Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Dishes and Tears

Lot's of tears have been shed over the last 5 days but today a big wave hit my while doing the dishes.  The music was playing and the kids were having fun and giggling next to me on the floor.  From Friday's massacre of 20 innocent children and 7 adults, to Daisy Love Merrick I just couldn't keep them back.  I silently cried as the tears rolled down into the soapy water.  I pleaded with the LORD asking  him to heal Daisy Love and was gently reminded as I cried that he loved me and Daisy more then anyone ever could.

If you don't know Daisy's story she is an 8 year old girl who has just been diagnosed with two cancerous tumors for the 4th time in her short life.  She isn't just any 8 year old girl to us though.  Her dad was/is one of my husbands mentors.  He discipled my husband and taught him what it meant to be a man after God's own heart.  If you have met Britt you know he is a man after God's own heart and if you met my husband you can tell he is a good teacher.  Because of this Daisy holds an extra special place in our hearts along with her whole family.  Christmas 2011 we stood at church chatting with her mom (Kate) while Elijah Merrick played with the children.  She told us how happy she was that Daisy's cancer was gone (that was after the second diagnosis) yet she knew that all these treatments had taken a toll on her sweet body.  That image is burned in my mind as I held our 5 week old little boy that was born in our hearts.  At that same moment we told her how Daisy's story and their faith had given us the courage to take the steps that led us to him. My heart breaks on so many different levels.  For Daisy as her body aches and she starts chemo again knowing that her tumors are inoperable.  For Kate and Britt as I know as a mother and father how much they just want to take the pain away.  For her older brother who probably wishes he could take away the pain too.

In all of this I know that God is good and he is bigger then any tumor even when I don't have the faith to believe it.  This year at Christmas we will hold our little ones a little tighter and tell them we love them a little bit more.  We will remember that our children are not ours but that they belong to our Father in heaven who loves them so much more then we ever could.  And he will not forsake us.

Psalm 147:3 He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.

John 11:35 Jesus wept.








To read more of Daisy's story and witness her families incredible faith go here www.prayfordaisy.com




Sunday, December 2, 2012

Chains

I got in the car yesterday and an old Jars of Clay song was on.  The second verse stood out to me as a sad state that happens in our lives.
Sitting silent wearing Sunday best
The sermon echos through the walls
A Great salvation through it calls to the people
who stare into nowhere, and can't feel the chains on their souls

It's the time when you forget what it feels like to be wrapped in our Saviors love.  When you forget the feeling of what it was like when you first realized how much the LORD loves you.  When the songs become just what you do instead of an overflow out of your heart.  Or just that picture of being silent wearing Sunday best and the legalism that can come with that.  And then there is the part that hits so hard " and can't feel the chains on their souls."  I think it hits so hard because I have been in this spot and am no longer there.  The chains of the yoke we weren't meant to bear.  Thankfully you don't have to do anything to get rid of the chains.  The LORD does it for you.  We all have chains we can't feel so it is good to ask everyday for the LORD to remove the things we aren't meant to bear so we can fall more in love with him.  

Thankful the LORD never leaves us where we are!






Friday, November 30, 2012

A broken system full of brokenness

   So Today is November 30th the last day of national adoption month.  I have blogged almost everyday and today will be my final blog in the series on Adoption.  Today I want to deal with the call to foster care and adoption (international, domestic, and any other way it can happen).  This is a ministry I feel many are called to, yet few answer the call.

   Often times we think or say "It is a broken system full of corruption, how can I make a difference?"  Well you can be the one that isn't corrupt.  If it is international adoption you can make sure that your child isn't a trafficked child.  You can do this by making sure your agency is upstanding and does due diligence some people even hire their own personal private investigator.  If you are going to adopt domestically through the foster care system you can be that safe family.  You can be the one that stands up for what is right.  The LORD never promised that when he called us into ministry it would be safe.  In fact it is just the opposite.  We are living a life devoted to the LORD.  It isn't comfortable or safe when you love with your whole heart, but it is full of purpose and blessings.  In Roman times unwanted children were left to die in fields and on the side of roads, Christians adopted these children and at the risk of death.  I think that the risks we are taking are far smaller then some of our ancestors.

In response to fear we should turn to God's word for answers.

Isaiah 41:10  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 hand.

Isaiah 41:13  For I am the LORD your God, who takes hold of your right hand and says to you Do Not Fear; I will  help you.

Isaiah 43:1-2 But now, this is what the LORD says he who created you, O Jacob, he formed you, O Israel: "Fear not for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine.  When you pass through the waters , I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers they will not sweep over you.  when you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze.

Do you believe these promises?  If you do then the call should not bring up fear, but anticipation for what the LORD will do through you.

International or domestic you are dealing with a broken system because this is a broken world.  Don't run the other way because the system is broken.  The children in the system need you. They need love, they need hope, they need healing.  Brokenness should draw you in because the answer to brokenness lives in you and through you.

I could put all the verses that talk about defending the fatherless and taking care of the orphan but you already know that list is endless.  So I will just put one verse up that I think sums it all up.

James 1:27a  Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress...

I was at an adoption prayer group the other day and two ladies shared what their husbands said about adopting "Our lives are too easy, our lives are not meant to be easy."  I thought this was such a neat way to look at life.  Why are we always looking to make our lives easier?  The LORD did not call us to an easy life. He did not call us to a life free from hurts. What He did promise was to redeem and bring beauty from ashes.  He also promised to be with us as we walked through trials.

The orphan issue can be overwhelming when we look at the numbers, so don't look at the numbers anymore just resolve to make a difference in just one orphans life.  I challenge you to just take in one orphan if you are feeling called.  Maybe it will be through foster care, or maybe you will travel to Ethiopia or Russia.  It may be a baby or a teenager.  Maybe you know a teenager who may not be up for "adoption" in the legal sense but you know they are lacking a family.  There are so many ways this can look.

I hope this song will encourage you to not let fear overcome.  You can adopt not because you have the ability or the time but because the LORD will equip you.  "The God of angel armies is always by your side."



John 14:18 I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.

What is the LORD calling you to do?





Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Things to think about...



NATURAL CHILD: Any child who is not artificial. 
REAL PARENTS: Any parent who is not imaginary. 
YOUR OWN CHILD: Any child who is not someone else's child. 
ADOPTED CHILD: A natural child, with a real parent, who is all my own.


Saturday, November 24, 2012

Unexpected Feelings

   Today is little man's b-day.  We were ready to celebrate.  We had a party planned and lots of people were coming.  It was joyous to wake up with our Big 1 year old.  But there was one thing I didn't expect as the day went on.  I began to feel sad.  I felt sad that I knew his parents probably wouldn't call or write or send a card.  I tried not to get choked up but I really was sad.  Even now at 8pm even with little man fast asleep I wish they would call.

   I wish they knew we prayed for them every night.  That what we really wish is that they would become healthy and that little man could know them.  I wish they knew that we loved them too.

  My feelings of sadness are mixed with so much gratefulness for the fact that so much of his bio family is in his life.  That we have pictures from the day he was born.  That his Aunt and I are so close and that we have all become like family.  Little man will definitely always know he is loved and by ALOT of people.  You should have seen the group picture.  Well soon soon I will be able to post it.  And it only shows a small portion of all the love he has in his life

Friday, November 23, 2012

Need and Necessity

    Today is black Friday.  The day when Americans go out and shop to get the best deals for the things they "need"  oh how our priorities are off.  When there are children without homes we call the new TV a need?  Maybe just maybe if we understood the true meaning of the word need we would be able to see that we are overflowing and we have no lack of need.  There are things we may want but not things we need.  I am guilty of this too. In fact this year I was guilty of saying "Honey I think we need a flat screen I mean they are so cheap right now."  So really what I should have said was "wow flat screens are so cheap it would be nice to get one."

   My challenge today as we go into the gift buying frenzy is to remember that there are some children who will receive no gifts and have no family.  A child without a place to call home is someone in need not a family without a flat screen.


Thursday, November 22, 2012

Thankfulness

    Today I am Thankful for so month but after Thanksgiving 2011 Thanksgiving will be extra special.  It will be the day our family grew.  It didn't just grow by one little man though it grew another 2 aunts another grandma another grandpa, uncles, and lots of cousins.  The best part is we ate Thanksgiving dinner having no idea, but talking with friends about our dreams of what life would be like when our family grew.  You see you always think it will be one way but the LORD always blesses you in ways you never expect.  Today I am thankful for family and the fact that family is so much more then blood.  Family is love.  So open your heart and let some love in :)

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Anniversaries

    Thanksgiving this year marks the anniversary for a few things for us.  On the Tuesday before Thanksgiving 2011 we received our first placement call from the county.  The placement never came to our home but it taught us a lot.  The phone call came at 11am it was basically a get ready and wait for another call.  The day moved on and I checked my phone constantly waiting and waiting.  Around 5 the phone rang and we were told you are on call for the whole Thanksgiving weekend.  I don't know who will call you or when.  So there we were wondering where a child we didn't know was.  Wondering how they were if they were safe, if they were warm, if they were hungry.  Oh man, I didn't know I could worry about a little one I didn't know that much.  It prepared us for the unpredictable life we were entering.  Where up means down and left means right.  Not on purpose, it's just the name of the game.  As I reflect I see how much these few days before little man grew us.  We went to Thanksgiving and everyone knew we may run out the door to pick up a little one.  We all talked and we explained why we wanted to walk this crazy journey.  It reaffirmed everything and little did we know less then 24 hours later we would get a call that would change the rest of our lives.

One year ago the rubber hit the road and we haven't stopped since :)


Monday, November 19, 2012

Bio Family: Guest Post

A little window into the world of bio family...


If you have adopted a child or are thinking about adoption or foster care please do not be afraid of the child’s biological family. The one who messed up or has struggles which placed the child in your care is not indicative of the rest of his or her family. I am speaking from experience, my brother is an addict.  He cannot take care of himself, let alone a child. The system truly works sometimes and in my case it has been a blessing. A beautiful family with open arms welcomed the baby into their home. With an open and trusting heart they let me be involved with the baby and as a result, the baby has an even bigger family to love him.  Give family members a chance and if they respect your boundaries and love the child then you will receive blessings as well.  There is no such thing as too much love!

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Pain and Grief

   This post is on a not so fun subject but a very necessary subject.  It's the issue of pain and grieving in adoption.  Adoption is beautiful yes but is also full of pain and grief. I know we hear those words and think run, run far away!  But you don't want to run far away; the beauty of adoption is that it is a redemptive story. So we need to walk through the pain and grief so that the LORD can bring beauty from ashes.

    Grief for an older child is probably pretty obvious right?  They lost the only family they ever knew.  It may have been broken and abusive.  Many of their basic needs may not have been met.  But they lost their mother and their father.  One thing I think many people don't realize or think about is that a little newborn goes through the same loss.

     Our little one grew in his mothers belly, he listened to her voice and heart everyday, and he heard his fathers voice everyday.  She birthed him.  From inside her belly he went onto her chest.  And then within 24 hours she was gone.  I know it isn't a conscious loss but even just typing that out as his mother my heart aches for him.  This hurt is a part of the beauty of his story but none the less it is a part of his story.  When he gets older I know the questions will come "mommy why didn't I grow in your belly?"  Mommy "why couldn't I stay with my first mommy?"  And who knows what else.  We could sluff it off with "you grew in our heart and you are right where God planned for you to be."  While these things are true, they would deny the true heart wrenching loss he experienced.

   The other thing about this is that I as his mother experienced some huge losses in this.  He didn't grow in my belly; I lost those 9 months of bonding and love together and he never nursed at my breast.  And when I first met him my voice was strange to him; he didn't know me and i didn't know him.  It was love at first sight don't get me wrong.  But I still missed out on part of his life.

   So this leaves us with two choices pretend none of this happened and cover it up with pretty words and clever sayings.  Or we can face the pain and the grief head on acknowledging it, crying over it, and handing it over to the LORD, so he can make beauty from ashes.


Friday, November 16, 2012

A Teen and Twins

This is a beautiful article about a local family who adopted a teen out of a group home and then were placed with twins :)  It is truly beautiful!

A Teen and Twins




Thursday, November 15, 2012

It's not about a Childless family

   I often hear people say "well if I couldn't get pregnant then I would adopt."  There is one huge problem with this statement, adoption isn't about a childless family getting a child.  It is about a child with out a family getting a family.  When we refocus our attention to the fact that orphans are children without home, without a mother, without a father.  Then we realize how heartbreaking this situation really is.

   Close your eyes and picture that child without a place to call home, a bed to call their own, someone to call mom.  There are many more orphans then there are childless families.  These children are not only blessings to families without children they are blessings to families with children.  The reason they are blessings though is because you can see the heart of the LORD.  The LORD loves this children, he loves his children.  We are all adopted into his family as well and that is why adoption is beautiful because it is a reflection God's love for all of us.

The Call

   A little window into what it looks and feels like when you get a call.  When we said we would take calls we got our first call a few weeks later.  The first call was for a 2 year old and then that fell through in a sense.  The second phone call came a few days later and that was for little man.  It is a whirlwind when you get the phone calls and we have had time to prepare.  It's this crazy thing where often you don't even have a name just a gender and an age and you already care so much.  You want them to be safe and feel safe.  You want them to be fed, and warm, and you can't wait to hold them in your arms.

   So if your wondering if you will be able to love enough or if your love will come right away.  Well I didn't realize that it would come with a phone call stating the gender and age so I think you will be fine :)

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Guest post from Daddy Stone

When I think about families taking in kids, I'm puzzled why so many men seem to have a negative view of foster care and adoption. In our culture today, men see opening up their homes as a new struggle and added stress.  Some would ask, "why would I do that, isn't that what people do when they can't have children?"

There have been a few men that have come along side me in my life and they have altered my perspective and opened my eyes.  I know some men and some friends that have been there for me and they were the examples and inspiration I needed to change for the better.  I feel bonded to them and close to them, even though we are not related by blood.

When it comes to the outcasts and broken in society, it usually seems to be the women that step up and make a difference.  Its always the women that ask the men to stand in the gap for the helpless.  My encouragement to the men is to stand up for what they know is true and good, to take the torch and lead the way. I challenge the fathers to imagine what our world would like if we opened up our homes to kids in need, to kids with lots of love to share.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Chasing Mavericks and Adoption: It's not always what you think

    Last night Dustin and I were able to go on a much needed date night.  It's been a while since we went on a date and even longer since we have gone to the movies.  Since I married a surfer and we live in Santa Cruz seeing  Chasing Mavericks in the theaters was a must.  Surfing on the big screen...even I say YES!!!

    Chasing Maverick was everything I thought it would be.  It was full of all the familiar places we know and love since it was filmed her in Santa Cruz.  We had fun looking for our friend who was a surfing stunt double.
Dustin of course noticed him immediately.  But there was something surprising about the story that I didn't expect.  You see it was really a story about adoption.  It was an adoption that took place without anyone realizing it.  Jay needed a father and really a mom too.  And Frosty and his wife adopted him without realizing it.  The movie ends with both of them realizing this.  They loved each other like family even though they weren't blood related even though no court had ever declared it.  Because you see adoption is a matter of the heart not a matter of paper and courts.  When they say an adopted child is born in your heart it is so true.

    Today I am thankful for a wonderful date night that the LORD used to encourage us that adoption is so much more then a paper and that our only job is to love each child that comes into our home.






Sunday, November 11, 2012

All they really want...

    I am on prayer team at church and today I was asked to pray for two teenage girls who live in a group home.  I asked for their prayer request and they both had the same simple request.  They both said "Could you pray for a good foster home for me?"  Wow!  One simple request from these beautiful girls!  It was the first time i was face to face with a teenager that didn't have a place to call home.

     Today's challenge is simple.  I am asking you to join me in prayer today and ask that the LORD would open our hearts to love these amazing children.  That he would provide everything preventing families from taking them in like emotional fears to housing or time.


Saturday, November 10, 2012

When love takes you in

This song perfectly describes adoption.  It is the moment when love takes you in!




I know you’ve heard the stories 

But they all sound too good to be true 
You’ve heard about a place called home 
But there doesn’t seem to be one for you 
So one more night you cry yourself to sleep 
And drift off to a distant dream

Where love takes you in and everything changes 

A miracle starts with the beat of a heart 
When love takes you home and says you belong here 
The loneliness ends and a new life begins 
When love takes you in

And somewhere while you’re sleeping 

Someone else is dreaming too 
Counting down the days until 
They hold you close and say I love you 
And like the rain that falls into the sea 
In a moment what has been is lost in what will be

When love takes you in everything changes 

A miracle starts with the beat of a heart

And this love will never let you go 

There is nothing that could ever
cause this love to lose its hold

When love takes you in everything changes 

A miracle starts with the beat of a heart 
When love takes you home and says you belong here 
The loneliness ends and a new life begins 
When love takes you in it takes you in for good 
When love takes you in

Friday, November 9, 2012

Time

    Today I want to acknowledge that sometimes it takes time for the LORD to prepare us to widen our tent.  Lately I have heard these statements a lot.  "This is something I never thought about but the LORD is opening my heart."  I have had friends have dreams and other friends say "wow I just keep running into this."  

    You see we are stubborn little humans.  Often thinking about how we can't do this.  How would I have the patience?  How would I have the room?  How could we do that, I already feel so full?  Well here is what I have to say if that is what you are praying/asking....your heart has already been captured.  It is just a matter of time until you surrender and realize the LORD will take care of all those minor details.  Because you see to him those are minor things.  

    Just sit and wait as he strips away the fear, the anxiety, the worry, and he slowly draws you to the child(ren) he has chosen for you.  Adoption is God's plan for every family because you are adopted already!  You are in his forever family and it is a blessing for you to be someones forever family as well.


John 14:18  I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Inernational part 2

This is a video of Lucy Lane's gotcha day.  I pretty much cried through the entire 10 minutes.  This video is a beautiful adoption story that also shares some heart breaking statistics about orphans in Ethiopia.  Warning you won't be the same after watching this video.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

International Adoption

So with all my focus on domestic adoption I thought today I should focus on international adoption.  This is a great need as well.  In third world countries when children are orphaned there is often no one local who can adopt them.  The numbers of orphans around the world are staggering.  In Asia and Africa children are orphaned every day due to AIDS and poverty.  And then there are always the eastern European countries with children who are left in their cribs all day at the orphanage because there isn't enough staff to care for all of them.

The orphan care can seem so overwhelming so insurmountable.  My encouragement is this, you help one at a time and you recruit others to help as well.  We shouldn't be doing this alone.  1/3 of Americans have considered adoption but no more then 2% have actually followed through.  What if just 10% of us followed through and adopted. Can you imagine? I don't think it would be a crisis anymore!

"We learned that orphans are easier to ignore before you know their names. They are easier to ignore before you see their faces. It is easier to pretend they're not real before you hold them in your arms. But once YOU DO everything changes." David Platt

For information on international adoption here is a link to a couple organizations that can help.



ANd here is a link to someones story of an airport party that made me cry
http://beskfamily.blogspot.com/2012/11/airport-parties.html

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

what if?

   So yesterday I was meeting with the head of recruitment from our county (Santa Cruz).  We share our very fun and unique name Anastasia.  I really love spending time with her and coming up with ways to get more families to love on these awesome children.  While we were chatting I had a vision for these teens in foster care and i thought I would share it with you.

   We were talking about how intimidating it is to think about taking in a teenager.  We both agreed that when we started this process we were intimidated but once you get to know them they aren't all that bad.  In fact some of them are really fun to hang out with.  So onto my dream.  What if we had so many homes willing to take in teens that we could literally match them according to their interests.  Like if you were to take our house for example, they may place a young man that loved to surf.  Or a young lady that loves to dance.  For children who have been through so much and have such a hard time trusting it would mean the world to walk into a home where you could relate on some level to your foster parent(s).

   Instead of teens being hard to place my dream is that we  would have so many homes we could do some awesome matchmaking :)

Monday, November 5, 2012

I don't know what to do?

    I have been writing a lot about becoming a foster and adoptive parent and i know you can't just do that in a day.  So today I am focusing on how you can help these sweet children today!

    So the best idea i have heard yet is Journey bags. Take a minute to picture this, a child is removed from their home and often times have nothing.  There have been stories of children showing up in a diaper with a bottle at their foster home.  I can't even imagine how scared and alone these children must feel.  Can you imagine if when they were picked up by the social worker she had a brand new backpack full of new clothes, maybe a couple of books, a cuddly stuffed animal, and some healthy snacks? What a difference that backpack could make!

     My friend Erin did this at her church.  Everyone signed up to get a backpack and fill it for children who could use it on their journey.  They filled up backpacks for children of ages.


You can't tell from this picture but there is a mountain of back packs!  What if today you considered getting a group of people together to create journey bags to show these children they aren't just a case file they are a loved child and they matter.  No special training required for this!  My challenge in creating these bags is remember to fill them with things you would give your children.  New clothes show these children they matter just as much as any child.  :)

I asked today what one of the greatest needs was and it is underwear for children ages 0-18.  In other words everyone needs some new undies.  

If you would like to organize a journey bag drive please send me an e-mail at familystone0507@gmail.com.  I will give you some check lists and instructions for creating the awesome bags to love these awesome children!

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Heart Change

        My "it will hurt" post received a lot of hits and feed back, so today I thought I would expand on that.  You see I have to tell you where our hearts began when we started this process.  
         So in the beginning we said we would love to give a home to a child that lives in our city/state.  We felt called to love a child from the US that needed a home.  We thought we will take a "safe" child.  So we searched out options with the county and with Hand in Hand, a local foundation.  We met with Hand in Hand and then we went to the county orientation night.  We went back and forth for awhile and decided to start the classes with the county even though we still felt a bit undecided.  As classes began, the LORD began to move on our hearts.  What surprised us was how much our hearts broke for the parents of these children in the system.  The parents were in dire need of help and love too.  We also started to come to the place of realizing that the children that had grown inside of me did not belong to us.  
         We experienced a few things that showed us in a real way that we were not in control of how long our children would be with us.  One was what happen to Dustin's college pastor.   The pastor's daughter was diagnosed twice with a rare form of cancer.  This is when we made the big change.  We decided to tell the county we would take any child whether they would stay for a week, a month, or forever.  This was a big deal for us and lots of people looked at us like we were crazy.  I mean it wasn't just our hearts but the girls as well.  We knew that the LORD was the one who led us here with words of truth, so we pushed forward. Just before we finished paperwork and said we were ready to take placement I attended a friends birth.  Her little girl was born into the LORDs arms and I learned once again that this would not be done by my strength but by the LORDS.  I realized that not one of my child's days was promised to me.  What was promised was the strength to love them and the blessing that loving them would bring.  Three months later we got our first call and this crazy journey began.  We learned that we would love children before we even met them.  We learned that we would love them more than we ever thought possible.  And we learned that our children's love for them would not change when they were told these kids could go back to their parents and have to leave our family.

You can do this, but not because you have the strength to do it but because the LORD will be your strength.

Music is often a way the LORD speaks to me and I think this song speaks volumes about life, but also specifically the bumpy road of foster care and adoption.  

"one day you will set all things right. When my world is shaking, heaven stands.  When my heart is breaking, I never leave your hands."


Saturday, November 3, 2012

Day 3: Foster Youth, the crisis

The Crisis

   The worst crisis in the foster care system is what happens to the teenagers when they are on their own. Today I want to focus on  a ministry that is very close to my heart, ReGenesis Rising.  ReGenesis Rising is an organization that meets these youth as they "age out" of the foster-care system.  They give these youth a home, a mentor and so much more.

   I could sing their praises all day long but the truth is they are just being obedient to the LORD.  I know many involved personally and can attest to their upstanding character and their desire to seek the LORD in all they do.  

  A few months back I posted some staggering statistics about children who age out of the foster-care system.  Here they are again so you can see how devastating this crisis is.

  • On any given day more than 500,000 youth are in some form of foster care across the United States. Nearly 80,000 live in California.
  • Nationally, each year an estimated 20,000 of these youth emancipate or “age out” of the foster care system, and are discharged into the world, whether or not they are prepared to transition to adulthood. 65% of them do so without a place to live and many don’t have the skills necessary to live on their own.
  • Over 70% of all state penitentiary inmates have spent time in the foster care system.
  • Over 40% of foster youth are moved 3 or more times and 11% are moved 5 times or more. It takes approximately 4-6 months for a child to recover academically after changing schools.
  • Former foster youth experience Post Traumatic Stress Disorder at a rate two times the level of U.S. war vets.
  • 51% of the youth are unemployed within 2-4 years of emancipation.
  • 67% of females who emancipated form the child welfare system had at least one baby within 5 years of leaving care.
  • Without housing, youth are less likely to complete their education, find employment, and gain access to health care, all of which jeopardize their ability to make a successful transition to adulthood.
Today I am asking that you pray about how you can be involved in the solution.  Could you take in a foster youth so that they don't age out of the system?  Could you mentor a teen?  Could you help to start a ReGenesis where you live?

So that you aren't left without hope watch this video about hope rising at ReGenesis in Orange County.



To learn more about this organization you can visit their website http://regenesisrising.org/

Friday, November 2, 2012

It will hurt

   Many times people say " I can't do fost/adopt because, what if the child leaves?  It will break my heart and it will be so hard."  Well you're right it will hurt.  But I am here to tell you that's a good thing and you are the kind of parent who should be a foster parent.  It will hurt because you will love them with your whole heart which is exactly what they need.
   When we thought our little one might leave I fell apart; I was full of tears.  And no one had said he was leaving for sure, there was just a chance.  As a Christian I know those are the times I have to remember that none of my children are "mine".  They are the LORDS.  Would I wish I had not had one of my girls if I found out they were dying?  No I would wish I had loved them more.  I would be thankful for the time I had with them.  Would it hurt?  Of course it would but I would still be blessed by them.  Take a minute to shift  your thoughts from "my broken heart if they go," to "what this child needs is someone to love them with their whole heart."

If you think you would be heartbroken if/when a foster child left your home you are the perfect person for the job :)


Thursday, November 1, 2012

National adoption month

November is national adoption month, so this month I am going to dedicate to blogging about adoption.  My goal is to blog once a day.  My hope is that your eyes and heart will be opened to the orphans of this county, state, country and world.

Today I would like to shed some light on some statistics.  There was a recent youtube video titled 8 adoption facts that will surprise you.  I will list the facts below and a link to the video.  When reading the questions ask yourself how can I make a difference.

8 Adoption Facts that will Surprise you:


  • There are more orphans in sub-Saharan Africa than children in Denmark, Ireland, Norway, Canada, and Sweden combined.
  • For every child born in the US two are orphaned in Asia
  • There are more orphans in the world than there are people in the UK and France combined.
  • 250,000 children are adopted each year, 14 million age out of the system. That's 14 million children that didn't get adopted.
  • There are more orphans in India than in the combined populations of the top 15 cities in the U.S.
  • Approximately 30,00 children "age out" of the American foster care system each year
  • More then 1/3 of Americans have considered adopting, but no more that 2% have actually adopted. Have you considered adoption?  Maybe it's time to make that 2% higher?
  • If 1 family in every 3 US churches adopted a child, we would adopt every child in need of a family in the US!  I am guessing that more than 1 family in every 3 churches is being called to adopt since the LORD is very clear that orphans are close to his heart.


Please take the time to pray and ask the LORD how he is calling to to defend the fatherless.



 

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Ask

This blog post will be extremely short.  It is a challenge.  It is simple ask the LORD what he wants your family to do about the orphans in this world?  Don't ask friends don't ask your fears just simply ask the LORD.  You are not equipped to do this none of us are.  It is not an easy road, but we were never promised that.  We are promised that the LORD will hold us and he will be everything we need!

Be open, venerable, and do not be afraid :)

Psalm 68:5-6a

A father to the fatherless, a defender of widows,
is God in his holy dwelling.
God sets the lonely in families,

Saturday, September 29, 2012

When I'm with you

I love the songs JJ Heller wrote after the birth of her children.  "When I'm with you" is one of my favorites.  "I could never count all the ways that you changed me baby."  All 3 of our children have taught us different things.  And with each addition our hearts have grown.  There isn't too much to this post except I love my 3 littles!





Tuesday, September 25, 2012

10 months

10 months ago we received a phone call that would change our lives and grow our family.  10 months ago they asked us to pick up little man.  We didn't know if he would stay forever or just for a little while.  What we did know was that we loved him instantly.  He was one day old plopped into my arms by the nurse.  I looked him over just like when the girls were placed in my arms, studying every detail of his face.  I knew I needed to leave to get things ready for him but I didn't want to.  Not one bit I just wanted to stay and hold him all night.  I left though and went home to prepare for him.

That day there was only one thing I knew I loved him.  I didn't know how long he would stay or how he wouldn't be the only way our family grew that day.  The weeks to come it became clear I family hadn't grown by one it had grown by 10+.

At church on Sunday the sermon was about how the LORD leaves you bread crumbs but you don't see the the whole picture as he is leading you.  This is so true of our story with little man.  He is a blessing beyond any other and the happiest little boy I know.  Thank you LORD for bringing so many blessings through our little man.


Monday, September 24, 2012

My comments

Just for the record below are the  comments that were never approved:

On, "some recently finished projects":

I am so glad you have an OB that you trust but the reality is many women don’t have that choice. For example there are a few good OB’s here but if you get their on call you could get the worst OB you have ever met in your life. I have personal experience with the OB’s in our town and there is a wide range. You could do research to days end pick an amazing OB and on the day your baby comes you get the worst. I agree be thankful the LORD gave them to you even if you didn’t pick them. On that same note he may have given them to you so you can stand up for what’s right. I think that is what is lacking here. Be thankful in everything yes but that doesn’t mean we don’t stand up for what is right. When speaking about birth remember not everyone has wonderful OB’s they can trust with everything and that OB’s are still human. I had one definitely unnecessary induction and c-section that I am grateful for because it forced me to research more about birth and the LORD led me into relationships where hopeful real change can happen.

On "Natural but Cursed":

I think you need to tread lightly and make sure you are not putting your faith in medical advancement. I just recently had the director of maternal health at our local hospital (which houses a level 3 NICU) tell me that she has seen external monitoring cause more harm then good. She said “a baby in trouble will always tell you but a happy baby can trick you on a monitor”. I keep hearing I am so happy I live in this country to give birth but this country ranks 49th in maternal mortality. It is because of the medical interventions. I am saying this as a mother who has had 2 c-sections. I am thankful for c-sections and other medical interventions when they are needed. But the reality is they are over used. Standing up and educating people about this is not putting it before Christ. It is important that we stand up for truth. So as a Christ follower my only goal in speaking about childbirth is educating women about the truth.


Sunday, September 23, 2012

I am that "Fussy" girl

Dear Femina Girls,

Lately you have posted about birth a lot.  In return someone from Christianity Today wrote a blog post responding to your posts.  I commented on a couple of the posts but my comments were never approved.  You see I am that girl that "Fusses" over births.  I am a woman that loves the LORD and I have a birth plan.  I encourage others to have one too.  I encourage people to research birth, interventions, and to question their care provider.

Lets go back a little less then 100 years to the 1920's.  If you lived on a farm you had a home birth and if you lived in a city with a hospital well....then your birth was something no one would stand for today.  Women were sedated, strapped down to a bed, and there child was pulled out with forceps after an episiotomy.  This happened to every single woman. Or how about the 1950's when all the babies were sent to the nursery and women were told that formula was better then breast milk in all situations.  Things changed because women "fussed" and said that they deserved better.

So maybe you are saying "but it's 2012.  Babies room in.  Mothers have choices.  None of these things are true today."  You are right, we have choices to a certain point.  Some doctors put on a happy face, answer your questions while saying things like "Of course, as long as things are going well we do all of those things." And then a woman gets into her 3rd trimester and things start to change.  Not because health issues have come up, but because doctors tend to say how they really feel about birth in this trimester.  For example there is a doctor who practices in the town just over from ours.  He is known for telling women in their third trimester "Oh by the way I only perform C-sections I don't do vaginal births."  First of all this is illegal.  So why hasn't he been turned in?  We live in a culture where OB's aren't questioned.  Can you imagine how you would feel as a first time mother in your third trimester and this is what you were told?  Or what if you were a woman in labor and this happens to be the on call Doctor that walks in while you are in labor?  Is that a good reason to "fuss"?

Let me bring you around to my story though.  When I found out I was pregnant in late 2005 we were so excited and immediately began reading books and articles on birth.  I have always loved children and was pregnant at the same time as a good friend who was planning her second home birth.  We liked the idea of a home birth but couldn't quite get our heads wrapped around it.  We decided on a hospital midwife.  We loved her, she was so sweet and took time with us to answer our 500 questions.  I read more.  We decided we wanted to avoid interventions and pain medication.  We took birth class and I walked a lot.  Towards the end of my pregnancy (I'm talking 35 weeks) my midwife went on medical leave.  I wasn't as in love with the other midwife but she was still super sweet.  We wrote a birth plan and started it by thanking the staff at the hospital.  We also left room for change in our plan and just asked that anything that was not an emergency was discussed with us and that we were given time to talk about it.  Then week 36 came.  I went in for a normal appointment and had to see one of the OB's due to the fact that the midwife couldn't see me that morning.  That was fine,  I just had to get over my fear of a male OB.

That  night was HOT in our upstairs apartment as I finished checking e-mail I felt a gush of liquid, and thought oh dear the baby made me pee.  But then I looked down to see bright red blood. My husband and I, the two scared first time parents grabbed a few things and went straight to the hospital.  The nurse that greeted us was sweet and tried to assure me that sometimes you bleed a little and that was ok, but I knew this was more then a little blood.  She affirmed what I thought when we went into the bathroom together.  The OB came in and it was the kind male OB I had seen that morning.  He was calm and reassuring, helping calm our first time parent nerves.  He said "Well that is more blood then I would like to see, but the baby looks great!  Why don't you two go to sleep and we will check on you in the morning."  When we woke up in the morning and we expected to see the same OB, but no we got the on call for that day.  She was frantic.  There was nothing calm about her.  I had stopped bleeding and the baby was still doing well but the OB was not calm at all.  She ordered an ultrasound and then after it was done came in and informed us we would be inducing.  No explanation for why.  My feisty self asked "umm why?"  She said "she was afraid my placenta was coming of the wall of my uterus and if we didn't do that my baby could die."  There it is the "your baby could die" card.  As first time parents we of course consented. Off we went IV's cervidil, pitocin, antibiotics, and constant monitoring.   So far most of our birth plan was thrown out but I was still smiling bouncing on the birth ball next to my bed.

My first birth ended in a c-section after 36 hours of labor.  It was a traumatic c-section as my little ones head was nicked by the scalpel.   Yet I was still so in love with my little girl!  We couldn't get enough of her, she was an amazing gift from the LORD!  I was thankful she was here and we were all healthy.

Ok so now you are thinking, sounds like you needed to be induced, sounds like you needed a c-section.  Well guess what, fast forward a year, I asked around for VBAC (vaginal birth after C-section) friendly doctors. I choose one and I go in for a check up.  I am told concerning my last birth "well I'm not so sure you needed to be induced.  I think the most conservative thing I would have done was put you on bed rest in the hospital."  This was my moment where I realized not all doctors think a like.  You see many doctors don't practices evidence based care.  Here were a couple risks of my induction that I was not informed about, an increased chance of uterine rupture (higher then a VBAC) and a 65% higher chance of a c-section.

Being grateful can be done while demanding change.  You see many OB's become oppressors of the women in their care.  They do not give them choices.  I have heard time and time again OB's say "well your baby could die" but don't explain that these interventions come with a risk of death as well.  When was the last time you heard an OB say "if we induce you I need you to know that your chance of a c-section is raised by 65% and that your chance of uterine rupture is higher then that of a woman having a VBAC?"

Ok so now maybe you are thinking what do tubs and candles have to do with any of this?  Well birth is a psychological event as well as a physical event.  You see they have done studies that show when the birthing room is calm and peaceful women progress faster and have better outcomes.  Birth is obviously a very private thing even though we don't treat it that way.  Think about this, when the nurse or ob/midwife comes in they often say this "I am going to check you now." and boom their hand is in the most private place on your body.  Why is it that we accept that?  They didn't ask before they touched you.  And have you ever said no?  I have had clients say they didn't want to be checked and even some of my favorite nurses and OB's were shocked by the objection to the point that they didn't know what to say.  You see it has become accepted as the norm, but there is no medical reason to check unless you are afraid for the baby and need to see if you can push.  Other wise you are just pushing germs up and touching people in a very private place.  This can prolong labor and cause infection.  Yet because it has become culturally accepted even in our best hospitals it still happens every day to every woman who walks in the door.  And we accept it.  This is just one example of how environment effects labor and birth.

I could go on and on with statistics and research to show you that all this " fuss" is important.  But I will stop here and just ask you to consider that maybe all this "fussing" is for a reason.  Maybe we have what we have today because people "fussed."  Pain meds or no pain meds.  Hospital birth or Home birth.  Bathtub or shower. OB or Midwife.  Every woman everywhere deserves to have choices, clear choices.  Honest choices.  Evidence based care.  Respect.

Please don't judge my fussing.  My fussing is not about me it is about women everywhere.  The fussing of women in the last 100 years has brought birth back to a family centered moment.  We have brought babies out of nurseries.  Mothers are awake and aware when they birth their babies and their care provider catches their baby.  My grandmother was one who said "no my baby will be in the room with me" in 1959.  And because of that her baby (my aunt) was the only baby born that week that didn't catch meningitis.  I am thankful my grandma fussed.

I am a fusser who is grateful for my induction and c-sections because they  pushed me to figure out the truth about maternal care in America, because birth matters for mothers and babies.  Birth matters for my two girls who will one day give birth.  I want it to be better for them!

If you would like to read the links to the blog post I am responding to below are the links in chronological order:
http://www.feminagirls.com/2012/06/30/mom-zilla/
http://www.feminagirls.com/2012/07/03/hold-it-loosely/
http://www.feminagirls.com/2012/07/06/natural-and-cursed/
http://www.feminagirls.com/2012/09/06/some-recently-finished-projects/

And the Christianity Today blog post:
http://blog.christianitytoday.com/women/2012/09/are-pregnant-women-who-have-bi.html

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Invisible Orphans

When we think of orphans we often think of babies. Sometimes we think of the 6, 7, 8, 9 year old. And then even more rarely we think of the teenager who is left with no one to take care of them, bouncing around foster homes, or maybe even living in a group home. But how often do you think about the 18 year old who aged out of the foster-care system and is now thrown into the world to be an "adult". These are the invisible orphans who often have no one stable in their life let alone a family. Here are few statistics to show you the impact this is having on our society.

The number of orphans:

On any given day more than 500,000 youth are in some form of foster care cross
the United States. Nearly 80,000 live in California.

Nationally, each year an estimated 20,000 of these youth emancipate or “age out” of
the foster care system, and are discharged from the system, whether or not they
are prepared to transition to adulthood. About 25% of these youth live in California
(In 2005, 4,249 youth emancipated from California’s foster care system).

What happens to the orphans:

Within 18 months of emancipation 40-50% of foster youth become homeless

Nationally, 27% of the homeless population spent time in foster care.

A history of foster care correlates with becoming homeless at an earlier age and
remaining homeless for a longer period of time.

65% of youth leaving foster care need immediate housing upon release.

70% of teens who emancipate from foster care report that they want to attend
college, but less than 50% complete their high school graduation and fewer than
10% of who graduate from high school enroll and college, and of those less than 1%
graduate from college.

50% of emancipated foster youth experience high rates of unemployment within 5
years of emancipation.

Forty-two percent (42%) of foster youth, including 60% of women, become parents
within 2.5-4 years after exiting care.

Parents with a history of foster care are almost twice as likely to see their own
children placed in foster care or become homeless than parents without this
history.

Females in foster care are six times more likely than the general population to give
birth before age 21.

25% of former foster youth will be incarcerated within the first 2 years of
emancipation.

I know that's a lot to take in but that is just the tip of the iceberg. So what do we do with this information? We decide to make a difference even if it is in a small way. The best part is when we are faithful to love God is faithful to do big things. Things that are bigger then we ever thought possible. ReGenisis rising in Orange County is a perfect example of this. For an example of what God can do with a few faithful people all you have to do is take a trip on over to their website.

Now wouldn't it be cool if we had a ReGenisis in every town?





Friday, March 16, 2012

Who I am

The song "Remind Me Who I am" by Jason Gray has really been speaking to my heart over the last month. If you haven't heard it yet maybe I can inspire you to take a listen.

When I loose my way
And I forget my name
Remind me who I am
In the mirror all I see
Is who I don't want to be
Remind me who I am

In the loneliest places
When I can't remember what grace is

Sometimes I think our biggest pitfall is that we let our sin shame us. The problem with shame is that it just leads to more sinning. Shame leaves us feeling unworthy of the love and freedom that has been given to us through Jesus. It doesn't matter how big or little we perceive our sin to be. Whether it is before we accept Christ or after. He died for all of it. We need to walk in forgiveness and freedom.

This is something I still struggle with. I have fallen down a lot while walking with the LORD and at times I have been crawling on the ground. I repented of these things and have reconciled with those I sinned against but I held on to shame. A couple weeks ago I had a light bulb moment Jesus didn't come to shame me in my sin, He came to free me from it! I hadn't realized how much shame I had been carrying with me. It was time to be free! These were sins that no one knew about, even from the girl who shares her story on a regular basis. I couldn't say those things though. What would they think? Well guess what.... it doesn't matter. Jesus covered all of it!!!

Get up and live in Freedom! That's what Jesus died for!