Friday, July 31, 2009

9 Months

***Neither of these are my belly!***

I love this picture, I have seen it before and am going to try to "recreate" it with Isabella, maybe our hands on her back or side of her head? Any ideas?

This is how I feel about Isabella, we got a small look at her but we cant' touch her yet. Look closely and see the little baby foot.

Nine months. That is how old Isabella turned today. Her age now is the length of most pregnancies…We cannot wait to get this girl home. It will be so good to meet her. Elephants have the longest gestation period at 22 months. We waited about 11 months for referral. Add that to the 3 months we have been waiting for since referral and we are at 14 months. I wonder how close to the mother elephants wait we will get. I found this online talking about the care mother elephants give their babies. Its quite heart warming to think that they are so good to their babies. It kinda reminds me of our family, my husband thinks our kids are my hobby and lets me raise them how I want-that is until he “thinks” I am doing something wrong and then he wants to take over…Ha Ha Ha, like this mother elephant would raise her kids wrong!!!

Like most mammals, elephants have a high degree of maternal care. Although male elephants do not participate in the family, females will love and nurture their babies constantly. The mother uses it’s trunk to caress the baby, to scrub and clean it, and to keep watch and stand guard. Mother elephants are among the most attentive of mothers. If her baby dies, the mother will grieve. She will seem to shed tears and not eat for a long time. Should the babies wander off or misbehave, however, mother elephants are prepared to discipline their babies with a swat of their trunks.
I hope in 3 months I am posting sweet Isabella's 1st Birthday and 1st Halloween. She is going to be a turtle. The cute little turtle from Finding Nemo and my boy is going to be Nemo. He is also going to be a transformer...I got the Nemo costume for him last year and he had to be Superman instead so this year he has to humor me with the Nemo costume so he matches our baby turtle. I will let him trick or treat as Optimus Prime though. (I should have done this post on the gestation of turtles-but its only 6-10 weeks-no comparison to us.)

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

16 Days-Any Chance That USCIS Will Approve in Actual Alloted Time?

Who knows at this point what will happen.
Hoping for video of my baby bird today in the mail.
I think I will call AAC and see if any travel paperwork has been done on the Korean side of things.
Hopefully Isabella Eun Jin has her passport already issued.

Mail Confirmation Showing That USCIS Did Receive Our I600 On May 21, 2009 Not June...



Just a funny, when I first posted this I accidentally put Deceived instead of Received...Maybe it was subconcious typing!!! Although I think that is what they are up to with the date and all.

She Loves Her Foster Mom/Stranger Anxiety

Our little Isabella Eun Jin is getting so big! It is amazing to see her on this video. She definately loves her foster mom. She shows some pretty strong stranger anxiety feelings, but I am thankful that she calms down fairly quickly with foster mom. I could not do the video as well this time with trying to cut foster mom out because she had to hold and comfort Isabella so much. I am so glad that we got to see Isabella get her care package. It makes me feel like we are a little part of her life even though she does not know it yet. I think if she is still so wary of strangers when we go pick her up it is going to be very traumatizing for her. I hope she will calm down for us, we really do not want her to be miserable. Seeing her just makes me ache to hold her. We will not get to Korea soon enough for my sake... I just want to start our life with her. I think the sooner we get her the better adjustment she will have. I may be foolish but am planning on having her here for her birthday. Jackson already calls her a Princess and I found the cutest pink princess party stuff. We are going to have a low key family birthday for her. I found the cake I want, I just need to see if the bakery I want to go to will make it. Her birthday is Halloween so we are going to have to do that low key as well so that she does not get overwhelmed. If we are lucky enough to have her home she won't have been home for long before these events take place. If on the awful chance that she is not with us for her birthday we will prepare a birthday gift care package that we can send if we need to. Our girl won't be going without her gifts either way it pans out...
(I can't get the video to go on blogger but I will keep trying...)

U2 Acrobat-This Song Is Really Good As Well


Don't believe what you hear
Don't believe what you see
If you just close your eyes
You can feel the enemy
When I first met you girl
You had fire in your soul
What happened your face of melting in snow?
Now it looks like this
And you can swallow
Or you can spit
You can throw it up
Or choke on it
And you can dream
So dream out loud
You know that your time is coming 'round
So don't let the bastards grind you down

No, nothing makes sense
Nothing seems to fit
I know you'd hit out
If you only knew who to hit
And I'd join the movement
If there was one I could believe in
Yeah I'd break bread and wine
If there was a church I could receive in
'Cause I need it now

To take the cup
To fill it up
To drink it slow
I can't let you go
I must be an acrobat
To talk like this
And act like that
And you can dream
So dream out loud
And don't let the bastards grind you down

Oh, it hurts baby
What are we going to do? Now it's all been said
No new ideas in the house and every book has been read

And I must be an acrobat
To talk like this
And act like that
And you can dream
So dream out loud
And you can find
Your own way out
And you can build
And I can will
And you can call
I can't wait until
You can stash
And you can seize
In dreams begin
Responsibilities
And I can love
And I can love
And I know that the tide is turning 'round
So don't let the bastards grind you down

Green Day 21 Guns-This Song Says Alot About How I Feel


Do you know what's worth fighting for,
When it's not worth dying for?
Does it take your breath away
And you feel yourself suffocating?
Does the pain weigh out the pride?
And you look for a place to hide?
Did someone break your heart inside?
You're in ruins

One, 21 guns
Lay down your arms
Give up the fight
One, 21 guns
Throw up your arms into the sky,
You and I

When you're at the end of the road
And you lost all sense of control
And your thoughts have taken their toll
When your mind breaks the spirit of your soul
Your faith walks on broken glass
And the hangover doesn't pass
Nothing's ever built to last
You're in ruins

One, 21 guns
Lay down your arms
Give up the fight
One, 21 guns
Throw up your arms into the sky,
You and I

Did you try to live on your own
When you burned down the house and home?
Did you stand too close to the fire?
Like a liar looking for forgiveness from a stone

When it's time to live and let die
And you can't get another try
Something inside this heart has died
You're in ruins

One, 21 guns
Lay down your arms
Give up the fight
One, 21 guns
Throw up your arms into the sky

One, 21 guns
Lay down your arms
Give up the fight
One, 21 guns
Throw up your arms into the sky,
You and I

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Sending Emails

Yesterday I emailed Bob Bennett concerning the lenghty processing of our I600 application. I had previously emailed Governor Jon Huntsman, I did not get a reply from his office but Tracie did. It advised her to contact Bob Bennett as the correct representative for USCIS.
I also emailed my concerns to the investigative reporters at Channels 2, 4 and 5.
Another email I sent out was to Nicole at AAC, requesting a copy of the received recipt from USCIS for our I600 application.
None of this may help speed up the process but at least I am doing something and this has relieved the suffocating feeling that I have had since Friday.

Monday, July 27, 2009

22-4=18

That should me the maximum days of wait...I guess we will see what happens. I wonder if there is any chance that the agency in Korea would have the birth mother relinquishment to AAC before August 14??? August 14 is officially our 90 days with USCIS.

Still Stressed Out

Well I talked to Nicole to get an update on the USCIS situation. They have to request from the Korean agency our daughter's birth mother relinquishment. This is not paperwork that is normally given out by the Korean Agency and they do not like to provide it as it is confidential between them and birth mother. USCIS says they will not approve our paperwork without it. Nicole said it will take "awhile" to get it from Korea. The family that is ahead of us going through this situation will not be able to go to Korea before thier child's first birthday. Nicole said "hopefully" we will get to travel before our daughter's birthday...Nicole said this information should not be needed for the USCIS approval but for some reason the Utah office requests/requires it. The supervisor in the Colorado office is also the supervisor over the Utah office, I seriously think AAC needs to do battle with the Utah office, so that families do not have to wait for something that is not required. Nicole thought that after dealing with the family before us that they would not have to help a family through this again. Now she thinks its going to be standard for Utah families. Good Luck with the Korean agency providing the CONFIDENTIAL birth mother relinquishment. I doubt they are going to want to do that on a regular basis. Nicole also asked me if I wanted to swing by and pick up the new video of our daugter, I kinda sat there for a minute and then said "Nicole, I live in Utah." And she sat there for a minute and I said "Why don't you mail it to me..." (I was actually hoping the new video would be in our mail today because when I called Friday and Nicole wasn't there Morgan said she was out at the post office mailing videos.)

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Absolutely Horrible News

I received a paper in the mail today from the USCIS. It is not an approval, it is a request for all kinds of information...

It says we are supposed to submit the following,

A copy of childs I600A

Copy of childs birth certificate

Copy of paperwork showing irrevocable relinquishment of parental rights by biological mother

Original or certified copy of marriage license

Original or certified copy of both adoptive parents birth certificates

A foreign document must be accompanied by a complete translation in english, including all signatures, stamps and seals.

Clarify whether you intend to complete adoption in korea then bring child to us or to complete adoption in us

Furnish a copy of the Seoul Family Affairs Court documents establishing the childs indentity and orphan status as referenced in the Standard Certificate, if available.

It also states that our I600 application was received on June 19 2009 and that they are currently working on those received in January 2009 and will be processed in order received.

When I last talked with Nicole about the family before us that had problems with USCIS she told me all these things and that they had been with the original file sent. She said that they had to get the boss who is in Colorado to get involved to get the people in Utah to do it right. I sure hope they can get this taken care of quickly.

My heart can't take it.
Hopefully I can get ahold of someone by phone tomorrow and say what the heck...
(We should have only 22 days of this hell left, but based on their "received" date we are only in the wait 35 days. So I am going to be very upset if this is true as AAC told me it was received May 19...Hmmm.)

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

What A Fantastic Day!!! I Did Not Even Dare To Hope For An Updated Picture This Time


Look at this cute baby! I can't wait to go get her. She looks so sad. I wonder why she is crying. She is even dressed in one of the dresses that we sent! Nicole said we will get video next week! So even though no I600 yet, it is a fabulous day!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Vuoto-Empty In Italian

25 days and counting. I am figuring we will travel the last week of September or the first week of October with how things are going.
One good thing is at the end of this week Christie will be back. We will get an update of weight/height that kind of stuff with the doctor's report she is bringing back to us from the "big" hospital in Korea. We probably won't get it until the end of next week but at least we know its coming.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Let Me Introduce You To The I600 Processors!


Hee Hee!
(Even though I feel like USCIS has dropped the ball (or maybe the baby in this situation) I am sure there MUST be some reason the folks processing our I600 form are taking so long, I just don't get it. This picture made me giggle though!)

Noa-Zero In Tongan

Well another disappointing mail day. I sure hope our USCIS office gets serious very, very soon. We are at day 64. That means at most we have 26 more days of waiting for
I600 approval. We are also inside of 9 weeks waiting.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Hala-Nothing In Tongan

Ho Hum. Better luck next week.

Oh Please

Let there be a good piece of mail in my box today.

Friday, July 17, 2009

ゼロ Japanese For Zero

Another Friday with nothing in the mail...

Digging To American-Anne Tyler


Lynda gave me this book. It is about two families that adopt baby girls from Korea. It goes over several years and describes the different beliefs and customs of each adoptive family. The families get together every year for an "arrival day" celebration. The book is so funny but it really got me to think about the way each of us as adoptive parents/families are going to raise our children and that acceptance of each others differences would benefit ourselves as well as our children.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Taking A Trip Together




http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/participate/

Go here to "send" your family to Mars!

Your name will be carried to Mars on a microchip carried by NASA's Mars Science Laboratory rover.

Day Sixty and 영 (Zero In Korean) To Report


Even though we have made it sixty long days in the wait, we still are not at the gate...

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Lynda-Picture Me In My Best Julie Andrews Voice Singing...







Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things

Cream colored ponies and crisp apple streudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles
Wild geese that fly with the moon on their wings
These are a few of my favorite things

Girls in white dresses with blue satin sashes
Snowflakes that stay on my nose and eyelashes
Silver white winters that melt into springs
These are a few of my favorite things

When the dog bites
When the bee stings
When I'm feeling sad
I simply remember my favorite things
And then I don't feel so bad

沒有什麼 Chinese For Nothing

Can you believe this silly wait? I cannot, except that I am living it... Tomorrow is day 60, should I cry or celebrate?

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Nulla-Another Nothing In Italian

Yep, here we sit waiting...

57 Days Equals 8.1428571428571428571428571428571 Weeks

So we are creeping up on 9 weeks... 3 days until we hit 2/3 the time that USCIS can take to process the paperwork. On Friday we have 30 more days that we could wait. I actually of course hope that I will be surprised during the next three days. That would be nice.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Toothbrush-Bracelet-Hat-Swimsuit




Swimming Suits Are My Vice






I can't wait to take baby girl swimming. Both of my kids are fishes so hopefully baby will take to it as well. Some of these are for this year and some for next.

Huggalugs-Baby Leg Warmers





I ordered these patterns of leg warmers for Isabella. By the time we get her the weather will be cooling down and we have a bunch of dresses for her to wear. Hopefully these will make her warm enough. She is coming from a very warm climate and will need time to adjust to the cold.

ничего Russian For Nothing

ничего Russian For Nothing
Yeah so here we are still pluggin along on the I600 wait. And in my book the Russians are about to get involved in Hitler's plan to rule the world...I hate finishing a good book, its like loosing a friend. I am almost done with book 6 in the series I am reading and there are maybe 2 or 3 books to follow. Someone tell me a good book to read...It's funny, when I picked up the first book in the series I figured that I would be reading book 2 on the flight to Korea and here I am on book the 6th book... Later if I have time I am going to do a fun post with some stuff that I have gotten in the recent weeks for baby girl!

56 Days Of Waiting And A Nightmare


My mail has not come yet today so I will post again later if I do or do not get anything...
So I had this nightmare last night...It doesn't make sense like most nightmares so bare with me.
I dreamed that our care packages went with our I600 application. Well after about 80 days ours was returned and we were denied because one of the outfits we were sending had pink buttons and that was against the rules...Can you imagine. PINK BUTTONS. Geez this wait is really getting to me!

Saturday, July 11, 2009

NIC-Czech For Nothing

I can't believe this silly wait...

Love From Jackson



Jackson made this picture as his love letter for Isabella.
When he brought it to me he said, "This is for the baby when we get her, if she rips this one then I can make her another one okay?" I said that would be fine. The picture is of some happy and grumpy snowmen!

I love you as much as the moon loves the sky

Dear Isabella,
This is the letter I thought of for you,
Oh Isabella how much do I love you well let me see, I love you as much as the moon loves the sky, I love you as much as the flowers love the earth, and I love you because YOU are my sister and I want you to know that I will always love you no matter what.

Your sister,

Joelee

Friday, July 10, 2009

Heart Udate-Its In Our Hands


AAC called today with an update on Isabella's heart condition. She has been to see the specialist at the "big" hospital and it was decided that there is not an immediate concern. We will have a copy of the medical records after July 24 when Kristie gets back from Korea. They are going to "release" her medically to us. We will have her seen by the cardiologist that did the paper consult for us as soon as she gets here. We will follow his advice and do the surgery when or IF he thinks it needs to be done. We are hoping for her that she does not need the surgery and that her little body will heal itself over the next few years. Such good news! AAC thinks (I use this word loosely at this point) we will travel in early September. Hooray, home before first birthday...Thanks Heaven! I put an S on my thanks for my cute friend Mayra. She is originally from Ecuador and always says and writes her thank with an S. She is so funny.

لا شيء Arabic For Nothing


لا شيء I love all these different languages. It is neat to see them...I am using Arabic today because it is also it the books that I am reading mentioned below on another nothing post.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

דבר Hebrew For Nothing

דבר Hebrew for nothing...This language is fitting as I am reading a very good book series right now in which some of the characters are Jewish and they do speak Hebrew. The book series is Zion Covenant by Bodie and Brock Thoene. I am really enjoying these books. At this point we have waited 52 days for I600 approval. That means given they have 90 days to respond, we have waited more days that we have left! I know what a thing to get excited about. At most we have 38 days left of being prisoners of USCIS! Do you think I can really take having to find 38 more words that mean nothing...I hope I don't have to. I think on friday I will call and see if AAC has any update on our baby.

Caterpillars


Little Isabella has the cutest caterpillar eyebrows. In one of the photos we received she has her eyebrows wrinkled up and it is oh so cute. I absolutely love them.
Isabella Eun Jin, your dark brown eyes are beautiful. I can't wait to see the many expressions you are sure to have.
I hope you are used to being cuddled because when you finally get home we are just going to hold you and not let you go.
I love baby fingers. Your pretty baby fingers are going to be kissed so many times. If you will tolerate all the kisses we have been saving up for you you will be a very patient baby.
The long wait for you has been emotional and trying at times, having you in our lives will make the wait worth it. I know that you will feel the love we have for you very quickly but it may take many years for you to truly understand how loved and cherished you truly are. We have waited for you with excitement and anticipation. We fell in love with you when we first saw your face and read about your little spunky personality. The person at AAC said you are an adorable girl with a cute, alert soul. She said that you are one of the most special babies she has met. She said you have a happy little joy about you. We can see in your eyes a little spark and are thrilled that we get to travel through your life with you.
Oh so many love letters I will write to you. If only you could see how many love letters are in my heart for you and your brother and sister. You will learn to love them as they already love you. They are so excited to come get you. It will be fun for them to have you as a baby sister. They are both old enough to help guide you through life and as I sit here with tears in my eyes I hope you will develop a strong fierce love for them. They will be your best friends, your playmates, your biggest fans and your life cheerleaders. Joelee is a serious little girl and she will protect you and love you. She will feel any of your pain and upset as if it were her own. Jackson is a fun loving, carefree boy that will take you down some interesting trails. He has taken ownership of you and in his childlike love thinks that you are his. He calls you Princess Isabella and loves to look at all the girl toys we have for you. He touches them tenderly. He knows they are for you. He does not try to play with them, somehow he knows that they are for you and he respects that.
I am going to have your Daddy write his own love letter for you. I think it is important for you to know that we both love you and have waited for you for so long. Until we come to get you, I hope your foster family keeps you safe and holds you tightly in their arms.
Love You Baby-Hoping to meet you very soon

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

何も Japanese For Nothing

何も These Japanese symbols are really pretty. They still mean nothing though...Ho Hum. I hope this week we will here somthing, whether it be the I600 or an update from AAC.

Korea Aims to End Stigma of Adoption and Stop ‘Exporting’ Babies

I have been looking for this article for awhile and found it on another adoptive parent's blog. In the article it says that South Korea wants to end all international adoptions by 2012.


Kim Chang-shik, left, and his wife, Yoon Yeo-rim, of Seoul adopted their daughter, Kim Ih-rin, top right, after first having a son, Kim Shi-eon.

Korea Aims to End Stigma of Adoption and Stop ‘Exporting’ Babies
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Published: October 9, 2008
Last year, for the first time, more babies here were adopted by South Koreans than foreigners and the government has set a goal of eliminating foreign adoptions altogether by 2012.
SEOUL, South Korea — Daunted by the stigma surrounding adoption here, Cho Joong-bae and Kim In-soon delayed expanding their family for years. When they finally did six years ago, Mr. Cho chose to tell his elderly parents that the child was the result of an affair, rather than admit she was adopted.
“My parents later died believing that I’d had an affair,” said Mr. Cho, 48, a civil engineer who has since adopted a second daughter.

Now, with South Korea becoming more accepting of adoptive families, Mr. Cho and Ms. Kim feel they can be more open, with relatives and nonrelatives alike. Ms. Kim, 49, attributed the change partly to the growth of other nontraditional families, like those headed by single parents or including foreign spouses.
“We feel attitudes have changed,” she said.

Just how much, though, is the critical question as the South Korean government is pushing aggressively to increase adoptions by South Koreans and decrease what officials consider the shameful act of sending babies overseas for adoption. Since the 1950s, tens of thousands of South Korean children have been adopted by foreigners, mostly Americans, because of South Koreans’ traditional emphasis on family bloodlines and reluctance to adopt.

But last year, for the first time, more babies here were adopted by South Koreans than foreigners, as the government announced recently with great fanfare: 1,388 local adoptions compared with 1,264 foreign ones. What is more, South Korea — which still is one of the top countries from which Americans adopt — has set a goal of eliminating foreign adoptions altogether by 2012.

“South Korea is the world’s 12th largest economy and is now almost an advanced country, so we would like to rid ourselves of the international stigma or disgrace of being a baby-exporting country,” Kim Dong-won, who oversees adoptions at the Ministry of Health, said in an interview. “It’s embarrassing.”

To bolster domestic adoptions, the government last year began offering $90 monthly allowances per child for those who adopt children up to 12 years old, as well as more generous health benefits for the children. Even greater health benefits are now given to adopted disabled children.

The government also made it easier for South Koreans to adopt. Single people can now qualify, as well as older ones. Until last year, prospective adoptive parents could be no more than 50 years older than the child; now the age gap has been increased to 60 years. In addition, the government has made foreign adoptions more difficult by imposing a five-month waiting period before children can even be considered for overseas adoption. It also increased payments to foster parents to try to keep children inside South Korea longer and increase their chances of being adopted domestically.

The government’s goal has received much media attention and popular support here. But adoption agencies and some adoptive parents and experts say the government’s new policies are concerned less with the children’s welfare than with saving face. Increasing the age gap and allowing singles to adopt have lowered the standards for domestic adoptions in a way that could be detrimental to the children, they say, even as the government has created unnecessary obstacles to foreign ones.

“The government is hung up on numbers and on South Korea’s image,” said Lee Mira, who oversees domestic adoptions at Social Welfare Society, a private, nonprofit organization that is the second largest adoption agency in South Korea. “When North Korea taunts South Korea by saying we’re selling Korean babies to foreigners, it hurts the pride of South Korea.”

Since 1958, when South Korea began keeping track of adoptions, 230,635 children have been adopted. About 30 percent were adopted by South Koreans, while 70 percent found homes overseas. Two-thirds of all foreign adoptees ended up in the United States.

While orphans made up a majority of adopted children in the two decades following the Korean War, children born to unwed mothers have accounted for the largest numbers since then.

South Koreans who did adopt tended to hide their children’s origins from the children and others.

In recent years, adoption agencies have conducted campaigns — some featuring movie and TV stars — urging adoptive parents to tell people about how their families were formed in the hopes that more openness would lead to less prejudice. The government’s efforts got a boost when some celebrities adopted and went public with the news.

Still, many adoptive parents choose not to share how their families were formed, according to adoption agencies, with some engaging in elaborate ruses to pass off the children as their biological sons or daughters.

A middle-aged couple now living in a suburb of Seoul learned long ago that the husband was sterile. But he was reluctant to consider adopting, unwilling to accept his condition and afraid of the lingering prejudice against adopted children. In a Confucian society that still values bloodlines, where many people keep detailed records of their ancestors, he was worried that adopted children might face difficulties in their careers or with marriage prospects.

So when the couple decided to adopt three years ago, they chose to fake a pregnancy, as many adoptive parents here do. The couple moved, and the husband, now 43 and a real estate agent, switched jobs.

The wife, an employee at a telecommunications company, began wearing maternity clothes over a special pillow, made by a company recommended by the couple’s adoption agency.

All was going well until a colleague the woman had confided in spilled the secret to a supervisor.

“I was so hurt and embarrassed by that experience,” she said. “I would like to adopt a second child, if only to go through the experience in a proper manner this time.”

Given the bias against adoptions, some couples who are initially open become more guarded as their children grow older.

Yoo Hae-yon, 48, has told relatives and neighbors that his two sons, now 4 years old and 18 months, were adopted. But he has since become worried that the boys will suffer in a society where television shows typically portray adopted children negatively, as schemers who end up damaging families.

“My sons haven’t been teased yet, but that will be a possibility in elementary school,” Mr. Yoo said. “So once they start school, we won’t disclose their adoptions. And in junior high school or later on, we’ll let them decide.”

Holt International, a private American adoption agency that has long been South Korea’s leading agency, welcomed the government’s new financial incentives for families but said that trying to curb foreign adoptions would risk hurting the children least likely to be adopted by South Koreans: older ones; the disabled, who still face severe discrimination; and boys, who, once preferred by South Koreans, are now considered by many to be less devoted to their parents than daughters.

“The changes could end up postponing the adoption process of those children,” said Lee Jin-hee, who oversees domestic adoptions at Holt here.

And Huh Nam-soon, dean of the social welfare department at Hallym University outside Seoul, said changing the standards for domestic adoptions could cause serious problems in the future.

“How many of those adopted children will end up in orphanages because of broken adoptions?” she said.

Ms. Huh, who has researched the history of South Korean children adopted by Americans, said that, in general, they had found good homes in the United States, even though some struggled with their identities.

Mr. Kim, the Health Ministry official, acknowledged that the history of American adoption had been largely positive. But he said that the government believed that South Korean children would be happier if adopted by South Koreans and that it would stick to its goal of phasing out foreign adoptions in four years.

Agencies and adoptive parents said the goal was unrealistic, if only because very few disabled children had been adopted here. Last year, only 40 disabled children were adopted domestically, while 500 went abroad.

“We wouldn’t feel confident adopting a disabled child since we even felt overwhelmed adopting a healthy one,” said Kim Chang-shik, 37, who, with his wife, Yoon Yeo-rim, 38, adopted a daughter four years ago, after the birth of their biological son. “I don’t know whether it’s because I’m Korean, but I’m grateful that foreigners are willing to adopt children who can’t find homes here.”

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

빈 This Little Symbol Means Empty In Korean



I am getting to the point where I don't like to get the mail.

Monday, July 6, 2009

아무것도 -Nothing In Korean

아무것도 -So I used Yahoo Babel Fish to translate from English to Korean. I know this site does not always translate correctly, but you get the idea.
나는 얻는다 나의 아기를 가고 싶다 I want to go get my baby

Friday, July 3, 2009

Nihilum-Latin For Nothing...Geez This Is Taking Forever

I am getting very close to having to look for a new list of nothing words. Thankfully there is no mail delivery for Saturday, the 4th of July and then nothing on Sunday so a little break from the nothingness. I sure wish this dang I600 would get approved so we could move on from this point. 32 business days since USCIS received our application. 46 total days.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Niets-Dutch For Nothing

Niets...Well I chose this word because we would definately need wooden shoes to attempt to go to our garden today! Wait, maybe I am confused, do people in Holland speak dutch or is there somewhere else I am not remembering? Oh well. You get the point. Niets...

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Ei Mit-Finnish For Nothing-And Care Package Sent


BriarClaire-one of my favorite spots to buy bows is going to South Korea. This little set of hair barrettes is adorable. I made sure I could get an extra set before sending these in the most recent care package! The bows are made by two adoptive moms, one waiting for her baby and one with her sweet Briar Grace home already. Visit them here BriarClaire.etsy.com

Thanks to Tracie and Darin, they were able to get the books that I am sending in Isabella's care package translated to Korean! They are so kind to do it for me. Thank You soooo much Darin and Tracie! Hoping for your legals to be here soon.



Books for care package.
The cute little asian baby doll from Lynda arrived this week. I picked it up at work and sent the whole care package to AAC. I think it will get to Korea this week when one of the AAC workers goes if they have room to take it.
***Lynda,
Thank You so much for the baby doll. Isabella Eun Jin will love it. It is the perfect size for her tiny hands. You are so thoughtful and our family appreciates you thinking of us.***
Amber