Showing posts with label #iamgladney. Show all posts

double the fun

This Thanksgiving we have a beautiful family story to share with you. It is a story about the young man whom we called Landon, you may remember him if you have been following the blog for very long. 



Before we share the story written by his mother, we want to reflect a bit on the times Superkids met Theo in China. From the first time we met him we knew he was a special guy. He clearly wanted a family and  boldly asked us to find one for him. We tried! In spite of our best efforts no one stepped forward. 

The last time we saw him in China we almost didn't interview him again, fearing that it would only be painful for him to speak with us again. But he came into the room and he insisted! He told our translators that he needed us to keep looking for his family. So we sat down and listened as he told us his story.

He looked into the video camera and told us of his need for a family and his desire to come to America. We came home and shared that story, in spite of our fears that it was unlikely that a family would step forward. You can only imagine our joy when the Scott family contacted us about him. I will never forget the day I heard the news: They are bringing him home! He has a family! And his name will be Theo.

So this Thanksgiving season we are grateful and humbled to be a part of this story, to have been there at the right time to provide a platform for Landon to advocate for himself. We are grateful for all of the people working together behind the scenes to make this adoption happen. And we are especially thankful for Rocky, our China coordinator, who insisted that we give Landon the opportunity to share his story with us again. 

Our hearts are full as we share this special story of Landon, now named Theo.

Gratitude is what I feel towards Gladney and Superkids when I look at my 14 year old son. It has been just a year now since we adopted him. He was 13 ½ years old and had been on the shared list for years, available for adoption, but lost in the crowd.  He had virtually no chance of finding a family.
We weren’t looking for him either; we had applied to Gladney to adopt an older girl. As we waded through the paperwork, we followed the latest Superkids trip to China out of curiosity but without any expectation of finding our child on their blog. However, one child stood out; one child whose intelligence and curiosity seemed to beg us to look further. He was in a wheelchair and his file was 8 years old. We live in the country with a two story house and the nearest paved surface is a half mile away. This surely wasn’t meant to be.




And yet –I couldn’t forget him. He was 13 and I knew what his future held as someone in a wheelchair in China. He would never have an independent life regardless of his abilities, probably never live outside an institution. His only real hope for a future was to be adopted, and he had less than a year left.


We called Gladney and spoke to a member of the Superkids team. There wasn’t really any new medical information that they could share, but what they could tell us was that he was very intelligent and that he understood what adoption was. He had asked over and over for them to help him find a family. When asked what kind of family, it didn’t matter. He just wanted to live somewhere where he could go outside sometimes, because he rarely got to experience the outdoors in his institution. When we heard that, our hearts turned over. The old medical report didn’t matter, the unknowns didn’t matter, and the need to redo our house for a wheelchair didn’t matter. He was going to live where he could go outside whenever he wanted.



The day we met Theo, he rolled right up to us and asked when we were leaving for America. He was disappointed that it would be another week. He left China with us with no tears, ready to meet the rest of his family and see his new life in America. He had been waiting for so many years and had seen so many of his friends leave. Now it was finally his turn.




He has thrown himself into life in our family. We have adopted seven children and he has had the easiest adjustment of any of them by far. There is nothing he won’t try. Communication was rough for a while, but Google Translate got us through a lot. His sense of humor makes me laugh every day. He enjoys helping me fix dinner and going to the store. He spends a lot of time hanging out on the porch, marveling at the butterflies and hummingbirds in our flower bed. I have found him many times in the yard, just gazing out over the hills, enjoying the outdoors as he so wanted to do.




I have heard so many people tell me they would be afraid to adopt an older child. Yes, there have been challenges, but his adoption has been easier than any of the others we did with younger children. Theo was old enough to understand the process of adoption and to understand what staying in China meant. Although he was understandably nervous, there was no hesitation. I am in awe of his courage, in unhesitatingly leaving his old life behind for the chance of a better one.

The APC Conference in NYC

A Great Day at the APC Conference!



Last Sunday Leta and I spent the day at the 37th annual APC adoption conference in NYC (www.adoptiveparents.org).  The conference was great (as it always is) – but each year I like it for a different reason.  This year my top 3 reasons for loving the conference were:
1.       I got to meet a wonderful USCIS supervisor, Terri Karafin, and thank her in person!  Terri is a supervisor overseeing the processing of 1-800s and I-600s (among many other things).  She is a smart and compassionate professional whose supervisory attention has helped with the processing of some of our difficult cases.  
2.       I attended a workshop with a mom, Roseanne, who I helped adopt from Russia 15 years ago.  Her son is now attending college – he may be 2.5 feet taller, but he still has the same cute smile – and as I told Roseanne, I felt really proud of her son…I can only imagine how she must feel.
3.       I talked with a new family working with Gladney to adopt from China who stopped by our exhibitors table to say hi!  They were excited to be at the conference and had just attended Gladney’s Pathways Training earlier in Texas.  They have a move to Chicago planned – but in the meantime, we will make the most out of our work together in NYC over the next few months.
Seeing people face to face makes such a difference – it reminds us of the shared community we are in – but also of the very individual connections we have that make up our lives.   I hope everyone has the chance to attend adoption events in their local area to celebrate and learn from each other.
Wendy Stanley
Director, Asia program Social Services

NYC Marathon {Go Team Gladney!}

Sunday morning runners, families, and friends will gather for the 47th NYC Marathon!  Gladney is honored to have 8 runners this year in the race!  Wendy Stanley and Beth Anne Pellegrino, a Gladney mom, gathered with Gladney family and friends to kick off an exciting marathon weekend!

Joe, a runner from Fort Worth, is pictured below in his first marathon. He and 7 other runners raised almost $30,000 for Gladney this year! This is Gladney's 3rd year as a charity participant in the NYC marathon. Thanks to Colleen Christi who helped initiate Gladney's inaugural year in 2015! 




We are proud of you Team Gladney! 

GO!!!

It is go time!

Bags are packed.

Good-byes are said.

Taken on a previous Superkids trip to China.

We are on our way.

See you on the other side!

Stuart {China}

Stuart is a precious baby boy who is only 11 months old. He is described as active and happy.



He crawls on his belly and sits independently. He has some stiffness in his right hand, but he is able to hold toys with it. His file says he has cerebral hypoplasia. It seems his hand is the only thing that is obviously affected.



We just got these sweet videos. Isn't he precious!?



We also just got an update. He pulls to stand for short periods of time. He says "mama", and waves bye-bye. His development is different from his peers only in that he has stiffness in his hand. He is in a foster home.



We also got a copt of his CT scan which we can share with interested families.

Could Stuart be your son? Please contact us at superkids@gladney.org for more information.

Set...

With only 2 days to departure for our Superkids trip to Taiwan it is time to be sure everyone knows where to follow and get the best updates while we are gone.

Some of our team is already traveling and will meet up with us in Taipei, but the group leaving from the US, Mary, Erin, and Michelle, leave early Friday morning. We will arrive in Taipei on Saturday and you probably won't hear much from us until Sunday. On Sunday we will rest and get ready for the work to begin on Monday morning!

We will be meeting children at ChungYi on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday will be spent with children from Cathwel. We have a lot of new children on our lists this time so we are excited to see some new little faces as well as see the children we have met before. Friday we will be heading back to the airport for that long flight home.



We hope to post at least one update per day right here on the blog. We will also try to post throughout the day on the Gladney's Superkids Facebook page, so be sure to follow us there! You may be sleeping when we are doing our live videos, but they will be there in the morning when you wake up!

Taiwan has some strict privacy laws that we need to comply with so we cannot post full-face pictures of children in public places. The pictures you see on the blog will comply with this rule. We do have a secret Facebook group where we can post pictures and videos of the children that we can't post here. Please request to join the group here! You will need to answer a couple of questions, but then we can add you to that group.

We are also going to be posting on Instagram for the first time this trip. You can find our brandy-spanking new Instagram account at gladneysuperkids! We need followers! :)

Stay tuned for a fun packing Facebook live video this afternoon!

November is National Adoption Month and many in the adoption community are looking for ways to raise awareness for adoption this month. One super simple thing you can do is like and share our posts on Facebook and Instagram. Let's work together to make the children we meet visible. You never know when their family may be on your friends list.

Everybody set? Because it is almost time to... 


National Adoption Month {NAM}

November is National Adoption Month – I don't actually know the legacy of how this came to be - but as a national movement, it raises adoption to a new level of awareness.

Soleil is waiting for her family in China!
Like most awesome things in life, it is best when each person puts their own individual thought, reflection, effort, and pizzaz into supporting what they personally deeply believed in.

What will you be doing to raise adoption awareness this month? Here are a few things we are doing:
First, to celebrate this month, the $300 application fee for Gladney's China and Taiwan program will be waived. Contact us at superkids@gladney.org for more information about getting started!

Hosea is waiting for his family in China!


Second, I want to wish our Superkids team traveling to Taiwan on Friday a safe and successful trip to visit with children at Cathwel and Chung Yi. You can follow their journey right here on the blog!

A Superkids volunteer playing with Austin in Taiwan.

And, third, we are giving grants of $2,000 each to several special children this month! Howie, Harris, Hector,  and Hosea all have grants! With the waived application fee this is a perfect time to contact us about one of these little boys. Click on their names to read more about them.

Personally, I'll be talking more about adoption this month, sharing about amazing people -- be they parents, children, siblings, or friends.

Lionel is waiting for a family in China.

Life is part memories, part today, and part how we all choose to 'pay it forward'.  When you add adoption to a life journey, the sum of the parts become humbling.

Wendy Stanley
Director Asia Program Social Services