Two Brothers Waiting for a Sister
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If I had a single flower for every time I think about you, I could walk forever in my garden. - Claudia Ghandi

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Happy St. Patrick's Day!




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Better late than never! Anyway, today I talked to the boys about their family heritage and they really got into it. I decided to draw shamrocks on their cheeks and they insisted on the rainbow. Noah was very wiggly, so the rainbow is quite crooked...but aren't they cute!!!!

Also, here's a story I found and wanted to share with you. It is written by Jean MacLeod.

A Little Bit Irish…

Hanna, my seven year old from China, was in the tub. I was helping her rinse the shampoo out of her hair when she asked,
“Am I a little bit Irish?”
My mind swept over some of our recent conversations about our family heritage, and I answered, “Well, ethnically you are Chinese. But since I’m a little bit Irish, then culturally, you are a little bit Irish, too.”
“When did it happen?” Hanna wanted to know.
“When did WHAT happen?” I asked, concentrating on her soapy head.
“When did I become a little bit Irish,” she explained patiently. “Was it when you kissed me for the very first time?”
I paused, shower wand in hand, and watched my daughter squeeze water out of her hair. I thought about the tiny, bundled baby that had been handed to me at the Anhui Hotel seven years earlier, and I remembered how her head felt against my cheek. I hadn’t wanted to scare her; my baby-kiss was soft and swift as I cradled her upon my shoulder. Unremarkable, it was the first kiss of many thousands, yet now, through Hanna, I see it with fairytale eyes:
My first kiss to my adopted daughter infused her with my love, my world, and the generations of my unknown ancestors! Like Sleeping Beauty wakening with a kiss from her Prince, the mother-daughter kiss called forth a magical intermingling-- a covenant leaping past genetics, it bestowed Hanna and me upon each other…
My pragmatic daughter had chosen to make sense of the vast, familial complexities of international adoption with a powerfully simple symbol of promise and connection.
“Yes” I said finally. “I think that’s when it happened.”

~ Jean MacLeod

4 comments:

Chantal et Bob said...

Beaux amours! Quoi ajouter que "Tante" Chantal adore vous et vos arc en ciel en disent long sur votre personnalité!

XXX

Debby Couture said...

Happy St-Patrick's Day to our two little leprechauns!
Love, hugs and kisses,
Auntie & Unckie
xoxox

Anonymous said...

I'm proud of my two Irish grandsons!
With lots of love,
Mamie
xx

Chantalou said...

Deux beaux petits garçons avec des arcs en ciel, comme ils sont mignons! Ces deux petits font sûrement honneur aux Irlandais!! Chantalou xx

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