Sometimes when I say “gotcha day” my mind just floods. So
much to think about.
I think about the whole event of a Gotcha. No child ever shows up at a Gotcha Day
because their history is painless. It’s
always prefaced by abandonment.
Always. And for most (many?) the
day itself is full of terror, fear, sadness, confusion. Sometimes I can talk myself out of
celebrating. Why in the world would we
go to any length to celebrate a day of trauma?
And if John Paul had any conscious memory of that day, we
might just skip the celebrating.
[I do think it is deep in his memory, and I do think there
are times that different parts of it surface. But I don't think he really truly recalls any specific event from that day.... he just repeats back the facts that we've told him.]
So at least at this age, for him, for our family, I’m
firmly convinced that this day is worthy of a celebration. John Paul spent the day on cloud nine.
I'm not sure I've ever seen him so very excited about an event. It was priceless.
Matt and I bought him a blue backpack, and the other kids worked to fill it with some goodies. He wore it most all day long.
We invited friends to join us for a picnic dinner, with cupcakes to wrap up the celebrating.
{I wish I could get better pictures of John Paul. He is so very very hard to photograph. In all our pictures from yesterday I got great shots of our other kids, great shots of other people's kids, and a few decent shots of him. oh well.}
2 years. God's strength glorified in our weakness.
We are so blessed to count this boy an arrow in our quiver (Psalm 127:4-5).
2 comments:
Blessing to you all.
Love that last photo with those big brown eyes! I don't think you'll ever convince John Paul that he was sad on his 'gotcha day'; he's so full of happiness now. What a blessing.
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