Welcome to my blog! I will be posting information about my mission trip to Burundi Africa for those interested in following what I am doing...


"Beginnings are usually scary and endings are usually sad, but it's everything in between that makes it all worth living." -- Unknown


Thursday, May 9, 2013

My new mission adventure!

-->
I am so glad I didn’t name this blog –Mikel in Burundi --- because now it is the perfect place to share with all of you my next adventure.

Just like the quote here on my blog – this is the beginning of something kind of scary, but I can’t wait to get past the scary part, because I know that it is going to be great!

I am in the process of getting licensed to be a foster parent – with the hopes of adopting through the foster system.   For some of you this may come as a complete shock, and others may wonder why I didn’t do this sooner.

Let me explain to you how I came to this decision:

Ever since I can remember, I have wanted to be a mom.  I used to play “mom” with all my dolls and stuffed animals as a little girl.   As I grew up out of the play stage, I still greatly desired to be a mom.   I have just been waiting for a husband, so that I could start my family.   This year when I turned 34, I had to come to peace with the fact that even if I met someone this year, the odds of being married and being able to start a family would most likely be a couple years out.   That would make me 36 and, at a greater risk for health effects on not only myself if I were to become pregnant, but also risk to the health of the baby.    Add all that to the fact that pretty much all of my friends have struggled with either infertility or miscarriages, or both, and my dreams of having a child of my own are seeming more and more like it might not happen.    When I try to explain this to people, I am often met with, “oh, you are young, you have plenty of time.”  But, the reality is, I am not that young, and I do not have that much time – when talking about fertility anyway.

Over the past several years I have tried to get involved in groups and activities where I could meet someone  -- and I won’t go into all the details here, but if I was willing to listen, I see now that God was clearly closing those doors for me.  Not closed forever, but closed for right now.   Just as clear as those messages were – the message about becoming a foster/adopt parent started to be presented to me.   I had thought about adoption off and on for years, but I always answered the question with, “I do not want to intentionally be a single mom.”  


Fast forward to now ---
It started with someone I hardly know, asking me if I had ever thought about adoption.   A friend giving me a book for my birthday that was about a family that gave up everything to go to Africa to care for orphans.   A long talk in a hot tub with a good friend about how much I wanted to be a mom, and that I was starting to realize being a single mom might not be that bad of an idea.   Something popped up on my FaceBook page about the Spokane Orphan Summit – and that same day my pastors wife mentioned the same orphan summit, and said we should go together.    Recently the front page of the Spokesman review was about Spokane parents that did foster/adoption.  I am taking a class right now about missions, and a recent class started off with the speaker talking about how he became an adoptive parent of 3 girls from China and then helped with an orphanage and getting more children from China adopted.  There have been other things as well, but these are some that have really stuck out to me.   Now, one could look at these things as all coincidences, or it could be like – I just bought a white SUV because I thought it was unique, and now everywhere I go I see them!  The reality of that is that they were always there, but you are just now seeing them.     One could look at this in the same way, but I am choosing to look at this as a clear message of a door that God has not only opened for me, but is nudging me through.

You may wonder why not just adopt, or do invitro fertilization?  Well, I am choosing the go through the foster care system, because of the incredible need.  There are children that are already here, or being born every day that need a home that will protect them and someone to care for them.  I believe that these children deserve to have these basic needs met, and I cannot say no to that.  

Once I decided to pursue this, I can tell you that I cannot remember a time where I have felt so much peace about where my life is going.

Am I scared…of course I am scared.  Do I wonder if I will be able to provide for the child that will be placed in my home…of course I do.  Do I wonder about the health of the child and pray that they will be healthy, but know that even if they are not, I will love them with all my heart…absolutely!   Do I wonder if my friends and family will accept the child and love them as much as I do….of course!   Do I worry about what I will do when they are sick, needy, not sleeping, not eating, crying for no reason…. definitely!     Do I worry about how much time I will have with them, if I will have them for only a few days or for the rest of my life…you bet!     Are these worries really any different from worries that a mom has when she is pregnant with a child?  I don’t think so.   I think these are things that all moms to be worry about, and this is no different.    When I told one of my best friends about what I planned to do – her response was this --- “you will be an amazing mother to whoever your child is, regardless of how they became yours.”   This is the kind of support and acceptance that I pray all of you will have.  If you are willing, this is a journey I would love to share with you, just like any new mom would want to share with their friends and family.    I can assure you that I have thought about all the pieces that go into this.  I know that I am opening myself up to potentially get hurt – but I also know that there are kids out there, that are living a life under circumstances that someone else choose for them, and they deserve better – they deserve a safe, loving, and nurturing place to call home.  If you feel like you really need to give me your opinions, I will listen to them, but know that you are not likely to change my mind.  

If you have known me for very long, you probably know that I have a hard time asking for help.  I think this experience is going to teach me how to ask for help! J  I know that doing this as a single person is going to be challenging, but I am up for the challenge.   Many of you may be wondering what does this mean about going back to Burundi --- because if you know me very well, you also know that I left a piece of my heart there, and I really deeply care about the people there and want to go back.  I don’t see this new journey as putting going back to Burundi off the table; I see it delaying it a bit, but definitely not taking it off the table.  I would love to bring a child to Burundi with me, and expose them to the love and kindness of the people there that I experienced.

Once a foster child is placed with me, I will not be able to give you the details of why they are in foster care, or the details of what is going on with their biological family – so please don’t ask.  I believe I can share pictures with you on facebook, etc., but cannot identify the child as a foster child or use any other identifying information.  I am learning more details about all of that now during my 27 hours of required training while I am going through the licensing process.

I don’t know anything about the child that will hopefully be placed in my home.  But I do know that they would be coming to my home out of crisis.  It could be that they were just born to a mom who is addicted to drugs, and so they are going through withdrawals also.   It could be that they have been a victim of abuse, or neglect, or both.   I don’t know their story yet, but I do know that I can provide them a safe and loving and nurturing place to call home, even if it is only for a short time.  The ultimate goal for the foster care system is to reunite the child with their birth parents or blood relatives.   I know this going into it.  However, that will not protect me from not feeling any pain or distress when a child I have been caring for and loving is taken from my home and back into the environment that they came to me out of.   This will definitely be hard, but I am still willing to do it.   Ultimately I will be praying for a child to be placed with me, who will be able to stay with me forever, and I will be able to adopt.   Ultimately, whatever the situation, I know that the time that I will have the child, I will be able to provide them a safe and loving environment and that they will be better off because of that, no matter if I have them for one day, a lifetime or any time in between.


Thanks for reading, and thanks for caring!