Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Fall Update

Two years ago the world lost a great soul. My brother, Marty, died unexpectedly and suddenly, leaving an enormous hole in the fabric of our family. Although painful and difficult, we have gone through much healing and have a patch that has strengthened us at the seams. Much of it is due to the weaving together of the threads that were left, by his wife, Cindy~ an amazing person in her own right. We are all well and creating joyful memories that Marty would be proud of. He is not forgotten.

August 2010

And life goes on in its cycle. 
In the fall we dropped Matthew off at college.
Within an hour after we left him, he met a wonderful young woman, Sydney, at a freshman orientation mixer. Previously acquainted from the college Facebook Group, they hit it off right away and have been constant companions ever since. Sydney is a welcome addition to our family circle and surprisingly, I see much of myself reflected in her personality.

 
While walking around campus, M & S found this cute little hole in the sidewalk.
So, in the next few days, we were walking around the block and found THIS cute little hole in the sidewalk.

We went to visit Matthew to see him play in a concert on campus~ thus the tux...

We celebrated Iris' birthday with a surprise visit from her son and granddaughter!


This cutie got lots of love!!

On a Chilly September Morning we went canoeing with our church friends.



Eric & I are trying to get out for some much needed Date Nights.

Here is my Dad, single handedly re-doing the kitchen floor in his house!

And Whisper, with her ever watchful eye on me. Every room I go in, she follows.

The Stage Crew
Proud Daddy.
Shanna sporting her new braces!
A late fall vegetable garden harvest. Yes, that is a very tiny butternut!

Mary Alice's Birthday

Celebrating at AppleBees. Just the girls, as Daddy was out of town, Matthew at college.
Shanna & Megan enjoyed a trip to the Firefighter's Open House.

Our annual Pumpkin Carving Party at Church. Matthew was home for the weekend!

Snuggle time with Daddy.
This Cutie is my great nephew, Arden, in his Halloween Costume!
And this Cutie is Whisper! =) Sorry, no pictures of the girls this year... Just didn't happen. Don't know why.
And more Stage Crew. A big part of Mary Alice's life.
And the cake she made for the friend above, for her birthday. Frosting is homemade fondant. All. On. Her. Own!

Here is the doorway that Eric created for me between our front hall and family room. I. LOVE. IT! It still needs some finish work and I will post someday when finished.

These giggle girls never stop smiling and hugging. Like puppies.

Once again we travelled to my brother and sister-in-law's home, where we were welcomed and pampered for a wonderful visit. We missed Marty, but the house was filled with the spirit of family. It was a special joy this year to have my mother, father, Iris and Arden join us!

Cindy gave us commemorative Menurkeys and we all brought our menorahs to light.

I enjoyed my time with Matthew. I miss him so much when he is away but I am Oh So Proud of his successful transition to college and independence.

I cannot get enough of this sweet face. He is simply dreamy.

Shanna, too. =)

Dawn & Mary Alice, too. =)
Matthew, too. =)
And Aunt Sue
And Grandpa Jerry.
Even Biddie is smitten. Arden was so generous with his smiles and attention.
Homeade hot cocoa with whipped cream in the morning is one of the things Megan remembers most fondly about Marty and Thanksgiving.
This is the beautiful Birthday Cake Mary Alice made me.
I was lucky enough to celebrate my birthday with my whole family.
And I share my special day with Shanna, who celebrated her 3rd anniversary of being adopted on my birthday!
These are rocks that we all painted over Thanksgiving weekend. Each represents a memory of Marty. Thanks to Sue for having such a great idea and bringing the needed supplies.
Happy Holidays to Everyone!

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

When My Birth Mother Found Me

I just read this thought provoking, well written, sincere article; posted by Salon.com

Source

When my birth mother found me
A picture of the author as a baby, in China

I was adopted from China at 4. I had no interest in tracking down my past -- but my past tracked me down anyway


The letter from my birth mother arrived six days before my 22nd birthday. A month earlier, I had packed all my worldly possessions into a sun-blistered Mazda and moved to Sydney to live with my boyfriend of four years. But we’d broken up three weeks later, and I found myself alone, hating the corporate law firm where I temped as a paralegal, but dreading even more the return to the filthy eight-bedroom frat house I’d wound up in after the split. One of my revolving cast of roommates casually tossed it to me: a giant white envelope postmarked from Beijing.
“What is it?” he asked, clicking on the TV before I responded.

I had no idea. As I ripped open the envelope, my mind was elsewhere — on the new beagle I’d bought from a classified ad, on the news my ex had already met someone else, and how I was possibly going to eat this Indian takeaway without any clean cutlery.

Birth mother in China has been looking for you,” announced an ominously bolded subject line. The rest of the letter read like one of those scammy, overemotional emails that show up in my junk folder. And I might have thrown that letter away if it hadn’t also been accompanied by adoption certificates, IDs and a couple of baby pictures. I’d never seen photographic evidence of my infant self, and was convinced I’d sprung from the womb 3 feet tall and able to enumerate the many virtues of Chairman Mao – a mantra obviously drummed into me at Chinese kindergarten. But the baby pictures made it all real.

Suddenly I had a past, and I had to face up to it.

The thing was, I didn’t feel like facing anything. It seemed to me then that life wasn’t simply handing me lemons, but a lemon tree was hanging over me and a whole branch had crashed on my head. “$*#” (modified by Linda-but after all, this is a Family Blog) were the first words out of my mouth. Not the response you’d expect from someone whose birth family just found her. But truth be told, I had never really wanted to be found.
I’d always known I was adopted at 4 by a noisy but loving Anglo-Australian family. I knew that my birth parents had given me up after a violent and messy divorce. Other than that, I never dwelled much on my origins. My limited adolescent enthusiasm was taken up by piano lessons, detention and the weedy next-door neighbor I was in love with.

“Oh come on,” people often prod, unconvinced by my nonchalance. “You never wanted to find your real parents?”

I cringe when I hear “real parents.” To me, my adoptive parents are my real parents – the ones who pinned my awful poetry to the fridge, taught me to drive and yelled and then laughed at me for getting my first wonky-looking tattoo at 15.

The only thing I had been curious about was genetics. Did I have my mother’s eyes? Will I inherit my father’s receding hairline? Did I look like someone out there? My older, natural-born sister looks alarmingly like both our parents, and I felt a pang of envy whenever someone mentioned it. But the rest of the time, I was incurious. I already had one family who loved me and drove me completely mad. Why would I want another?

As fate would have it, I was one of the rare Chinese adoptees sought and found by their birth family. Not that it would have been so hard — they could have just Googled me. Instead, my birth mother paid an illegal people search company $2,000 to track down my address and the comprehensive life history of my entire adoptive family, including every city we’d ever lived in the last 20 years. But perhaps I should start from the beginning.
* * *
I was adopted from Chang Chun (a relatively small town of 8 million people) in the far northeastern edge of China in 1990. I was 4 and fearless. When my birth father signed my adoption papers and handed me over to my new ghostly white parents, I told them straight up they had bí zi (big noses). But I never cried, nor complained. Not once.

In my first memory, my parents and I arrived in Beijing after a six-hour train ride from my hometown. It was winter — minus 22 degrees — and I was wrapped from head to toe, with only my eyes visible through a small rectangle of prickly scarf. This was less than a year after the Tiananmen Square massacre, and I could see what I later learned were bullet holes in the concrete monuments as we strode around the square, gloved hand-in-hand, for the first time as a family. No one knew that inside the bundle of clothing there was a Chinese kid.

That was the last time for many years I was afforded such anonymity. For the rest of my childhood, I would constantly be asked why I was “different” from all the kids in my neighborhood, and forced to grin and bear years of good-natured name-calling from friends. The playground intelligentsia was particularly fond of “banana” — a moniker reflecting the fact that I appeared “yellow on the outside, white on the inside.”

I might have overcompensated to fit in. In all my high-school photos I appear amid a gaggle of white girls. I’ve never had an Asian boyfriend. I took up French rather than Mandarin classes, despite everyone’s insistence about my natural proficiency, or perhaps because of it.
Far sadder than the rejection of my cultural heritage, though, was a sudden distancing from my adoptive father in public. In my self-conscious teens, I stopped linking arms with him and loudly inserted “Dad” into the conversation whenever we dined alone at restaurants, tortured by strangers’ dirty glances, expecting that they’d assume we were a couple. The older Western guy with younger Asian girlfriend was an all too familiar sight in parts of South East Asia where we lived for many years.

But in the grand scheme of things, I knew I was lucky, considering the many desperate or disturbing stories of children around the world. I talked to girls who grew up as prostitutes in Cambodian slums or a teen who was born addicted to heroin and I thought of my own upbringing, filled with the usual sibling squabbles over Lego men and door-slamming fights with parents over the length of my skirt.
So I never resented my birth parents for giving me up. I came to embrace my differences as a topic of interest at dinner parties and around water coolers, and not as a source of shame or something to hide. Besides, Aussie mores dictate that one should refrain from grizzling (complaining) where possible, lest the whinger (complainer) be called a sook (someone who complains a lot). The variety of slang indicates just how discouraged such behavior is.

But when I told people I was adopted, I learned to wait for “the look.” That embarrassed, pitying stare that I’ve spent a lifetime trying to avoid. Some offer an “Oh, I’m sorry …”

“It’s OK,” I say, “I hear there’s a good chance of survival.”

As an adult, I steer clear of adoption meet-ups and support groups, troubled by their perpetuation of all adoptees as people who need fixing and are desperate to find their birth parents and have rejection issues. I know this is not actually the case, but I grew tired of hearing so many well-meaning friends and lovers over the years tell me that my fear of rejection was the real reason I’ve never wanted to find my birth parents. My gruff response to that is, “If I were worried about rejection, I wouldn’t have become a bloody reporter.” Oddly enough, my journalistic curiosity never spilled over into my personal life — I merely ended up professionally burying my nose in everyone else’s past.
By my 20s, I had resigned myself to the idea there would always be a part of my background left undiscovered. I kind of liked it that way. Mystery and intrigue filled the gaping black hole in my history, which in reality was much less romantic than my childhood fantasies, where I secretly fancied myself as a princess or the daughter of famous actors or acrobats or spies.
And then the letter arrived.

The envelope was branded with neat rows of Chinese characters and was covered with a light salt crust after being exposed to wafts of sea spray on the front porch all afternoon where it had been left by the delivery guy. I opened it while finishing Indian takeaway with the head of a broken plastic spoon. There was a telephone number at the bottom of a slightly soggy second page, and my fingers were sticky as I punched the buttons on my phone, smearing it with fish curry. To this day, I still associate the smell of turmeric with my first call to my birth mother.

As I waited for the dial tone, all the questions I’d never asked growing up suddenly clamored in my consciousness like a dozen people talking at the same time. Where were you the last 18 years? Why now? What do you want from me? Do I have siblings?

The woman who picked up was Rose, the translator friend who had helped “find” me, or at least pay some very shady people to find me. She was there, ready to answer any question I had, but my mind had gone blank. Plowing through the awkward silence, Rose informed me that since both my birth parents had split up and remarried, I now had three younger half-sisters and a half-brother I never knew existed. So much for China’s one child policy, I thought. There was a blur of other information, but I don’t recall much, except that I did scan the room a few times for hidden cameras, just in case my roommates were playing a practical joke. They weren’t.

The conversation only lasted 10 or 15 minutes, and afterward, I called my adoptive parents who were watching a football game in the grandstands of the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

“Dad, did you know?”
“Know what?”
Just as I said, “My birth mother found me,” a hundred thousand people screamed in the background.
* * *
It took me a year after the phone call to work up enough courage to visit my birth mother in Beijing. I spent most of the week nodding and pointing and getting to know my siblings who spoke some English. It was all a bit dizzying, and I was embraced into the greater family bosom with a kind of huggy eagerness that made me feel very uncomfortable at first. The oddest part was being around strangers who looked like me. Not only do I have my mother’s eyes, but we’re the same height, weight and shoe size. She even has the same laugh. It was like staring at a futuristic version of myself in the mirror, except my reflection spoke back in Chinese.

The sliding doors moment became very real when I took the train back to my hometown to meet the rest of my family. The city was an industrial grid of endless concrete blocks, with bleak soviet monuments and starless skies. As I gazed around the home I’d lived in until I was adopted — a squalid one-room apartment that had housed four people — my heart pounded. In another life, I could have ended up here, I thought, working in one of the city’s many car factories, pollution mask strapped to both ears. For many years, my adoptive parents had struggled to support our family on a single teacher’s wage, while one or the other finished their doctorates. We were never wealthy, but at least I’d had the chance to gain a decent education.

While I was in Beijing, most people reacted kindly to my terrible Mandarin. I was told it would come back. “Once Chinese, always Chinese,” they said. But I didn’t feel particularly Chinese or Australian at that point. I felt more like I had my shirt hooked on a door frame between two worlds.
Perhaps that’s why I fell in love so quickly with New York when I finally moved to the city last summer – the city where everyone is from somewhere else. Here, I’m just another anonymous immigrant with an interesting “origin story.”

Since the Beijing trip, I’ve maintained a close relationship with my birth mother and an amicable one with my birth father. Navigating language and cultural differences has been a struggle, as has been allaying the concerns of my adoptive parents, who in the beginning were uncertain of my birth family’s intentions. They feel jealous at times, which is completely understandable — it’s probably the biggest challenge to overcome for any adoptive parent going through the reconnecting process. I can only remind them that nothing will change the fact they’ll always be my real parents.

Sometimes I look at little Chinese babies with button noses on the subway or in elevators and wonder how their mothers could possibly give them up. It’s a quandary I can only attempt to understand, never having been a parent myself, but it nags me every now and then when I entertain thoughts of entering motherhood at some far-off point in the future. For now, I’m simply relishing sisterhood. In a perfect world, I would have grown up with my siblings, teaching them long division and how to apply makeup and attending their dance recitals. But I’ve realized just having the opportunity to be with them now is pretty spectacular. I may not have been ready to receive the letter from China five years ago (is anyone ever really ready for that sort of thing?). But sometimes it’s good to be found, even when you wanted to stay hidden.
Liz Fields is a freelance journalist based in New York, raised in Sydney and made in China. She is a 2013 graduate of Columbia University's Journalism School and has previously scribbled for Slate, ABC News, Sydney Morning Herald and more. Follow her on Twitter @lianzifields.

Monday, September 9, 2013

My Busy Summer Days with My Family

That was the title of the writing project the girls and I worked on during the last week of school. As we went through the calendar from late June through August to gather facts to write about, I could not believe everything we had done. It was a non-stop roller coaster of activity.

First we celebrated Daniel & Kate's Wedding. Kate is my step-sister-in-law, and Tom (Marion's husband's daughter). We adore her and Daniel and are thrilled for them.

Celebrating at Daniel & Kate's Wedding.
Sweet Princesses.
Then we welcomed Gramma Judy for a nice, long 3 week visit. The girls had a wonderful time playing and talking to her. Gramma especially liked Whisper, to whom she could completely relate, as she was content to rest her head in Gramma's lap while the rest of us ran around the house!

 
  Next, we went through many Lasts of the year, the last band, orchestra, drama, soccer banquets, the senior prom and Matthew's graduation. We are so proud of all of his accomplishments but most of all, because he is a wonderful, thoughtful young man, who knows the value of family.

Mary Alice at the barn where she rides Vanilla
At a favorite restaurant.
Celebrating my sister, Sue's birthday!
Last Day of school. Last day of HS for Matthew!
Matthew and his "friend group" at the prom. Such handsome young men!

Matthew, at 13 months, catching up on his reading..

Matthew at 18 years, caught up on his reading.
So proud are his grandparents. We were so glad that Gramma Judy could come and see in person.
Dropping Mary Alice off at camp
Mary Alice 's 4th year at camp, first as a leader in training.
Megan turned 9 and caught up with Shanna, who turned 9 six weeks earlier.


Their joint party was a swimming party at the YMCA.
Whisper celebrated her 11th birthday, opening her own box of dog treats!
Then the girls went off to YMCA camp for a week! They had a great time trying new things!
Inside their cabin.
Megan's first time in a Kayak!
Still smiling, even after a week of camp! Ready to come home, though!
At the same time, Mary Alice went to Horse Camp for 2 weeks.


Riding the course

Our garden was very large this year. Lots of produce!
We enjoyed tomatoes, basil, zucchini, yellow squash, green beans, lettuce, peas, raspberries, peppers, acorn squash and potatoes!
But it's nothing compared to Bill & Janis' garden!
Out to lunch with Mom
The girls had a Free Water stand with their friend, and a police officer stopped by and "bought" some.
One morning I came down and found this sweet sight.
Gramma Judy's friends stopped by for their annual visit from Florida.
We went camping way up north in Killarney, Canada.
This time we got smart and towed a Uhaul. Best decision we made!

Shanna and Matthew exploring the view from our site.
Unfortunately, it rained a bit, but mostly was super windy (and chilly) the first 3 days! We had to sit underneath the canopy trying to keep warm.
The sun came out to shine on the special dessert that Mary Alice made to cheer me up. Camping eclairs, the recipe for which she found on the internet. Crescent roll dough cooked over the fire on a stick, then filled with vanilla pudding (pushed into a hole made by a spoon), then coated with chocolate frosting. Yum....
Me snuggling with my sweet Whisper to keep warm.
The view of the lake from our site, when the wind finally stopped blowing on day 4!
Sadly, my father-in-law Tom passed away at the end of August, following a miserable summer in the hospital, weakened from symptoms of his Parkinson's disease. He fought valiantly but when he could no longer swallow on his own, he decided he couldn't any longer. He was an amazing and interesting man and we miss him. He was given a special service because he was in the Navy.
A silver lining to the funeral is that we got to see Eric's brother Evan and his wife, Kathy. We were so glad to see them.
The same weekend that Tom died, we took Matthew to college. He returned for the day on Monday to play the violin in Tom's funeral, a moving tribute to his grandfather.
Looking pretty organized and off to a great start.
Matthew's college has a huge garden right outside his dorm where they grow tons of produce that they serve in the dining hall. It's wonderful.
This is an amazing onion.
And here are the girls on the first day of 3rd grade. This year they are in the same class and are really enjoying that!
This weekend we took a quick ride back to see Matthew to bring him some forgotten items and brought along Grandpa Jerry and Grandma Iris to visit.
Well, even after seeing it all again through the pictures, I still cannot believe so much happened in such a short time. Now we are back to school and trying to get into the rhythm of things again, ready for the fall season.

~Linda

PS: for those of you wondering, we had NO monarch butterflies at all this year! We looked and looked for eggs, but only found one tiny caterpillar, and left him on the milkweed outside because it was the weekend of Tom's funeral.... Hopefully, next year...