Thank you all so much for sharing your generosity with us. We are on the brink of meeting our Day 3: $3,000 goal of our $30,000 adoption costs. It makes our dream of bringing home a baby in need of a family seem just a little bit more real. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to help us start this Next Chapter.
Onward to the blog post. Here's the title of this blog post again: "When's the Baby Due?" Have you re-read the blog title? Yes? Ok.
Well, the short answer is: we have no idea. End of blog post.
Onward to the blog post. Here's the title of this blog post again: "When's the Baby Due?" Have you re-read the blog title? Yes? Ok.
Well, the short answer is: we have no idea. End of blog post.
Ok, ok. Well - there are timelines and statistics that can give us a bit of an idea of the earliest we might be looking at bringing a new family member into our home. It includes all sorts of new lingo that we are just now learning ourselves. So below I have the rough timeline and belower I have given definitions of all this adoption vocabulary:
The Schedule
July 2015 - October 2015: Homestudy Process
November 2015: Finalize our Cradle profile page
December 2015 - ?: We are listed as potential adoptive parents
...And now for the explanatory adoption vocabulary list.
What's a "homestudy"?
(July 2015 - October 2015)
(July 2015 - October 2015)
A homestudy includes inspecting our home (per the term "homestudy") as well as interviews with us and our parents, the submission of a million pages of paperwork including short biographies about us and our families, and a series of classes that focus mostly on child-rearing in the context of "conspicuous families." After we complete our homestudy we are approved as foster parents.
The homestudy process is kind of like a white glove test, only it feels a bit more like what this picture implies. |
What's a "conspicuous family"?
"Conspicuous family" is a term used to describe an adoption across racial backgrounds. First and foremost, Victor and I want to have our home open to someone who needs a family. In order for us to truly let the "child come first" we are letting ourselves be more concerned about the home we make than the color of our child's skin. What is conspicuous is that the outside world will always be well aware that our child is adopted. I'll post some more about this "conspicuous family" thing later. There is a ton of research and advice about how to be this kind of family. We are going to share this information with you in-depth because it involves all of our friends and family and will help everyone make our child feel a welcome part of our lives.
Profile Page? Is that like adoption Facebook? Whaaaaaaaat?
(November 2015)
A little bit. One of the many roles that The Cradle plays in the adoption process is "matchmaker." In the most ideal scenarios, biological parents come to the Cradle to consider giving their child for adoption and The Cradle presents them with a short list of potential adoptive parents that seem a good match for the interests of the biological parents. Those biological parents are then shown the adoptive parent profile pages which include biographies (created during the homestudy process) as well as a short video the adoptive parents prepare to introduce themselves. If the biological parents pick us, we go on an awkward breakfast date with them so we can get to know one another better. If everyone agrees, we make the match. After that both sets of parents come up with a plan for the placement of the child. This includes how "open" the adoption will be. More on "open" adoptions in another post to prevent this post from becoming a straight up dictionary.
So why don't you really know when the baby is due?
(December 2015 - infinity and beyond)
Because it is up to the matchmaking and selection process made by the biological parents, we could be on the list of potential adoptive parents for a while. That means that we could be accepting a baby into our family right in December 2015, or the following December, or - God please forbid - the following following December...or even later. Last year the median wait time (which begins when the adoptive parent's profile is posted which, for us, should happen in December 2015) was 13 months, while the year prior it was nearly 18 months. And, if you can't remember what a "median" is, ask your nearest 4th grader, because it's a little well, emotionally difficult to describe that math in this context.
Faith, hope, and love (and penguin cartoons) will bring us through the wait period. It will all be more than worth it in the end. But first, we need to be able to begin the adoption process. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to help us start this Next Chapter.
And now it is time for a comfort penguin. He is placed here to offset the reality of just plain not knowing when we will bring home a baby. |