This is the soccer field for the older kids. Children can be adopted until age 14, then can stay at the orphanage til age 18. If they have severe special needs they then move to a Social Welfare Institute. In our travel in China we did not see any people with disabilities at all. This morning at breakfast one of our servers did have a repaired cleft lip, otherwise I have seen no one else with any kind of special need.
The orphanage visit was very hard and just kind of bewildering. There are 800 kids at this orphanage, but only 300 workers including doctors and nurses. And yet I saw maybe only 30 kids.
Judah was in a foster situation--in an apartment with a family and 6 other kids from the orphanage in a tiny apartment. It was sparse but clean.
The Mom and Dad in the home were so sweet and kind, and showed me so many videos of Zi Rui (Judah) and told me about his likes and dislikes. They told me over and over how smart he is, that he is quiet but listens and understands very well. So far this is very true. He is coming out of his shell a bit more everyday and today he was belly laughing as I tickled him! (And Josiah was giggling with Joe--big progress).
I am so thankful for this family who loved on my boy and gave him a better start. Right now he is grieving and reticent to be snuggled, but slowly he is learning and will keep learning we are here to meet his needs and will not leave him.
Zi Rui can hold a pen and draw! This was so cute and I didn't know this til then. He loves to have a pen. Maybe he will be our artist.
I can't put into words what being in China, and visiting the Orphanage have meant to me, have changed in me. The children I have seen have been so resilient. Smiling even in such a hard place. It made me want to adopt them all, if I could. It made me want you to adopt from China, too.
Adoption is not easy, but it is beautiful. It makes the gospel so real to me. I had nothing, but was given God's grace and my standing is as a heir.
We have met many families in Guangzhou adopting all kinds of different children with different special needs and ages. Their stories are all unique and I have treasures hearing about how God brought each kid to the right family.
It breaks my heart to leave children behind. Older children especially. It has been so amazing to see my very quiet and scared boys open up and smile and eat! They are wanted and loved and I so want that for every child left behind. My heart is grieved, for one sweet boy in a wheelchair with cerebral palsy in particular. He was playing with blocks in a physical therapy room and was doing so well despite his bent hands. He was all smiles. What resilience in such a hard place. A friend said to me this week that wherever we see compassion, with it will always be sorrow. This week I have seen almost 20 families adopt children...20 kids who now have a Mom and a Dad. This is amazing and wonderful, but it just isn't enough. China has been sweet for us, but also bitter.
Praise God that we are bringing our Judah Lane home with us. He is already so very dear to me, and I am thankful that he is our son. God had plans for him, and us, when he was born (just three months after our Little Man at home!).




















































