
Friday, December 18, 2009
Friday, March 13, 2009



THE ROBERTSON FAMILY STORY
Our journey to adopt our precious daughter began long ago. We first considered adopting from China around 15 years ago but what with one thing and another we didn’t proceed with any great seriousness until many years later.
Our journey to adopt our precious daughter began long ago. We first considered adopting from China around 15 years ago but what with one thing and another we didn’t proceed with any great seriousness until many years later.
After an incredible trek through remote areas in southern China in 2000 we came home and decided to pursue adoption from China with renewed vigour. Visiting China had changed our minds and lives forever.
After much discussion and research we approached social work to begin the process in November 2003 and after a long and stressful process our papers finally winged their way from the UK to Beijing in July 2005. Little did we know that our daughter was being born halfway across the world at the exactly the same time. We waited almost a full year until the end of June 2006 before receiving our referral information. Wan Jin Dao was just approaching her first birthday on referral and was 13 months old by the time we met her and fell in love in August 2006.
She had waited for us in Wanzai exactly as long as we had waited for her back home in Scotland.
We arrived in Nanchang at around 2pm on Sunday 27th August and at 5pm our daughter was placed in our arms in the Civil Affairs Office in central Nanchang.
Jiangxi is often called ‘the furnace of China’ and I now know why! The heat was incredibly intense and Dao Dao, as she was called by her foster granny and SWI staff, came to us wearing a very worn blue and white stripy body suit and nothing else. She was hot and sticky after the long minibus journey from Wanzai to Nanchang. The bus had broken down on the way and the babies had had nothing to eat or drink since mid morning.
To make matters worse our luggage had been lost between Beijing and Nanchang so we had nothing to give her.
Once all the formalities were completed I took Dao Dao back to our hotel while my husband and our guide went shopping in Wal Mart for bottles, milk and nappies etc to keep us going until our own things arrived the next day.
It took some time for Dao Dao to settle and drink something that afternoon but we bonded very quickly and all the stresses and strains of the long, long wait melted away as I held her in my arms and walked up and down the hotel corridor quietly singing nursery rhymes in her tiny ear that evening.
Our time in China felt like a bubble in time and space. It was incredibly important to be removed from the worries of everyday life back home for that short period of time. All we had to do was look after our daughter and get to know one another. Nothing else mattered.
Dao Dao was very happy from the start and settled into a routine much quicker than we had hoped for. She ate and slept well and quickly attached herself to both of us. She was wary of her new dad for a while but by the time we came home they had ‘clicked’ and she is now very definitely a ‘daddy’s girl’!
Back home in Scotland Maisie Dao Dao, as she is now called, has flourished and everyone who meets her falls under her charm. It’s wonderful to hear her little Scottish accent develop and to watch her race around without a care in the world.
I often wonder what her life would be like if she had been able to remain with her birth family in China. What would she be doing, where would she be living? Things would be very different – for her and for us that much I do know.
She is a perfect match for our family and is much loved by her big sister and all our extended family and friends.
I can’t imagine life without our beloved Maisie Dao Dao and can no longer remember life before she came along! In the two and a half years she has been with us she has transformed our lives beyond recognition. I had no idea what this little skinny scrap of life was going to do to my mind and heart when I first saw her but each day thank God for the blessing she has been to us so far.
Marion & Bruce Robertson
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Van Eman Family Story

I am the blessed mother of Jocelyn Jin Luo. My story began on May 4, 2004. This is the day that I looked on the internet about adoption. This is something that I had been thinking about for some time. I wanted to be a mother and my chances of having a biological child were slim to none due to polycystic ovarian disease and endometriosis. I filled out my application for the adoption agency and sent it off. Being a single woman once I was accepted I had to be put on a waiting list as they only allowed a certain number of singles to adopt per year. I was told that it would probably be October before I could begin the paperwork pregnancy. I got a call from the adoption agency on August 12, 2004 that I could officially start the process. I never guessed all of the paperwork that was to come. I was able to complete the paperwork and had my dossier logged in China on 12/20/05.
Many things developed during my 2 + year wait. I lost my father to pancreatic cancer in June of 2007, my primary care doctors changed as my former physician couldn't seem to fill out the paperwork correctly. My desire to become a mom became even stronger than before.I received the call on Feb 4th of 2008. I couldn't contain my happiness. I had to wait until the next day to see pictures of her.
I cried tears of happiness. My fondest wish was coming true I was a mother. I finally had a face to put to her name. During the wait for travel some misinformation was given to the adoption agency that delayed my approval being sent to China. My travel approval was delayed also. Needless to say once the confusion was cleared up my travel approval arrived. I found out on March 6, 2008 that I would be able to travel with my group and leaving on March 13th. Talk about frantic.My gotcha day is March 17th of 2008 (St Patricks day) I have been blessed and honored and priveledged to be Jocelyn's mama. Getting to see the culture and scenery of where Jocelyn spent the first 11 months of her life was very special and a trip I will never forget and I will be telling Jocelyn the story every chance I get.For updates on Jocelyn and I please visit my blog at http://mamas-china-doll.blogspot.com/
Many things developed during my 2 + year wait. I lost my father to pancreatic cancer in June of 2007, my primary care doctors changed as my former physician couldn't seem to fill out the paperwork correctly. My desire to become a mom became even stronger than before.I received the call on Feb 4th of 2008. I couldn't contain my happiness. I had to wait until the next day to see pictures of her.
I cried tears of happiness. My fondest wish was coming true I was a mother. I finally had a face to put to her name. During the wait for travel some misinformation was given to the adoption agency that delayed my approval being sent to China. My travel approval was delayed also. Needless to say once the confusion was cleared up my travel approval arrived. I found out on March 6, 2008 that I would be able to travel with my group and leaving on March 13th. Talk about frantic.My gotcha day is March 17th of 2008 (St Patricks day) I have been blessed and honored and priveledged to be Jocelyn's mama. Getting to see the culture and scenery of where Jocelyn spent the first 11 months of her life was very special and a trip I will never forget and I will be telling Jocelyn the story every chance I get.For updates on Jocelyn and I please visit my blog at http://mamas-china-doll.blogspot.com/Saturday, February 21, 2009
Davis Family Story
On February 4, 2008 at 3:16 p.m. we finally got our referral call. Our daughter, Lily Grace, (Wan Jin Mi) was born on May 17, 2007. When the referral photo was taken, she was 5 months old. She weighed 12 pounds, and she was 25 inches long. At birth, she weighed 6.8 pounds, and she was 19 inches long. Her caretaker wrote in her paperwork, "Wherever little Jin Mi goes, people adore her."We sent 2 cameras, stuffed animals, clothes, and pictures of ourselves to Lily and her foster Nanny. The following pictures are the ones her Nanny took for us.






This is a picture of the home beside the orphanage which houses the elderly people who become foster parents to most of the children.
This is a picture of the room in the orphanage where the babies slept. We were never told if Lily slept with her foster Nanny or in the orphanage at night. But, we wondered why she would have taken a picture of this room if Lily was never in it.
This shows the back of the Wanzai Social Welfare Institute- orphanage.
The children had a playground at the orphanage. You can see the building for the elderly people in the background.
Lily was found on the day she was born with her umbilical cord still attached. We were told she also had a note, but nothing was given to us. They said she was found right outside the gate of the SWI. We imagine her being left right under the signs with Chinese writing on them. But, we really have no idea of the exact spot outside the gate.
We started our adoption on June 19, 2005 through America World Adoption Agency. We got all of our paperwork completed by November 26th. Our dossier was sent to China on December 2nd. The following picture shows you all of our paperwork laid out before Christmas of 2005.
Then, the true wait began. On January 2, 2008, we missed the CCAA's cut-off by one day! Then, finally, our call came, and we began waiting again- but this time on the package!
Lily's package arrived on Feb. 5th & another wait began! The final wait to go get Lily and bring her home!
Friends helped to keep us busy having baby showers for us during that last waiting period.
We finally left to go get Lily in March. On St. Patrick's Day, we got to meet our beautiful daughter for the first time. It took 3 days for her to completely get used to us. She was beautiful, and the foster Nanny had taken excellent care of her. She was also spoiled rotten already! Our time in China was wonderful, and we cannot wait to take Lily back someday. Now, Lily has been with us for 11 months. She was definitely chosen and made for us by God. There is no doubt that she is our daughter, and she was always meant to be with us. Even though the wait was long, once Lily was placed in our arms- the wait was forgotten. There are a few pictures of our time in China on our blog (http://oneworld--onelove.blogspot.com/), and you can also see updates of Lily's life now. Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Rizzo Family Story

This is our story..
It began in the summer of 2005 when we decided to adopt our first child from China. We began the paperwork and the wait. We anticipated a 8-10 month wait that turned into a 29 month wait for our referral from China. We can now say that every second of the wait was worth it because it brought us our beautiful daughter Sophia Joy JinTe. We received our referral on May 2, 2008 we were instantly in love with this round faced, dark eyed girl who was named Wan Jin Te.
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It began in the summer of 2005 when we decided to adopt our first child from China. We began the paperwork and the wait. We anticipated a 8-10 month wait that turned into a 29 month wait for our referral from China. We can now say that every second of the wait was worth it because it brought us our beautiful daughter Sophia Joy JinTe. We received our referral on May 2, 2008 we were instantly in love with this round faced, dark eyed girl who was named Wan Jin Te.

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She was from Wanzai County Social Welfare Institute in Jiangxi, China. We immediately began searching the Internet for information about Wanzai. We were hungry for details and wanted to know anything we could about where our daughter was. We quickly found out that there was not a lot of information available about Wanzai. We found the Wikipedia page and the Wanzai Family Yahoo group that provided us with some connection to Wanzai and families that had adopted from there before us. We were so grateful for that resource but were left with a feeling of wanting more information. Ever since we adopted I have had this desire to help families who will be receiving referrals from Wanzai. I found that much of the information that was out there was quite old and fragmented. I wanted to create a place where all families (families with older children, current families, and those still waiting to travel) could come together and share information about our experiences with the Wanzai program. On June 12 2009 we made our way from Central Florida, USA to Beijing , China. We arrived, checked into our hotel and so started the trip that would change our lives in a remarkable way forever. We embraced this change with every fiber of our being and with overwhelming excitement. For the next 2 1/2 days we toured the Great Wall, Tienanmen Square, and The Forbidden City
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