Username Password

ADOPTION STORIES Back to listing

The Hatmakers
MEET THE
Hatmakers

We are parenting damaged, traumatized children; don’t let the pictures fool you. We’re in the weeds. Every minute is on; there is no off. We’ve arrived late, cancelled altogether, hunkered down in therapy mode, missed appointments, failed to answer hundreds of emails in a timely manner, left voice-mails unlistened to, and texts unread. We’ve restructured, regrouped, replanned, reorganized. We’ve punted and called audibles. We’ve left “the bigs” on their own, hoping they are functioning well on auto-pilot after a lifetime of healthy stability. And sometimes, we put Tangled on for the eleventh time and cry in the bathroom.

We are exhausted beyond measure.

I know what you’re thinking: You asked for this. Yes we did. And we’d ask for it again, with full disclosure and foreknowledge. We would. We would say yes to adoption, to Ben, to Remy. We would do it all over again. We might do it all over again in the future.

That does not mean we are not exhausted.

I know what else you might be thinking: Are you trying to scare people away from adoption? Because this is pretty good propaganda for turning a blind eye to this mess.

No, I’m not. While adoption is clearly not the answer for the 170 million orphans on earth, it is one answer, and I’ll go to my grave begging more people to open their homes and minds and hearts to abandoned children who are praying for a Mom and a Dad and a God who might still see them.

But my husband, Brandon, and I decided some time ago to go at this honestly, with truthful words and actual experiences that might encourage the weary heart or battle some of the fluffy, damaging semi-truths about adopting. Because let me tell you something: If you are intrigued by the idea of adoption, with the crescendo-ing storyline and happy airport pictures and the sigh-inducing family portrait with the different skin colors and the feely-feel good parts of the narrative, please find another way to see God’s kingdom come.

You cannot just be into adoption to adopt; you have to be into parenting.

And it is hard, hard, intentional, laborious work. Children who have been abused, abandoned, neglected, given away, given up, and left alone are shaken so deeply, so intrinsically, they require parents who are willing to wholly invest in their healing; through the screaming, the fits, the anger, the shame, the entitlement, the bed-wetting, the spitting, the rejection, the bone-chilling fear. Parents who are willing to become the safe place, the Forever these children hope for but are too terrified to believe in just yet.

Editor's note: To read more of the Hatmaker's adoption journey, please visit Jen's blog.