Our Dossier for Hannah's Sister was Logged in 9/26/06

Saturday, April 28, 2007

HAPPY BIRTHDAY STEPHANIE!!

Hannah’s cousin, Stephanie, will be celebrating her 10th birthday on Monday! (Stephanie--we may not be with you in person, but we're celebrating with you in spirit and sending LOTS of love your way!)

Although it’s been awhile since they’ve seen each other, Hannah and Stephanie had the opportunity to visit a couple of times. The first time they met, Stephanie taught Hannah how to “high five.” That was almost 2 years ago. Just recently, Hannah started a routine at bedtime that includes the “high five” she learned from Stephanie. For some reason, Hannah is more than willing to let me leave the room if we “slap five” a few times. Thanks Stephanie!

Hopefully, these girls can get together again very soon …







Friday, April 27, 2007

Favorite Photo Friday





Can you pick out Hannah??
















Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Some Food for Thought ...

Here's an interesing article that I found on the web. Something to think about ...

We Protect Kids From Everything But Fear
With hand sanitizer and long-sleeved swimsuits, we're teaching our children a dangerous lesson.

By Paula Spencer
Newsweek

April 2, 2007 issue - Four 11- and 12-year-old girls stood in front of my open pantry, mouths gaping wide. "Look! Fruit Roll-Ups!" "Oh, my God! Chocolate-chip cookies!" "You have regular potato chips? We only get the soy kind!"
After 14 years and four kids, I thought I'd feel comfortable as a mother. Instead, I'm increasingly aware of a prickly new sensation: that I'm some kind of renegade. Who knew that buying potato chips would become a radical act? Or that letting my daughters walk home from school alone would require administration approval? How did I, a middle-of-the-road mom, become a social deviant?
Fear is the new fuel of the American mom. If it's not fear of her child becoming obese, it's the fear of falling behind, missing out on a sports scholarship or winding up with a thin college-rejection envelope.
Apparently I'm not nervous enough. Last summer while I was loafing in front of the TV with my kids, the most benign things morphed into menaces. For example, the sun: long-sleeved, UV-protective swimsuits were all the rage at my neighborhood pool, while I could barely remember to bring the year-old sunscreen. The water wasn't safe either: at the beach I saw tots dressed in flotation belts and water wings—for shelling along the shore. And goodbye, cotton candy and hot dogs! At a major-league game I saw moms and dads nix the stuff as if they'd never eaten the occasional ballpark treat. As if their children would balloon into juvenile-diabetes statistics if a single swig of sugary soda passed their lips.
Half my kids' friends—who already make A's and B's—had summer tutors in order to "keep it fresh." I thought vacation was for relaxing and recharging. What would our pioneer foremoms think? (You want something to worry about, let me show you frostbite, typhoid and bears!) Heck, what must our own mothers think? (Snap out of it! Go worry about something truly scary, like how you're going to pay for retirement!)
I thought that once the kids were back in school, things would calm down. Instead, a fresh seasonal crop of anxiety sprouted, this time over corruptive candy fund-raisers and insufficient use of hand sanitizer. I know one mom who wants to change her son's schedule because he doesn't know anyone in his classes; she's worried he'll be "socially traumatized" all year. Another is afraid of a learning disability she just read about, though her child seems bright and charming to me.
And then there's playground panic. I had to laugh when an Australian study recently found that playground injuries continue to rise despite safety improvements. One of the suspected reasons: the safe new play structures are so boring that kids are taking more risks in order to have fun.
The fears are as irrational as they are rampant. Recently my children's elementary school failed to meet adequate yearly progress goals for a particular minority's reading progress under the No Child Left Behind Act and was placed on a warning list. This meant parents might gain the right to transfer their children to another school in the district. Never mind that this very same school sent more kids to the district's gifted program than any other, or that this entire district has the highest SAT scores in the state. The day the news broke, six different moms (none in the affected minority) asked me if I was planning to transfer my kids. From neighborhood pride and joy to threat to child's future overnight.
It's not that I think parents shouldn't worry about anything. I'm personally petrified of SUV drivers on cell phones. I fret as much as the next mom about how to pay for college. I pray my kids won't wander onto MySpace and post something dumb.
But you can't go around afraid of everything. It's too exhausting! No matter how careful you are, bad stuff happens (diaper rash, stitches, all your friends assigned to another class). And it's seldom the end of the world.
Watching my daughter's friends ogle my pantry, I realized there's one big, legitimate fear that I haven't heard anybody mention: what's the effect of our collective paranoia on the kids? Yes, these very kids we want to be so self-sufficient, responsible, confident, happy and creative (not to mention not food-obsessed). They're growing up thinking these weirdly weenie views are healthy and normal.
Walking out my front door that day, each girl happily clutched a plastic baggie stuffed with the exotic kid snacks that my daughter had doled out in pity. I may be a rebel mom, but at least I'm not afraid of a chocolate-chip cookie.

Monday, April 23, 2007

A "Summery" Weekend!



What a difference a week makes! This past weekend was very warm (and quite windy!) --- it definitely felt like summer. As you can see, Hannah loves to water the flowers. Actually, she loves to water pretty much anything -- the dirt, the driveway, the brick patio, her shoes, etc., etc.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Favorite Photo Friday


The cutest Dalmation ever!





Tuesday, April 17, 2007

More photos of Hannah's weekend with Lily ...

Wait, come back!
Hannah's gettin' some love from Nikki!


We LOVE painting!


Monday, April 16, 2007

Here's Lily Hangin' Out With Hannah ...




Pretty in pink ...


















Okay, the wagon is nice, but we're big girls now ... give us a Jeep!








Lil Bubble Queen!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Hannah can't wait to see Lily!

We're gettin' ready for a sleepover! Hannah's best friend, Lily, is coming in from out of town, and we can't wait to give Lily, Nikki, and Jay a big hug!

Here are a few pics of Hannah and Lily taken last summer when they got together for the first time. They were best buddies from the start! For more fun photos, check out Nikki's awesome blog (she's my "blog mentor"!) --- http://lifewithlilylin.blogspot.com/2007/04/lilys-gonna-see-hannah.html


As you can see, Lily was quite comfortable at Hannah's house. :)



Just in case you can't tell, in the 2nd photo, Lily is on the left!




Anyone who knows Lily, knows that she likes to blow out candles! Boy, these two are cute!!!!!!!!!!
















Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Happy Easter!


As you can see, we've been having tons of fun this weekend while visiting with our good friends from Michigan. Kierra and Hannah are celebrating a belated "Gotcha Day" together, as they both joined our families two years ago.




Here is the Fogo clan in Chicago's Chinatown ...


Oh how I love sleepovers! Well, this is my first one, but I can't wait to have more ...




Rub a dub dub, three girls in a tub ....
Who knew that coloring Easter eggs could be this much fun!


Ooooo00hhhhh, pretty ....


Friday, April 6, 2007

Favorite Photo Friday


Since Lily and her family are celebrating "Gotcha Day" tomorrow, I decided to post a picture of Hannah with her good friend Lily. Aren't they cute??

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Happy Gotcha Day!!




Today is the 2nd anniversary of the day we first held Hannah. To be honest, it seems like Hannah has always been a part of our lives. As I reflect on the day that Hannah became our daughter, I’m wishing that I could borrow my friend Nikki’s exceptional talent for expressing her thoughts and emotions. (It’s funny, for almost 7 years I’ve been making a living writing summaries of case law, but when it comes to creative writing and expressing my emotions, I struggle.)


Hannah means the world to me and I pray that God gives me the wisdom, patience, and heart I need to be the Mom that Hannah deserves. As Hannah goes through life I want her to know that she has a Heavenly Father who created her, loves her, and will never leave her. I want her to know that, just as she brings a smile to my face everyday, God is looking down and smiling at his wonderful creation. I want her to know that choosing adoption was the best decision we ever made and that we are eternally grateful God chose Hannah for us. I want her to know that her Mom and Dad simply adore her. Just a few of the things I want Hannah to know ....

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Gotta love an Easter egg hunt!




An adoptive playgroup that we belong to hosted an Easter egg hunt last weekend. It was a bit chilly, but Hannah had a great time (as you can see from the photos!).