Monday, September 30, 2019

"Silky Mom"

I heard a new term today: Silky Mom. This is apparently the opposite of a Crunchy Mom, which I had already heard of! After I heard this term on the radio, I looked up the meaning and laughed because I can relate! Allow me to share! (Side note, if you disagree with me on these, it's okay! You do you, and I'll do me!)

Formula
So obviously I have an adopted son, so breastfeeding wasn't an option. (Actually, technically it was an option. I could have chosen to take hormones and supplements to force my body into producing milk, but that sounded unpleasant!) Here's the thing, I didn't want to breastfeed even if I had given birth to Caleb! I told Austin long before we even decided to pursue adoption that I wanted to formula feed. I have NEVER wanted to breastfeed! It sounds awful! And the truth is, formula isn't as bad as people make it out to be. My son is healthy, gaining weight, and is kind of a baby genius, so something must be working!

Sleep
We don't co-sleep. Well, we have before. There have been a handful of nights where we end up bringing Caleb to our bed around 3 or 4 in the morning to get some sleep. However, I do not sleep well with a tiny human in my bed all over me! We moved Caleb from a portable baby bed in our room to his crib in his room when he was about a month old, and NO REGRETS! We all three sleep better! (We also use the cry it out method. We do not allow our child to scream forever. He cries for a few minutes, and we go check on him. I do not for even a second believe crying it out causes a baby to feel abandoned or to develop a lack of trust.)

Vaccinations
We vaccinate. And we do so on the recommended schedule from the pediatrician. I have VERY strong opinions on this, and it's okay if you disagree. I am not okay with my son contracting a deadly disease. We have been so fortunate to live in a time of modern medicine and vaccinations. I have never known someone who died from polio or the measles. You know why? Vaccines. I could go on, but I'll stop there! If the pediatrician in which I trust my child's health recommends a vaccine, he will get that vaccine. 

Baby Wearing
I wore Caleb in a sling in North Carolina when we were waiting to go back home a few times. I wore him through the airport, which was fantastic! I was terrified of my 2 week old catching nasty germs in the airport, but the sling kept him close to me and away from strangers! After we got home, I never used the sling again! We used to the stroller instead. I genuinely like the concept of baby wearing, but once the baby starts getting bigger, it starts to hurt! I attempted to wear Caleb in a carrier around the house, but it killed my back, and it was super hot! I wish I could've gotten more into baby wearing, but I just couldn't!

Homemade Baby Food
Y'all, I don't even like making homemade adult food! The less time I have to spend in the kitchen, the better! I think it's great if you puree all your own organic or home grown food for your baby. I really do! But being able to swing by the baby aisle in Target and toss a few pre-made containers in the cart is fantastic! 

Oils
Do I think essential oils can be helpful in certain situations? Yes. But so can Tylenol. I think oils can be calming. (A massage room with oils going...holla!!!) I think certain scents can help with congestion or breathing issues. I'm not totally sold on most of the other uses though. I'm very much a fan of modern medicine! 

School
I grew up in public school and then taught in public schools for five years, and I'm a fan! I do think home schooling or private schooling can be the best options for some families. However, I'm a big proponent of public school. Are there flaws in the system? Absolutely. NO system is perfect. However, there are AMAZING things happening in public schools all the time, but the media has done an excellent job of only showcasing the negatives. School is about so much more than simply learning to read, write, add, subtract, etc. It's about learning to deal with others. How to stand up for yourself when someone is mean. How to approach a teacher you may not like. How to lead others. How to persevere. Caleb will be going to public school. (Palmer Bulldogs for life!)

Technology
Okay, I'm a big believer in limiting screen time. I believe children should PLAY. However, I have already found a YouTube video of the B-I-B-L-E song that Caleb LOVES! We do not watch it every day, but there are some evenings when Austin is working and I just need a few minutes to get something done, so I put the video on. Sometimes, I play it 3 or 4 times. Technology is at our fingertips all the time, and I believe it can be used for good! And it can also be used to help a mama from losing her mind at times!

Plastic
We don't use reusable shopping bags. Ever. We also drink from plastic water bottles all the time. Neither of us like the taste of the tap water at our house, so we buy cases of water bottles. 

Diapers
DISPOSABLE. There is no part of me that wants to wash poop out of cloth diapers day after day! No! Absolutely not! Nooooo way! I am thankful to be living in a time of Pampers. Enough said!

Birth
Again, we adopted, so I have never and will never give birth. If I had, it would have been in a hospital. I most certainly would have requested an epidural. (I have a low pain tolerance! lol) I don't believe an all natural birth in your bath tub at home makes the birth more special than at the hospital with an epidural or a scheduled c-section! You are bringing another LIFE into this world! That's amazing!! 

I don't grow my own vegetables in my backyard. I've literally never grown a plant of any kind ever. 
I don't eat kale. I don't want to eat kale. 
I don't know how to sew, and I'm not crafty. When I want a cute onesie for Caleb, I order from Etsy. Or even better, Amazon Prime!
I don't believe I need my infant's consent to have him circumcised or change his diaper. 
I believe in the "5 second rule" when food is dropped, except I don't count seconds!
I don't use covers in the shopping cart. I do wipe it down with a wipe before putting Caleb in it!

I other words, I'm so far from being a "crunchy mom." I learned today that I am much more aligned with the "silky mom" term! I like that I'm living in a time of modern conveniences. While I feel more strongly about some of these things I mentioned above than others, such as vaccines, public school, and modern medicine, I do think it's great that every family gets to choose what's best for THEM! Raising children in the 21st century is awesome because of the amount of options we all have! It's also really hard because of all the judgment we oftentimes receive. I see posts on Facebook nearly every day that I do not agree with, but instead of freaking out that others do things differently than I do, I'm simply thankful that I get to raise my son however I choose! 

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Grief Into Meaning

As I grew up, one thing was always certain, I was going to be a wife and mom one day. I didn't have this long sought after dream university. It took until freshman year of college to finally decide teaching was what I wanted to pursue. But hands down, I always wanted to get married and have children!

To be completely honest, I never expected adoption to be my calling. When I envisioned having children, a baby bump, childbirth, and ultrasound appointments were what I saw. I always thought it was awesome for people to foster and/or adopt, but I didn't think it was for me. Austin and I very casually talked about it before we were married and shortly after getting married, but we weren't sure if we ever actually would adopt.

After an extremely unexpected loss shortly after we got married, my thoughts became totally consumed with the desire to have a baby. I can't tell you how many pregnancy tests I took throughout our first year of marriage. Honestly, Austin doesn't know either! We had part of our budget worked out to give ourselves each a little spending money each month that we could spend however we wanted. Austin usually saved his so he could get something he was really wanting. I spent much of mine on pregnancy tests month after month. At the time, I wouldn't even tell Austin because I didn't want him to know how much time energy, emotion, and money was being eaten up in this way. There would be times when I just so sure! Austin would be at work, and I'd run to Target and buy more tests. Negative. I'd tell myself I was going to wait another week and test again. A couple of days later, I'd take the second test because I just couldn't wait any longer. Negative again. I'd wrap the negative tests in other trash in hopes that Austin wouldn't see them. One day I told Austin I had taken far more than he realized. He simply said, "I know. I've seen the trash." He knew how my heart was aching to be a mom. He knew how much I was consumed with it all.

I was having the daily pain I've discussed in another post by this point. We had no reason yet to believe we couldn't conceive and carry a baby naturally, but I was really struggling each day physically. The doctor wanted me to try some medicine that would make it near impossible to have a baby while taking it. He suggested taking it for quite awhile and trying for a baby later. I did NOT want to put a hold on a baby, but I knew I needed physical relief, so I agreed. Austin and I decided to adopt instead. We'd have a biological child later. Besides, adoption is known for being a lengthy process. We figured we'd just go ahead and get the ball rolling if it would take up to two years!

Fourth months later, Caleb was born! The medicine the doctor had prescribed earlier had made me sick and did not take the pain away, so I had stopped the medicine. We weren't getting pregnant still, but we had Caleb! We never, not even for a second, questioned adoption after the started the journey. We had prayed, talked with family and close friends, and extensively discussed it ourselves. We were completely sure that our firstborn was meant to come to us through adoption, and we were thrilled! There was always time down the road to have a biological baby.

We never expected to never have a biological child. We really thought we'd end up announcing that Caleb would be a big brother one day. However, here I am at 26 years old recovering from a hysterectomy. Life very rarely pans out the way we plan, but it ALWAYS pans out the way God plans. Now, please don't get me wrong. I'm not saying I believe God plans bad things. In fact, I'm not getting into that here. What I do know is that my God is good, faithful, and sovereign. I know He planned for us to adopt Caleb. I don't know what else He has planned, but pregnancy, childbirth, and biological children aren't happening, and that's okay.

Now let me explain to you how my heart has shattered, grown, and rejoiced over the last year and a half.
Miscarriage. It's awful. Even when it's very early and unexpected. I wept and begged God to tell me WHY. It was unfair. Why couldn't THAT baby live? The feelings that follow can be so ugly. I pulled away from all my friends. I had to go to hospitals and hold newborns twice right after this happened to us. I vividly remember picking up my sweet brand new baby cousin in the hospital shortly after he was born, just days after losing my own. I held him and stood over his mama, who is my cousin and best friend, and I wept. I was thrilled to be holding my cousin's baby, but my heart was shattered. A little over a month later, I had to do it again. We went to visit another dear friend's brand new baby in the hospital.  I held it together, but it was HARD. I was supposed to be okay. It's had been over a month. I should be moving on. I should simply be overjoyed for my sweet friend and her family. But I was hurting. Another friend was getting married the next month. A friend I loved so much. A friend who had been a wonderful bridesmaid to me. I was now a bridesmaid for her, and I was not my best. I was forgetful. I was physically and emotionally hurting and exhausted. I was experiencing some depression. I failed as a friend during the happiest time of her life. I went to another cousin's baby shower the next month. I didn't want to go, but I kept telling myself, 'It isn't about you. It's about them. Go celebrate this baby.' I sat in this room filled with family as I watched my cousin's wife with her adorable baby bump open gifts. I watched as a little memory book about her pregnancy was passed around. I saw a picture of a pregnancy test inside. It was positive. My trash can at home was filled with negatives.
Then one night as Austin and I were jumping into our adoption journey, my friend told me she was pregnant again. She had been so nervous to tell me. In fact, she cried as she told me. I felt a burning in my chest as I heard the words. I remember getting into the truck with Austin, and I burst into tears. Austin didn't know what to say. I yelled, "Why do THEY get to have ANOTHER ONE?!" It just seemed so unfair. I stayed up nearly all night long that night crying.

I threw all my time and attention toward adoption. I wanted to be mom more than anything. Adoption, in and of itself, is an emotional rollercoaster. I've shared all about that in early blog posts. We faced rejection, fear, and emotional exhaustion. It felt like so long, but in reality we had an incredibly fast adoption journey. The amount of bumps, tears, prayers, and unknown that we experienced in just four months was unreal.

While I was focusing on adoption, I was still struggling. There were countless insensitive comments, most of which were truly innocent. Can you just not have babies? How many losses have you even had? Why are you rushing into adoption? Will you still have a baby of your own one day? Infant adoption is actually kind of selfish; you should just foster. How much does it cost to buy a baby? I bet you'll get pregnant now!
I could go on, but that's enough! We were thankful to be adopting. Caleb is the absolute greatest joy and gift! Just because you are happy and excited to adopt doesn't mean you aren't still hurting. Pregnancy announcements, gender reveals, baby showers, insensitive remarks, etc. were all so hard.

After Caleb was born, that boy became OURS. 100%! We still assumed we'd end up giving him a little brother one day. As I shared in my last post, pain got worse, and a hysterectomy was next. I got to the point where I was welcoming this surgery. I wanted to feel good for my son. I didn't care if we never had another child. I couldn't spend my days missing out on the child we DO have. While I was ready for the hysterectomy and was extremely confident in the decision, it was still hard to accept that I'd never know pregnancy and childbirth. It wasn't a matter of wanting a biological child who looked just like us. I wish I could have experienced it all with Caleb and still have gotten the exact same baby! Curly headed, smiley faced, black boy and all! We knew infant adoption would be difficult to do again due to expenses, so we didn't know what would lie ahead or if Caleb would ever have siblings. That's what is hard. The unknown.

I have had friends who have avoided even telling me they were pregnant because they knew how the news would affect me. Hearing that other families 'weren't even trying' and got pregnant for the third time is hard. Watching friends' baby bumps grow sends little pangs of sadness. Watching siblings horseplay is difficult because I don't know if Caleb will have that. But more than all of that, I have experienced jealousy. It's an ugly thing. I catch myself still sometimes wondering why some people have babies left and right while we're over here paying off an adoption loan and surgery bill. I've wondered what it's like to see that pink plus sign on a pregnancy test and plan some cute announcement and gender reveal. I've rolled my eyes, avoided baby showers, changed the subject when people talk about their pregnancy, and questioned so many things. I've wondered if my husband is secretly incredibly disappointed that he'll never look at a baby and see himself or if he feels like he's missing out. I've had a buildup of anxiety. I've cried and cried and cried, and I have been in a pretty dark place. Since surgery, I've gone back and forth between feeling grateful and sad. I've felt broken. I've clung to my husband or best friend and sobbed to the point of shaking asking why this is happening. I've been so sick and tired of the physical and emotional pain. It hasn't been pretty!

Then I'm reminded when I look at my beautiful 7 month old son that HE is my why. If pain and loss and grief had to happen to lead us to him, I wouldn't change a thing. He was meant to be our boy, and we were meant to be his mom and dad! Will we ever give him a younger sibling? We don't know! It won't come from us! Will there every be another infant to live in our home? Probably not. The truth is we don't know what lies ahead for our family. We've discussed a few options for several years down the road, but only time will tell. We've talked about adopting an older child at some point. (Don't ask us when or how old or literally anything! We don't know when or if this will even happen.) We've talked briefly about fostering later. We've even discussed surrogacy possibilities. (That one's probably a no!) My point is that IF our family is going to grow, we have a lot of options for later. One thing we know is that our boy has several cousins to grow up with! (One of which is only two months younger than him! Just imagine all the memories they're going to make! And all the trouble they're going to cause! lol)

Our journey to this point has truly been a roller coaster. We never expected any of it, but I see the joy that has already come from it all, and I can see that there's more to come! We adopted a baby! Not only did we adopt the best boy of all time, but the Lord has placed such a love for adoption within us. This journey was meant to bring us Caleb, but it was also meant to open our hearts. It was meant to stretch us. It was meant to lead us to become advocates for children and adoption. I have had countless people reach out to me since Caleb's adoption to ask for more information. More people are being led to adopt. If all the pain, heartache, tears, and struggles led us to Caleb, they're worth it. But if it goes beyond Caleb and leads others to adopt and fight for life and adoption, it's EVEN MORE worth it!

I have been researching ways to spread adoption awareness, encourage others to adopt, help others adopt, etc. I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that God can take broken, ugly, dying, and dry pieces, and give them meaning. He can breathe life back into the lifeless and hope into the hopeless. He can give children to the barren! Through her body or through adoption, He can make it happen.

The Lord has given us our child, and we will never stop praising and thanking Him for Caleb. He is still working on my heart. He is still placing the broken pieces together. He is still speaking to my soul and guiding us to what comes next. Grief and healing take time. It's a bumpy journey to get from shattered to whole, but through Him, it's possible. I'm trusting Him to continue taking such a difficult experience and turn it into something that leads others ultimately to Him.

If you have experienced loss and/or infertility, please know that I'm here. I can listen, share my experience, pray, and love you. You don't have to worry about hiding the fact that you've felt jealous and angry. I get it. Don't let the pain and fear consume you.
If you're considering adoption and would like to know where to start, reach out! I can help you in your infant adoption journey, but I have learned about other types of adoption and foster care, and I can point you in the right direction. Don't let fear stand in the way. We were terrified of the the financial aspect, but it came together. It can for you too!

It has been on my heart to share this side of our journey for a long time. I was always very open about our adoption, but I've been more private on just how much I have struggled emotionally. Infertility and loss can turn you into someone you're not if you allow it. I've allowed it! But I'm tired. I'm tired of crying. I'm tired of aching. I'm tired of feeling like my joy and happiness about having Caleb means I'm somehow supposed to get over the pain I've felt. You can feel both! And you can find a way to allow that pain and grief to become something beautiful.

**This is completely unedited. I'm an English teacher, so typos make me cringe, but a lot of times I write and then don't want to read what I've written for awhile. Please excuse any typos you may see!

Monday, September 16, 2019

Physical Pain

Trying to find the right words for this past has been difficult. How do you accurately put into words all the feelings and thoughts you have experienced for about a year and a half that have all led to a life changing surgery that caused you to know 100% that you will NEVER carry a biological child? Well, here goes.

I have experienced physical pain for about a year in a half. This pain has at times been debilitating. Austin went on two different beach trips with our family during the summer of 2018, one to Florida, and one to Galveston. BOTH trips were spent primarily in bed and away from our family and the memories we should have been making all because I was crying and hunched over in pain. I had surgery that summer thinking it was going to solve everything. It didn't. I went to work each day to teach my 8th grade students, and on good days, I had a dull ache on and off all day. On the bad days, I couldn't get out of bed. I wasn't myself as a teacher, which was crushing for me. I spent so much time on the couch and in bed. Austin and I missed countless events. I can vividly remember last year my oldest niece's birthday party was planned for shortly after Christmas at Urban Air. As the party approached, I knew I was going to go to the party, but I was going to have to sit on the sidelines because I was feeling so bad. For those who know me, you know I'm not a sideline kind of aunt! I'm a sign the waiver, put on some socks, and jump at the trampoline park for my niece kind of aunt. It killed me to know I was going to miss that. (She ended up getting sick the day of her party, and I was actually feeling decent the day it was rescheduled!) However, that day when I thought I was going to casually sit down and miss out on the fun with my sweet niece was a day I'll never forget. It was the day when I knew something had to be done. Austin and I were in the middle of our adoption journey, and I hated the thought of having to sit on the sidelines as a mom because I was in pain. It couldn't happen.

Caleb was born in February. BEST DAY EVER!! We brought our precious son home, and the physical pain not only continued, but it intensified. Around the very end of the April 2019, the daily pain was severe. I could barely get out of bed. I missed about two weeks of work. (After missing 6 weeks for maternity leave!) My paycheck was dwindling. My emotions were a wreck. Austin was running himself ragged taking care of everything. It was one of the most difficult times of not just our marriage, but my life. I went to the doctor and was extremely frank with him. I explained how this pain was consuming my life. I told him I was ready for something drastic. The doctor prescribed monthly injections for three months. These injections were an intense chemotherapy type drug that would put my body into temporary menopause. The next three months would determine what would happen long term after the injections.

I got my first injection in May 2019. Each shot very expensive even after insurance, but we were out of options. The pain intensified after the first injection for about a week, and then it went away! It was like a miracle! I felt like a new person! However, there were negative side effects too. All the typical side effects of menopause. Hot flashes, moodiness, and insomnia were very bad for me, especially the insomnia. I had another injection in June, and the last was in July. The insomnia was terrible. Austin went to the night shift, and there were some nights when he would get home around 6:30 am, and I hadn't even been to sleep yet. I was enjoying a pain free life, but I still wasn't free!Around mid August, the pain returned. I had a follow up appointment with my doctor to discuss the shots, and he explained that we could monitor the pain and try some of the things we had already tried in the past again, but a hysterectomy may be the next step of nothing else works. Austin and Caleb were both with me in the doctor's office. I teared up as I asked the doctor if we could skip the stuff we've already tried and just skip straight to the surgery. I explained that I already have a precious son, and I have to be present for him. I want to enjoy HIM! I couldn't live in daily pain in hopes that MAYBE, SOMEDAY, we could POSSIBLY have a biological child, all while missing out on the perfect child we already have. If a hysterectomy would give me my life back, that's what I wanted, and the doctor agreed.

Surgery was scheduled for August 30, 2019 in Waxahachie. I felt relieved, nervous, sad, and excited all at once. The day finally arrived. Surgery was planned for 1:30 pm, and we were supposed to arrive around 11:30. A nurse took my back to the pre op area to begin getting ready. I was so nervous. Austin was the only person back with me, as several family members waited in the waiting area. Austin prayed with me in the prep room, which is exactly what I needed. This was definitely not my first surgery experience, but it somehow felt different. Different nurses were in and out to give me the hospital gown and lovely socks, set up the IV, check vitals, etc. There was one nurse in particular who was in there the majority of the time. She had us laughing, and she kept me completely distracted as everything was happening. If she left the room and someone else came in, I could feel my nerves skyrocket. She'd come back in and tell some joke, and I was at ease once again. (Let's all pause to appreciate good nurses! Nurses who can calm your fears through humor or kindness or whatever their specialty is. I was so grateful for this nurse at Baylor Waxahachie, and I made sure to let staff above her know!) It was almost time to go back to the OR, and Austin asked if the rest of my family could come back to see me. A couple minutes later, in walked my mom, dad, little sister, my Nanny, and my Nana and Bawbaw! We all talked and laughed for a few minutes, and then it was time to go. They wheeled me to the OR, and this is where things start to get fuzzy due to the anesthesia.

I woke up later to the sound of Austin's voice and a different nurse nearby. Listen, I've been known to get extra emotional and chatty on anesthesia. (There's videos from the past that still haunt me! LOL) I don't think I said anything too goofy this time. I know it took me awhile to finally open my eyes. I was talked to the nurse and Austin without looking at them. Austin fed me ice chips, and I kept telling the nurse she was doing a great job. I could feel them wheeling me to a room to stay overnight. I remember hearing someone else mention that the nurse was pregnant, and I groggily congratulated her. I wish I had opened my eyes. I remember holding a conversation with this sweet nurse, but I never saw her face! I finally really woke up and saw family. The pain was manageable thanks to pain meds. I can remember one of the night nurses came in and instructed me to cough because it was supposed to help prevent pneumonia. I like to think I'm usually a pretty compliant and kind patient, but I wasn't having it with that nurse. I just had four incisions in my abdomen, and this lady was telling me to cough! I refused, and cried, and I'm pretty sure she was irritated by me! Oh well!

The night went on, and naturally neither Austin or I could get much sleep in the hospital. I got up to move around at 3:30 am because I was going crazy! I got the go home around the middle of the day, and I was so happy!

It has now been about 2 1/2 weeks. It has been an up and down battle. Pain is minimal. Exhaustion is high. Soreness comes and goes. This recovery is more challenging than any surgery I've had before, but I've been blessed with the BEST husband and family! Everyone has gone out of their way to help us by bringing dinner, watching Caleb, checking in, encouraging, and praying. The physical recovery is coming along, but it's not quite over yet. Prayerfully, I'll be pain free physically within the next few weeks, and I can't tell you how thrilled I'll be! It's going to be a huge burden lifted!

While the physical recovery will soon be behind me, the emotional recovery will take some time. I'm sharing all of this because I believe these stories NEED to be shared. There are far too many women who experience pain, infertility, loss, and grief, and all too often we hide it. We don't think anyone will understand. We feel alone.

We we are NOT ALONE. I am 26 years old. I have now had a hysterectomy. I've experienced a miscarriage. I will never carry a baby in my body. I will never experience pregnancy or childbirth. And I have an adopted son who is my WORLD! I've cried A LOT. I've grieved. I've asked why. I've told my husband he doesn't deserve this. I've experience an ugly jealousy. I've prayed. I've asked God why. And I know others have too. This post was to share about my physical journey. The next will be about the emotional journey. It's my prayer that while I write to get my personal feelings out, others can connect and find hope too.

**This is completely unedited. I'm an English teacher, so typos make me cringe, but a lot of times I write and then don't want to read what I've written for awhile. Please excuse any typos you may see!

Friday, September 13, 2019

Navigating Adoption

Back in January when we were matched with Caleb's first mama, we didn't learn anything about the biological father. All we knew was that he didn't even know about the pregnancy or adoption. When we were in the hospital in Charlotte waiting to meet Caleb, the attorney sat down with us to have us sign a few documents and go over everything with us. At this point, we received a questionnaire that Mama A had filled out detailing basic facts about her history and the birth dad. We learned quite a bit about Mama A and her family history, but there was very little info about the father. It was really just some basic facts about physical appearance. No information about medical or genetic history on him, nothing about his personality, just general skin color, hair type, eye color, etc. However because of some comments from Mama A's mother in the hospital, we weren't even sure if the information about race was accurate! There were so many unknowns.

Over the past 7 months, we have gotten to know Mama A a little bit. It has already been a rocky experience. She is very sweet, but she's dealing with the grief that comes with adoption. She has been through A LOT, most of which we don't even know about. However, we are working to maintain a strong relationship with her because she's a hero, and she loves our boy!

Through all these months and conversations, I haven't even attempted to ask about the birth father. I just never felt like it was the right time, but I've been hopeful that this relationship would lead to information about Caleb's first dad.

It finally happened! I won't go into details, but we finally have a little information! We finally have just a handful of facts we can share with Caleb one day. Even better, we know that this man now knows about Caleb's existence. I can't even begin to imagine what he's going through right now. I know that he has shed tears and is very eager to learn more about our boy.

I don't know what lies ahead with Caleb's first dad right now. This is still new for us. Who am I kidding, navigating through adoption is all still new for us! All I do know is that Caleb Austin Starkey deserves parents who will honor his background. Parents who will strive to do whatever is best for him. Always. We will always try to learn more about his first parents. The ones who gave him life. The ones who genuinely love him. If it makes sense and will benefit Caleb, we'll try to allow them to be part of his life. If it makes more sense to keep more distance, we'll do that. Whatever will help our boy is what we'll do!

We learn more and more all the time how hard adoption is. Being Caleb's parents and wanting to maintain connections to his biological family is difficult. Not only are they halfway across the country and in another time zone, but they have busy lives with jobs and children. But they are part of Caleb. They have a deep love for him that I can see. If staying in touch means our sweet boy has all the answers he needs as he grows, we'll gladly do it.

Do I have fears? Yes. I'd be lying if I said I didn't. We're trusting God and His ultimate plan. The Lord brought our perfect, handsome, smiley boy into our lives, hearts, home, and family. He opened our hearts in a way only He could to the decision to have a more open relationship with Caleb's birth mom. He has bonded our hearts to our son in ways I'll never be able to explain. I have full confidence that He will lead the way as we navigate this entire process. Adoption isn't over at finalization. It's a lifelong journey, and I feel incredibly privileged to get to walk this journey with Austin and Caleb!

Pray for Caleb's first parents. Their hearts will probably always grieve for Caleb. I pray they continue to find peace and joy through the pictures, videos, and FaceTime chats with the world's happiest baby boy! Pray for us as we make decisions for Caleb's future. All we want is for Caleb to lead a happy and full life. Also pray for our boy! He has so much love all around him! From his own home, from all our friends and family, and all the way from North Carolina! Pray that he NEVER questions all that love!

***Let me just add that every single adoption is different. Some adoptions CANNOT be open for various reasons. All adoptive parents have to do what's right for their child, and relationships with birth parents are NOT always the best option. Everyone is just doing the best they can with the information they have!