Sunday, May 29, 2011

He Did It!!

I'm so proud of Ian! This morning he was 1 of 3180 runners participating in the 33rd annual Saskatchewan Marathon. My amazing husband ran the 1/2 marathon!! Woohoo! He enjoys the competition, but I know that the real motivation for him was our baby and training for RUN 143.

Here's a bit of the morning...


Looking relaxed before the race

Waiting for the gun...


I drove to different spots along the race to get out and cheer Ian on...
Here, I guess he was cheering for himself too! :)

Almost to the finish line!!!

Still smiling at the end

Don't mind the tired looks...we were up very early to get going!

It was a great day and makes me so excited for the big run! It's just around the corner! If you haven't already checked it out, visit www.run143.com **The website also continues to be updated with more info**
Have a great week everyone!

Monday, May 23, 2011

The Prayers of Kids

A few weeks ago the class I work with (gr.1) was on for chapel. I work at a Christian school and between the Gr. 1-4 classes, they take turns leading chapel.

Anyway, we were sharing about prayer and the different ways that people can talk to God. At the end, we shared a song talking about how we are not forgotten and that God knows each of our names - even the children of this world that may seem to be forgotten. The teacher I work with then asked me to share a little bit about our adoption and RUN 143 to have something personal and tangible for the kids. I was happy to have that opportunity.

So, fast forward to the following week. We broke into small groups to experience different ways of talking to God (through music, writing, speaking). Before that though, the gr.1 teacher had the kids (all 100+) of them gather around me in praying for our baby to come home!

Okay, so if any of you know me, you know that the tears flow pretty freely from these eyes of mine and all I could think was "Hold it together, Heidi. You can't fall apart in front of all these kids!" As the laid their little hands on me though and prayed their simple prayers, I was so overwhelmed with emotion!

Once they broke into the small groups, the had a chance to write down their prayers and I got to keep the ones that they wrote about us. What an incredible thing for me to hold on to. I believe children's prayers are powerful - they have unbelievable faith.

I wanted to share a few with you...



*Not sure if you can read this one. It says (word for word):
Dear God, Plese make miss closson have her baby so he is not frgotin. And he will have a good life. aman. I love you God.

Notice the little baby reaching his arms out of the basket :)

How can that picture not bring tears to my eyes?


What an honour it is to teach these kids. It makes going to work much, much easier. I am blessed!

Friday, May 6, 2011

A New Love - And The Motivation Behind It

Well here we are (It's me again - Ian). Thought I would write another post.

Running is becoming a new love. I haven't always enjoyed running but never disliked it either. I did a little more distance running when I was younger but not a lot in recent years. I'm an active guy and I love sports and athletics a lot. However, I never thought I would get addicted to running. The Run 143 event is to blame! - (for those of you who are hearing about Run 143 for the first time, go back a couple of blog postings) - oh and get involved. I began my training back in February, give or take a week or two. I started very slow and took it easy. With the pace I was at, I thought how in the world am I going to run 143km?I tried to be persistent and kept pushing through. It wasn't until around mid to end March when I started to push myself a little harder.

Here is what I call April, the victory month. Finally it began to warm up a little outside and I was drawn in. I began running around 5-6km runs a little more as part of my routine and by mid April I was doing a couple of 10km runs. I was pretty pumped! - probably looking like an idiot - but pumped nonetheless. Fast forward a little bit and here we are, first week in May and I have really surprised myself. Last Saturday, I ran my first half marathon. Honestly, I had not set out to do it that day. That was the same weekend we found out of the unfortunate news about the continued delay in our adoption process. As I was out on my run that day - I was set to do 16km - I was feeling pretty good around the 13km mark. At that point, I thought to myself, I think I could do a half marathon! Then I thought of the frustration of the news that previous day and said to myself, "I'm doing it! Take that, bad news - I'm running a half marathon"! Though that helped my motivation a bit, the running definitely wasn't easy. Nonetheless, I was able to finish it and felt some victory. Today, I ran another half marathon - and man did it ever feel better than last week. I am a lot further ahead in my training than I thought I would be at this point and I praise God for that.

I'm not telling you of this to boast or brag, but rather to tell - of what I believe - where the motivation comes from. From the beginning, even prior to the training, my motivation has remained the same. My purpose and motivation in doing all of this training for the upcoming running events, has never changed: Little babe - this is all for you! All I can think of is our precious child who is so patiently waiting for their homecoming. Last week during my run when I felt like giving in to my body and quitting , I continued to think of our awesome little babe and it gave me the motivation I needed. I kept saying to myself "I'm running to you little one, I'm coming". Though we don't know who this little one is yet, I can't and will never give up the fight. When I think of what these children have already endured and what they are going through now, all I can say is that my pain (physically and emotionally) is nothing compared to what some of them have had to endure already. When I am running I have two choices; one, to keep going or the other, to stop. Many of these children don't have a choice. This gives me the motivation I need to keep going - it's the least I can do.

There are many, many lessons that all of this running and training has been teaching me. Though I won't go through all of it right now, one quote that I've read sticks with me: "If you want to win something, run 100 meters. If you want to experience something, run a marathon." It reminds me that our adoption has both great moments and hard moments. No one said it would be an easy victory, but definitely one worth all the pain and suffering once you cross the finish line. Adoption is a very beautiful thing. Each story is different and each has an incredible journey. All of this running and training is teaching me many lessons and I am grateful for it.

One last point:
During my run this morning, there were two prominent things that came to mind. With mothers day soon approaching, one thing that laid heavy on my heart were the mothers who gave birth to the millions of orphans world wide. I can't begin to imagine some of their stories and how hard it must have been to give up their child. My heart goes out to those mothers this weekend. My heart also goes out to my beautiful wife and all the waiting mothers of this adoption journey who patiently await the arrival/meeting of their child. Bless you!
One other image that came to mind was that of a story and documentary I saw a few years back of Rick and Dick Hoyt; an incredible and inspiring story of a father who continues to live out complete love for his son in what seems almost impossible or unimaginable. I won't explain the story, but rather show this video that tells part of it. Please take a few minutes and watch. This has been my inspiration for today.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Aching

I wish I had better news to share. The truth is, my heart is aching. We found out that, once again...we will receive an update mid-JULY as to the progress of all this government "stuff." I don't really want to assume that I know what's going on anymore, but it basically means that our program continues to be at a stand still until then. It's hard to stay hopeful when you wait with baited breath for the end of the review or the next update, only to have your legs swept out from under you again and you are told to hang in there. We try to enjoy each day, but when you are so ready to welcome this child into your family...there are days when it just hurts too much.

Of course, there are things to be thankful for and to look forward to (finishing up the school year, RUN 143, summer weather, time with each other, etc.). We also know that it will "all be worth the wait" and once we see our little babe's face the painful wait will probably seem like a distant memory, but it doesn't dismiss the fact that right now it's hard. The difficulty in waiting for something that doesn't have a definite end is something we can't explain.


There are times when I don't know how or what to pray anymore. God knows my heart, He's heard my pleas and He is powerful and able to turn things around. So for now, I am choosing just to rest in knowing that He loves me. Truly loves me. Deep in my heart, I know that He has my best interests in mind even though I can't possibly understand why this all needs to be prolonged any more than it has. I will continue to cling to the peace that comes from knowing a loving God.


I found this song a couple of weeks ago and it's been a blessing to me. I find a lot of times that music has a way of speaking to me more than anything.


Thanks for thinking of us, praying for us, reading our thoughts and travelling this journey with us. We are so grateful.