Thursday, April 28, 2011

Moses Update

Have you ever noticed with adoption blogs that people really don't post as frequently once their child is home? I definitely fall into that camp. Working full time and being a mom is a busy life. I have a lot less time for reflection and lot less time for blogging. I'm hoping to start documenting more of our family experiences this summer.

Here is our latest update...
  1. Our papers were submitted to the Ethiopian court on March 17th (St. Patrick's Day).
  2. We received our court date on April 18th. AMAZING! We got this news not long after announcements that Ethiopia may reduce adoptions by 90%. Our actual court date is May 30th (Memorial Day will have a new meaning for us). Daniel will leave Wednesday, May 25th and return Tuesday, May 31st.
  3. We will hopefully get an embassy date 6 to 8 weeks after May 30th.

Recent family photos



Friday, January 7, 2011

URGENT Request

Many of you have been a part of our adoption story in some way. Some of you donated your time, some donated your gifts, some of you encouraged us, and some of you financially supported us through our adoption journey. Our story isn't finished yet. Moses, the 1st boy we were adopting from Ethiopia, is now available for adoption (this is a miracle). We need $14,000 dollars in the next month in order to bring our 16 month old son home. We are applying for grants and no interest adoption loans. We would also love any additional financial support. Thank you for being a part of our lives!

Daniel, Abby, Asher, and Moses

Here is how to donate to our adoption:

Online
Go to http://www.christianworldfoundation.org/home.htm
Click on Donate Now
Then under "specify donation":
Select general fund and enter donation amount
Move on to the OPTIONAL section and select "CWA Family". Write Daniel and Abby Umlauf so CWA knows where to apply the donation.
*You will receive an automated receipt for the donation. The receipt will not show our name, as it must be received into the general fund of the Foundation.

Check
Make check out to Christian World Foundation, noting our name on the memo line (Daniel and Abby Umlauf).
*You will receive a receipt via US mail (this will not show our name on the receipt).

Address:
Christian World Foundation
777 South Allen Road
Flat Rock, NC 28731


Christian World Foundation's statement on donations:
"Even though, by law, these funds are received as open donations, a request is made by our Asst. Executive Director to the Board of Directors for any monies marked for client donations. There has never been a time that the board has refused a request for these funds, so please assure your donors that these funds will be marked for your adoption expenses."

Monday, December 13, 2010

Hello again...... Come Home Moses!!!

We officially started our next adoption today. We submitted an application with CWA again. We are getting everything ready in case Moses can come home!!! His region is now open and CWA is just waiting on his regional birth certificate. He can be scheduled for a court date once they receive this next paper. We still feel he is our son and we want to do everything we can to bring him home. Our biggest obstacle is finances right now but I really trust God with this (this phrase used to annoy me but things have changed after I saw how everything came together perfectly with our last adoption.) I can't believe I may finally hold this little boy that I've thought about for over a year.

Asher is ready for a brother!

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Goodbye

I've decided to stop using my blog for now on updates on our life with Asher. I have a Facebook page where people can follow Asher's story. Just type in Asher Umlauf in the search box. I have a pretty busy year ahead of me and Facebook is much more efficient for updating pictures, videos, and short informational blurbs.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Why did I stay in Ethiopia after our court trip?

video
I walked into the transition home on the 2nd day and saw Asher like this. We went straight to the hospital. He had a fever of over 104 and his white blood cell count was at 28,500 and should have been around 7,000. He ended up having pneumonia. Poor little guy. I'm so thankful we were able to stay with him.

Friday, August 27, 2010

International Adoption: From a Broken Bond to an Instant Bond

Great article about international adoption.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/26/AR2010082605232.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

By Michael Gerson


Friday, August 27, 2010
Scott Simon -- the sonorous voice of NPR's "Weekend Edition" -- has written a short, tender book about the two most important people in the world. At least to him. "Baby, We Were Meant for Each Other" recounts the arrival of his two daughters, Elise and Lina, from China, while telling the stories of other families changed by adoption.


Simon describes himself as skeptical of transcendence but as taking part in a miracle. "My wife and I," he says, "knew that Elise and Lina were our babies from the moment we received their postage-stamp portraits. Logically, I know that's not possible. But I also know that's how my heart, mind and body . . . reacted to their pictures. . . . I would take the photo out of my wallet in the weeks before we left to get each of our girls and hold it against my lips to whisper, 'We're coming, baby.' "


It is an unexpected form of human affection -- meeting an unrelated stranger and, within moments, being willing to care for her, even to die for her. The relationship results from a broken bond but creates ties as strong as genetics, stronger than race or tribe. It is a particularly generous kind of parental love that embraces a life one did not give.


International adoption has its critics, who allege a kind of imperialism that robs children of their identity. Simon responds, "We have adopted real, modern little girls, not mere vessels of a culture." Ethnicity is an abstraction -- often an admirable abstraction, but not comparable to the needs of a child living in an orphanage or begging in roving bands. Adopted Chinese girls are refugees from a terrible oppression -- a one-child policy that Simon calls "one of the great crimes of history." Every culture or race is outweighed when the life of a child is placed on the other side of the balance.


It is one of the noblest things about America that we care for children of other lands who have been cast aside. Simon recalls his encounter with an immigration officer in Chicago when bringing Elise to America: " 'When you cross that line,' he said, 'your little girl is a citizen of the United States.' Then he put one of his huge hands gently under our daughter's chin and smiled. 'Welcome home, sweetheart,' he told her." This welcome to the world is one of the great achievements of history. After millennia of racial and ethnic conflict across the world, resulting in rivers of blood, America declared that bloodlines don't matter, that dignity is found beneath every human disguise. There is no greater embrace of this principle than an American family that looks like the world.


Instead of undermining any culture, international adoption instructs our own. Unlike the thin, quarrelsome multiculturalism of the campus, multiethnic families demonstrate the power of affection over difference. They tend to produce people who may look different from the norm of their community but see themselves as just normal, just human.


Every adoption involves a strange providence, in which events and choices are random yet decisive. "Those of us who have been adopted," says Simon, "or have adopted or want to adopt children, must believe in a world in which the tumblers of the universe can click in unfathomable ways that deliver strangers into our lives."


When a columnist has a conflict of interest, he should disclose it. My wife, born in South Korea, was adopted by an American family at the age of 6 and welcomed into a Midwestern community. I first saw her when we were both 10, and I have never recovered. Years ago, we visited the orphanage where she lived in Inchon -- orderly, cheerful, but still with dirt floors. The director said she remembered my wife. We were skeptical. But the woman went into a storage room and produced a slip of paper -- the police record relating how On Soon had been found as a newborn abandoned in the market, a note with her name pinned to her blanket.


Life is a procession of miracles, but this one stands out to me. A 6-year-old girl walks off a plane in America, speaking no English, loved by a family she had never met, destined to marry, of all people, me. A series of events that began in a Korean market created my family, my sons, my life. And now my Italian, Jewish, English, Korean boys view themselves as normal, unexceptional Americans. Which they are.



michaelgerson@washpost.com

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

We are home with Asher!

Some of you may wonder where I have been the past month. Well it is a pretty long story so I will have to summarize as best as I can. When I got to Ethiopia Asher was really sick and had pretty serious pneumonia. I spent the entire 2nd day with him in the hospital. After passing court on July 30th we officially took custody of him. I just couldn't leave him there after seeing him so sick. He was also not crawling or walking and didn't really make any noises other than moaning. We spent the past month in Ethiopia loving on him. Every day we played with him, loved him, and made him feel like he was the most important boy in the world. It was amazing to see him develop. Every day he seemed to progress half a month. He is now crawling like crazy, walking, and non stop babbling. I can't believe we are actually home with him. I will try and update more later. We are pretty tired. It feels like it's 3 am.