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Thanks to some friends who have gone through the process ahead of us
here's my adoption reading library.
I'm thinking I might as well get my master's in social work - it might be less reading! |
I've always been afraid to admit that I would like to raise a little girl. I felt that somehow by admitting I would love to have a daughter I felt as though I was being disloyal to my son.
My dad has two daughters, and I remember as a little girl wondering if he wished one of us was a boy. Not because of anything he did or said but because that's what popular culture seemed to tell me - mommy's want little girls and daddy's want little boys. But my father always assured me he loved having girls. I very clearly remember him telling me that he had always wanted daughters, that he had grown up with younger brothers and thought it would be fun to have little girls in his life for a change. I grew-up secure that my dad loved everything about his little girls - the pink, the tea parties, barbie dolls, prom dresses, etc. Once assured that he had
wanted and desired me more than any boy I never wondered if he secretly wished he had a boy to play ball with rather than a girl to play princesses. I was absolutely secure in his desire for me.
I LOVE having a boy. Not having any brothers I was incredibly excited when I learned we were having a boy-child and I would get a front-row seat into the world of men. It's been thrilling watching Landon's masculinity develop. The noises this kid can make when "driving" a truck! And never before did I know there were quite so many different varieties of tractors and construction trucks - cranes, excavators, diggers, etc. - the list is quite impressive.
But there is the part of me that lingers next to the pink tu-tus in baby Gap. And this adoption had brought all of my buried feelings about desiring a girl to the surface. Adoption is unique in that you have a choice in the gender of your child. It's a strange decision and quite honestly it felt a bit unnatural to me. I always assumed that
if we adopted we wouldn't specify the gender of our child. However, thinking about the process and actually being in the process is quite different.
Also, by
not choosing we would actually
be choosing. In Ethiopia female infants are requested more often than males, so if we were to leave the gender field blank we would most likely be placed with a boy. RJ and I were really torn-up about this decision and we spend tons of time in prayer. We also sought counsel from other adoptive parents and pastors from our church. And during this process I finally gave away to my fear and admitted that I would love to have a baby girl.
But I worried that Landon would overhear me admitting my desire. I know he's only two but what if he remembered? What if he heard me say that I would like to have a daughter and he felt less desired? Or what if my admitting to wanting a girl caused him to feel that mommy likes girls better than boys? It's amazing how negative thoughts can consume you. And then the Lord whispered in my ear:
I place desires in your heart. I know you and I love you. Do not live life and make decisions from a place of fear. If you love and cherish your son he will know it. Fear is not from Me.
Those sweet reminders from the Lord have lifted such a weight from my shoulders. We are not called to make decisions from a place of fear and worry. He has placed a desire for a daughter on my heart.
And the desire for a daughter does not in any way lessen my desire for my son. What freedom!
Once I was able to open my heart and confess my desire the decision making was so much easier. RJ and I felt a unified peace. Since the
greatest desire of our heart is for two children we have agreed to keep the gender open for two children - boys or girls.
So there could be three little boys in my future - bring it! I love dirt and baseball.
However, if the Lord only has one child for us then we feel as though a baby girl is the best fit for our family. And not just because I would like a girl but the best for RJ, Landon and our daughter as well - the best for the four of us.
What freedom I feel knowing that it's okay for me to ask the Lord for a daughter. He already knows my heart and I should not feel ashamed or fearful of my desires. He knows our family and I have absolute trust in my God. He will place the perfect little person or persons in our home. Be it Ethiopian prince or princess.
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| If we are blessed with a daughter I think this book might come in handy! |