Category Archives: Adoption

Homestudy?

A lot of people have asked us about our homestudy– what it is, what we have to do, etc. The purpose of a homestudy is to get a homestudy report, to mail with all of the rest of your paperwork to the country that you are adopting from. The report tells about your family, why you will be good adoptive parents, who you should adopt, etc.

To do a homestudy, you have to find a licensed social worker, licensed in home studies that is. When I was  searching for our social worker, it was not easy! This is partly because I was looking the Kansas City area, and social workers are licensed by state, so I would find some licensed in Missouri and not in Kansas. But, anyways, I asked potential social workers lots of questions BEFORE picking one. About our ages, length of marriage, finances, all of that, to check and see if any of it would be a problem for her.

Once I picked someone, the first thing that she did was mail us oodles of paperwork, some of it which needed to be completed before we met with her at all. What we needed to get done before we met her: application to work with her, financial sheet & autobiographies for both of us. Other paperwork included: info for reference letters, medical forms, HR letters, etc.

We had to write our autobiographies. There were lots of questions (four pages worth) to work with. Questions about our family of origin, schooling, childhood, spirituality, spouse, pets, EVERYTHING. My autobiography was like 6 or 8 pages… I think Aaron’s was 4.

I can’t tell you much about the financial info we had to fill out– Aaron did that all. But, it was mostly budget, etc.

Now that we had the preliminary stuff done, we mailed it all back to her and then scheduled our first meeting. And in the meantime, I started bugging everyone for reference letters.

Our first meeting was two hours, it was a lot of listening to her speak about adoption. The challenges. Things to consider. Honestly, it was nothing new, because I have read SO MUCH– books, articles online, blogs, accounts from parents, even corresponding with adoptive parents. And, I highly recommend that if you ever decide to adopt. READ EVERYTHING. It was nice to sit there and have everything reinforced, not hearing it from the first time and trying to commit it to memory.

We have three more meetings with her. Two in her office and one in our house. She told us it will be more questions for us. Judging by the few questions that she did ask, I expect it is very therapist-style, if you know what I mean. The few questions that she asked us reminded me of our pre-martial counseling which we did. Questions like: “What did your parents do that you liked? What would you change for your own parenting style?” “Why do you want to have children? What do you enjoy about children?” “What made you decide to pursue adoption?”

I hope that I am not wrong in saying this, but I am not too stressed about the homestudy. Not TOO stressed. I don’t think it is so much a test of whether you are fit as it is an educational experience about how adoption works and to get us thinking about the questions which we need to ask before we will bring children home. I do think it is a lot like pre-marital counseling, but in the end, there is a report that gets written up on your adoption & sent to the children’s country.

I hope this helps shed light on the homestudy, and what we’ve been up to lately.

Photos

I have been so busy, with all of the things I have to do– things for the home study, just got all of our dossier documents, etc. In the midst of all of this craziness, I got an email from Bethany at Positively Orphaned, who confirmed how sweet Ilya is AND sent me more photos of him. He is smiling in every one. I am so grateful for them; here are a couple…

Fundraisers

The first of our fundraisers is a common adoption one, JustLove coffee. JustLove Coffee is all fair trade coffee and for each bag someone purchases from our link, we get $5 towards our adoption! Pretty awesome, right?

http://www.justlovecoffee.com/IlyaandErika

The second fundraiser that we’re doing is something unique to us and something that I am really excited about… Ukraine love t-shirts! The t-shirts come in standard men’s t-shirts sizes S-XL, women’s fitted t-shirts sizes S-XL, youth t-shirts S-XL, a few different options for toddler shirts (18mo-5T) and infant bodysuits 0-18mo. They come in a variety of colors and I can print almost any color ink on them… I have everything from cookie monster blue to stainless steel silver to wedding ivory.

I am also happy to personalize the t-shirts for you for $5… by moving the heart, adding text or even featuring a different country.  I am doing all of the printing in my own home… I screenprint around a thousand napkins a week, so screenprinting is not something new to me. The t-shirts are heat-set so they are fine in the washer and dryer.

To check out the t-shirt options, visit my etsy store: http://www.etsy.com/shop/thepaperhat?section_id=7089346

Introducing…

Ilya!!!

When we first found out that we were not going to be able to adopt Quinn, I wasn’t sure about adopting another little boy… maybe we should just adopt Erika? None of the little boys in Erika’s orphanage seemed like our little boy. Sure, some of them were very similar to Quinn– just a few months apart in age, brown hair, blue eyes and all of them were absolutely adorable. Andrea at RR told me that she was going to update the website and I checked it before I went to bed. Some new little boys, but still the same– none felt right.

Then, the next morning, when I got up, I saw Ilya! What a sweet smile. I love that he is smiling in his photo… so many of the kids are not.

Ilya is only three and a half… his birthday is in January. So a bit older than Erika. Hopefully enough older that they won’t be in the same class and they won’t have all the same friends. But close enough in age that they can be good friends.

Worn Out

This has been a long week…

On Monday, we got a new foster dog. He is a handful. He barks and whines at night, whenever we crate him. He can literally bark for HOURS. He can also break out of his crate. I took him for a 1.5-2 mile bike ride one day and a 4-4.5 mile bike ride another and he still barked and whined when we got home.

On Wednesday, we found out about Quinn.

On Thursday (today), I had a sick dog who would not eat her breakfast and got sick in the house (let’s just leave it at that). Late this afternoon, we had animal control come to our house. Not because of all of the barking. Or because we have four dogs. But because one of our dogs is thin. I will give them that… she IS thin, but she is needs-to-put-on-a-few-pounds thing, NOT about-to-die-because-no-one-feeds-her thin. Yes, she looks very thin in comparison to the average dog, because the average dog is FAT. This girl runs for hours a day. I am certain that one of our neighbors called it in, without talking to us first. We must take her to the vet to have her tested for “diseases causing thinness”. Money that we will waste. I don’t think it is too likely that my dog who ran all weekend, and went on a four mile off-leash bike ride yesterday, where she ran way more than we biked, is sick. She just lovvvves running.

To be positive though, everyone has been really supportive. Several people listened to my rants about animal control. I’ve talked to lots of people about Quinn and considering a new little boy. There is a chance that we will be adopting a different little boy and when we figure that all out, I’ll let you know… I also have a cool fundraiser idea that I am working on and hopefully will be letting you know about soon…