense, right? When I read it the first time it read like this "blah blah blah, you're never ever ever going to meet your kids, blah blah blah, your adoption is the longest in the history of adoptions, blah blah blah, go eat something".  I walked into the bedroom and kind of tossed my phone at Jake while I morphed into an ugly cry face. I fell apart. It wasn't fair. Why is ours taking SO much longer?! I've watched kids come home who's parents didn't even know they wanted to adopt when we got started.....what are we being punished for? And as Jake held me on his chest, the Holy Spirit washed over me and reminded me of this.....

You prayed for an answer. This may not be the answer that you were expecting, but God was faithful to you in answering your prayers, just as He promised. He will not forsake you.....OR your children. He has not left you. Praise Him.

And you know, that little moment has kind of started this overwhelming conviction this week.... 

How often, ok, how many times in each hour of every day, do I forget to remember the prayers that He has answered. Every night I pray protection over our kids. And every morning when they pounce on me and the mommy morning monster wakes up.....God answered my prayer. They woke up. I woke up. We are safe. He protected us. Every night at dinner when we pray "bless this food to the nourishment of our bodies" and we go another week as healthy, thriving individuals. He has indeed blessed our bodies. I could go on.....but really, how many days do we forget that breathing alone, is an answered prayer?

And so what are you teaching us, God? Why this delay? Why is September better for you than say, next week? I can speculate....so I will. When I first quit work it was with the intention to be at home with our kiddos and the kiddos that are coming home. And before we knew the more realistic time frame, that was totally okay. And then the answer didn't come, and we got really really really consumed by that. Consumed by the lack of an answer. And more than anything, consumed by the process of adoption. And now that I see what that consumption has done, I get it. We let our prayers, and the needing an answer to those prayers, become WAY more important than the One answering them. When the first thing I reached for in the morning is my phone to check my email, instead of my Bible to fill my cup, the balance is off. When I will complain and cry and whine that "its so haaaaaard not knowing" but I won't hit my knees and just ask already, there's a problem. I believe God gave me this time at home to bring my family back to focus. To remind us that He still reigns. Not adoption. Not Cole and Zella. Not church softball. Not church. Not what people will think (or say) when they hear there's ANOTHER delay. But God. He gave us this time to convict us. Because He knows that we are going to need Him closer than ever before in just two short months.

People will say to us, after finding out about the adoption, "well I commend you for what you're doing" "well hats off to you and your husband for what you're doing" "wow. I could never do what you're doing".  And I let them say it. I allowed that one little pat on the back and that's all it took. Please don't commend us. We haven't done anything. Commend the mothers that lay in bed every night alone as their Marines fight a fight for a commander in chief that doesn't respect them. Tip your hats to me because I'm raising the kids I have now. Pat yourself on the back for raising your own kids in a crazy, messed up world. And yes, you could totally do what we're doing. Because truly, we are doing nothing. Yep. We're going to have a few more mouths to feed. Yep. I will more than likely be buying stock in Clorox wipes. I might not sleep well for several months (me and sleep don't seem to get along anyways).  But what really, am I doing other than the same thing that every mother on the planet already does? Nothing. Except that I'm COMPLETELY RELYING ON GOD TO GUIDE ME. Enter conviction.  We've been struggling with parenting. Our kids are in that transition phase where everything we were doing 6 months ago isn't really working all so great anymore. And we've been frustrated. There have been great, awesome days. And there have been so not at all cool days. Why is it that I am willing to completely rely on God to guide me through an adoption, and through parenting adopted children, but I'll go to Dr. Dobson when I have a wooden spoon issue instead of talking to God?  Why is it that I will completely rely on God to raise $26,000.00 to bring these children home, but when the good ol' gov'ment tells me that we are losing 20% of our pay because a bunch of fogeys can't balance a checkbook, I panic, post on FB, cry a little and maybe pray AFTER all that? How come, when Jake and I argue, I'll call my sister, and not call on my FATHER?  God gave us this time for a purpose. He is answering prayers that I haven't even prayed yet. He's gently grabbing us with both hands, by the cheeks, and turning our faces back in the right direction.

Does it hurt my heart to look at the Pros and Cons list of traveling in September? It does. Because I hurt for Cole and Zella. And I hurt for our two kids that hope every day for a mama and papa. Two months is eternity in kid time. And in Mama time.  But in just a week of refocus our family dynamic has shifted. God is shaping us into a home that will be perfect for two new little ones. He's changing me and Jake and training us to focus on what we have.....and not what we're missing. He's reminding me that I am where He wants me, at the heart of the home. My paycheck is my family. There is no greater reward than loving them with Christ like compassion and watching them turn that same compassion out into the world. Do I fail? I sure do. But I'm covered in grace. I'm afforded "extended time lines" to get back on track.

This is our storm. It didn't come with the force of a hurricane. This is our years long rainy season. Thank you, Lord, for the rain. For never having to be thirsty. For the laughter (and sibling fights) that bounce off the toy room walls. For the ups and the downs that keep this life exciting. For all of Jake's quirks that make me love him more. Thank you, Lord, for giving us an even longer storm so that we can learn to praise you......at all times.

We'll get to Ukraine. We will push forward. For us, right now, faith means that timing is everything....and not OUR timing, but HIS timing.


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

The GREAT news and What's next?.....and a little piece of this girls mind.....

So we got AMAZING news on Monday night! We are officially registered as adopting parents in Ukraine!! Hooray! (spirit fingers) We don't have an appointment date yet - but that's OK because at least now we know our seemingly endless paperwork (and paperwork correction) is over and we can wait in peace for the appointment date that will absolutely come some day soon. So that's our amazing news (keeping it short and sweet tonight, kids!).

We've had so many people ask us "ok, what's next?". Here's how it works......we will receive an appointment at the SDA in Ukraine. When we arrive at the appointment, we will be given an undisclosed number of medical records (could be 1, could be 10) of children that match our requested criteria. We said any boy or girl, or sibling set of 2, age 7 or under. We will have, along with our translator, approximately 30-45 minutes to go through the medical records and select the child/children that we would like to meet. Then we file for a "referral". The referral can usually be picked up the next day. Once we have the referral we travel to the region that the childrens' orphanage is in. For regions think of it like counties.We will meet the child/children and determine whether or not these are in fact "our kids". If we have any concerns, or if for any reason we have to deny the first children we select to meet, we go back to the SDA and start again with medical records, etc. You are only allowed to do this 3 times. HOWEVER, we have faith that God will reveal our children to us immediately.  Once we decide to proceed with adopting certain children, the paperwork starts, a court date is requested. Once a judge determines that we are fit to adopt the child/children, there is a mandatory 10 day wait period before we are allowed to sign the kids out of the orphanage (cause you know, they haven't been there long enough). After the 10 day wait, we check the kids out and head back to Kyiv for Visas, Passports, medical exit exams, etc. The total trip will probably be about 5 weeks. 

In March, we went to a prayer night for the adoption ministry at our church. One of our incredible prayer warriors was praying for us and prayed for Jake to receive a sign about our children....if it's one or two, gender, a face, even a shirt color so that when we see the pictures, we are 100% sure that those are the children God chose for us. That was on a Monday night. The next day Jake completely surprised me with a new mini van. It came with two sets of headphones as part of the package. He went out to the van to grab the headphones and he came back inside laughing and shaking his head. When he went out to get the headphones, there weren't two sets, there were 4. We don't believe that there is such a thing as a "coincidence" with God. There is direct purpose in everything, we just have to be looking for it. We wholeheartedly believe that we are coming home with two children. Please pray with us during this time that God will reveal the file to us that He intends for us choose, clearly, without question. 45 mins. is NOT a lot of time to choose children.....we are trusting that He will use the time wisely and direct our eyes to the correct one.

Having said all of that, I need to say a little more.......

I took Cole to the doctor today for a check up and was talking to the doctor just about how I am a little concerned about how the emotional changes will effect Cole after the adoption. She isn't the pediatrician that we normally see so she wasn't aware that we are adopting. She's a mother and she's a pediatrician so I guess I just wasn't expecting her reaction. She asked a few questions and I explained the process just as I did above.......and her response "but even with the medical records, there are so many psychiatric issues that you might not know about it. I don't know, that's just a big risk to take."  You can insert a lot of things right here that you might think went through my head.....none of your ideas are probably strong enough for what actually ran through my brain. But my response was this "it's just like having a baby. There is no promise of perfect health. But that's your child, so you just do what you have to do and you make it work." That's all I had to offer her in that moment....but its what I TRULY believe. Is it going to be hard? Yup. Does every single little tiny part of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome suck? Absolutely. Is there a gigantic risk that our children will have FAS or detachment disorders? There sure is. Does that change anything? Not a chance.

Yes. It is a huge risk. If it was easy, I wouldn't need God. If it was easy, everybody would be doing it and there wouldn't be an orphan crisis. If it wasn't a risk, I wouldn't be terrified of what I'm walking into, and I wouldn't be 100% reliant on God for the strength to walk it out. We aren't patting ourselves on the back here. There are days when Jake and I look at each other and say "we are surely crazy". Jake said it best the other night when he said "I'm just a guy that's following instructions."  And that's it. We're just a family that said "yes".  When we first started talking about adoption Cole said, "let's bring an orphan to our house. They can sleep in my bed."  ITS THAT SIMPLE. Give them what they don't have.  Where is the risk in that? Where's the risk in obedience? Where's the risk in looking at a child with no self worth and telling them, "you are a gift from the Lord! You are a heritage! A reward!"  In this house, the risk is big, but the reward is a million times bigger. 

So for everyone that looks at the risk, before you look at the yield and the gains, you have it all wrong. It took us years and years and to see it like this but the risk, no matter how big, is always on the smaller side of the equation.

We don't have any idea what God is about to give us. If you think we're crazy, its ok. Cause we think we are too! But we know, and we trust, that through this journey God has been equipping us, because we are called. So bring it on, Kubnick Kiddos! Daddy and Mama have a Bible (and a Ukrainian translation app) and a whole army of prayer warriors standing behind us, there isn't anything we can't make it through.

The next time I post, we'll be making travel plans.....ITS FINALLY HAPPENING!