The family that was matched from our orphanage in December received their court date: April 17th. This falls exactly within the anticipated 4 month wait between being matched and traveling for your court hearing. We are watching this family closely because there have been many changes to the Uganda program over the past year and this family is the first to travel under the new timeline of documentation. I am very curious to see how long it takes them to travel home after their court date. Previous families have been told to expect at least 6 weeks, but this new timeline may bring them home faster. We'll see.
We are also in the process of redoing our home study, abuse clearances and fingerprinting. The other complication of a long wait is that formal documentation expires :( We had our reinspection on Thursday, March 28th and everything seems to be coming together with our approvals and documentation. Yipee!
So how have we been?
Waiting is never fun, but I continue to remind myself that we are waiting on God and not on the government, the paperwork, or the orphanage. It is easy to get frustrated by the process. It's unorganized and unpredictable. But through it all we know that God is faithful.Several weeks ago I was driving to my friend Lisa's house to pick up something and I became overwhelmed with emotion. I said out loud to myself and God "this is an unexpected tender hearted moment" and then I began to cry harder because without meaning to, I had spoken the name of our orphanage (Tenderheart) and it made me miss our son even more. What was getting me choked up was the beauty of the friendship between Lisa's daughters. I had just gotten done showing Cara a video of the girls playing ball together. They are at an amazing age right now. They know a few words but mostly all you hear from them are squeaks and giggles. Watching Natalie and Noelle play together is absolutely priceless. They make each other laugh constantly. Cara adores them. Her favorite thing to do is pretend to chase them and then say "tickle, tickle, tickle" because it makes them laugh so hard. There was a part of my heart that was breaking in that moment because I so long for Cara to have a sibling of her own to laugh with like they do. Whenever she plays with other children Cara is her happiest. She has been so patient as she tells anyone who will listen that she is going to have a brother soon.
She collects things around the house and sets them aside for Ugi. She is planning a trip to Disney World for him (not that she's even been but she tells me she thinks he will love it). There is a growing mountain of stuffed animals, blankets, and special things in his crib. She tried to convince me that he would like her pink socks that don't fit anymore but I told her we could splurge to get him boy socks. LOL.
I have to remind myself that in the end this part of the journey will seem like a small blip in the timeline. The same way the 9 months of pregnancy can feel long and then all the sudden this little person is in your life and you're thinking "where did they come from?" Cara will not be alone forever. She's getting the exact brother God has planned for her and one day our house will be full of their laughter (and probably a few arguments...lets just be honest)
I often feel humbled that God would consider us up for the task of raising children, let alone raising children who come to us with a broken heart. The grief process for orphans is very real even if their mother never held them. They know that something is missing they just can't identify what. Children lucky enough to find themselves in an orphanage like Tenderheart are additionally burdened by having to part from their caretakers and 'brothers' and 'sisters' at the orphanage. Can you imagine growing up with a group of children, feeling like a family, and not understanding why you were taken from them? Thankfully, God is also a God of the brokenhearted. He promises to draw near to us and to bring the peace, comfort, and love that only He can.
Over and over again in scripture we see God looking out for the orphan. In Deuteronomy he commands the farmers not to pick their fields clean, but to leave behind grain for the foreigner, the orphan and the widow. In James 1:27 it says "Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after oprhans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world." In Psalm 146:9 it says "The Lord watches over the foreigner and sustains the fatherless and the widow..." Countless times we see God hold cities accountable for mistreating their orphans and widows. He promises to hear their cries and defend them (traditionally a family is defended by the head of the household, the father...) God steps in for the fatherless and he is using us to do that. I am humbled everyday at the thought that we are a part of God's story for Ugi and he is a huge part of God's story for us! I never feel up for the task, but I know that not a single step on this journey has happened apart from God and God will continue to provide everything we need for each step of the way from patience and wisdom to practical needs. I am so thankful for a God that is bigger than me. We could not do this without him!
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