Bulgarian Q & A

Monday night Jon and I had the opportunity to talk with the president and vice president of Anido, our Bulgarian agency! This evening was just what I needed at this stage of the adoption. I don’t feel any less eager to get things moving with the adoption but the anxiety I was feeling has been relieved… for the moment any way 🙂 The information was first hand and complete. I got a lot of the rumors I’d been hearing cleared up and some reasons behind things cleared up. It was invaluable and I’m so glad we got to go.

International adoption is ever changing, very political, and quite based on relationships between agencies. People who think adoption is the “easy” way out are very mistaken. Our Canadian agency, Sunrise, had gone to Bulgaria a few years ago to start developing their relationship with Anido and it was their turn to come check things out here. They started the evening by giving us a bit of a synopsis of how things looked in Bulgaria as it related to adoption. It was a lot of info to take in so I’m just going to write out some of the more pertinent parts that relate to our developmental special needs adoption… which is DEFINITELY not the norm for Anido.

– There are four types of orphanages in Bulgaria…Ages 0-3, 4-7, 7-18, and severe special needs orphanages. Down Syndrome is classified as a severe special need. (Sadly so is deaf and blindness, even if they are developmentally typical.) In the typical orphanages the children have all their needs met (aside from the obvious downsides of orphanage life). The special needs orphanages are not so lucky and “are not is as good a shape” as the vice president put it.

– 90% of the orphans are given up because of poverty. Their parents do not have the resources to care for them.10% are given up because they have health issues. It is the 10% that we are interested in 🙂

– Children are available for international adoption after one year of age.

– An interesting cultural difference in looking at ages is if you say in your home study that you want child “under 3”, you will get a proposal for a 2 year old. If you are open to a 3 year old you have to say “under 4 years old.”

– Another rumor that was cleared up for me was the 2 month proposal thing. I, along with a lot of other people, understood that the agencies shuffle files of children between them every two months. This had me really worried about correct timing for finding our child and frustrated with how inefficient that process was. Thankfully, this is misinformation. There is a centralized registry of all the children. When an agency does take a file of a child to propose to a family, they can only hold on to it for two months to make sure no other agencies take it and propose it to another family. This ensures families don’t get attached to one child only to have it be adopted before they finish up their own paper work. That does happen in many other countries.

– Once our Dossier is accepted Anido registers us in the Adoptive Parent Registry and we are put on the list. The Ministry of Justice then looks at their list of children and starts going down the list of parents to see if any of the kids meet their criteria. Special needs kids are prioritized. The wait time for a typical, healthy child under three is 3 years… the wait time for a kid with DS is 3 days – 3 weeks!!! Can we all say YAY!!!!

I had a hard time relating to the other potential parents in the room. We were the only people in the meeting interested in adopting a child with special needs. We were the youngest couple in there. We are not looking at a long wait. One woman I talked to has been waiting 4 years already! We (thankfully) don’t have grief issues around not being able to have a biological child. I can’t imagine the grief that this causes but I get frustrated at the idea that adoption is a way to guarantee parents get a “perfect” child. One woman was frustrated with the fact that there was no way to ensure the birth mother hadn’t drank during the pregnancy. This is Europe we are dealing with here… everyone drinks! Perfectly “imperfect” children are the way to go!

So what’s the hold up with our Dossier? Well, Bulgaria has a lot of National holidays, like stats in Canada, so their vacation days add up. They don’t need to use them because they have so many long weekends. So, the government forced people with too much vacation banked up to take a vacation… which was everyone. Everything stopped and there is at least an extra month added on to everything. We were told between 2-3 months for our Dossier to be approved. It now looks like it will be closer to 4 months. We are almost at the 3 month mark for our wait. Once we are approved though, our waiting should be almost over! I do have to remember that international adoption is very unpredictable and tons of different things could happen or go wrong.

One really exciting thing that Anido told us is that we could probably get a video of our daughter with, or shortly after, our proposal! That will be so fabulous to see her moving and maybe hear her voice and her laugh. How incredible! I just have to detach myself from thinking of her in an orphanage that doesn’t have enough of the bare essentials for all the children. I don’t know how I’m going to cope with leaving her there after the first trip. I cry just thinking about it. Our friends had a really great experience with the orphanage that they picked up their son from. Hopefully ours isn’t as bad as I’m imagining. I need to stop imagining.

I think this evening was really good for Jon too. When we started this adoption process Jon had just started a new job. Most of his attention was going to that and I was in charge of all the particulars with the adoption. I find all the info, get all the paper work and just keep Jon up to date and involved where he needs to be. He knows he wants to adopt but has not begun the attachment process like I have. I think it takes some guys a little longer than moms. It took Jon until after Livi was born to be attached to her, where as I was in the process of attaching since the first time I felt her move in my belly. I think this evening made it a lot more real for him. He couldn’t sleep that night because he was “too excited about the adoption!”

Waiting

I’m still waiting. I’m tired of waiting. I want to bring my daughter home. I was so sure that everything was going so smoothly up until now. Doubt is starting to creep in. I hate it. I’m getting emotional whenever I think about the adoption… that might also be due to the fact that Livi is teething and I was sick. I have to catch up on the sleep that I’ve been missing. Livi has been waking up at least 3 times a night due to her sore molars! Not normal for her and I am missing my sleep 😦

So, where are we with the adoption? Well, I emailed my agency last week to check up on things. I’m sure they are thoroughly annoyed with my incessant questions. They told me that our Dossier is “actively being translated”. Since it has been two and a half months since we submitted our Dossier to our agency and we were told that this stage of the process takes 2-3 months, I’m assuming/hoping that means it is being translated in Bulgaria. Once we are translated and accepted to adopt by the Bulgarian Ministry of Justice we officially begin waiting… or hopefully choosing.

I’m having doubts about how long the right referral is going to take though. Like I said in a previous post, they already have our homestudy and we haven’t received a referral, even though I know there are waiting little girls who would fit in to our family. I’ve also received second hand information that the two girls we were starting to consider are being adopted. Don’t get me wrong, I’m so happy for them and I hope they have incredible lives… I’m just very eager to meet our daughter.

I think the other trigger to my over emotional state is the that if we hadn’t decided to adopt, we would have started trying to get pregnant around now. I’m not feeling the urge to get knocked up at all. I’m just feeling so ready to get on with this adoption! There are so many things in this adoption that are completely out of my control! I don’t do well with being out of control 🙂

The other disheartening thing with the adoption right now is that we haven’t heard from the citizenship office. There is two parts to the citizenship process. I’ve sent in the Part 1 application in and got a response that it would take 8 weeks for a response… That was almost 17 weeks ago. I haven’t followed up because I’ve heard that this office is notorious for this. I will be following up this week though.

The one good adoption news I have is that the connecting agency from Bulgaria is here in Vancouver next week for a conference. Monday night I am going to a question and answer night all about adopting from Bulgaria! I hope this trip of theirs is the other reason our Dossier acceptance is taking so long.

Please pray, or do whatever you do, to help bring our child to us. I’m tired of waiting.

Sick and Whining

I’m looking at a pretty busy week and I’m sick. Why do you always get sick at the worst times? My daughter is at the tale end of her cold too… she started it all. Jon is continuing to ward it off with a strict regiment of whiskey. It works. I forgot to take some at the onset and got sick. Jon burned those germs up with the kick of hard liquor and remains healthy. It is only a matter of time before we start giving it to Livi to keep her healthy! (Maybe I shouldn’t have written that down :P)

On top of Livi being at the end of her cold, she is a little off too. My mom took her to church this morning and Livi wouldn’t stay in the nursery with out her. Then when Jon took her to church tonight (I stayed home sick) she cried again, wouldn’t play with the toys and ignored the other kids. This is very unlike her. She usually jumps into the nursery… or anything… without a second look back at Mom or Dad. I’m hoping this is just a short little phase because I am sick. I’m supposed to work the next three days in a row and am hoping she is okay with staying with Gramma, Marmee and Daddy. I feel so guilty leaving her when she is like this. It is so rare that I feel I should cater to it… like she needs a little extra Mommy time right now for some reason that I can’t figure out. Maybe she is teething? How many molars are kids supposed to get?

Okay, this is a really boring post. I’ll understand if you didn’t read this far. I’m sick. I’m complaining. I’m not looking forward to working three days in a row.