December 7, 2012
Dear Zachary,
Yesterday I went to visit your old home. It was an hour car
ride from the Jianguo Hotel in Xian, where we are staying, to Xianyang City in
Shaanxi Province. I hated to leave you for those few hours, but I knew it was
important for me to go see it and that you wanted some alone time with Mommy!
I was told that
Xianyang City was a rural area. I was expecting an area with some trees and
green grass. However, the entire car ride from our hotel to your old home was
very urban. On the way there were many people along the streets selling things,
buying things or just hanging out. We passed literally thousands of apartment
buildings and factories full of people. I
traveled in a van. Others on the highway were in cars, buses, trucks,
motorcycles, scooters, bicycles (most overloaded with more boxes than you can
imagine) and others people just walking. I believe they have traffic laws here,
but from my observations, I’m not 100% sure. It seems like mass chaos, but it
seems to work.
As we got closer to your old home, our guide pointed out
your building to me. I could see it from a distance, as it was at the end of
the road straight ahead. If the road didn’t curve, we would have driven
straight into it. For the first two years & 12 days of your life you lived
in this colorful 6 story building. We had to go through a guard gate, since
your building was located inside a small complex with other similar buildings.
There was a building for older people like your grandparents (maybe slightly
older), another building for people that needed a little extra assistance for
various reasons, a building for school aged children, a building for all the care
takers and your building. The building you lived in houses 140 pre-school age
children.
We parked the van and I walked up to your building. I
noticed the playground where you would have played. It had one large swing set
with a bunch of fun stuff on it. I bet you had tons of fun going down those
slides! The playground had a concrete wall with happy cartoon characters
painted on it and the ground was all concrete. I hope you never fell on it and
scraped your knee – ouch! The playground was near the street and across the
street you could see a bunch of smoke stacks from some factories – I wasn’t very
happy to see that.
The playground was just outside your building. As I walked up to enter the building, I
looked up at three boys watching me from their window. I waved to them and after
a short delay, they waved back. I was hoping I would have a chance to meet
them, but unfortunately I didn't make it to their floor.

Your living space consisted of two rooms, both approximately
18x18. The first room was the play room. It had colorful foam tiles on the
floor and was a wide open space. The other room was for sleeping and eating. It
had 14 cribs; they let me take a picture of your crib. I was glad to see it was
near the window, so you could enjoy the sunlight. As I was taking a picture of
your empty crib, a little girl, maybe 3 or 4 years old, asked me to pick her
up. A few moments later, a little boy walked up to me wearing the fuzzy blue
shirt you wore in the only picture we had of you before we met you. Without
saying a word, he used the international sign for “I want up” and put both of
his arms up in the air. I couldn’t resist and I quickly bent down and picked
him up!
As I held that super sweet little man, I had an opportunity
to talk to your care givers. There were six of them and each one was feeding a
child. Most of the kids were much smaller than you and I only recognized two
from the pictures (from the CD we the caregivers gave us on the day we met you)
of when you lived there. They said you and six of your friends had recently been
adopted and they have a new group of kids to care for, mostly babies.
I had an opportunity to talk to your caregivers. Here are
some of the questions and answers we discussed:
Me: What signs does Zhong-Zhong (your Chinese
nickname) know?
Caregivers: He knows some signs, but he talks now, so he doesn’t
need them.
Me: Yes, but he
speaks Chinese. We noticed that he signs and that could help us communicate.
Caregivers: He
knows thank you, give me & more.
I was surprised, because that means this week you picked up:
eat, up, no, please & night-night while you have been with Mommy and me.
Me: How does
Zhong-Zhong handle bedtime?
Caregivers: No
problem. After our prayer and praise time, we put him in his crib and he lies
down after he plays for a few minutes.
Me: No crying?
Caregivers: No
crying. (We need to talk about this, since this is not the bedtime routine we
currently see. You demand to sleep with
Mommy and me and you kick and punch us all night long. Never mind, we enjoy it!)
Me: What interesting or memorable funny stories about
Zhong-Zhong can you share?
Caregiver: They
all laughed and smiled! They said that you love to be held – all the time. They
explained how smart you are and how you always get what you want. They said
that if you wanted something and they wouldn't give it to you, you would distract
them by grabbing their cell phone or something else. Once their attention was
on the distraction, you would run back and get what you wanted in the first
place and be victorious! I appreciate
that heads-up and will keep a close eye on your shenanigans.
They also said you are a bit stubborn, but we figured that one out already. My
favorite observation from asking that question was that they all smiled and I
could see what joy you brought to them. It was obvious how much they all loved
you!
One caregiver gave me a great description of you: "He likes to eat a lot, sleep a lot and play a lot!" You will get along with your brother and sisters just fine.
It was a short visit, but one I am glad to have made. It was
a long ride back to you and Mommy at the hotel and I missed you so much
already. I look forward to the days to come when we talk about this special place you lived for your first two
years and 12 days.
What I can tell you now
is that Mommy and I are so thankful for how well cared for and loved you have
been. We had been praying for you over the past several months and to see how God
answered our prayers, beyond our expectations, is overwhelming.
Daddy
Amazing on many levels! Praise the Lord for the great things He has done! This is beautiful Jim! Zachary will love to read this oneday!! What a gift to him!
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome! What a treasure this is and to have recorded so much of it on detail for Zachary. Love it!
ReplyDeleteWhat an awesome journey. Zachary sounds like an amazing little boy. So cute and clever. Perfectly sculpted by God's own hands! The Carollo Christmas season is going to be full of so much love and joy:)
ReplyDelete