Hair

I used to think my hair was hard to manage. I still sort of think that. I used to think that taking nearly one full day to drive to the salon and pay to have my crazy curly hair permanently straightened once every 8 months was quite the hair extravaganza. By the way it's been 8 months and I am in desperate need of another drive to such a salon. This is why none of the following pictures have me in them. My mother, sisters, and husband used to refer to my once every 8-9 month hair day as "high maintenance". My husband should be rethinking that label about now considering his hair observations of the past 8 months...which did not occur in only one trip to the salon once but about every single Saturday...a Saturday like today. Today the fastest and best hair fairy showed up at our house on Saturday sleep in day and woke up girls at 8:30 am to commence hair day (certain such persons would sleep in until 10 every day). She left at 7:30 pm. Only ONE head was accomplished all that time and the entire time (other than very quick bathroom and food breaks) was spent doing nothing but HAIR. Thinking that is some kind of record. The poor child whose head was not accomplished has stated at least 5 times that she is not going to church tomorrow. I asked her if she didn't like going to our church and if she would like to visit a different church. The answer was "no...just no church". I know that she loves going to church. So later on I got down to the nitty gritty of the issue as I was putting her to bed. The truth came out that she simply did not want to go to church without her hair day being accomplished. I told her she could pick out one of my hats or one of my headbands and she said, "ok". 


I remember being a fairly particular little girl. I remember getting a bad haircut once...actually maybe more than once. Think I am just remembering the very worst one and nothing can compare to that! Never ever give an 80's layered and feathered cut style to a 9 year old girl with already uncontrolable kinky-curly-wavy hair! Thanks alot Mom. I looked like I had a mullet with wings. Sweet Esmée darling, I totally know how you feel (because surely a mullet with wings looks worse than an afro with a cute headband right?) 


I used to think I would adopt a black child "one day". Eric and I used to talk about this "one day" and I don't ever remember "black child" referring to "little girl" and certainly the plural of that did not enter into my mind. Oh. No. It. Most. Certainly. Did. Not. And why is that? I'm pretty sure it was the hair. Actually, it was the fear of the hair. Little black boys hair...no problem right? But little black girls hair? 


Now why did I ever fear that?
This smile was totally worth the hours and hours I spent doing this precious head!


As was this one!

And this time when Daddy told her she looked very beautiful and she wanted to take her pic with Dad. 

This is cute but not at all worth it...as far as time goes.
Bonding.
Yes.
Pic with Dad.
Yes.
Time.
Um, no.
Because the hours it took were completely undone after 2 minutes spent with swings outside

This is not the before shot.
It is the after shot of 3 hours undoing what was previously done.
And don't think I am getting her to go anywhere until at least another 3 hours are spent.

This doesn't take 3 hours.
Also doesn't stay put for more than 3 hours.

This is what we do when we don't have 3 hours or even 1 hour. 

 This is what we do when we are feeling like fun people.

Fun hair might last all day but won't hold after bedtime. 

As if two little black girls heads weren't enough....

Other heads are being done constantly! 
But not by me. 
Sometimes they are being done by my friend Audrey.

Audrey's the hair fairy for the non-black skinned scalps in our house. 

While this is a common sight you see after cutting hair...
Please BEWARE

 (and please excuse us and don't think we are just super gross)...
because it is also now a common sight at all times in all rooms of our house...
Thanks to our beautiful girls.


Getting used to that.  

Oh Audrey! What shall I do without you when you leave Haiti next month?

I would rather do little black girl hair all day than deal with this picky fellow! 

Not that he would let me. 

Sometimes glow in the dark beads are necessary when the power goes out at night. 

Sometimes I just don't have this many hours and have to call the hair fairy...

This is Elita Marguerite's natural hair...to be compared to strange phenomenon below when extensions are put in by same hair fairy and don't look much different than this. 



Last weeks style...
It took one full day to do both of their heads.
I cannot take credit.
I only participated in attaching one strand and that was enough for me.
Actually this was the last two weeks style except that after one week they kept telling me how very bad their roots looked and that they needed to get it done again!
What? I paid $20 for those extensions. They better last longer than a week! 
Here is what became of the last two weeks extensions today.
And no that is not all of them.
The others are strewn all over this house and we'll be picking them off the floor for weeks to come!

This was our first experiment with extensions.

We shall see if I can get used to the aftermath or not. 

This is the poor dear who took out her extensions prematurely.
The mean hair fairy had to leave after only 11 hours of doing sisters hair!

Glad she seems happy.
Cause I'm not super happy that these "extensions" look just like her real hair only shorter and with weird straight ends that look totally unnatural.
But I told her she looks beautiful. Cause she is.
But also asked why hair fairy spent 11 hours putting in hair extensions when her hair is already this long?

I said I didn't understand.
I got a shrug.

I asked again.
Another shrug with explanation that I needed to give more money for longer extensions.

I still don't understand.
The ones that were purchased for this hairdo were 3 ft. long in the package.
Once they were secured to head they came to her shoulders.

Not as long as I thought, but longer than shown picture.
Then hairfairy decided to give them a trim.
To my horror.
But, of course it's my fault that I didn't pay for the longer ones. 

11 hours and many, many movies later.

I have a long history with hair. Not just my own hair. My mother you see (as evidenced by my mullet with wings) has no idea how to do the hair thing. She is the most wonderful mother who is good at many things. But hair is just not one of them. Dear mom has had the same exact hairstyle for at least the past 34 years I have been alive. My late grandmother (her mother in law) would claim many more years which is probably the reason mom's hairstyle never changed. 

I am the oldest of five children (another explanation of why mom had no time for hair). Three of the other children are girls as well. I taught myself how to french braid on my cornsilk cabbage patch kid Genevieve's hair at the age of seven. My sisters would benefit from these lessons as well. I made sure they never had mullets with wings. I cried for days when Erin let a friend buzz her head like a boy at the age of four. I put a bow or bonnet in Erin's hair every day (she would let me) until it grew out. I burned Eleisha's forehead with the curling iron more times that she would care to remember. I also cried when mother decided to take Eleisha to the salon without my consult (when I was 10) and give her a poodle perm that was almost as bad as my winged mullet. This tragedy happened the day mom went into labor with my baby sister Emilee. Emilee was my prize and took much attention away from poodle perm. Nothing bad would ever happen to her hair. I would make sure of it! Emilee was born with the most beautiful hair I had longed for all my life. She was my real live doll. I brushed, and braided, and fluffed to my hearts content. It stayed beautiful...and sometimes she still lets me braid it. 

All that to say...some people ask me how I know how to do hair being previously a mom of only two boys?
Now you know how. 
But speaking of the boys...
How did they end up with fairly straight easy to manage hair when both Eric and I have curly unmanageable hair? I don't know other than that I prayed for that before they were in my belly. Perhaps God was having mercy on me since only He knew what was to come. However, the history of hair did not let me rest just because my boys have easy to do hair. Oh. No. It. Did. Not. 
Just ask anyone who knew us during this stage of life!



Do you see that "thing" in little Evan's hand?
Not the pacifier.
The other hand.

Here he has TWO of those "things".
This was a common sight in our house back in those days too.
But instead of pieces of hair, it was hairpieces all over the house!

A little background here. Evan had a hair fettish. He loved to hold my hair since he was one day old. He would not go to sleep unless my hair was hanging over his crib and he could fondle it. His crib was lowered with age and my hair simply was not long enough. This was an "issue" for our bonding. 


But it was actually Ethan that started with the hair business. 


More background. One day Ethan and I were shopping in one of the many Dallas, TX Walgreens stores and I ran into a friend. We struck up a conversation in the personal care isle. Baby Ethan was being oh so good while sitting in the shopping cart during our lengthy chat and I later found out why. I had parked shopping cart right next to the hair accessories where lo and behold there was a "hairpiece" that immediately caught my #1 hair loving baby's eye. He reached for it and was successful. By the time I realized that what was keeping him quiet was not a needed nap, the hairpiece was not returnable to the shelf. That was the first hairpiece. It cost $13 at Walgreens. It was the last of its kind for Ethan, but was a true gem of a find because its rememberance saved my head when it came to Evan. The Ebony Fashion black hair store run by the Chinese couple in Mexia, TX was also a gem of a find. The hairpieces as seen in pictures above and below only cost 99 cents at the Ebony Fashion. I stocked up weekly. And people thought I was crazy when I said I was moving to Haiti!
One day the Chinese man asked me why I needed so many of these hair pieces when he never saw me wearing any of them? Hahahahaha! I told him they were not for me. He looked confused. Then I said, "They are for my baby"! More confusion followed.
One day I took Evan in with me to pick out his own hairpiece after I told him they had run out of mommy's brown hair so he could see for himself and stop throwing a fit about it. Chinese man no longer confused after that. Well, maybe still confused. But he seemed more amused by crazy white people and what they let their kids play with. Surely I'm not the only one who allowed her babies oh so strange vices? Right? Please tell me I'm not the only one. 


So one day we were at toddler playgroup. I see postings on Facebook and hear my sister talk about such things these days and remember, "Oh yeah. I used to live in a cookie cutter neighborhood and do that too." But it seems like another lifetime ago. Babies grow up too fast. Maybe that's a good thing in Evan's case. Tangent. Back to toddler playgroup. A new family had moved to the neighborhood and mom had not yet been introduced to Evan's hairpiece. I rushed out when she informed me my son was playing with a dead squirrel. I arrived at the dreaded scene and said out loud, "Oh that? It's ok. It's just his hairpiece".



Fear of little black girls hair? So over. 

God is so good.
When I don't understand
the why?
the what the?
the will my child ever be normal?
I will remember the days of the hairpiece were indeed preparing me for today! 

And today is preparing us for tomorrow! 
When life gets hairy...we will remember!


--------------------

The sequel...
one week later. 

Hairfairy returns. 
Esmée is happy.
Last weeks purchased hair extensions are magically much longer this time around.
Mom is happy.
The End...(hopefully) for at least a month!


We Know He Hears Us!


Back in September we posted the following list. Praise the Lord we have been able to cross off some pretty significant steps since then!  We will continue to choose to dwell on all God has done to get us to this point and pray for the remaining steps to be completed. We can never say enough thank you's to all our dear friends, family, and even those we have never met who have prayed with us in this process the past two years. Please choose to praise the name of Jesus with us! Prayer request for what is left at the bottom of the list! Our biggest praise is that our girls are now our legal daughters and that they are now at home with us in Haiti! Praise be to God for this unspeakable gift! 

We know He hears us!

BASIC OVERVIEW OF HAITI ADOPTION PROCESS
Get your homestudy done.
Notarize documents for your adoption package to be sent to Haiti.
Send notarized documents to Secretary of State to be authenticated.
Get notarized, authenticated documents translated into French.
Send I-600A and supporting documents to USCIS.
Send French and English documents (adoption package) to Haitian Consulate to be legalized.
Send your adoption package to Haiti.
Send first payment of Haiti adoption fee to Haiti to begin adoption process of a particular child.
Orphanage director compiles child’s documents.
Haitian lawyer reviews adoptive parents’ and child’s file.
File enters IBESR (the social services dept of Haiti).
IBESR director approves this adoption. 

Send 2nd/final payment of Haiti adoption fee after exiting IBESR.

Haitian court appearance before the judge who also has to approve the adoption.

Some people (like us because we have bio kids) have to get "Presidential Dispensations"...meaning the President of Haiti has to sign our waiver allowing us to adopt and continue the process.
Dossier goes to Parquet Office  (or Commissary)
a.  Homologation
b.
Parquet
c.
Justice Palace
d.
Exequature
e.
Civil Register
f.
Authorization for signature of Adoption Decree
g.
Parquet Legalization  (This is the  second “First Legalization”)
More Courts
a.
Ministry of Justice (Second Legalization)
b.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Third Legalization)
c.
Attestation of Signatures on Adoption Decree

Archives 
(THIS IS WHERE WE ARE NOW...MARCH 2012)

Immigration submits papers to Minister of Interior to get approval to make child’s Haitian passport.

Minister of Interior gives passport authorization to Immigration.

Immigration prints passport.

DHS 
Adoptive Parent files I-600
DHS interviews birth parents 
We file more USCIS forms (File I-864W, recent Employment letter, past 3 years tax returns, etc. to prove our adopted child will not become a public charge.)


US Embassy approves visa application.

US Embassy prints child’s US visa.

The good news (out of the bad news on the last post) is that we will not have to go through the Haitian system of IBESR, etc. once again to obtain the documents the U.S. Embassy is requiring to approve visas for our girls. We have been told that the Haitian father (the one that failed the DNA test) will have to go to court (once again) in order to now obtain documents stating he was the "legal guardian" instead of the father and at least 4 other valid witnesses must attest to this as well. This just needs to get done and then we must show these documents to the U.S. Embassy. The fact that he was the father listed on the paperwork in no way undoes anything already completed in our adoption process. We had to do this "guardianship" paperwork for Marguerite through her aunt that relinquished her to an orphanage 8 years ago, so we are somewhat familiar with this process. The Embassy is also requiring further "proof" of Marguerite's mother's death and a baptismal certificate on Marguerite. So our first prayer request is that this new required paperwork for each of our girls will get done as quickly as possible. We are praying that these things can be accomplished by the time we are out of the Minister of Interior and that the visas will then be approved so we can bring the girls to the states (and once we touchdown in Miami they will be U.S. citizens!). The U.S. Embassy has given us an extension deadline of June 4th, 2012. Our HUGE prayer request is that we will be able to come home to the states as a family of six in mid June (preferably on June 12th returning with home with our 4 friends visiting from our hometown who already have their ticktes returning on that day). That would be just the best! Please pray for best! We know God's timing is always best and we are trusting His timing for the completion of all these things! 

"Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, 
that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. 
And if we know that He hears us, 
whatever we ask, 
we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him." 
1 John 5:14-15

"But certianly God has heard me;
He has attended to the voice of my prayer. 
Blessed be God,
Who has not turned away my prayer,
Nor His mercy from me!"
Psalm 66: 19-20

Never Once

We received some discouraging news regarding our adoption process on Friday. I opened my e-mail Friday night to find a report from the U.S. Embassy in Haiti saying that the DNA test results did not confirm the parental relationship between the birth father and adoptive child and that because of this they were unable to make a favorable determination as to her orphan status at this time. Although it is now clear that because her mother is dead and the man married to her mother who is on her birth certificate is not found to be her father, that she has no one and is in every way a true orphan. Unfortunately, true orphans are often harder to adopt than those who have been relinquished for adoption by their parents or due to abandonment. At least on the Haiti side of the paperwork. The U.S. side (immigration) doesn't like to see any parents involved in the process. But in our case even though there are no living or eligible parents (since both our girls mother's are deceased and neither mother was married to the now unknown birth fathers), we would have to go back through the Haiti system to get the paperwork the U.S. wants to see in order for immigration to happen. And getting that paperwork done on the Haiti side is what has taken the past two years to accomplish. So to say the past few days have been difficult to "be anxious for nothing" is an understatement. Haiti has already approved our adoptions. Pretty much the only thing we had left in our process was to gain approval for the passorts and visas to be issued. This type of thing has happened to friends of ours adopting in other countries as well. You can get all the way through another countries long and difficult process (who don't want to adopt out their children) and then have trouble with our own country granting us permission to bring the kids home. It is such. a. mess. There are unanswered questions and we are patiently waiting and seeking out those answers at this time. There are options...just not any we are super excited about pursuing. We are shaken. We could choose to be angry with those processing our adoptions, with our own U.S. government, with UNICEF who do their very best to make adoption impossible, with the overall anti-adoption system, with time lost, and most of all with the injustice of keeping children from the families that love them. But we knew getting into this that  it was a battle. And we know that this battle "is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places". This fight is not against human beings. There are spiritual forces against us. And then there is our great and faithful God who calls us to fight His battle. This is His battle. He has always been faithful to us. Sometimes we do not understand His ways, but we trust His ways. His ways are higher than ours. His plan is better than ours. We can grieve our futile plans all we want, but every victory is His. We will remember all He has done to get us to this time and place. We will remember that He has never once left our side. 


"Never Once"

Standing on this mountaintop looking just how far we’ve come 
Knowing that for every step, You were with us

Kneeling on this battle ground seeing just how much You’ve done
Knowing every victory was Your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way but with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say...

Never once did we ever walk alone
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Kneeling on this battle ground seeing just how much You’ve done
Knowing every victory was Your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way but with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say

Never once did we ever walk alone 
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Scars and struggles on the way but with joy our hearts can say
Never once did we ever walk alone
Carried by Your constant grace held within Your perfect peace
Never once, no, we never walk alone

Never once did we ever walk alone 
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Every step we are breathing in Your grace 
Evermore we’ll be breathing out Your praise
You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Standing in church yesterday hand in hand in between my daughters, softly singing the words of this song with tears in our eyes...this was God's gentle reminder to dwell on His faithfulness. This is His battle. These are His children. And never once will He let them go. 

Please pray for us now. We would also like to ask for prayer for our family members that are also facing much discouragement at this time. My sister Eleisha is having her second surgery to try to keep her baby this Wednesday morning. It is a risky surgery this late in the pregnancy. Eleisha's marriage is also a serious matter of prayer. Please pray for wisdom, strength, and peace for her during this difficult time. Please pray for my brother in law to be truly repentant and reconciled to his family. Pray for protection over the hearts of our little nieces as well.
My sister Erin and her husband Jesse (whom we lived with for a few months before moving to Haiti) have been facing many struggles as they seek to love and care for the children God has placed in their home through foster care. They have experienced an incredible amount of grief in watching the children they love (and hoped to be able to adopt) being crushed by the system that in no way has sought the best interest of the children. Please pray for God's sovereign protection over the two little ones currently in their care and for the grace to get through each day for Erin and Jesse. Please also pray that God will soon give them a child of their own either through conception or adoption. It is so hard to be far away when your family is grieving. This is one reason why the latest news on our adoptions is so discouraging. We were really hoping to be able to travel home in June to be with family and have time to obtain our girls U.S. passports before we needed to return to Haiti in August. This now looks less likely. But once again, we know that His plans are better than ours. And never once have His plans not turned out for our benefit...even though we may have to endure suffering and pain to discover that benefit...the joy of knowing Him more. Never once. We pray that all these things will be a testimony to the watching world that "in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us". We did nothing to deserve His  love. We can do nothing to earn His love. He suffered for us. He first loved us. Can we expect that we shouldn't have to suffer for His namesake? Pray that we will suffer well and never once fail to remember what He has suffered to adopt us. Will you remember that with us today?

Ta Comes to Haiti!

Whoops! I have tried to post at least once a month since the start of this blog but just totally missed the month of February! I meant to post this two days ago, but our full house won over my blogging intentions. One reason for the lack of blogging is that I've been spending that time with our many visitors. We have had several friends and family come to stay with us during January and February. 


Three members of the Bonacquisti family blessed our lives with their presence for two weeks in January. Jeremy and his wife Tamara were facebook friends and a fellow adoptive family that we connected with a year before our move to Haiti. They helped start and run a clinic in the countryside and have made many trips to Haiti (spending most of the last year here). They have quite the adoption testimony and we have bonded over the difficulties shared in the long journey to bring our kids home. Their 13 year old Haitian daughter Isemelda (who we affectionately call "Lala"...reminding me of my sweet baby niece Talia whose nickname is also Lala) was such a joy to have around the house. I felt like she was here just for me as it lessened the pain of not having our girls with us during this time (after getting used to them being around during the Christmas holidays). We were very encouraged by Lala's amazing fluency in English and to see how well she has bonded to her adoptive family. She also amazed us with her knowlege of Haiti geography as we could go anywhere with her and never get lost! Our boys really enjoyed having Christian to play with as well! We praise the Lord for word just yesterday that Lala has received her I-600 approval and that they should be able to take her home to Illinois sometime next week! We are so, so happy for them! 

We left the Bonacquisti's for our Quisqueya staff retreat weekend at the beach where we enjoyed time with our boys, Haiti missionary friends, and our retreat speakers who are missionaries in Quito, Equador. We returned after a full weekend to get ready for our next house guest arriving on Monday. 

We first met the Roberts family at an "If You Were Mine" adoption training seminar two years ago. They are from our neck of the woods in Texas and we were matched with our adoptive children (from the same orphanage) around the same time. Dean Roberts was with me on my very first trip to Haiti in April of 2010. Melissa was on my second trip (Eric's 1st) in June of 2010. This time Melissa came to Haiti with their 11 year old daughter Natalie and they were able to stay with us! Their adoptive children arrived on Tuesday morning and we had the most precious time with them all! Once again (aside from having the fellowship of my sweet friend) I felt this time was God's mercy in the grief of missing my girls. Melissa was overjoyed at having the chance to bond with her adoptive children in a home environment outside the orphanage and seeing another side to life in Haiti. Please pray for the Roberts family and their adoption process that has been held in IBESR with no progress for the past 10 months. This is extremely hard. There are other families like the Roberts both at our girls orphanage and adopting elsewhere in Haiti who share this same hardship. Once again, please pray. Pray for those processing adoptions and the officials who govern this system in Haiti as well. 

Next up was our long awaited visit from my mother Beverlee whom her grandkids lovingly call "Ta". The name "Ta" is short for "Safta" which is the Hebrew word for grandma. The story behind the name goes like this. When I was a little girl we lived in Jerusalem, Israel. I went to a Hebrew speaking pre-school and called my mom "Ima" and my dad "Abba" like all the other children. Skip ahead about 23 years and I'm near ready to present my parents with their first grandchild. I kept getting cards at my umpteen baby showers from my mother signed "Ima". I was like, "ok, so if you want your grandma name to be Hebrew, then what is the Hebrew word for grandma?" Mom wrinkled her nose up and said, "Safta". I said, "then Safta you shall be"! So my parents are Saba (meaning "grandpa") and Safta. But when our Ethan (1st grandchild) was learning to talk he couldn't say Saba and Safta so he just shortened the names to "Ba" and "Ta". The names stuck and every grandchild that has followed has called them Ba and Ta. These names seem so fitting and natural to our family now that we sometimes forget they aren't common grandparent names...until we have to explain why we call them that to their adopted grandaughters. We thought the reason our girls giggled whenever they called their grandparents "Ba" and "Ta" was simply that they were unusual and silly names. What we didn't know until a few months ago was that the words "ba" and "ta" are actual words with actual meanings in Creole. And the funny thing is that the meanings totally fit with the personalities of their grandparents who share those names! Ba in Creole is a form of the verb "bay" meaning "to give". If you know my dad, you know that he loves to give gifts to his children and grandchildren. Ta in Creole means...are you ready for this..."late". My mom will never live this one down as she is usually and notoriously late! However, on this long awaited day our dearest Ta was not late. Her plane was right on time and we were all very ready to have her with us. This was the girls first time meeting their Ta! It was also our school spring break (due to Mardi Gras otherwise known as Carnaval in Haiti) so we all had the week free to take Ta to our favorite spots in Haiti. Below are some pictures from our special time! 

The day Ta left we had more friends come to stay! The King family whom we knew from when we lived in Mexia, Texas four years ago (Chris, Tracy, and their two oldest kids Carter and Kynlee) had already been in Haiti for nearly a week and spent the last part of their trip with us...lucky us! We expect to see them again very soon...Lord willing! Please pray for provision as the Lord seems to be leading their family this direction! Whohoo! Whose next?


4 grandkids waiting outside the Port au Prince airport ready to catch sight of their Ta. 

Ta is here!

Long awaited hugs!

Ta brought lots of goodies!

The girls spent the next hour modeling their new outfits for us!

Elita Marguerite proudly showed Ta how well she is reading both in Creole and in English!

We took Ta to the beautiful land of Belot.
It was Elita and Esmée's first time to visit the mountaintop too!

We had a picnic lunch at the top of the mountain with the Oostland's whose family was visiting from Holland. 

We thank you Lord for the ability and freedom to run and breathe the clean mountain air...

...and spend time with our Ta!


After our time at the top of the mountain we ventured down to make a stop at the Baptist Mission.
We were blessed to spend time with Wallace and Eleanor Turnbull who founded the Baptist Mission. They have been missionaries in Haiti for 60 years and wrote the books we have been using to learn Creole.We discovered that the Turnbull's only live about a mile from my parents in Lynchburg, Virginia and work with Haitian students at Liberty University where my father is a professor! My mother was very excited to talk with them about this program and find that they share many of the same dear friends. We had a wonderful time visiting with the Turbull's and learning from their many years of wisdom in Haiti where they still spend much of their time.


Mom might not like me posting this photo, but I just had to record this! Our boys and girls took turns sleeping with Ta each night. The girls had a really special time bonding with their grandmother for the first time. 

And there is no better place to bond than the beach! 

We were invited by a new friend who lives beachside to come and hang out with her family. We much enjoyed spending time with Heather's family including her many, many children....which Ta loved getting her hands on!

We visited an orphanage nearby that our friend Heather started.
Ta loved holding the precious babies there too!


More fun in the sun...

...with those we love!

Mom said, "I think this is one of the most beautiful places I have ever been". And if you happen to know my mother then you know she has been to A LOT of places! I have to agree. There are some places in Haiti that are the most beautiful I have ever been to too!

And the morning after we returned from the beach, this is what I found when I woke up. Ta hired these massage therapists who were desperate to earn a trip to the toy store.
(I'm sure she won't like this posting either...but I can't resist!)

Surely she won't mind me posting this one of my beautiful mother and my school bound boys!

Saying bittersweet goodbyes the morning Ta has to go.

Lord willing we will see Ta again very soon.
The girls seemed worried about the next time they will see their Ta and long for the day they will get on the big airplane as well. 


Please continue to pray with us for the day we can fly away together!

Remember, you can always come see us too!