Our United Family of Five

Our United Family of Five
Hooray!

Waiting for our Sweet Girl

Waiting for our Sweet Girl
Before Lulu's Arrival

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Real Time Update

We just got an email update with measurements and photos from this week.  We read this with utter delight today:


"Now her height is 96 cm; weight: 17.5 kg; head circumference: 49.5 cm; chest circumference: 54 cm; foot 15 cm; teeth: 24.  She is outgoing and open, her verbal expression is great.  She likes to play with other children.  Every teacher loves her.  She loves to be pretty, likes to wear girly clothes.  She likes others call her "little princess".
Now, she is wearing a eye patch to correct her vision problem."
We have a little princess!  The princes of the castle say, "Aww, she's so cute." Dec says he's not a prince, he's a dragon.

By the way, Minlan was born in the Year of the Dog, Thom is a Dog, I am a Rooster, Quin is a sheep/goat but he also says he's a knight of the castle.  Dec really is a dragon.  A golden dragon - as he was born in 2000.

From Quin (ar ge): To: Little Princess  You are so cute.
From Dec (ge ge):  WOO! SHE IZ SEW KYOOT! (He just got back from Hip Hop dance class).

I have to learn to say Little Princess:  xiao3 gong1 zhu3.  I will work on it.  Also "my little princess".


Enjoy the new photos.  We received 11 and these are the boys' favorites.  Unfortunately many of the photos show her eyepatch on the wrong eye.  I hope to goodness that this was an error of the photographer and that her foster mom will put it on the correct side when she gets home from school .  We think these photos were taken at the site where she attends pre-school through Half-the Sky Foundation.  Thank you HTS and the donors who keep the organization going.  Thank you Sabrina and the China Coordinator who took these photos.  They were taken May 20th.  Just five days ago.  This is really her, now, at various stages of play, interest, boredom and just plain tuckered out.  I love them all.




Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Care Package #2

There is a neat woman in China through whom one can send care packages to future adoptees in China after you are far enough in the process.  You look at her website www.redthreadchina.com and choose preplanned package with a theme such as PJs or Birthday or Moon Cakes or choose individual items and put your own package together.  Payment is easy through Paypal.

We sent a Hello Kitty bookbag for which Ann creates a tag that says that the bag belongs to Minlan and includes a request for the orphanage or foster family to place all her precious items inside.  That way, a child is assisted in being sure anything that she now owns (her care package items) come with her.  We sent two dresses (Auntie Kayce and I chose the "strawberries" dress with the stylized little girl and Ann at Red Thread China chose the pink and white one) and matched them with hair clips we ordered.  We also requested a small cuddly toy or doll as well as green tea and cookies for the foster family.  Ann was out of shoes at the time so we will order those later.

We were also allowed to send a letter to the orphanage director that Ann translated as part of our order.  Here is the text of the letter:

Dear Orphanage Director,

I would very much appreciate it if you could give this package and these items to my future adopted daughter (we listed her full name and DOB), and her kind foster mother.

We are so grateful for everything you are doing for Min Lan and the other children under your care.  We were very glad to see that Min Lan now has glasses and a patch in her December photos.  Thank you for providing that care for her and helping her with her vision.

I wonder if you might answer a few questions for us about Min Lan.  I have sent an addressed card that you might send back to us:
1.  In what city is she living with her foster Mother?
2. What does Min Lan like to be called?  Does she have a nickname?
3.  Does she have a bestfriend or frequent playmate?
4.  What is her favorite color?
5.  Is there a children's song or other song she really likes or that her foster mother sings to her?
6.  How do you know when she is upset or angry?  How is she calmed?
7.  Would her foster mother like to stay in contact with us as Min Lan grows up?  We would support that if allowed.
8.  May we have her foster mother's name for her memories?
9.  Is there a foster father?

I thank you for taking the time to read my letter and I hope you will respond.  We will have your note translated here when it arrives.

With great respect and gratitude,
Karin and Thom Harp

Ann sent us the photos today and said that the package should be received within a few days.  It feels so good to be able to send something to our darling girl.  It feels like a link or connector has been placed as we now have a way to show her that we are thinking about her.   Who knows what kind of preparation she will have before we arrive.  Hopefully with the blankie, Winnie-the-Pooh, dress and family photo-album in the first package and now these fun goodies, she will start to make positive connections between these far-away family members and her own life. 

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

NVC letter in Hand

From Karin and Thom's iPad:
We received the NVC letter today by PDF.   It still hadn't come by mail.

I had to ask four times to get it emailed but it came thanks to persistence and multiple kind people at the NVC center.  Thanks Mom for teaching me to be polite combined with assertive. Sometimes it pays not to give up. The phone call a day got me nowhere but the email system was the key.

This is my favorite part of the NVC letter:
"The State Department's National Visa Center has recently received your approval Form I-800, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative. This letter is to inform you that your petition has been forwarded to the appropriate visa-issuing post where the adoption interview will take place."

It goes on to name Minlan and says that, the case has been forwarded to the consulate in Guangzhou in the People's Republic of China.

Yippee wahoo hooray!

So what does THIS mean? Well, I reported our progress on Rumor Queen so it could be charted and then I had to ask the group what happens next. Thank goodness for the blogosphere. The answer came right away:

-The consulate produces a document called the Article 5 which may be picked up in person at the consulate only on a Monday or on a Thursday. It is the document that tells China that the US agrees to the whole process and will make the adopted child a US citizen. It takes two weeks to produce the Article 5 so ours will be ready on June 3rd at the earliest. The agency person in China picks it up and delivers it to the CCAA.  The CCAA then asks the orphanage whether the child is still available for adoption. The orphanage must respond and then the Travel Approval is created by CCAA.   It takes 2-4 weeks for the TA to be produced depending on how fast the orphanage responds. When Travel Approval is given, then the agency gets to ask for a consulate appointment for us and we get to get on a plane.

Phew. Each step feels so big yet so tiny. Just like it is when I look at the photos of Minlan's adorable hands. Tiny, but the hands of a girl who can already do so much. I can't wait to hold them in mine, watch her play with toys, help her to turn the pages of her book, tie her shoes and more. We're all taking tiny steps to something huge.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Updated photos!

We just received a set of photos of Minlan from December 14, 2009. She obviously has a sense of humor, feels loved, and knows how to have fun. What a cutie! Her dimples are back too!

The neatest thing though is that we get to see her with her snazzy glasses and patching of the dominant eye. Note that her left eye is looking almost straight ahead in one photo without her turning her head to the side. The iris is in the middle. This is a first for our happy little girl. I am so proud of her and so thrilled to see her enjoying herself.




She'll fit right in with her goofball big brothers.



Oh, those dimples!


Love from foster mommy.



Fun with a friend. She's so cute!

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Friday, May 14, 2010

Girl Stuff

The Hannah Anderson Outlet 30% off Everything Sale opened today. For the first time, I got to go in and peruse the adorable soft cotton girls stuff. The dresses were precious. Oh my goodness. I had no idea how much fun it would be to imagine my sweet (or cranky, or peppy, or talkative or
quiet) darling girl in her first jean jumper with a red trim on the pockets.

One pink blue and red gingham dress with light-blue shorts drew a full-on smiley, "Awwwwww....", from Thom. It just lit him up. In the basket it went.
Of course the boys got a few pairs of shorts for the summer. But navy blue shorts and a t-shirt with Popsicles that says, "Chill out" is not quite as satisfying as the modernist floral motif of a swingy cotton dress. Okay, the t-shirt was cute... But I am getting more and more desperate for an update. I heard a few sad stories about other families this week and I just want to know that she is okay. I want to know that she is growing, playing, being... Then I want her to be in my arms. In her daddy's arms. To look at her and know that we love her and that someday she will accept that love and even reciprocate it when she is ready. The important part is that we get to begin the part where we actively care for her and are responsible for her welfare. if I was allowed to get on that plane tomorrow, I would. We would.

Today I contacted the National Visa Center. They input the I-800 approval late last night and a letter went out to us today. I asked them to send me a PDF of the letter to speed things up but, although they said it would be sent, I never received it. We will expect to get it in the mail next week but they did confirm that they notified the consulate in Guangzhou about our approvals. One more step on the path to adopting Minlan and uniting our family.

I'll get back to my nesting now and get those cutie-girl clothes in the wash so I may lovingly fold them and pat them, and press them into those waiting dresser drawers. Those cute little clothes waiting for their girl along with us.









- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

It's in the Water/9-10 Months

Everyone I know is pregnant. Not really. But it feels like it. In a good way.

One of my closest friends is due one month from today. My friend at work is due in September. Two acquaintances who I see weekly are in their second trimesters. Another dear friend just found out she is now excitedly expecting her third in December. Last week our whole family celebrated the news that our own Masha (my stepsister) is expecting her first and due in September.

All these women have an expanding waistlines that tell the world that they have big changes, dreams, trials, and joys ahead. The world of mothers and women and parenting automatically comes to the forefront of most interactions. The fantastic book I am reading, Toddler Adoption, advises me that parenting a new child from toddlerhood is not like parenting an infant. I am still an expectant mother but no one can see it. To share in the community of motherhood, not only do I need to talk to the women expecting babies, but I also need to connect with mothers of toddlers.

Our child will be completely new to us, to our family, to our life, but she will come with her opinions, her grief, her life experiences both good and bad, and her ability to express herself in those powerful ways that a toddler can really pull off. She will be in a 3 year old's package with all her memories and feelings but is expected to be emotionally more like a 2 year old. All the literature says that things are going to be even harder than we expect.

So am I scared? Yes. Am I excited and optimistic? Absolutely. We are "due" in 2.5 months. It's wild and amazing to me that the little girl I already love will be in my arms soon. I am painfully desperate for an update on her. Our last written info is from July, 2009 and our last photos are from October, 2009. I want to know how she is doing, what she looks like, what she likes to do. The emails from the adoption agency, any document, the sending of a care package, any small step forward, all take the place of the doctor's appointments my friends are going to.

Do I envy them? No. I truly believe that I am meant to be Minlan's mother and we are all meant to be her family. She is meant to be our daughter. Our pre-approval came at the end of October and our day to receive our daughter will be at the end of July. 10 months. That's the length of time we medical folks think of when considering human gestation. Everyone around me, including myself, is expecting. As my pregnant colleague said when I told her our family is expecting a daughter and a nephew this Summer, "It's in the water".













Here we are signing our Letter of Approval from CCAA on my birthday and our acceptance of the plan to adopt Minlan.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Friday, May 7, 2010

I-800 in Hand

Quin and I went to the mailbox and the I-800 USCIS approval had arrived.  This was our final approval of our "Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative".  We did a little happy dance in the driveway and I have just scanned the form off to the agency folks.  I have no idea what happens next and whether I need to Fedex the original anywhere.  I didn't think to ask that in advance.  So unlike me!  But I have been trying to go with the flow but also to be quick when I do know what to do.  Fascinating time.  Lotsa growth going on around here.  Not just in our every taller boys...

So, the grown-ups are going to "Ironman 2" tonight and will celebrate over dinner.  Lulu's brothers and cousins will have a play night with Nana and Bapa.  We'll all be thinking about the little girl that we already think of as our "Immediate Relative".  The USCIS agrees with us!  I'm just going to take a moment now to thank God from my whole heart.

The US says, "Yes!"

I have been checking in periodically with Officer Harrison at USCIS to see how close we were to I-800 approval.  Now that we have the final approval from China to be the adopting parents of Allura Minlan, and we have the approval of the USCIS to adopt internationally through the Hague convention, we need the final approval of Allura as THE adoptee.  The one and only.  The precious.  The fabulous.  The beloved.

Yesterday was the two week mark from the USCIS's receipt of our final I-800 application to their lockbox in Texas.  When we received the receipt, I asked Officer Harrison, as she had processed our I-800A, how long the next step would take.  She told me that it takes 7-14 days to get from the lockbox to her desk but she assured me that I-800s take precedence over I-800As as there is an actual specific child involved and she would process it immediately.

At yesterday's two week mark, I emailed her to find out if it had made it to her desk.  This AM, I received this email:

"Good morning Karin,

In an answer to your question, I received the I-800 on 5/5/2010, 
and processed on the same day.  Congratulations, 
I approved the your case and the approval notices went out 
in the mail that day!  Please let me
know if I can be of further assistance!

Thanks!"
 
 
 
Although we already have tickets, we still need every permission 
and every document to be processed, done in time, and in our hands. 
This is one more fantastic step to parenting
our youngest child. 
 
Next step?  No idea.  Something about the National Visa Center 
and "cabling to Guangzhou".
Stay tuned for more soon....  Smiles..... 
We're gonna put on our dancing shoes and get our 
groove on in celebration. 

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Reality Checks

This week has been full of the small things we do to prepare ourselves for adoption.  Thom and the boys went to the county Health District office for a travel consultation.  I had already done mine and gotten my typhoid vaccine when we were thinking we were going to Russia.  The boys were absolutely calm and brave because they knew they had to do this in order to go to be with Lulu.  When I asked them what they remembered of the visit, they said that when we are in China, they have to shower with their eyes and mouth shut in order to avoid accidental water ingestion that was not bottled and sealed.  Sounds like there were lots of useful tidbits before they got the precious gift certificate for a Frosty (milkshake) for being so brave for their shots.

Yesterday I received a call from my oldest friend who adopted her son from Ethiopia almost 3 years ago.  I thanked her for letting me know that when you are waiting and the wait seems endless, one starts to worry and fret about how things will go, how the family will do and anything else a stressed mind can come up with.  The knowledge that what I am thinking is normal when I worry about how we will handle two active boys, the financial aspects of this endeavour,  and a toddler who may be working on her "terrible twos/threes" is a normal healthy concern.   It's okay to fret and move on or even to perseverate a bit. 

She was glad that her advice helped me and wanted to share another piece of wisdom.  She pointed out that anyone adopting will have dreams and expectations that may or may not be met.  She is sure our adoption will be the treasure and joy that we hope for and that all will go well overall.  But, that we need to know that anything can go any way and it's entirely possible that our expectations won't be met and we will need to work with that.  She wasn't offering this because of anything I had said at all but instead the knowledge of what it is like to expect a child whether biological or adopted.  Another friend had many minuses along with the pluses in the adoption of two older siblings.  One always dreams and imagines and projects what one's children might be like.  How you work with the differences and the discoveries a huge difference. 

I am so grateful that friends, families and new friends through adoption are so willing to share their experiences.  Tonight, when I finish my current trashy novel, I will begin to read my new book  Toddler Adoption.  Insights galore and I am ready to soak them up.

Our Adoption Timeline

  • March, 2011. Start re-adoption process in order to have US Birthcertificate.
  • February, 2011. Our first post-placement report due.
  • October, 2010. US Passport applied for and received.
  • September, 2010. All kids start school. Lulu to pre-school with Daddy.
  • September, 2010. Social Security Number.
  • September, 2010. Lulu receives citizenship certificate.
  • August 7, 2010. Home to the USA.
  • July 27, 2010. Thumbprints and footprints- we adopt our daughter.
  • July 26, 2010. We sing to Lulu for the first time.
  • July 20, 2010. Left for China.
  • June 25, 2010. Travel Approval received by agency.
  • June 3-4,2010. Article 5 picked up and overnighted to CCAA. To be received 6/4/10. We begin the wait for TA itself.
  • May 18, 2010. NVC letter received by Email.
  • May 14, 2010. National Visa Center notified Guangzhou US Consulate of I-800 approval.
  • May 7, 2010. I-800 received.
  • May 5, 2010. I-800 approved by USCIS and in mail to us.
  • May 4, 2010. We bought tickets to China!
  • April 22, 2010. USCIS receives our I-800 application.
  • April 19, 2010. LOA on Mama's Birthday.
  • April 17, 2010. Daddio's and Uncle Alex's Birthday.
  • April 13, 2010. Pop's Birthday.
  • Apr. 7, 2010. Nana's 65th Birthday.
  • Apr. 3, 2010. Auntie Kayce's Birthday.
  • Feb. 11, 2010. LID! Our dossier has officially been logged in on this date. We found out about it two weeks later but very happy with quick LID after DTC.
  • Feb. 2, 2010. DTC (Dossier to China with courier)
  • Jan. 29, 2009. Our official deadline from China based on our pre-approval dated Oct. 29,2009. As of Jan. 26th our dossier is on its way to China. Marilyn assures us that the Chinese component of authentication will happen over three days and then the dossier will be received officially by the CCAA. This means our documents will be officially in on Feb. 3.
  • Jan. 23, 2009. Received I-797 (I-800A approval) in mail. Too late to meet Fedex deadline but turned docs around right away to get them to Utah as early as possible. Will be received in Utah first thing Tuesday AM on the 26th. Due in China on the 29th. Please Marilyn, our dossier specialist, save us! Lots of praying to be done....
  • Jan. 19, 2009. Day after MLK day so first day office is open. Get call from Officer Harrison saying that approval not yet completed but will be completed today and mailed out.
  • Jan. 15, 2009. Spoke with Officer Harrison about I-800A and fingerprint approval. Lots of snafus, some real, some not. Took 3 people to manage them. Should be approved today.
  • Jan. 8, 2009. Fingerprinted by Homeland security (FBI fingerprints passed months and months ago) a week earlier than invited so that we have a chance of making the China deadline of the 29th. Agency says we will ask for an extension if our entire file is ready except for the USCIS approval (I-800A)
  • Jan 6, 2009. Receive notice that our documents are all in Washington, DC for final authentication at the US State Department.
  • Nov. 2009. We move into speed mode to get all the documents together for federal approval and for the China Dossier.
  • Oct. 29, 2009. We receive the pre-approval letter stating that we have until January 29, 2009 to submit our full dossier and that agree to process her file as a "Waiting Child" due to her age and need for multiple eye surgeries.
  • AM Oct 25, 2009 (Quinlan's 6th birthday). We receive a forwarded email from China entitled, "She's Yours!" by the US folks. Her file is "locked" to us and China needs us to get our photos and letter of intent to them immediately to complete the lock.
  • AM Oct 24, 2009. We call back within the hour to say, "Yes!". We are told that we will have to wait 24 hours to see if we will be matched to her. We know it is possible that we may not be lucky enough to match with her and try not to get too excited but it was impossible not to already be attached and to know that we might have to grieve her loss if we find that we were not meant to be her family.
  • AM Oct. 24, 2009. We review the multitude of medical, developmental, and personal documents and photos and recognize right away that we have found our daughter.
  • AM Oct. 24, 2009. We receive excited call from Kathy Junk stating that Wasatch had matched 2 families that day and that they have a child to match that they think might be our daughter.
  • Oct. 23, 2009. We mail our check to Wasatch to commit to adopting through their agency.
  • Oct. 2009. Min Lan celebrates her third birthday in China with her foster family who loves her very much.
  • Oct. 2009. Completed pre-application with Wasatch and sent in list of medical conditions we could work with in our family.
  • Oct. 2009. Researched countries, adoption agencies, and our own hearts and recognized that we would find our toddler daughter in China.
  • Oct 1, 2009. Completed our homestudy with the fabulous Allison Reeves.
  • Sept. 2009. Completed our huge homestudy documents by pouring our souls on the pages detailing every aspect of our lives from childhood on.
  • After a poor experience with one adoption agency, we had 5 glowing references for Wasatch International Adoptions.
  • Sept. 2009. We decided it was time to find our daughter.
  • Jun. 2007. Baby Lulu has her second eye surgery to try to reduce the congenital esotropia (pointed inward).
  • Apr. 2007. Baby Lulu (Min Lan) has a congenital cataract successfully removed.
  • Feb. 2007. Min Lan is placed to be found in order to receive eye surgery to save her sight.
  • Oct. 2006, Baby Lulu (Min Lan) was born in Guilin, China.
  • Oct. 2003, Quinlan's birth in Seattle.
  • Dec. 2000, Declan's birth in Seattle.
  • Early 2001. Saw "Wednesday's Child" on Portland, OR TV and recognized that we would love to adopt a child someday