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(left to right) Lauren, Nana, Me and Jason during a visit |
I've always felt so grateful for being adopted. Not many people could have adopted kids of our age and background. Most people wanted babies or very young children. And not a whole lot of people wanted more than one. My adopted parents would tell me that from time to time. I am not sure why they did that, but they would always follow it up with, "we picked you guys", "we wanted you guys". Moving into their home was an experience I remember well. My brother got his own room while he was there and my sister and I shared a room. I had a bed for the first time in my life and an actual room. I remember that well. Our parents slept on a pull-out couch in the living room while renovations were being made to the house. They were building an addition onto the back of the house and a room upstairs. When my brother was sent back, I moved into his room.
The house was built before the Revolutionary War and sat on over 12 acres of land. A lot of the land was wooded with pine trees. It was a fun place for kids to grow up. You could have an adventure every day. The floors in the house were actual wood planks and the exterior was cedar shingles. There was a "trap" door in the hallway floor that led to a makeshift basement. It was made of the same wood the floor was made of an opened from the floor up. It was a great house. I remember a picnic we had there when we moved in. We met a lot of the family and that was a happy day because everyone seemed so excited to meet us and spend time with us. The other thing I remember about that day is chasing my brother around the house. It had to be spring because I remember the smell of the grass and the sun was shining bright. It was a good day.
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(left to right) Lauren, our new dad, me 1st Christmas, 1981 |
before Christmas and I don't remember much. But, my mother said that when she asked me what I wanted for Christmas, I told her a closet. I wanted a closet. Of all the things I could have and that was what I wanted. A closet for Christmas might sound funny to most people but I think it was me trying to get some normalcy back into my life. I had slept in that crib in that closet for years and that was what I knew. I never had my own room until we moved into our new home. I so appreciated that room and that bed. I was happy to share a room with my sister. That was until she began to have a hard time adjusting, then it became a little violent and unsettling in that room. I was still grateful though. I was happy just to be there.
My entire life I have been so grateful for anything I've had or that has happened. I have known my whole life how it could have been had I not been adopted. I have known my whole life how it could have been to be without parents. I was told when I was six that our birth mother had committed suicide. I will never forget that day. It was when I first began to understand loss. Throughout my life I expected only the minimum because I believe that even the minimum was enough and was a blessing. And disappointment wasn't something I felt too often because anything was better than foster care. I got used to loss way too young. I had become accustomed to adversity way too young. I learned how to deal with feelings of inadequacy way too young and most days I woke up not knowing how defeated I was. I didn't know God then. He wasn't a topic of discussion in our home. I know now, it would have been easier had I been introduced to faith earlier in my life.
A closet for Christmas. Think about what your children want for Christmas. I think of what Madyson asks for and it blows my mind. I think she asked for a phone at age 5. Either 5 or 6. I never even knew to ask for materialistic things as a newly adopted child. All I wanted was a closet. A darn closet. People often accuse me of being "overdone" or "two passionate". You can't come from where I come from and not be. You can't lose the people I have lost and not appreciate so much the people that stay and the ones who you connect with. I was so grateful for that closet just as I am so grateful for every blessing I have been given throughout my life. It's true that you can not know happiness until you become grateful. So many of us work hard to find the negative things in our life. We spend time dissecting what others have done to us, or haven't done for us. Somehow we just squander the blessings that God has given us and even laugh in the face of his mercy and grace. We forget that there are people in this world who are happy to have anyone to call family. We overlook that there are children out there who are just excited to get a closet for Christmas.