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Testimonies

INSPIRE

Rachelle Alspaugh

• TX, America •

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A wife, daughter, mother, bilingual teacher, poet, author,

women's Bible study teacher, world traveler, orphan advocate, and an adoptive mother.  

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Be inspired

 

“No. I can’t do this right now. It doesn’t make any sense. I can’t even process this reality, no less deal with it or even grieve over it yet.” I stuffed all the emotions threatening to pour out of me into a box, taped it up as tightly as I could, and set it high upon the shelf inside her small closet. Maybe someday I could bring it back down and face the contents, but not today. Not now.

 

My thoughts spun around in absolute confusion, grappling with this unexpected turn of events.

 

“What do I do now?” The closet door creaked as I carefully closed it and walked out of her room. The adoption failed. They denied our request to adopt both her and her older brother from Colombia. That little girl I’d grown to love and adore more than I ever imagined would not be coming home to me, after all. I’d never hear that precious seven-year-old voice over my phone again. She’d never see the beautiful clothes in her closet nor the toys that already filled her room.

 

I walked into my son, David’s, room and felt the same overwhelming grief. Half of his closet held clothes that Juan David would never wear, and the top bunkbed constantly reminded us of his absence. David slept soundly in the bottom bunk, while the bed above him, prepared for a brother, remained empty.

 

Why did God ever let us meet them in the first place? Not just meet them, but immediately fall in love with them, pursue their adoption for fourteen long months, and develop a close relationship with both of them over the phone throughout the whole process? Our entire life revolved around bringing Viviana and Juan David home to make them a part of our family.  But now what?

 

“It’s not right for kids to not have families.” The hosting program motto repeated itself often in my ear. We wanted more than anything to embrace them as our children. We bravely answered the call. We attended all the trainings, made all the right preparations, but no one prepared us for a loss like this.

 

In addition to our grief, a weight of guilt hung heavily over my shoulders. Viviana expected us to visit her someday and bring her gifts, but Juan David knew we planned to adopt them. His twelve-year-old mind already assumed us as his forever family. What did this outcome now mean for him? What would it do to him?

 

“Will I ever know what happened on their side when their government closed our case?” I tried to pray, but only questions came out. So many questions with no answers. I guessed I’d never know the answers on this side of Heaven.

 

The natural introvert inside me took over quickly. I pulled away from those closest to me. I built up walls--huge, thick walls. I withdrew into myself more every day. I stopped answering the phone. I spent more and more time alone. I screamed at God every morning on my way to work but then wiped away my tears as soon as I arrived at school, washed my face, and focused all my attention on my job and my second-grade students.

 

Thank God for those students. They kept me busy. They kept me focused and sane. Most of all, they helped me keep moving. If not, I know I would have completely fallen apart.

 

I also thank God for a simple, short strand of e-mails I received from Colombia during those hard months between November and March, unexpected e-mails from Juan David and Viviana’s older brother, Julian. Sweet messages that let me know how they were doing, assuring me they still thought of us and would always love us.

 

After about six months, the e-mails turned into daily messages and long, virtual conversations. The more I “talked” to Julian, the more my tears naturally fell. God gave me someone to talk to about my grief, someone who could give me answers from the other side. He gave me the chance to process my emotions and finally begin to grieve.

 

A full eight months after the adoption failed, I bravely gripped the handle on Viviana’s closet door again. As the door slowly opened, I reached for the box up on the shelf. Opening that box of grief caused a flood of tears to pour out of me, but I knew it was time. You can only postpone grief for so long, and God gave me just the right person to help me through it. Who knew?

 

At the same time, God placed me in Julian’s life to become the loving mother-figure that he needed in his life as he finished up high school without the support of a family. During the course of that year, another family began a legal process to care for and support Juan David, and a single mother from Spain adopted Viviana. He grieved losing them now, too.

 

A full year later, my husband, son, and I boarded a plane for Bogotá, Colombia to meet Julian face to face, now that he had turned eighteen and was considered an adult. We spent two full weeks with Julian, a young-man that God gave us the privilege to know and love as the son we could never adopt. He filled a huge void in our lives, and we filled the void in his.

 

We thought Colombia would always hold memories of hurt and bitterness for us, but we instead found a beautiful country, a rich culture, and a precious young man right on the brink of starting life alone.

 

Our pain held purpose, after all.

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Continue onto Part II

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