We met Kyle 3 weeks and 4 days
ago. We have been home for 5 days (after
a bumpy China trip and a hellish trip home).
How are we doing?
In some ways, it seems like Kyle has
always been here. In other ways,
not. Sometimes I see him beebopping
around the house and think to myself “holy cow, there’s another kid here”!
As far as bonding and attachment,
Kyle seems to have taken to us pretty well.
He does have the tendency to mommy shop a little bit and he will go up
to absolutely anyone. While I’m not a
fan of “the cocoon” (a process where parents hole up in the house with their
newly adopted kids, discourage visitors and allow no one but mom and dad to
hold, care for or feed their new child), we have been staying pretty close to
home and keeping things relatively low key.
Don’t worry – I’m not one of those militant cocooning moms who will
shriek “don’t touch my child”. If he
will let you hold him, so will I. For a
bit – I’ll be keeping my eye on you. My
head won’t spin around if you offer him a cracker. But, we are intentionally keeping his world
relatively small.
Kyle is Kyle. We called him “Jin Jin” for the first couple
of days, but honestly, I think we were pronouncing it wrong (Mandarin is tonal),
because he didn’t really respond to that.
He has definitely taken to his name and knows when we are addressing
him. His receptive language is
great. Basically, he will do what we
tell him to do and shake his head yes or nod when we ask him a question. “Go in the other room and get your bug
shoes”; “give that to daddy”; “are you sleepy”; “do you want to eat/drink/go
potty/go bye bye”…etc. By the way, in
any language, when you ask a three year old if he is sleepy, wants to go to
bed, or take a nap, the answer is never yes.
Ever. EVER.
Kyle repeats things we say to him
and can count to 5 if coached a little bit.
He says the following words spontaneously:
Eat, more, noodles, no, poop, mommy,
daddy, sissy, Pee Ew, uh-oh, dog, bubbles, hello, bye-bye, please, shoes, hot,
cheese, meow, Sponge Bob (or something like that) and teeth. By the way, he calls Zack “di di” which is
Chinese for little brother. I know…aw.
Other things he will say if we
repeat it to him. He can point to about
8 body parts when asked things like “where’s your nose”? He enjoys singing games like “Itsy Bitsy
Spider”…we believe his caregiver sang to him quite a bit and he does seem to
gravitate toward musical toys.
He’s got a (mostly) sunny
personality but his obstinate streak is starting to show through. He is generally pretty obedient and is very
good about sharing. He is an AWESOME
sleeper. He sleeps very soundly and
sleeps all night. He’ll go down for
about a two hour nap each day. He is a
little difficult to get to sleep because he doesn’t like to go to bed. He whines and kicks a little bit until he
realizes that we mean business and gives up.
He puts his shirt over his face when he’s about to go to sleep or really
upset – that seems to be his security gesture.
He will not sleep with a pillow or a blanket…he is going to be rocking
some footie pajamas this winter. He’s
fairly affectionate and has been giving all of us random, unsolicited kisses
and hugs. It’s very sweet. He still does not usually take to being held
when he’s agitated or upset, so the fact that he’s not yet willing to let me
comfort him tells me we have some inroads to make with the bonding.
Chinese children are rarely told “no”,
that they can’t do something or disciplined, so being in our structured home
has been a little bit of a shocker. Kyle
will often “shut down/tune out” when told no/not to do something. He will become very quiet and sullen and pull
his tee-shirt up over his face. This
lasted about half an hour the first time, but have been getting progressively
shorter. He pretty much knows what he is
and is not supposed to do now. We run a
fairly tight ship and don’t subscribe to the “don’t tell children no” school of
parenting. Uh…no. He’s adjusting well.
He has swam in the paddling pool a
bit and we spent a little bit of time in a big pool while we are still in
China. He likes water but he’s a little
wary of it. He does like baths, but we
have a hard time getting him to sit on his bottom versus squat. He lets me wash his hair, brush his teeth,
clean his ears and cut his nails with no problem. He loves being clean and really likes powder
and lotion. He is afraid of
animals. The dog at my in-laws house
gave him fits and he still shrieks whenever Henry comes too close, but he is
willing to tolerate being in the same room with Henry…mostly because Henry isn’t
too keen on getting anywhere near Kyle.
He has a great appetite and has
eaten just about everything we give him.
He does not seem to be a huge fan of tomato sauce (although he loves
fresh tomatoes) but he will eat it. Any
sort of bland, saucy pasta or rice is a favorite, as well as eggs. We had quiche for dinner tonight and he tore
it up. I’ve started him on Pedia Sure
today – he really needs to gain some weight.
I know that we may eventually have to adjust his diet to something “no
white” or gluten free but for now…I’m just trying to get weight on him. Kyle weighed 19 pounds when we met him and at
three and a half – that is way too small.
He needs to chunk up. I’ll take
whatever direction the doctors give me on down the road but I’m just happy to
have him eat.
We have our first appointment with
the pediatrician tomorrow, which will hopefully begin a round of referrals,
blood tests (YUCK), vaccinations, etcetera.
We are still keeping the bulk of Kyle’s medical issues to ourselves, for
his privacy, but he does have some substantial GI issues we weren’t expecting
and was significantly underweight for his age.
We are hoping that our love and care along with good, Western (albeit military)
medicine will help him to bloom.
Kyle is a very smart little boy. He is a fast learner and catches on to things
very quickly. However, we think he has
some “orphanage delays”. It’s pretty
obvious he’s never had any sort of developmental or educational toys. He seems very familiar with how to manipulate
a smart phone and is comfortable on playground equipment, but puzzles,
stacking/sorting toys, blocks do not seem familiar to him and crayons seem to
baffle him. He does, however, know what
to do with stickers. He is following
Zack’s lead and seems to be enjoying playing with the toys at our house and
usually catches on fast once we show him how to do something. We have thought of putting away a few things
and limiting his access to a few things at a time (we have a LOT of toys)
because he seems sort of overwhelmed with all that there is to play with. One thing he does not like, though, is
TV. He asks to watch cartoons but he
will not sit for any length of time to watch them. If I had to guess, he was cuddled a lot and sang
to and treated like a much younger child.
He was loved and seems to know how to show love and be loved so for
that, I am thankful. I keep telling
myself that his caregivers did the best they could with what resources they
had.
How are the rest of us doing?
Zack is dealing with having to share
his parent’s attention, his possessions and his room with another child. He’s also having a really hard time with Kyle
wearing some of his old clothes, which he sees as “his”, even though these
things no longer fit. He’s taken to mimicking
everything Kyle does – Kyle fell down in our garden while playing tonight and
Zack threw himself on the ground, also.
Oh brother. He is very bossy and
sometimes aggressive with Kyle, but it is nothing out of the scope of what you’d
expect.
I am having a hard time. I am struggling. I don’t usually expose my “soft little
underbelly” this way, but the past three weeks have worn me down and have caused
me to be willing to admit vulnerabilities that I wouldn’t ordinarily admit
to. I am stressed out.
Yes…I wanted this child. No…he wasn’t what I expected. Yes…I still
love him and still want him. He is where
is he supposed to be, which is in our family.
Everything that could have gone wrong with our trip and homecoming
did. OK…the van did not have a flat tire
on the way home from the airport and the house was still standing when we got
home….but seriously, the trip was so horrific that I can’t even write it all
down. I’ve tried three times to get it
out on paper and can’t. Now that we are
home we have a bunch of “collateral” issues going on – pay issues, work issues,
issues with getting Kyle seen by a pediatrician sometime before
Thanksgiving. Every paper pusher I’ve
encountered talks about how Kyle is different from a “regular” child, a “real”
child or a “normal” child. It’s
absurd. Why can’t things settle down for
us and why can’t my life resemble some sort of normal? Am I not due for a break?
We’ve been supported by so many
wonderful and unexpected people during this time in our lives but it pains me
to see that so many we thought were close to us have not reached out to offer
any words of encouragement. My circle
has narrowed since we’ve adopted and it saddens me to see it getting smaller. For every casual friend, acquaintance and
stranger that has reached out and shown us kindness, there is someone I thought
was a good friend who didn’t. Not “hey
Robbins Family – thinking of you”. Not “anything
I can do?” – which there wasn’t. Not “Man,
that sucks.” Just…nothing. And the nothingness has stung. A lot.
Maybe some of my Facebook peeps are
getting tired of our “adoption tale of woe”.
We had someone suggest we “drop off a script” in LA while we were
there. Not sure what that meant (maybe
nothing) and don’t want to know. Call me
dramatic (I know…such a stretch) but I’ve swam uphill and walked the hardest road
of my life for this child. We’re still
figuring each other out, he and I. It
isn’t the deep, instant love that I felt for Zack, but it is the love of a
mother for her child.
I did not set out on this path to “save”
this child. I wanted another child,
quite selfishly. Kyle was the child we
chose. Or maybe there was a larger hand
in that choice. But in walking this
path, I clearly see that we have probably saved this child’s life. We have definitely changed his fate, changed
his path. I don’t say that in a “look at
me” or “pat me on the back, I am so noble” sort of way. It’s true.
It’s fact.
Adoption is not for the weak. Not for the faint of heart. I am not a weak person but this process has
tested me in ways I can’t even begin to write down and has changed me in ways I
cannot explain…not just yet. Don’t tell
me “it will all work out – he has a good home now”. Of course it will and I know he does. If that is you saying that – thank you, but
that does not offer me comfort now. Maybe
nothing offers me comfort. Maybe telling
me “I’m your friend/cousin/neighbor/stranger off the street and I’m thinking
about you – hang in there” might offer me some comfort. Ask me how I’m doing. Talk to me about something BESIDES adoption,
children or my horrible trip. Take me
out for coffee and don’t make me talk at all.
I am angry…and maybe I just need to
be angry for a little while. I am angry
over the state that this child was in when he was handed over to us, and
instead of that anger dissipating, it grows.
I get angry every time I feed him and see how eager he is to eat. I get angry when I reflect that three of the
dozen or so English words he says without being prompted are “eat, more, and
noodles”. I get angry when I recall the
day that his orphanage caregiver who seemed to genuinely care about my son told
me “don’t feed him too much because he will poop too much and doesn’t know when
to stop eating.” I get angry each time I
change his clothes and see how tiny he is, angry that I can count each of his
ribs through his skin. I am angry that I
just had to order 12 month clothes for my three and a half year old. I am angry that a bright and beautiful child
like this had to be shown how to play with the most basic of baby toys. I hope and pray that this anger and fire I
feel will turn constructive and allow me to DO SOMETHING” versus just stewing…because
really, that isn’t me. I’m not sure what
this something I can or should do is just yet.
But I’m different now.
But overall…I’m coping. There is a lot of joy in my life these days
and a lot to be thankful for. There is
also a lot of stupid red tape and a lot of bigotry and lack of understanding
that my jet-lagged, over-exhausted self is dealing with while trying to figure
out what my new normal is – as mother of three and a wearer of my country’s
uniform. Hopefully, I will catch a
break, soon.
Cheers, people.
3 comments:
Big HUGS! Thank you for being honest. Only wish that we lived closer.
Dear Jill,
I am in the process of adopting from China and your blog is the most useful, honest, and informative, information piece I have been able to find. Many thanks for your candour.
Sarah
Sarah-I am glad you find my blog useful. I went back and re-read my post from September...that was a hard time for me, truly. Things are much better now and our family is doing great...but it was definitely a hard road from there to here. Best of luck with your adoption!
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