Saturday, April 28, 2012

Sweet 16



Yesterday was Megan's sweet 16th birthday!  We are so blessed by such a wonderful young lady as our daughter...she is truly a treasure!

To celebrate, Andy, Megan and I went to one of the highest restaurants in the world...100 Century Avenue on the 91st floor of the Shanghai World Financial Center.  Needless to say the view was amazing, but the dinner companions were even more so! What a treat it was for us to spend an evening just talking with each other (un-interrupted might I add!), enjoying delicious food (Megan and her sushi) and watching the sun set from high above the Shanghai skyline.
Thank you Jesus for the gift of Megan!




Friday, April 27, 2012

April...Whew!

6 planes, 5 cities, 4 weeks, 1 train...we're exhausted and so glad it is yet another holiday weekend here in China!  After Zhengzhou, Andy, Joseph, Sue and Zoe (a late addition to the trip but she was real sad at the thought of us being gone for a week so we took her with us!) headed to Guangzhou to finalize Joseph's immigration status with the US consulate.  A medical appointment, a bit more paperwork, the 5 minutes spent with the US consulate representative and then you pick up the Chinese passport that now has a US immigrant visa in it!  Gave us lots of time to explore Guangzhou which included a visit back to Shamian Island, the area of GZ where we stayed for both Abigail and Zoe's adoptions.  VERY fun to go back there, walk through the streets, see the White Swan hotel and, yes, eat at Lucy's.  So many fun memories and it was great to have Zoe there and talk about all the stories of when we were there to adopt her 8 years earlier!




We are also thanking our father that his timing is perfect as we finished up in GZ on Thursday and could take the train to Hong Kong to see Kelly and Lindsey play soccer in the Asia Pacific Athletic Conference (APAC) tournament for Friday & Saturday.  It was great fun to be in Hong Kong...we really enjoyed that the primary language was English, there were double decker buses everywhere, signs discouraging people from spitting on the streets and the school was located essentially in the mountains!  The soccer games were the best...Concordia made it to the finals and after an excellent game lost in overtime.  It was wonderful to see the team and our girls just give everything they had for each game.  Kelly was also named as an All-APAC player...one of just 16 girls selected out the 120 at the tournament.  A fabulous end to her high school soccer career!



Back in Shanghai now we are getting ready for our first post-adoption placement visit...there will be 6 over the next 5 years.  I think they are trying to discourage people from adopting through the sheer amount of paperwork alone.  Try as they might we're happy to keep doing paperwork for as long as it takes for our little guy...he's worth it and so much more!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

It's a boy!!





It's a boy and it's finally official! Today in Zhengzhou, China, Zhao TongXin officially became Joseph TongXin Thielman...and we are over the top happy! It has always been so clear that God has his hand upon our little guy's life and we are humbled and honored to be his Baba, Mama, and JieJie's (older sisters).

Andy, Joseph and I travelled to Zhengzhou (the provincial capital for Henan province where Joseph's orphanage is located) on Sunday. Memories of our first two adoption trips came flooding back first thing Monday morning as we saw many other families with their adopted kids at the breakfast buffet! It was so sweet to talk with them and hear their stories...we just LOVE adoption stories as they are all so unique and special! After breakfast (and a quick walk to the park where lots of people were playing badminton or doing tai chi) we headed to the government building. What a different feeling walking in with our child and already knowing him so well since he has been with us for the past 14 months! It allowed us to really see all the other families (because we weren't so focused on meeting our child for the first time!)....the joy in the parents voices, the uncertainty on how to comfort the child who was crying inconsolably, the look of complete bewilderment on an older child as to what was going on, ayi's trying to convince the kids that everything was going to be okay...so many emotions and so overwhelming. The process itself was a bit chaotic and seemingly unofficial...lots of signing our names on documents we could not read, never actually talking to any of the government officials, giving our 'donation' to the government, taking a picture and we were done.

We quickly learned that despite a 'small' city of 8 million people, there wasn't a lot to do in Zhengzhou. We had our celebration lunch at Pizza Hut, treated Joseph to some new Hot Wheels Cars and a ball to play with at the hotel, took a nap (that would be Andy & Joseph) and then celebrated again with a Sichuan dinner! We also hung out some in the lobby and talked with several other families there (also trying to occupy themselves at the hotel on a rainy afternoon!)

Today we returned to the government offices and this time we were the only ones there. The government head came out to officially give us the adoption certificate and thank us immensely for giving Joseph a home, a family and a future. She kept saying thank you and we kept saying that we were the ones who were blessed by this gift and thanking her. After that exchange and talking more with our guide, it seems that even for those who work in the adoption process they have a hard time understanding bringing another child into your family, especially one that is not yours and even more so one that has special needs. So when we are asked why we have adopted, how we manage more than one child, we answer truthfully...it's all God - He planted the seeds for adoption, He used our wonderful friends in Arkansas to help the seeds grow, He matched us with Zoe & Abigail and He brought Joseph to us through a 'chance' meeting and question from a friend in the grocery store that asked "Would you mind watching a little boy for a week while his foster family is out of town for Chinese New Year?".

A week, 14 months, a lifetime...absolutely!