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August 13, 2017 By HallieZ 2 Comments

A Story Part II

Originally posted May 24 2014

read Part I

I felt stupid, embarrassed. Ashamed to witness the mother, the Brave One’s  “shame”.

Horrified that my children were seeing this, first hand, for the first time.

Yes, they’ve heard us talking, they’ve seen the presentation, and seen the pictures. I have overheard their make-believe games…

“and I was an orphan, but my mom was alive, she just couldn’t keep me because I was a girl”…

I held my own baby in a baby carrier, and clung to the hand of my two year old. My perfectly healthy 5 and 8 year old were ahead of me, dancing along behind their daddy.

I was aware, oh so aware.

Of my privilege

My wealth

My options

My freedom

My choices

These things are only mine by birth. I did nothing. They are just there. My birthright.

My husband knocked on the door.

A voice hollered back, before opening

“are you the fostering people?”

Their home is so humble.

Dominated by a blue, towering tank of oxygen.

A child at peace, sleeping underneath a white, dreamy mosquito net.

Like the one that decorated the alter when I married my friend.

The Brave One trying to smile, happy to see all my kids, their cheer, distracting her from the pain of the moment.

My foster son’s minor disability surprised her. His missing fingers, not a problem for people like us, who do not take our living from the land, from working with our bodies.

She was expecting us to walk to say goodbye forever, to walk out of that room with her treasure.

We said all the right words. We thanked her husband for letting the child live. We thanked them for loving her enough to let her go. Her shame hung over her like a cloud, regardless.

And I didn’t have the words to explain, only to tell her we did NOT judge her.

The were surprised, and eager, when we asked if they wanted to go with us to the child’s new home. They were surprised, and tears finally came, when they were told they could visit any time they want.

We loaded that enormous tank into our car, and drove for an hour, across town.

The foster family greeted our little troop with smiles, with gentleness, with love.

His love.

No other kind of love could be so willing to sacrifice, so without agenda.

Our job was done.

We said hello to the other children in the house.

Thanked the new foster mother.

Smiled at the Brave One.

Thanked her husband again.

Took the hand of my son.

Closed the door behind us.

 

Filed Under: CHINA ARCHIVE, expat life, fostering, Grief, kindness, love

August 13, 2017 By HallieZ 2 Comments

A Story Part I

Originally posted May 21 2014

* This story is based on facts. I have adjusted here and, there, for the sake of privacy and clarity. The heart of the story is 100% real. It’s something that happens every day in this land, and our co-workers see all the time. It is a story that I rarely witness first-hand. But I did this week.

She lay on her side, staring at her sleeping child.

The mosquito net rippled in the morning breeze, and her baby’s breath was

slow, even, priceless.

 

The oxygen tube  that connected her baby to a gigantic, industrial tank next to her bed had slipped loose after her last feeding.  Now she couldn’t fall asleep again. She anxiously fiddled with the tube, where it went into the child’s nose, making sure her baby was getting enough.

Her husband slept beside her… she couldn’t believe he could sleep, at a time like this.

She breathed deeply, and propped herself up on her elbows, pulling her favorite Book out from under her pillow, and flipped to the book in the middle. Prayers, from a desperate heart, to a loving Father. The sun was coming up, and it was light enough to read without waking her husband. Her heart begged for comfort. Her mind screamed for an explanation. Her emotions were raw, and there were no tears left. She pleaded with Him to give her an option, to send an answer. Her friends were trying, calls were being made.

Would someone, anyone, finally call her back today?

The call came. At 10 am. On that warm Sunday morning.

Someone would come around 4 that afternoon, and her baby would live.

Her baby would be safe. She knew nothing more than that.

She sent her husband to the market for the lunch things, and asked him to bring home peaches.

They were in season, and maybe she could offer some to the guests later.

Usually she went to the market, but she dared not leave him alone with the baby. Not after what happened last week. Tears sprang to her eyes, which surprised her, because she thought she had none left. She set about methodicly washing the rice for lunch, willing herself to stop crying, before he got home.

Just forget everything that had happened. She couldn’t afford to make him angry again.

They were so, so close to an answer.

But she couldn’t forget. She would never forget.

Walking in the door after being away an hour. Bag of fresh vegetables in hand. Her mother-in-law glaring at her, defiantly, from the couch in their tiny studio apartment. Her husband, cowering in the corner, tv blaring. She dropped the bags, and ran to the baby. Her baby. Her princess, miracle baby. Where was the oxygen tube? The doctor had told her the baby would die without it. WHERE WAS IT? Her baby’s face color looked off… where was the medicine? Not on the desk, where she had left it. She asked her husband, she turned to his mother. They were going to let her die, they said. If she wouldn’t do it, they would.

Pleading, screaming, crying, she was locked out of the room.

That was the worst day of her life.

Worse than the day she was told her baby’s heart had a hole, and would die.

Worse than the day she went into labor,

1 month early.

Worse than the moment she looked in her baby’s face and knew it was true,

she had Downs Syndrome.

Worse than the days, and nights, of the entire family screaming,

yelling, insisting she could not keep her child. It was HER fault, HER responsibility.

Worse than looking to her husband for hope, for comfort, for a pledge of commitment,

only to see that it wasn’t there.

She had come back the next day, weary, resigned. They let her in.  Slowly, she walked to the bed, the bed where her child was conceived, the bed where she and her husband had whispered and laughed over their hopes, and dreams for the little one to come… 

And there she was, breathing, roughly. But breathing. She was ALIVE!

Her will to live was stronger than their will to let her die.

THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU she breathed, as her mother-in-law handed her the tube, and the medicine. Moving quickly now, she inserted it into her child’s nose, carefully taped the tube the her head, and administered the medicine.

She held her treasure close, as the color slowly returned to her cheeks,  her hands, her feet.

 Stomping her tears down, she had, promised, SWORE to them.  

She would find someone to take the baby. This week. This weekend.

Just don’t try to let her die. Please, please.

Please.

Her husband returned with the groceries. She prepared the meal. She served him his rice.

She sat next to him, picked up a notebook, and a pen, and wrote the words they had asked her to write.

“I_______ cannot take care of my baby. I release ________ into the care of foster parents.

They have sole right to make decisions about her life and health… “

She signed her name.

He signed his.

She bathed her baby one last time.

Put on fresh clothes.

Wrapped her in the bunting, and tied it with twine.

She washed the dishes.

She sat again.

And waited.

4 o’clock

The door buzzer rang.

Her body tensed. The time had come.

read Part II

Filed Under: CHINA ARCHIVE, expat life, fostering, Grief, kindness, love

July 10, 2017 By HallieZ 2 Comments

Because, Sometimes You’re Afraid

ORIGINALLY POSTED 4/3/2013 

*this is still true today, 7/10/2017, if not EVEN MORE SO*

There is a common misconception about me.

“oh, Hallie? She’s fearless”

“Hallie? She is SO BRAVE”

I hear that, oh, ALL the time. All the time. I’ve been hearing it since, well, at least since I was about 21, and headed off the Brazil…

But, today, I am going to let you in on a little secret.

I get scared, ALL THE TIME.

All the time.

I go swimming in the tropical ocean?

I worry EVERY SINGLE TIME I dive into that ocean.

about

Jellyfish

Stingrays

Drowning

Tsunamis

Monsters that live in the sand and will reach up and grab my legs and suck me down and keep me as their slave in an underwater air bubble parallel reality…

I’m alone with my kids, in a country with no 911, no do-gooder Samaritan neighbors… and my husband is on another continent, and everything is dark, and all are asleep.

I lay in the dark, fearing

Rapists

Burglars

Child-stealers

Government officials, who hate The One I Love

Oh, or cockroaches swarming over me

Then the alarm in my basement goes off, so I grab the baseball bat from under our bed, tuck mace in the waste band of my PJs, and head down to investigate. And I am so scared, I think I am going to pee my pants.

Every time I climb on a motorbike, even though I have done it a thousands times, as I speed down the gravel road, or highway, I get mind-numbingly, brain-scrambling scared.

about

concussions

broken necks

paralysis

road burn covering my body

getting hit by a car

my thighs looking fat, all squeezed and gelled on the seat

Get it? These are just 3 tiny examples.

I get scared.

I get worried.

And I have fears, many of them with a capital F.

Especially living as an expat, I experience a new, or old FEARS every day of my life.

This is the deal, though.

I don’t let my life be defined by my fears.

I don’t make decisions influenced by my fears.

I live BIGGER than fear.

Have I not commanded you be strong, and courageous! Do not be terrified, do not be discouraged!

In YOU I take refuge

You are my rock, and my fortress

You are my ever present help in time of trouble

The eyes of the Lord see far

Do you not know? Have you not heard? He does NOT grow weary or sleep!

I beat the crap out of my fears every day.

I lock them up, and I beat them down, and I stand on top of them.

When I hesitate before jumping into the ocean, I scream these truths out to my spirit, and I dive, and I come up smiling.

When I am alone in my bed, in the dark, I fall asleep, not counting sheep, but saying, over and over.

“In peace I will lie down and sleep, for YOU LORD, make me safe”

*ps 4:8

When I my body starts to shake, because I am so scared of driving a motorcycle, I pull over, and I praise Him for making these arms, these legs, that obey the directions of my brain, make safe, and thoughtful driving decisions, and I head back out on the road with joy and thankfulness for the wind on my face.

Our fears stare us in the face.

Our kids getting hurt.

Death

Political freedoms

Even “silly” things…

Someone will laugh at you

You have to get an immunization

Take a blood test

Squish a spider that got into your house

As I swam in the ocean today, I felt something brush my leg, and pure panic rushed through my veins. I looked, there was nothing, so I lay on my back, and floated, face to the sun, repeated the words that are true, and I thought of YOU my friends and family.

 

Today, I shared my fears with you, because I LOVE YOU. I want you to be PUSHED TOWARD your fears. I want you to find the courage to face them, and defeat them. I want you to live fully, with confidence that oozes out of your pores, and with a smile that gives glory to the ONE WHO HAS DEFEATED FEAR!

 

Filed Under: CHINA ARCHIVE, healing, parenting, speaking up

July 6, 2017 By HallieZ Leave a Comment

Dear Me

ORIGINALLY POSTED 9/6/2012

Dear Me,

You are 16. Everything seems like a really big deal.

I am twice your age now. And this is what I want to say.

Don’t grow up. Just refuse. Don’t do it.

You are going to double your age, and end up 32.

You will find yourself living in a country of very short people,

who call you fat every day of your life.

It is cold, dirty, and insanely polluted here.

You will miss your family every day of your life.

Shopping at Target will become as big a dream as going to Disneyland once was.

Everything in your home will be such crap quality that it is almost always broken.

You will drive everywhere on a scooter,

and it will make your current lack of transportation not look so bad…

NAH, just kidding!

Here is the real letter I am writing to myself.

Dear 16 year old me.

You, Hallie, of the strong, strong will. With the strong body and mind. With the deep and thoughtful heart. You, who knows your Maker in such a deep way, you will one day be 32, and marvel, and know how rare and beautiful what you have is.

What you are doing now, who you are being now, are all the things that add up to making me able to do what I do now. So for the most part, I don’t want this letter to be about changing you life… except for one thing. I want to tell you this.

No one is telling you NO.

Even now, I don’t understand what exactly “they” were saying,

but I do know it wasn’t NO, exactly.

Don’t listen to them. You want to go to college? GO.

You want to get a job? Get it.

Scared? Embarrassed to ask other for help? Don’t be. ASK them. You know who.

You are smart enough. You can work hard enough.

You won’t mess up. You won’t go into debt for it.

You will regret it for the rest of your life if you don’t defy that perceived “NO” and GO DO IT.

Ok. So now we got that out of the way.

I think of you, and I want to cry, and scream, and laugh!

You are being told this, right now, and it is true. You are being uniquely prepared, and you, to whom much is being given, will find that much shall be required.

From where I stand now, I see a million ways that your unusual upbringing is shaping you,

and moving you forward to the days when you will walk in His steps, on the other side of the world.

I want to cry, because I know how sad and lost you feel. Someday, you will hold your 2 year old daughter on your lap, right next to your hours-old second daughter, and you will know, all along, there WAS enough love. I/we won’t really believe it until that moment,

but Mama and Papa do want you, and they do love you as much as each baby that

shows up every few years.

I want to scream, because it IS too much. Too much on your shoulders. Nobody is trying to hurt you. I don’t think they realize how much you hate the responsibility that you handle so well on the outside. Bow your heart, strong, oldest Child. Bow your heart, and trust that He will use these years to build in you character that will change your corner of the world. And be looking, your Father is going to put people in your life to be Him with skin on, and they will be there in exactly the right moments.

I want to laugh, because you LAUGH! Oh, how you laugh. It keeps you sane, and fills your heart when it is empty. It ties you to your mama with undeniable blasts of joy, and breaths life and hope into everyone around you. One thing I want to tell you now, because it will hurt when you finally learn this in about 10 years: Tame the laughing. The introverted, the truly sad, sometimes you hurt their feelings. Sometimes you intimidate them. You want your smile and laugh to encourage them, let them know you are listening. But they don’t get it. So learn to tame it down. Practice being calmer, and listening harder.

Don’t be afraid of the silences, wait on them.

Those convictions you have? The ones you keep doubting are really yours?

They ARE. Stop worrying that you just inherited them from your parents.

You are NOT going to “mess up”. You are not 1 step away from skanky, loose, or immoral.

Your heart is pure and beautiful to the lover of your soul,

and I wish you would stop wasting time worrying about it.

Your girl friends, and your friend-boys are amazing.

The girls will always be there for you. Even when you are 32, they will be kind to you, pray for you. They are going to remember you, and love you, even when you are gone from the USA for years at a time. These girls are the best and all the time and energy you are spending on them is NOT wasted. The one your parents won’t let you hang out with right now? She is going to end up being a life-line to you, when you find yourself in dark places, and you two will laugh and laugh about this time.

Your friend-boys are beautiful, kind, and chivalrous. You worry that you are doing something “wrong” by loving them, but you aren’t.  Not many girls are given friend-boys who treat them with the love and respect yours do. Be thankful for them. Ask God how to love them rightly. You will NOT “mess up” physically with any boy, ever. . So stop being so scared of messing up! Live life, and be brave!

And finally,

Your 16 year old self looks weird to you. Silly. You aren’t weird looking at all. You are beautiful. Really. On the inside and out.

 Your body is strong, capable, and will accomplish many wonderful things.

You will be proud of all that it has done, one day.

So start thanking for the marvelous creation that is you NOW.

You are going to change the world. One life at a time. You are going to see dreams you thought lost be restored. And you are not going to mess up.

With so much love and hope for you,

Your older and more tired self

PS

As I write these things to you, tears come, and I think of your daughters, I realize I am also kind of writing this to them. Do you mind if I let them read your letter in 10 years?

Miss Z is 6 now. And she is a lot like you. I think she needs to know some of these things, too.

 

Filed Under: CHINA ARCHIVE, healing, parenting

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