7 Months Home!

Sofie has been home for 7 months now! I looked at her this month and saw a little girl, not the baby that I’m used to seeing. She is growing up and going to be such a beautiful young lady.

 Feeling violated…

So are you wondering what is new this month?!

  • Sofie is so good at giving us hugs now. It is so nice. One of my favorite times of day is night time cuddles with her. We lay down on her big girl bed looking at each other and touching each other’s faces. Then I pick her up and she snuggles in to my neck giving me hugs, while I rock and sing to her. 
  • Her language is continuing to take off yet not consistently. We hear her say new words one day then not again for quite a while. This month we’ve heard her say Uh-Oh, Hat, Wow, Sleep, and Down. Her words are muffled and even I have to listen carefully but she is saying them!
  • She has started singing! She sings parts of her lullaby with me, in her own way. I love it. She sings notes at music class too.
  • We left her over night for the first time this month. She did great. She had lots of fun with my sister. No out of the ordinary behaviors. She even smiled and came over too us for a hug when we came home!
  • Sofie hardly ever pulls hair any more. She grabs glasses so much less. She still hits but not as hard and hurtful as she used too. I need to focus on that when she is tired or hungry and her behaviors get exasperated. 
  •  She did a somersault! It was so cute. I wish I had got it on video. We were watching the dancing on Footloose and she was copying … which ended up being bouncing on all fours and doing somersaults. 
  • Sofie has been working really hard at gaining weight and growing bigger. We saw a dietitian last month and now have her on one Pediasure a day, along with lots of healthy calorie rich food. I have even gone so far as to mix her juice with whip cream! Although she loved it, she is still not gaining enough weight or height. She is still 33 inches and 24.5 lbs. I don’t know what the dietitian is going to say or suggest on Monday. She is not unhealthy. Her BMI is good now, and she is on the charts but there is some concern as to why she has not grown and almost stopped gaining weight.  

    6 Months Home!

    I can’t believe Sofie has been with for only 6 months. She fits in so perfectly. I don’t even want to begin to imagine what her life would be like if we hadn’t found her. God had better plans for her. Honestly, He has better plans for all those orphans… now if only we would all just bring them home.

    Isn’t it amazing what a little food, love and a family can do in just 6 months!

    These past six months have gone by so fast and yet it seems to have been our lives forever. I remember what it was like to just have one child. Livi was so EASY compared to the two of them together! They were made to be together. They are sisters through and through. Livi dotes on Sofie… when she isn’t pushing her away or hiding her toys up high so she can’t get them. Sofie is so easy going when it comes to Livi. She loves to be close to Livi and do what she is doing. She tries to be just like her “big” sister. They fight too, but that is encouraging in a weird way. It means they are developing a completely normal sibling relationship and it is a beautiful thing.

     Making cookies on Valentine’s Day together.
    Baking with my kids is one of my most FAVORITE things to do.

    These past six months have been life changing for all of us but especially Sofie. Her development has literally sky rocketed. The orphanage director warned us, when we where picking her up, that the change in Sofie’s life would probably stunt her development in the next few months. Well, that did just not happen. AT. ALL.

    In just six months, Sofie went from having no voice and not being spoken to in Bulgarian to understanding English, using 15-20 signs, babbling up a storm (a loud storm!) and speaking nearly ten English words clearly! Just hree days ago her newest word came! She said “Marmee” and made my mom one happy Gramma! Just this month she has learned to identify some different parts of her body parts, like her nose, eyes, tummy, etc. She is starting to chew a lot better. We haven’t got to raw veggies yet but we are getting there! She is doing really well with water too. Less of it is spilling out when she drinks and I think she is getting closer to the amount of liquid she should be drinking for her weight. Speaking of her weight she is 24 lbs and 33 inches tall! She is still ridiculously small for her age but she is finally a healthy BMI!

    When she came to us she was just toddler walking and fell over a lot. She still falls over a lot but she is so much more confident in her walking. She is nearly running! She climbs on everything now. She has such a sense of humor and laughs her head off when she is trying to tease us. For example, we will be changing her and she thinks it hilarious to turn on her tummy so we can’t put her diaper on… and then she sometimes pees. Awesome.

    I celebrate my second daughter and am in awe of how much she has overcome every day. She drives me nuts, breaks me in to laughter, fills me with pride, joy, love, honor and mysticism. I am SO excited so see where the next 6 months take her and us! I think I might cry from happiness when I get to celebrate her 1 year home!

    Some of Sofie’s favorite things are:
    1. Music. She loves to dance, rock out, she is starting to sing and even knows how to turn on the stereo by herself. We keep “her” CD in the stereo for easy accessibility for her.
    2. Music Class. I can not recommend Music Together with Miss Kendra enough. We started the class in September as a family and now her and I continue to go alone. It is therapy for her. I credit this class as playing a major role in her development. Particularly her following directions and speech. She completely participates in all the actions and even tries to sing!
    3. Naked Barbie. I gave her every encouragement and option to attach to a typical fuzzy, pillow, or stuffed animal in the house. Instead, she chose to become enamored with an old frizzy haired Barbie of Maggy’s that happens to have lost her clothes. I’m so glad that she is attaching to something but why does it have to be a naked Barbie?
    4. Mirrors. She loves looking at her self in mirrors. She is vain. But what can I say? She does have a lot to be vain about 🙂
    5. Tickles. She loves it and has the cutest baby belly laugh.
    6. Giving kisses. She is very proficient at it but doesn’t quite know who she can and can’t kiss yet 🙂


    Things she doesn’t like: 

    1. Soups and juicy fruit. She doesn’t like the textures. It weird’s her out. 
    2. Not being able to keep up with her sister. Livi likes to run but Sofie can’t quite keep up despite her best tries. She gets frustrated when Livi keeps running up and down the hall passing her each time. 
    3. Being hungry. If she has any little hunger pains she gets ridiculously upset. I think it scares her. She didn’t get enough food in Bulgaria. She remembers and it is a trigger.
    4. Being told “No”. Really, who likes that? She is quite stubborn about this one though!

    I try to take pictures of each of my kids on their 6 month “birthdays” as well as on their actual birthday. Sofie is NOT easy to photograph! But she still makes some cute shots!

    We love you Sofie! We thank God for you every day. You are a miracle.

    Adoption – 6 Months Later

    Should I say, “six months already?!” or “it’s only been six months?!” I think the latter is more true. Sofie belongs with us. She always has. She is a part of us and I can’t imagine life with out her. We had our first adoption check up on Tuesday with a social worker from the agency. It went well. Jon keeps making fun of me because I cleaned my house like I had OCD for the social worker to inspect and she didn’t even look around! She just asked questions about Sofie’s development. I’m just going to talk for a moment about my experience and feelings over the past 6 months. I’ll give you an update on Sofie around the 15th when she has actually been home for 6 full months.

    In looking over the past 6 months, I’ve learned a lot, changed, grown, been enlightened and developed a whole list of new worries and personal issues 🙂 Adoption is amazing but so very hard, and I say this thinking that I have had it pretty easy. So many people thought we were choosing the hard road because Sofie has Down Syndrome. This is just not the case. If anything her DS, innocence, love and openness has made this transition easier on everyone.

    I remember meeting her for the first time and been so completely enamored with the frail little bird that cautiously explored and ate up our attention. When we got home, things got real. The first two months were hard. So. Very. Hard. I was sleep deprived, most new parents are, and felt very alone. I was walking down a road very little people had any experience with. No one could give me the answers that I needed and I discredited those that tried because of their inexperience. I didn’t know how to separate Sofie’s orphanage/adoption issues from her natural delays with having DS. Even the doctors and professionals we saw seemed to dismiss possible adoption issues and figured everything had to do with delays associated with DS.

    I remember, in those first few weeks, wondering what I had done… I felt “I had brought violence in to my home”. Sofie hit, pulled hair, threw things and scratched to the point where she made me cry from pain a few times. I saw no end. No cure to the behavior. I was scared for the harm that the “violence” would bring to Livi and I wondered how much I could take before I lashed out. It was a dark few weeks.

    Thankfully, that’s all it was. A few weeks. One day, I began to realize how much less Sofie was pulling hair and throwing things. She was relaxing. Realizing we were safe. She doesn’t have to defend against or attack us. I saw hope again! Once we all made it through those first two months of no sleep, panic and distress, we started finding solutions and relaxing. I’ve said it before… we LITERALLY saw Sofie’s entire being relax and come out of the tight little shell it was trapped in.

    I had the maternal instinct early on that the issues Sofie was facing had way more to do with the neglect and trauma she experienced in the orphanage setting rather than DS, so I approached them all like that. I understood her difficulty going to sleep as this was the first time she had been out of the walls of the orphanage and she was too scared to relax and sleep. I saw her hitting as the only defense she knew how to use against other children and adults. I saw her quiet, calmness in new overstimulating situations as her inability to cope because she had never been stimulated in the orphanage. She just shut down and inward. It was so sad to see but followed her lead, tried to give her the support she needed, and stayed close.

    It’a  been a hard balance to give Sofie the extra attention she needed and give Livi the attention that she needed.  I still struggle with this balance. Livi goes through moments still of wanting to be babied like Sofie. Livi regressed in her own development when we first brought Sofie home and it took a frustrating few months to get a handle on proper toileting again! Bedtime for Livi is still a battle. And don’t even get me started on the attitude! I can’t blame that on bringing Sofie home though 🙂

    With Sofie  it is hard to know how much to push her independence and how much to still baby her for attachment reasons. She doesn’t love being babied but giving her independence usually ends in such a huge mess! She has begun attaching to us but is still very non-discriminate about who else she goes to. She will come back to Jon and I but rarely looks for us in a crowd. She does recognizes us and is happy to see us though. She comes to us for nurturing and occasionally asks for us if she is with some one else for a few minutes. We still have only left her for a few minutes at a time with her Marmee and one evening at Christmas with my sister. Looking forward to a date night one day!

    I love my girls. I love the journeys I have been on with both of them. I feel pretty confident most of the time with parenting Livi. Like I know what I am doing… at least to a point. With Sofie, I feel like I am in such new waters. Most of the time, she is just my darling daughter. I see her more as an 18 month old more than a three year old. I think she is somewhere between 12 – 18 months developmentally. I don’t think about her being adopted or worry about her having Down Syndrome… except in rare moments.

    I find those moments happen more when I’m in public or talking to acquaintances or strangers about my family. I am so proud of my family. All of them and their unique journeys and gifts. But people don’t understand us… or at least me. When I get asked how old Sofie is, I usually answer with the truth, “She’s actually 3.” Then I feel like I need to explain why she is so small or enlighten them about certain unattached behaviors they are commenting on. I hate people thinking that she is so tiny just because she has DS. She was malnourished and neglected so she didn’t grow. Or that she is so quiet and calm in new surroundings because she is an angel. She is actually emotionally shutting down and inwardly freaking out because she can’t process everything and she’s scared. And I’d hate for people to think that hitting, rocking, throwing, eating issues, being overly friendly and explorative with new people and having unattached issues are typical for people with DS. These all stem from being in an institution for over 3 years.

    I want people to know her story, our story, but I don’t like myself always telling people that she was adopted. Does this make sense? I don’t want her or Livi to grow up hearing me tell everyone she was adopted. That could just cause a bunch of other issues. Maybe this is just the stage that I am walking through and it is a good thing I’m going through it while she is still young. As she grows and attaches, I hope I won’t feel the need to explain her size and different behaviors. I also hope people won’t assume things just because she has DS. This is completely my issue and I don’t really know where it is coming from. Do I feel extra defensive and protective for some reason? Am I feeling judged and guarded?   Why? I generally don’t worry about what other’s think to much.

    Although this journey has been so difficult, there are immeasurable things to celebrate! It’s been two years since we started this journey to Sofie and now we get to celebrate her being home with us for six months already! I’ll fill you in on all the things I celebrate about our little monkey in the next post and hopefully have some commemorative pictures for you!