I recall past Mother's Days when my son would wake me up at 6 AM, proudly bearing the gift he created for me, thanks to a kind teacher: the macaroni pencil holder, the painted rock, the tissue papered baby food jar vase (see photo)... Now that my son is a teenager, gone are the days of handmade gifts (although thankfully the cards keep coming). On the bright side, he sleeps in until 10 AM.
But,
like all mothers, I didn’t become a mom because I thought I’d get to sleep in,
receive daily accolades or collect a hefty paycheck. That’s not to say I don’t
savor feeling extra special once a year. We do what we do because we’re blessed to have
children. My blessing was made possible because of another woman’s sacrifice. I
was lucky enough to become a mother through adoption.
Especially
on two occasions - his birthday and Mother’s Day - I think of her. She lives in
Russia and we know few things about her, but I know she must think of him and
her heart must ache. I don’t know what led to her ultimate decision and I only
venture a guess when our son asks us about it. I have not lived her life and so
I cannot know. But there came a time when she had to do what was best for him
or her or both of them and then leave the rest up to faith.
Our
journey through adoption entailed a lot of research, a pile of paperwork, and
months of preparation. And then we had to leave the rest up to faith. What a
wonderful parenting lesson to learn so early on: I can’t control everything.
Some people don’t know the gender of their child. We didn’t know the gender,
race, or age. There weren’t any conversations about whether she’d have my curly
hair or my (then) husband’s green eyes or if he’d be as creative as me or as
intelligent as him. We couldn’t put any of our DNA expectations on him.
From the get-go we had to let this child be whoever he or she was going to be.
It
was our second day in Moscow and we were anxiously awaiting the meeting with
the Ministry of Education who was in charge of international adoptions. After
waiting for over an hour, we were finally led up three flights of narrow stairs
to her cramped office. We were there with two other couples who were also
adopting children, but she said our name first. She opened the file and the
minute she said his name, Roman, I
felt he was mine. (We subsequently kept Roman as his middle name.) She pushed a
picture across the table, a small one of the day he was born five months prior.
She was telling us in Russian what the file said about him and our translator
was talking over her in English and all I wanted to do was shout, “Take us to
him!” My hand shook as I signed the papers to begin the process.
Another
hour in the car and we were at the fairly dilapidated orphanage. It was a sad
sight and I was relieved not to have the opportunity to see any of the other
children there. We sat in the director’s office with our agency liaison and one
of the other couples who was adopting a baby girl from the same orphanage. We
were nervous and didn’t say much.
Abruptly, a stout female caretaker came in carrying a baby all dressed in
pink. I assumed it was the other couple’s girl so I was wholly unprepared when
a few Russian words were hastily exchanged and then the five-month-old child
was plopped in my lap. Obviously, blue and pink don’t have the same
connotations in Russia as they do here. It was our son and my first thought
when I looked down at him was, “How did we get the most perfect baby in the
world?”
He
turned fourteen last month and of course he’s not perfect - in fact, he has several challenges - but there are often
times I think he is. We talk about his birth mother with love and gratitude. On
this Mother’s Day and every day, I send her strength. And I hope she continues
to have the faith she had that day, to know that he will always be well taken
care of and fiercely loved.
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