Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Day 17: LAST post from China!! Packing, Red Couch, Lucy's!!!

Whew!!! What a JOURNEY it has been!!!

This will be our last update from China. Our guide is picking us up tomorrow morning at 5:30 a.m. for a 9:00 a.m. departure to Shanghai. We depart Shanghai at 4:10 p.m. and arrive in Chicago at 5:00 p.m. and depart Chicago at 7:40 p.m. We have a very tight layover in Chicago to pass thru Customs & Immigration before making our connection to Evansville and (HOPEFULLY!!!!) arriving at 8:45 p.m.

Today has been a very laid back day as we prepare for tomorrow's journey back home. We started the day with our last White Swan breakfast, walking/shopping the island with our buddies (the Teagues - we're gonna miss you guys!!), packing, napping (BenBen) and drinking (Greg)....so sad.

A few random bullet points on our journey:
  • Skype has been wonderful!!! Can't imagine not seeing and speaking with our kiddos at least every other day. We miss them soooo much and BenBen knows them already!! -- and "go go" too (aka, Chezzy).
  • VPN is crucial for Facebook and Blogger. Glad we had in advance!!! Loved reading everyone's comments!!! Thank you to all who followed our journey!!!
  • Meeting other Americans and their new children in Guangzhou has been priceless....and a real lifesaver. We have met some truly wonderful people and look forward to continuing our friendship back in the States.
  • We ate wayyyyy too much!!!! It's difficult to fill up on Chinese food!!!....and it's sooooo good!! I'm a master at chopsticks now!....LOVE Chinese beer (although I learned that Tsingtao is actually brewed in Germany!). I believe we'll be able to buy it in Evansville. :)
  • The Great Wall is amazing. Beautiful....absolutely breathtaking. Wish we could have spent several days there or more. It's that freakin' awesome!
  • We missed the opportunity to visit a province (since BenBen was from Beijing) and only experienced "big city" China. Perhaps another visit someday to experience rural China is in our future...? hmmm.....
  • We found the Hutongs, back alleys and "real life" China to be extremely interesting and educational. Life is so different here. Our Guangzhou guide, John, is 25 and has never left China. It was so enlightening to hear his thoughts on America (where everyone is "rich") vs. life in China.  
  • There is very little religion in China....even Buddhism. Except holidays, Chinese "worship" from home. On holidays they may journey to a temple.
  • Chinese women value light skin....every cosmetic counter (Clinique, namebrands...) sells "lightening creams"....every cosmetic has sunscreen + lightening additive.
  • A good business for a Chinese local to start: Gotcha Day photography and videography!! Greg took some amazing photos and our guide took video....but other families weren't as fortunate. Such treasured moments.
  • The White Swan does NOT have electrical outlets in the bathroom, clocks, strollers to rent/borrow or any food you can afford (other than the breakfast included with the room)...and never enough towels. The pool is wonderful and a great meeting place for families. Great hotel service! 
  • The adoption medical office is also moving off the Shamian Island and relocating near the US Consulate. I doubt Shamian Island will be a destination for adoptive families in the future. 
  • Jordon's truly is the ONLY store on the island that doesn't pester you when shopping!! It's annoying....but in a friendly kind of way. 
  • LOTS of tourist traps....Beijing and Guangzhou -- tea shops, jade factories, souvenir shops in general. Shop with Ann @ Red Thread while in Guangzhou, if you can!!! Everything is marked up 70% or more!
  • A lot of Chinese adoptive children return to China on "heritage tours" with their parents. A LOT of them are staying at the White Swan. Very interesting to see them with their families of 10-20 years.
  • Chinese men (in general!) are rude. Very pushy and inconsiderate of women....except John, our guide! They're always spitting, hacking and coughing. 
  • Chinese women (in general!) are NOT afraid to stare (closely and for LONG periods of time) and instruct you on parenting skills - in Chinese - as they chase you down the street (while you're pushing your screaming child in a stroller).  
  • Younger Chinese are much nicer and most know some English....they all seem to think BenBen is extremely handsome!  
  • Dogs are almost never on leashes....even in the bigger cities.
  • We haven't seen a single family home (free standing) in China...only highrises with clothes hanging on the balconies....in a typhoon or sun. 
  • The squatty potty - I could do an entire post on this....for another day, perhaps.
BenBen has come a looonnnng way in the 17 days we've had him! A few tidbits:
  • He now cries when "Baba" leaves his sight. He has definitely bonded with both parents...although he still prefers his "Mama" (which is great, until he wants to be carried!).
  • He's learning more English every day but it's still frustrating for us/him when he cries and we can't console him.
  • He says up, down, please, thank you, eat, drink, more, finished, mama, baba, Sam (or ge ge "big brother"), Ellie, Jack, ball, shoes, panda, diaper, and fishies (in the White Swan lobby pond), ohhh (with a look of surprise and rounded mouth), hold on, buckle and sit down - regularly.
  • He knows "nighty night" (but doesn't use it much - doesn't like the thought of actually going to sleep - but great once he gets there!) and "potty"...but is still in diapers.
  • He likes to count to ten with us when he walks up and down stairs....he's almost got 'em all! 
  • He's learning his colors (he knew "lellow" yesterday)...but, Greg said it was a "Fredbird" - (inside joke for Waltsan!).
  • He does tell us after he poops and always holds his nose, waves his hand and says, "shuuuuuueeeee" as we change him!!
  • He still does not like messes but he's getting much better!
  • He's also learning to share, a little....yesterday he shared his treasured "chocolate filled teddy grahams" with Daniel (another FTIA lil guy), major progress!!!
  • He loves to throw things away, line up all of our shoes and get his hands into anything he's not supposed to!
  • He also knows to whine (incessantly) for anything he wants or doesn't even know he wants. It's sooooo annoying...we're trying so hard not to give in and it is getting better. BUT, in the meantime, food usually does the trick!
  • He loves when I gel his hair (sorry G'pa!) -- and then he wants to comb it. Soooo cute.
  • He knows how to "give love" and will hug you or give a big open mouth kiss.
  • He knows how to high five, ching ching (aka "fist pump") and blow kisses.
  • He also says, "awwwwww" every time we show him his picture on the digital camera!!! Cracks us up!
  • We're trying to teach him NOT to give the thumbs up on every photo - so if you see a picture with his arms very straight - to his sides - that Greg telling him to put his arms down!
  • He LOVES to nap and requires a LOT of sleep...and still no blanket or pillow. Crossroads (preschool) may need to extend the 2 hr napping period for BenBen!!!
  • Ben has yet to eat a vegetable or a fruit (other than banana) since we've been here. Hmmmm.......
  • He has the sweetest belly laugh and mischievous smile ever.
  • We have not called him Xigang or GangGang since about day 4. It's Ben or BenBen....and he definitely knows his name.
  • He loves his Ge Ge (big brother) Sam and BenBen thinks he's much bigger and capable than his 2 1/2 years of age. We think he's going to play football - go GSS Rams!
  • We think he likes us and can't imagine our lives without him!!
  • He's funny, loving and a typical 2 1/2 year old. Fun times ahead!!!! 
Through 4 adoption journeys, I can honestly say from the deepest depth of my heart, you parent the child you're meant to parent. BenBen's a Schultz, without a doubt. As I was laying in bed one morning, next to him (well, actually he was lying sideways!) and I was looking at him in sheer amazement (sucking his thumb, bottom in the air, looking so adorable) I was NOT thinking (as most people do -- "an orphan no more").......I was thinking.....we found you....

BenBen was always meant to be ours - he was never an orphan. He was always in our hearts...and others cared for him (very lovingly!) until we could get here!!!....Never an orphan. Always loved. Always cared for. Always in our hearts. Can't wait for everyone to meet him!!! He's a VERY special little guy. What a tremendous miracle we have witnessed with his tearful, frightful, screaming, initial meeting to his loving attachment to our little family....and daily increasing trust. He is changing all of our lives. How lucky we are to have him...to love him, forever.

Sam has been great!!! Yes, we actually do have another child on this trip!! He has adjusted so well to everything and has truly been wonderful with BenBen. Sam has enjoyed the trip....and Guangzhou a LOT more than Beijing. The pool, friends (Carson and Spencer) and a more "Westernized" environment (where everyone is not gawking at him) have been lifesavers. Sam is missing his friends though and definitely his "room"....(that's what he'll say if you ask him!). I guess he's wanting his private space back and display all the souvenirs he's purchased....including a Chess set today. We're such suckers!

It's getting late and we're back from our last dinner in China at Lucy's with our friends from FTIA and the Harrell's (our friends we met in Beijing!). 16 of us on the outdoor porch...having a few beers and rehashing our journeys. It has truly been a remarkable experience. Each of us with very different circumstances and "challenges" but all with a common thread - unconditional love for our child and faith...it is a faithful journey. This evening was a wonderful evening to end our journey.

I'm down in the lobby finishing this last post (our internet package in the room expired today!). Sam and Ben are hopefully sleeping and I'm heading upstairs for our final packing weigh-in. 

Our Red Couch photos were great and I can't wait for Greg to share them with you all on Shutterfly....may be after our trip home though. The kiddos looked sooooooo cute in their traditional Chinese clothing and all posed so perfectly (4 in all). Ben did great and even posed a few shots without the famous thumbs up! :) He's such a poser!!!

Well, this is our final farewell post from China. It has gone by quickly but also seems like forever!!! We're all ready for home and can't wait to unite our family. I've been missing a piece of my heart on this journey....I'm not myself without all my kids in tow. I've missed them terribly. Please pray for safe travels home.

Thanks to everyone who has helped us along in this journey -- FTIA (Betty rocks!!!!), our guides (especially Shirley and John) and most of all our families, friends and co-workers at home. We couldn't have done this without all of your love and support. 
Blessings and see you all soon!!!!

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Monday, June 27, 2011

Day 16: US Consulate appt, Huacheng Square, 5th floor with friends!!

It was an early start today for BenBen!! This kid loves to sleep!! We had to wake him at 5:30 a.m. to eat breakfast and meet our guide by 7:05 a.m. He was NOT happy. But, as soon as we told him we were eating, he was a new kid!! The van taking us to the US Consulate was filled with 6-7 families all from the White Swan Hotel. The Sloan family from FTIA was with us (adopting their first child, a darling little guy named Daniel) - but all the other families were with CCAI and adopted their children from the same province!! Must be a huge agency!!!

Cameras/cell phones/any electronics (even toy cell phones!) are not allowed in the US Consulate area. There was a security checkpoint where we left our stroller and all of our electronics for pickup after we exited the room. There were approximately 20 families with appointments at the same time as ours. We entered a nice room with seats lined on either side of the center doors. Adoptions to the right, regular Chinese visas to to the left. There was a nice play area for the kiddos (chalk board, table, chairs) and we all stood and chatted until we heard the American voice!!! A Caucasian lady made the announcement for our attention - followed by some instructions....and finally, the Oath. We all raised our right hand and promised our documents were legitimate, among other things which I don't recall. Then, one by one we were called to the window by our agency/child's Chinese name. They verified our passports with the information provided, we signed a document and that was it!

Our guide did take our picture downstairs in the entry way in front of the US Consulate's sign (which contained the American Flag). Thumbs up for all!!!!! It was such a relief to have this last appointment behind us. All of the paperwork and possible what-ifs are behind us!!!! He's ours and we cannot wait to have him in America....with his whole family. We can't imagine what he'll be thinking as we escort him through yet another drastic change....new country, sites, sounds, smells, language, etc. Nothing will be familiar to him but us. We're so thankful we've had this time to bond with him and build some trust before we throw him into the Schultz family routine!!! LOL!!! He's gonna fit right in!!!

BenBen is doing great! He has his moments, like any 2 1/2 year old but overall he's amazingly happy and good. He LOVES to laugh, give kisses (I'll be across the room and he'll yell, "Mama!" - I'll turn and he'll pucker up and smooch me!!!) and roughhouse/play with Sam. They are going to be buddies, no doubt! He's very adaptable to most situations and goes with the flow...as long as there's food and water. The kid wants to be eating constantly. We're giving in for now...but we'll need to limit the "snacking" at home. 

We came back to the hotel and journeyed out for an early lunch (early nap to follow!) to Subway. BenBen loves the Chicken Teriyaki. He eats all the chicken and some of the bread....no veggies of course. NOT a fruit or veggie guy. Not even apple juice (to try and help his recent constipation). There's a little convenience store next to Subway (where the lady gave him the "meltdown" sucker a few days ago), we found some awesome little teddy bear graham thingys with chocolate inside! He LOVES 'em!!! We'll have a backpack full for the 14 hr flight home!!!! -- and we debated...and finally broke down.....and bought a pacifier. Yes, we know. It's ridiculous....but, if it helps soothe him on the flight home we'll try anything!!!!! He sucks his thumb when he's really tired or sleeping, but not when he's in the "zone". We're hoping a meltdown does not develop in flight, but if it does, we'll give it a try!! (along with every other possible snack item imaginable).

BenBen is napping now and Sam/Greg/I are blogging/watching movies/resting. We're meeting our guide and the other FTIA families at 2:30 p.m. for a tour of "modern Guangzhou"....not sure what to expect but we're going with it! I believe we are dining above Jordon's (5th floor) again tonight - with the Sloans and the Teagues - from our group. Should be a lot of fun!

Our "Red Couch" photo is tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. For those not familiar with Chinese adoption, it's legendary for families to have their photos taken (along with the other adopting families) on the red couch in the lobby of the White Swan hotel. Families not even staying at the hotel will journey to the hotel for this photo. The newly adopted children typically wear "traditional" Chinese outfits. We can't wait! We bought BenBen AND Sam an outfit for this special photo!!!!

We toured "Huacheng Square" with our group - it's Guangzhou's largest square and Guangzhou TV & Sightseeing Tower (largest in the world) is a new landmark of Guangzhou. We saw the new Guangzhou Opera House and the site of the 2010 Asian Games. It was a beautiful area - the financial district of Guangzhou....and full of 5 star+ hotels (Ritz, W, Four Seasons). We asked John if the people who work in this district make a good living, and where do they live? He said, "only people who work for the government are rich"! LOL!. John, said his cousin has a 2 bedroom condo overlooking the square and paid 10 million yuan or $1.5 million USD. I asked what his cousin did for a living and he said, "he works at a hospital but his wife works for the government." Hmmm......

Dark rain clouds were looming, so we boarded the bus back to the hotel and headed to the 5th floor restaurant above Jordon's (with the Sloans and the Teagues and John!). They sat us in a very nice, banquet type room and it was a blast! We are really enjoying our group and John is a hoot! We love picking on him :) He's a big kid at heart and great with the kids. We drank lots and ate even more!!! Good times, treasured memories.

We walked in the rain back to our hotel and of course, a stop at our favorite gift shop "Chinese Life" next to the hotel. BenBen is a rockstar there and it's always fun to stop by and say hello. Sam asked the Teague's sons (Carson and Spenser) to come back to our room and teach him to play chess (with Carson's new chess set). It was fun having them in the room with us! They are such great kids and Sam has thoroughly enjoyed being with them. We have too! Finally, off to bed!

Tomorrow we're packing (YAY!!!), swimming, Red Couch photos and dinner with our group and the Harrell's (the couple we dined with in Beijing) at Lucy's. A perfect way to end our trip!!! We are so excited about getting home....but the journey (over 25 hrs. + of travel) not so much. We will be exhausted and jet lagged for quite a few days, if not a week. We're fortunate Greg's mom (Meri) is staying in town until the 9th so we'll have help with the kiddos not suffering jet lag!! -- and everything else!! We're so thankful for Meri - 3 weeks with Ellie and Jack and not a single issue!!! She's ready for us to return home but we're thankful for her patience and care of the kiddos more than she'll ever know. It made this journey possible for us and we're VERY, VERY thankful for her.

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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Day 15: Six Banyan Temple, Chen House, best meal yet!!!

Today was another touring day with our fellow FTIA families. We met John (our guide) and the other families in the hotel lobby at 9:30 a.m. (after another over indulging White Swan breakfast!!!!).

There were 3 other families on the tour and 8 kiddos total. First stop was the Temple of Six Banyan Trees....an ancient Buddhist temple originally built in 537 in the Liang Dynasty. It is one of 4 Buddhist temples in Guangzhou. It was raining, and our 2nd Buddhist temple since arriving in China, so we weren't overly partaking in its wonderment. The second stop was the Guangzhou Ancestral Temple of the Chen Family built in the 1890's during the Quing Dynasty. It was built as a collective effort by the Chen families from 72 counties all over Guangdong providence to honor and worship their ancestors. OR, as Greg prefers to describe it for blog purposes, "just tell 'em it was a real snoozer"....I think we're kinda China'd out on the sights. We enjoy spending time with the other families and seeing the sights though...just ready to come home.

From there we stopped at "Carrefour" grocery store for snacks/groceries. It was fun seeing the bizarre variety of flavors and food available. We purchased mostly snacks and PB, bread for the room, a Pineapple Beer (for Greg), Pearl River Beer (aka Guangzhou beer for us - love it!!), various snacks (Pringles regular YAY!) and goldfish, gummies, M&M's, suckers and teddy grahams for BenBen. Ben is happiest when he's eating....and with a nearly 25 travel time home....lots of snacks will be flowing.

We ate PB sandwiches in the room for a quick lunch and put the boys down for naps (yes, both boys!!). I took laundry back to the "Chinese Life" gift shop and toured the island a little while Greg stayed back with the nappers. When I returned, the boys were still napping so Greg took his turn roaming/touring. He was adventurous enough to cross the bridge off the island and head back to the shopping area from yesterday. The boys woke after a nearly 3 hour nap and we watched Ni Hao Kai Lan on my iPad until Greg returned.

It was around 4:30 or 5:00 p.m. by this point so we decided to walk down by the pool to see if our fellow FTIA buddies were swimming. We met them on the way, and after letting the boys swim for a while, decided on dinner at a local restaurant off the beaten path - with a wonderful reputation for cheap food, great service and excellent food. Sounded great!! For those traveling, it's on the 5th floor above Jordon's gift shop...no elevator. Just head to the back of the hall between Jordon's shop and up to the 5th floor. They have menus in English and Chinese, air conditioning and help yourself rice from a huge crockpot...and a cat running around. The people were very accommodating....happily pushing tables together for our large group. The food was EXCELLENT - best we've had so far - and cheap!!! DEFINITELY a top recommendation for Shamian Island. Plus, they offer takeout food AND TsingTao!....+ only 2 blocks from the White Swan. We had a great time!!! LOVE our travel buddies...truly a blessing on this journey. I'm sure you'll see our dinner highlight in Greg's photos -- a chicken dish the Teague's ordered with the head still attached. At one point Greg was using it as a puppet....I nearly vomited. Good laughs though...not sure the locals appreciated our "American" humor though!

On the way back to the hotel we stopped at the "Chinese Life" gift shop for our laundry (great prices! - like $20 for a week's worth - 4 people) much better than the hotel and same day service - neatly folded and tucked inside plastic bags. Highly recommend!)....and of course, BenBen stole the show. All the girls in the store know his name and follow him around for kisses. He only wants his Mama though....LOVE!!!

Back to the room and quickly skyped the kids! Miss them soooooo much --- only 3 more days!!! Doesn't seem real! They look like they've grown so much since we've been gone! :( Baths for the boys then bed. I'm finishing the blog and right behind them.

Tomorrow is our U.S. Consulate appointment -- the swearing in, under oath, that will make BenBen a US Citizen once he lands on US soil. Our LAST appointment in this journey and we couldn't be happier!!! We've enjoyed this once in a lifetime opportunity....we will cherish these memories forever. We're glad we had the 3 weeks to bond and attach with BenBen....it seems like we've always had him - already! But we're ready to get home....see our Ellie Bell and Jack Jack and see BenBen with his entire family and "go go" - (his Chinese pronunciation of dog). Our lives will never be the same...it's hard to believe we met our precious lil man only 2 weeks ago today!!

We'll leave early tomorrow morning with another FTIA family at 7:05 a.m. and will return around 11:00 a.m. We'll lunch and nap and we have tours scheduled with the other families at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday is a free day (other than picking up BenBen's visa and packing - and maybe our "Red Couch" photos!) and Wednesday we leave!!!!!!!!!!!

BenBen has really been great these past two days. No meltdowns and very well behaved....95% of the time!! That's pretty awesome for any 2 1/2 year old!!! The whining is ceasing too -- it was like a cry, but not really a cry. DROVE US CRAZY!! Anyway, that is lessening as his/our communication improves. He's also learning to count (almost to 10 - in English!) and LOVES to laugh....he's a VERY happy little guy and charms everyone he meets. He has such energy and sweetness and big cheeks that everyone tries to kiss!!! He's getting better with walking but still quite clumsy and trips/falls a lot. He's mostly been walking lately (his big boy independent little self) vs. the stroller and we're glad to see him gaining strength (and some exercise)!! I gotta tell ya though....this kid sweats!!! Poor guy...gotta get him some dri fit shirts for our humid Evansville summers!!! 

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Saturday, June 25, 2011

Day 14: More shopping, swimming & dinner with friends!!!

Another free day today! We started the day sleeping in until 7:30 a.m., skyping the kiddos, breakfast, and some island shopping. The plan was to meet our guide, John, and the other FTIA families at 2:30 p.m. for some shopping off the island....pearl/jade, pet and medicine markets.

The island was packed (since it was Saturday) with locals and photo shoots everywhere!!!! It seems every bride in China has a photo shoot on Shamian Island because of its historic colonial look and beauty. Plus, models (including ones in bras and panties only!). A lot of locals were out - exercising, playing badminton, playing with their kiddos. It's a beautiful, charming little place and we love it. So different than Beijing.

We visited Jordon's place to pick up Benjamin's scroll and purchased a few items (definitely see the price difference vs. shopping wholesale with Ann!). We even managed to buy BenBen his first pair of "Squeakers"....shoes that squeak when he walks. They're sandals and fit his "Fred Flinstone" feet (LOVE!!!!)much better than the socks with Stride Rites we brought from home! :)

We came back to the room around 12:30 p.m. so BenBen could nap before our shopping excursion with the other families. He fell asleep quickly. Greg agreed to hang in the room this time so Sam and I could take a walk to find a local "charity" gift shop where we can donate unused items before we leave (i.e. medicines, diapers, etc.) and pick up Subway for lunch. Greg enjoyed his time in the room, drinking a Pearl River beer....and crying over his broken camera. Soooo sad.

We met our John and the Teague family (with new daughter Mia - adorable!!!!) at 2:30 p.m. and loaded the White Swan (deluxe!) bus to the shopping district. It was sunny out and extremely crowded!!! The shopping district was a long street (no cars allowed) and beautiful....hanging lanterns, loud music, TONS of people. We saw a McDonald's converted into a lingerie store...hmmmm......and a koi pond with children feeding the fish using bottles. No one bought anything but it was very fun and interesting to see.

We then walked thru the small, crowded pet market....fish, turtles, bunnies, cats, dogs, gerbils, hamsters, birds, lizards, frogs, crabs, salamanders. BenBen loved the "go go's" (dogs), of course. We turned onto the medicine street and it was packed with vendors selling dried animal skins, herbs, tree bark - you name it. John said most items are used in soups. He also said he sees a Western doctor for antibiotics. :)

We walked back to the island (just over a bridge) and walked with the Teague's to Jordon's. They bought Mia her Squeakers (hot pink) so LOTS of squeaking!!! We decided to head back to the hotel so the boys could swim before dinner (the Teagues have 2 boys - Carson and Spenser). Although BenBen had a nap, we were still apprehensive about dining out.

We decided to risk it and venture out with the Teagues to a Cantonese restaurant our guide recommended that is very close to our hotel. It was packed...and quite an experience! The menus are huge but most have pictures which helps when you don't speak Mandarin! The waiters also expect you to order everything at once and they deliver dishes in complete random order - whenever they're ready, I guess. They also do NOT offer napkins...even in the finest restaurants. We've also seen a lot of locals wearing plastic gloves when they eat. Interesting...

Greg ordered a variety of dishes including a beef rib dish, chicken dish, fried rice and noodles...and Pearl River beer! (LOVE the beer here!). All the dishes were quite spicy vs. Beijing food.

We really enjoyed the time with the Teagues. They are a great family and such a blessing to have with us on this trip. Ben did GREAT!!!! He sat patiently throughout the long meal and tried most dishes. 

We walked back to the hotel (around 8:30 p.m.) - which is very late for BenBen. We gave him a quick bath and off to bed...Greg, Sam and I are headed to bed now too (about 9:30 p.m.).  

Tomorrow (Sunday) we're going on a temple tour (I think, not even sure which one!)....it's supposed to rain (rainy season in Guangzhou) so we'll see. John received Ben's passport from Beijing yesterday!!!!!

Monday is our U.S. Consulate appointment swearing in. YAY!!! This will be the last appointment before we leave for HOME!!!! We'll pick up Ben's Visa on Tuesday and we leave early Wednesday morning - flying Guangzhou to Shanghai to Chicago to Evansville! Arriving at 8:45 p.m. Wednesday night!!!! Can't wait!!!

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Day 13: Shopping, screaming & swimming!

We're back at the room for the night. BenBen is ready for bed....after no nap today. But, he slept 16 hours last night! This kid LOVES to sleep.

Greg went exploring the island early this a.m. while we slept -- and his camera stopped working due to the moisture. Not good. We have a back up camera but Greg is a camera "snob" and the pictures certainly won't be worthy but they'll have to do. :)

We started the morning at 7:30 a.m. with Ben an inch from my face saying, "Mama...Mama". It's such a great way to start each morning!! Sam slept on the sofa vs. the inflatable mattress (something about the room being too cold). We headed down to breakfast and Benjamin can eat!!! He tells anyone that speaks to him in Mandarin that he's hungry. Cracks us up! He was working the wait staff again. They love seeing him each morning.

Sam usually finishes breakfast before us (well, BenBen)....he was touring the amazing lobby and a Chinese lady approached him and said, "beautiful, beautiful"...Sam said thank you and ran away....and she followed him! She kept saying, "beautiful"....LOL!

We had about 30 minutes to kill so we walked around the island. The weather was beautiful and sunny (finally!) and we strolled to Jordan's (a very famous souvenir shop on the island)...the owner, Jordan, is "Christian" and happy and proud to share this with you. He also has a wonderful reputation and will write your adoptive child's name in Chinese calligraphy / scroll for free. We loved his little store and he's so friendly and knows English very well. His prices seemed very reasonable compared to other touristy stores. He's also "no pressure sales" as his sign outside indicates. We had to leave to meet Ann so we'll head back tomorrow for some shopping. Highly recommend a visit to meet Jordan! He's quite a character!!!

Next, we were off to meet Ann (our personal shopping guide!) at 10:30 a.m. at the hotel. We took a taxi to a shopping district in Guangzhou, off the island. It was an 8 story building and tons of tiny shops selling anything imaginable. Ann is able to get "wholesale prices at a discount"....and it's definitely true!!! We then visited the pearl and jade market. Without divulging all of our secret purchases, it was a very successful excursion!!! We paid Ann $30 for 3 hours plus taxi fairs of $6. We completed nearly all of our souvenir shopping with tremendous savings over the island and/or Beijing prices. TOTALLY WORTH IT!!! I would highly recommend her services if you're visiting Guangzhou!! Plus, she's super nice, a great negotiator and great with the kids....she said we are VERY decisive and efficient shoppers and she enjoyed that! :)  

We came back to the hotel and decided to head out for lunch (after Ann said BenBen was hungry for rice!). We decided on a local Shamian Island staple -- Lucy's. It's super convenient....and served PB&J (Sam)!!! We knew it was a risk though...Ben was overly tired and had been schlepped all over Guangzhou for the past 3 hours of shopping, in a stroller in the heat. Well, Ben decided he did not want to share the menus....so we couldn't order. We finally pulled a menu away and meltdown city. Head on the table, screaming. Time to go. I ordered a quick take out meal of noodles and chicken for BenBen and wheeled him out of the restaurant to wait outside for our takeout....meltdown still in process. Chinese people were coming out of stores and homes staring at us....shaking their heads and yelling at me. Hmmm....not so good. Greg ran the food outside and I pushed Ben back to the hotel room. The meltdown (aka screaming) continued nonstop thru the lobby, elevator and into our room....something like I've never experienced. BenBen has a set of lungs on him!!!

I tried speaking to Ben a few times to no avail. When he's in the "zone" it's futile. After about 15 minutes he finally stopped crying, looked at me, and waved his hands "finished"....and smiled. Like nothing ever happened. Mama needed a TsingTao!!!

BenBen ate his lunch and by then Sam and Greg had returned. We decided to forgo nap because BenBen seemed in a great mood, it was beautiful out and we hadn't taken BenBen swimming yet. Ben was very apprehensive about swimming at first. Greg sat with him in the baby pool and he wanted no part of it. After about 30 minutes he started walking in the pool while holding Greg's hand...and then finally by himself! He loved playing with Sam and splashing and didn't mind when he fell under the water.

We decided take out for dinner would be our best option considering Ben's absence of a nap. We changed out of suits and were off to search for dinner. Ben did NOT want to be in the stroller (or something...we're not really sure) but we got outside of the hotel and he started the meltdown. This time I let Greg push the stroller! Sam and I went into Subway. I looked outside and a shop worker came out of her store and gave Ben a sucker.....when she asked Greg why Ben was crying Greg said, "because he wants out of the stroller". So, SHE TOOK HIM OUT. What?! Well, BenBen couldn't have been happier....exactly as he wanted. We're calling him the "Little Emperor"....whatever "LE" wants, "LE" gets. SO sad. Greg, I and Ben ended up with takeout from a deli next to the hotel that serves "Chinese" takeout. Hmmm.....we got some kind of soup with a head in it and the "chicken" I had was not edible. I ate white rice, a beer and Greg ran out later for ice cream while Sam and I watched movies on our iPads. Ahhhh.....

We think the recipe for BenBen is lotso food and sleep!!! We'll need to work some exercise in the regimen or he'll be a sumo wrestler!!

Tomorrow is another free day. Our other FTIA families should be here tonight and they'll have their child's medical exams tomorrow. Hopefully we can meet up with them tomorrow afternoon. We don't have any plans...a day of just hanging out around the hotel sounds great! We haven't taken our red couch photos yet or many shots around the hotel. We also need to return to Jordan's to pick up Benjamin's scroll and a few other souvenirs. I'm sure we'll be swimming at some point and napping too! :)

Missing home and can't wait for Ellie and Jack (and everyone!!!) to finally meet our BenBen! Only 4 more nights!!!

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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Day 12: Safari Zoo, Typhoon, Papa John's!

Today has been an amazing day for our little family....I can't explain it, something has "clicked" and it just felt right....more "normal", more relaxed and not stressful. Benjamin had his best day yet...and it wasn't an easy day to be "good"! He's learning to trust us more and comprehend a lot more of what we say. Waiting, patience and communication are still his biggest challenges...but it's getting better day by day. John, our guide, commented he has never seen a 2 year old with such a good English vocabulary and the ability to understand and communicate with his new family. He's such a smart lil guy!!!

It's little things....like, Ben is beginning to understand that breakfast WILL be served, albeit not the millisecond we enter the restaurant! LOL! He also wants to do "big boy" stuff like Sam (hold an iPad, bumper cars at the Zoo, etc.) and that's sometimes difficult for us to explain to him. We think he's beginning to realize this is the real deal....and he kind of likes it! We realize we have a long road ahead of us but his behavior and cuteness today were beyond normal for even the best behaved 2 1/2 year old. :)

We slept in until 7:30 a.m. and had to meet John at 9:30 a.m. for the Safari Zoo tour. LOVE the White Swan breakfast - where else can you find pizza and dim sum for breakfast?! Ben had congee again but was more interested in the noodles and scrambled eggs today. Still no fruits besides bananas. We met another family from Green Bay, Wisconsin...adopting their 2nd girl. Their first girl, Anna, is 7 1/2 and they waited over 5 years for their 2nd girl, Claire (age 18 mos.). She was absolutely precious. Ben and Claire were flirting with each other all during breakfast...soooo cute. BenBen was blowing her kisses! Such a ladies man! They were headed to Hong Kong this afternoon and on to Detroit then Green Bay. Very nice couple. The mom even commented how impressed she was when Sam (of all people!!!!) held the door open for her on the way back from the restrooms!! We've been working on that for years!! So proud of him!

The weather forecast today was rain (which we knew yesterday when we arranged the tour) but we decided to take the chance and head to the Safari Zoo Park anyway. We figured, how long can it rain, seriously? 

Hmmmm.....not a good sign when we pulled into the Safari parking lot and NO ONE was there!!! It was like the Wally World scene out of Chevy Chase's "Vacation"!!! Oh well.....

We brought umbrellas, were already there and decided to give it a try. The temps were perfect....overcast, breezy and mid-80's. We entered the park and headed straight to the Safari tram tour. No wait (of course!)...normally, families can wait for hours. It was spectacular!!!! Worth the price of admission alone! I've never seen the variety, quantity or quality (i.e. animals you really want to see!) in any Zoo, let alone a tram driving right next to the animals! It was awesome. Ben "ooohhed" and "ahhhhhhed" over every animal....until he lost interest about 3/4 of the way thru and started playing with the Kleenex package he took from the hotel.

It also started to rain (or as John likes to call it - "typhoon") during our tram tour and despite a nearly torrential downpour for 80-90% of our entire visit, it was wonderful!!!!!! We were all soaking wet, BenBen would not lean back in the stroller and cover himself with the stroller hood - he sat up as far as he could enjoying ever bit of the rain!! He just rolled with it....pants/diaper soaking wet. No worries. This kid has come a LONG way in 10 short days!!!

We were also pleasantly surprised that BenBen wasn't scared once - not even a tiny bit - of any of the "characters" in the park (Koala, Panda) that approached him. He gave 'em high fives, blew them kisses, shook their hands. I guess if everything in your world is new, what's one more thing?!!

Greg took a zillion photos (ok, actually 650!!!) and they are seriously worth viewing. Amazing. Greg said it was "the best place he's ever been to in his entire life"....seriously, it was that cool!!! Well, he did just drink a HUGE Chinese beer, so who knows?!

The park was beautiful, clean, friendly - on a Disney World level! The bathrooms had changing tables (the first I've seen in China) and normal potties (with phones?). Each exhibit ended with a walk thru an amazing gift shop (sound familiar?!). We ate lunch at the "Koala Cafe"....Sam had french fries, something he thought was a hamburger but didn't touch and "chocolate milk tea"....which he didn't drink but Greg said it was great. We ordered a variety of Chinese dishes and Ben was in heaven. He's starting to eat slower and chew his food....knowing we aren't going to limit him. He always gives us the sign for "finished".

The day was so special....especially, if you're into animals. :) The Safari Zoo had 'em all...and LOTS of 'em up close and personal in ways we've never seen. It was so exciting to sit and watch 6 beautiful pandas being fed carrots...a mere 3 feet in front of us. No crowds....just us and a few Chinese people. Maybe it was because we had the park to ourselves....or running in the rain from exhibit to exhibit.....or maybe it was the bonding and fun and laughing with Ben - experiencing so many new things thru his little eyes.....it was so beautiful and serene and fun.

We saw parrot eggs "hatching", the only set of Koala twins in the world (soooooo cute!!!!), Sam fed 5 whole bananas to an elephant and we viewed dozens of white tigers, giraffes, elephants, kangaroos......and these amazing little monkeys. The park had amusement rides (included in the price) and many opportunities to ride elephants, hold a tiger or koala, etc. It's really a top notch place. BenBen likely experienced his first carousel ride, zoo visit and running outside in a complete downpour "typhoon" and loved it all!

Our guide, John, was terrific too!! He's 25 and comes from a Guangzhou family with 3 children. He's the baby and only boy. His family had to pay the Government money to have more than one child. His family is considered very large in China. We really enjoy him and he's soooo great with Ben. We told him we wanted him to come and live with us in the States and be our nanny! (...we think he was considering it!!).

We came back to the room soaking wet and exhausted. Sam and Ben took baths and watched movies for a while. BenBen was very sleepy and headed to bed around 5:30 p.m. He'll sleep thru the night - no nap today. We're ordering Papa John's for dinner....just too exhausted to leave the hotel and room service is crazy expensive at the White Swan.

Tomorrow is a "free day" so we've arranged to go souvenir shopping with Ann from Red Thread at 10:30 a.m. for a few hours. YAY!! Then, weather permitting, we'll swim in the afternoon or hang out in the hotel play room and perhaps try the Pearl River Cruise dinner in the evening. We're excited our 3 fellow FTIA families will be arriving tomorrow too!!! Can't wait to meet their new little blessings!

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Day 11: Medical Appt, New Stroller, Americans!!!!

Happy 69th Birthday Mom and G'ma!!! We love you and miss you and appreciate you the whole world!!! xoxoxoxoxoxoxo

Wow! So much to say and it's only 3:40 p.m. our time! BenBen just fell asleep for nap. Greg and Sam are trying out the pool for the first time. We walked by earlier and the water is extremely warm - almost like a hot tub!! The scenery is beautiful - a waterfall into the pool and a great kiddie pool. I can't wait till Ben checks it out....he seemed very eager but we wouldn't let him out of the stroller (it was raining a little too). He loves baths but is apprehensive (not sure that's the right word...?) about getting his head wet.

We started the morning by sleeping in (well, me and the kids). Greg was out walking the island at 6 a.m. - taking photos and checking things out. We slept in until 7:30 a.m. or so. Ben usually wakes me up by staring at me really close to my face and smiling really big when I open my eyes. Cracks me up! We played in bed (quietly because Sam was still sleeping) for about 10 minutes. We were whispering counting to 10, naming body parts, playing "this little piggy"....he's such a little sponge and loves learning all the new words. He's trying so hard and it melts my heart.

I must say, (and I mentioned it in my post yesterday) - the beds here are ridiculously hard. Harder than a floor...more like concrete! The pillows are huge (like, tall/thick) and I can't use them....nearly paralyzes my neck. I think I'll try a travel pillow tonight. Otherwise, the rooms are great. Loving having the extra 1/2 bath and the view from our room at night is fantastic...overlooking Guangzhou across the river with all the lights. This is more like vacation.

We skyped the kids first (they're doing great!!!) and then headed down to breakfast around 8:30 a.m. The breakfast buffet more than lived up to its reputation!!! EVERY imaginable and unimaginable item available. It goes on and on....located in a beautiful room, with floor to ceiling windows overlooking the river and the waterfall / koi pond on the other side. The waitress greeted us in cowboy attire - hat and all....hmmmm. We were seated right in the center of about 6 fellow American families all with their newly adopted Chinese children and even had a highchair! It was fascinating to say the least! BenBen was excellent and ate "congee" (rice porridge) for the first time (since we've had him) today. I could tell he loved it....his initial serving was small (we like to introduce him to a lot of different items in small portions to see what he likes). He signed "more" and slurped the congee bowl clean. I got him a cereal size bowl next and he ate most of it...and any meat we put in front of him. I had a few slices of wheat bread and some fruit. No low sugar oatmeal and flaxseed meal for Mama....so sad. Greg and Sam ate several helpings and all was good.

We had to meet our guide, John, at 10:00 a.m. for Benjamin's medical appointment. We walked to the appointment (on the island) and stopped first for Ben's Visa photo. Amazingly, we were the ONLY family at the adoption medical appointment!!! Normally, via blogs I follow, there are literally dozens and dozens of families crammed into a small, un-air conditioned waiting room...and it's an all-day process. We walked in / out in under 30 minutes!!! Ben did GREAT!!!

There were 4 different examinations:

1) a doctor reviewed his medical file and asked us how he's doing. Asked us to take off his pants, diapers, socks, shoes and lay him on the table. This was the only time he cried...heck, I would've too! The doctor listened to his heart, lungs and asked Ben to walk so he could see his walking skills. Thumbs up!

2) a different room, a nurse came in speaking very, very quickly in Mandarin. Ben seemed to understood what she was saying and he was responding. Our guide started laughing. Apparently, while taking his temperature very quickly, she asked him if he was nervous. He answered, "yes". Our guide said, "his responses were very funny"...but I'm not sure what was said exactly. The nurse weighed him - 32 lbs. (about 2 lbs. less than Jack!!) and took his height (although I don't know what it was). Thumbs up!

3) next stop, different room, different nurse. The "ENT" room. The nurse held a flash light to his face and moved it around. She then rang a bell on each side of his face to see if he responded. Then she made him say, "ahhhh". She checked his ears. Thumbs up!

4) last stop, different room, different doctor. Normally Ben would have his TB test taken at this point. BUT, Beijing requires a TB test for all adoptions so we merely had to supply the certificate from that test (taken last week just prior to Gotcha Day) and it was satisfactory. Thumbs up!

Whew!! I can't imagine going thru that with dozens+ other families. So glad that's behind us!!

We then came back to the hotel to fill out some paperwork for our guide in advance of our US Consulate appointment later this week. Tomorrow is a tour day with John and we decided to try the Xiangjiang Safari Park. It is the largest Safari Park in China and is China's leading zoo. It holds a 5A class Tourism Attraction Level, the highest level obtainable and the only zoo in China to hold this level. It is home to over 20,000 animals including Giant Pandas, Polar Bears and Koalas. It is the only zoo in mainland China to display Koalas and is the only zoo in the world to currently have koala twins, an extremely rare occurrence. The zoo also has over 100 white-tigers, half of the worlds population. The zoo is broken into 2 sections a "Safari on Foot Section" where guests walk around a modern zoo, and a "Safari on Wheels Section" where guests board road trains and travel through an impressive open plains zoo with three main sections, Asian Plains, Predator Island and Africa Savanna. It's about 50 minutes from the hotel and we thought BenBen would enjoy it most. We've heard wonderful things about it...just hope the rain holds off. Fortunately, the rain here is like the afternoon showers in Florida....rains for 15 minutes and sunny again. We're meeting John tomorrow morning at 9:30 a.m.

After John left we decided to check out the infamous White Swan play room and Ben loved it! First thing he ran to was a ball! The kid loves balls. He played really well independently and with us. He knows how to play and really seemed to enjoy it. He loves anything that makes sound or he can sit on. Initially we were the only family in the room. After a while another woman and her 2 daughters joined us. Her oldest is 7 1/2 and adopted at 13 months from China. Her youngest, age 3 1/2 was adopted the same day as Ben. She's a single mom from Arizona with Holt International (11 other families from Holt are here on their same schedule...such a big agency). It was SOOOOOO nice speaking to her. So many of the things we're experiencing with Ben she is experiencing with her new daughter. I even hugged her at one point I was so relieved. Another few Holt families joined the room and it was so fun seeing them all play together, speak Mandarin, and bond with their families....while the adults all commiserated together!

This is a difficult journey (tiring - mentally and physically exhausting while burdened with jet lag and the anxiety of meeting a new child that can't communicate with you and who is grieving their lost family/life. In addition, we're missing our family, friends and kiddos back home, etc.)...but this journey is also one of the most rewarding, enjoyable and fulfilling things I've ever had the privilege of doing. These beautiful children are gifts...miraculous little gifts and we're changing their lives forever and they're forever changing ours. They are not something owed to us....nor are they perfect. They are little human beings terrified of the transition occurring in their lives. It fills my heart with such love to see Ben giggling and bonding with Sam and starting (albeit barely on the edge) of trusting us. This is a journey....and it will take us all time to adjust. But, Ben is amazing. Truly, truly amazing. We love him so much and we're so inspired by his strength and humor and courage through it all.

A lot of blogs naturally shed light on the positive....I've tried to be real with my posts...well, as real as I can be without scaring people! :) Ben can be a handful and he's very determined, but what child isn't at 2 1/2? He's learning so much every day....and trust and communication are the biggest. He has to know we're there for him. He has to know that when we enter Subway he will get to eat....albeit not the second we enter the door. He has to know that when I leave the room, I'm coming back. He has to learn there are rules. * He has to learn what a family is....how they operate and love and trust.   

* In China, I've been told - small children/infants are completely spoiled. Parents do not discipline their children until age 6. This is a VERY consistent theme from all the American parents we spoke with today. Regardless of Foster vs. Orphanage care...these kiddos are spoiled......and loved.

After John left decided to stroll down by the pool with Ben in the stroller. Apparently I wasn't doing something right when pushing Ben up the steps and the stroller collapsed and broke....not good. We visited the White Swan concierge but it couldn't be fixed. Next stop? Stroller shopping!!! But first, we headed upstairs for our dirty laundry....it's very inexpensive to have clothing laundered and folded on the island. So, we headed to the nearest tourist/stroller/laundry shop (right next to the hotel) and bought an awesome new stroller for $25! It even folds back for napping and has a rain cover and mosquito net. We will pick up our laundry tomorrow after the Safari Tour. BenBen will be so happy to have clean socks. He does NOT like anything dirty :)

We then headed to a Subway down the street for lunch....takeout...and walked to a nearby Starbuck's for Greg to grab a drink and we ate on their beautiful patio. A nice breeze, sunny out, a shady table and absolutely gorgeous scenery. Ben was great!!! He ate a chicken teriyaki sub, some chips and a cookie. He's so American already!!

We stopped at a 7 Eleven for Coca Cola Zero and beer and headed back to the room for BenBen's nap. Housekeeping left our "Going Home" Barbie today!!!! A blonde American barbie (by Mattel) holding a Chinese baby. Another White Swan classic! (and great souvenir for Ellie!). Ben wanted to take a bath and I thought it would calm him down for a nap anyway. Our tub has a shower sprayer and he's not a huge fan of that. He also wants more bubbles...but the bath soap we brought (Aveeno for sensitive skin) isn't really bubble bath. It made one bubble and he followed it around the tub for 5 minutes! It was so cute.

Sam and Greg finally arrived back to the room from swimming around 5:00 p.m. It's so nice for Sam to have kids to swim with in the pool. Greg got to meet a lot of fellow adoptive parents and kids too. Such a sense of community here - we love it!! We finally woke Ben at 6:00 p.m. for dinner (he could have slept till morning) and headed to the Cow and Bridge Thai Restaurant, walking distance from the hotel. It's a very "kid friendly" restaurant - we ordered Ben congee with seafood! He was in heaven!! Couldn't slurp it down fast enough! They gave him a high chair and his own special plastic bowl and spoon....and moved all the plates and silverware out of the way as soon as we were seated. You could tell they've done this kid thing before!!!

We ordered fried won tons for appetizer. Greg ordered a shrimp dish ("prawns" as he likes to refer to it) -- they still had eyes. GROSS! -- and a banana shake. Weird. Sam ordered deep fried spare ribs with garlic and a lemonade drink with a flower....he didn't really care for either. I ordered fried rice with chicken - Thai style. It was yummy and a Chinese beer, of course. Ben was good but he has absolutely zero patience once the food is on the table. It was all served steaming hot and he does NOT understand the word, wait. This has to be our next sign language word. He is a "one track mind" kind of guy when he sees food, he wants to eat....and eat a lot immediately! He's very focused....wanting to shove as much in his mouth as possible at once. We've taught him to open his mouth and say, "ahhhh" after each bite to ensure he's properly chewed and swallowed before taking another bite. This is another common issue with children from orphanages (hoarding food, storing food in their cheeks, overeating, etc.). It's a trust issue and will lessen with time....we hope!  

We left the restaurant and it was POURING rain....we had umbrellas, but also BenBen in the stroller. We had to run in the rain for about 4 blocks to our hotel. Ben wouldn't let us take his shoes off so they're soaked...and his stroller and our shoes. Hopefully they'll all dry before tomorrow's Safari Zoo trip.

Sam and Ben took a warm bath, we skyped home for a quick call, and then Sam and Ben were off to bed....both exhausted. Greg and I are updating the blog and photos and not far behind them. Ann (our "personal shopping guide" with Red Thread Care Packages just called and we're touring with her, off the island, on Friday at 10:30 a.m. Can't wait!!

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Day 10: Guangzhou!!!

Finally!! The last leg of our trip! Our guide picked us up at 8:30 a.m. this morning for our 11:00 a.m. flight. We were on time AND packed within the weight restrictions (44 lbs. domestic vs. 50 lbs. international)! YAY!

We arrived at the airport and realized our flight was delayed 50 minutes. Thank goodness for the stroller! We had no issue getting thru security....all the girls (and guys!) were ooohhing and ahhhhing over Ben. Speaking to him sweetly in Mandarin...we weren't patted down because they were so taken with BenBen :) They did ask me what was in Ben's sippy cup (water) and asked me to take a drink. Beijing's airport is beautiful, clean and very easy to navigate! Lots of nice family restrooms, distilled drinking water with paper cups available, free luggage carts and kid cars to push. There was also a children's play area near our gate that Ben loved! We did see a little 2 year old Chinese girl wearing a dress and nothing underneath...going down the slide. Hmmm....her mom handed her to me at one point and took my picture with her. I was hoping she wouldn't pee on me!

After boarding we sat on the runway for almost an hour. NOT good with a 2 1/2 year old who is ready for nap time. Ben did great though. He ate a few suckers, colored, ate lots of animal crackers, looked at magazines, tore up magazines (so sad) and watched Ni Hao Ki Lan on my iPad but tired of it quickly....then lunch was served! Seafood rice. He loved the seafood and not the rice, or fruit or yogurt or bread with mysterious brown filling. I was hoping he'd nap during the 2.5 hour flight but it wasn't to be. Only one meltdown at the end of the flight as we were descending...he wanted me to pick up items he kept throwing on the floor and I'd had enough. An attendant asked if she could help, but of course it only made matters worse. So, they turned up the music (very loudly!) on the very large plane (we were in row 53!). Cracked me up! This too shall pass...and it finally did. 

The White Swan hotel staff was waiting for us at the airport. The hotel is about 45 minutes from the airport. Our guide, John, met us at check-in. He informed us a typhoon is headed to the island. Nice. We're on the 19th floor facing the Pearl River (Greg said, a step below our beautiful Ohio River).

The room is a Junior Suite with 1.5 baths which is great!!! The rooms are fine...the decor is quite outdated and the scheduled hotel remodel (August to last 1 year) is definitely needed. I jumped on the bed with Ben when we arrived and ..... thud. HARD AS CONCRETE! Seriously, the floor would be softer. I've never experienced anything like it. Should be a tough night's sleep!

The staff has been extremely nice and helpful. There is no free internet (like in Beijing) so it will cost us $50 for the week. Definitely a MUST though! Also, room service and meals in the hotel are EXTREMELY expensive. Breakfast - which the hotel is known for - is included and legendary! Can't wait!! 

Our guide said we could order Papa John's for delivery and they speak English. He gave us the number and Greg called....after speaking to 2 people, they hung up on him. So, Greg and Sam went out searching for dinner. They ate at Lucy's (Sam had a hamburger and fries, Greg had a "Chinese thing" per Sam and they brought me back a Chicken wrap and fries). They also stopped at a deli nearby for beer and banana bread. Yummy!
We're meeting our guide tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. for Ben's medical exam. Wednesday is a tour day (up to us where we go...?) and Thursday and Friday are free days. We're planning a shopping day with Ann from Red Thread and a day at the Safari Park if we can manage the heat! Greg's camera steamed up when we left the airport. It's VERY tropical and beautiful. The weather is definitely hot and humid - palm trees et al! 

We were able to pack Sam's inflatable bed from Beijing so he's all set. Ben took a bath immediately after check-in and went right to bed...at 5:00 p.m. for the night. The little guy was sooooo tired. He fell asleep crying on the ride to the hotel. He could hardly walk. Glad we don't have to be up early tomorrow. The bedroom is separated by french doors with heavy blackout shades from the living area which is very good thing. It's also a lot quieter than Beijing. Looking forward to a good night's sleep and a fresh start tomorrow.

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Monday, June 20, 2011

Day 9: Free day, Hutong Pizza, Dinner with friends

Today is our last day in Beijing...and we're ready to go! We have toured nearly every possible attraction taken thousands of photos. Hopefully someday Benjamin will appreciate the photo journey and memories we've created for him.

After packing (phase 1), we took a taxi to a hutong that is very popular....lots of restaurants and shopping. Hutongs are a type of narrow streets or alleys, most commonly associated with Beijing. The Hutongs are alleys formed by lines of traditional courtyard residences. Since the mid-20th century, the number of Beijing hutongs has dropped dramatically as they are demolished to make way for new roads and buildings. More recently, some hutongs have been designated as protected areas in an attempt to preserve this aspect of Chinese cultural history.

The taxi driver dropped us off very far from the Hutong (not sure he understood Greg's directions) but we managed to find our way via a map and Greg's iPhone compass app! We strolled the hutong in search of a very famous pizza place named appropriately, "Hutong Pizza". It was down a very narrow alley way and we were surprised to find it. It was air conditioned (thank goodness) and a very charming little place. Exactly the "hole in the wall" type of place we love. We ordered a cheese pizza, french fries and a chicken/veggie pizza. It was delicious!! Greg had 2 Chinese beers - living like the locals!

We sat next to an expat couple from Sydney. The husband teaches 4th grade in a local school and the wife is a stay at home mom...with an ayi (nanny). They were very interesting and have a 4 year old girl and a 2 year old boy. It was nice to speak some English and hear about their lives in Beijing. They were amazed how well Benjamin was behaving...especially for a 2 year old. :)

We decided to head back to the hotel after lunch so BenBen could nap before dinner. We're meeting a family at 5:00 p.m. tonight @ the Tube Station (pizza again!). They are from San Antonio, Texas and recently met their 12 year old daughter in Beijing. They also have a younger daughter (age 4) from China who is with them. We're looking forward to meeting them and hearing about their journey. Their daughter has lived in a foster family most of her 12 years and not the orphanage like Ben.

We're so excited about our flight tomorrow to Guangzhou. We've heard wonderful things about the island and of course, the legendary White Swan hotel. We will stay in Guangzhou 8 nights and finally head home!!! It seems like a dream to even type it!! I pray Ben does well on the flight. Motion usually puts him to sleep or makes him vomit. Hoping for the former. I've heard the airplane bathrooms are "soundproof" (from another adoptive mom) so perhaps we'll be spending some time in there, if need be.

We skyped the kids earlier today and they're doing great! BenBen always wants to see Chezzy "gow gow" he yells and points. He's going to love that dog!! Ben also recognizes Ellie and Jack and says their names....although he's hard to understand. He gets so excited when he hears the skype ringing...but then usually starts crying when we don't let him push the buttons on the keypad. No different than any other toddler! LOL!

Packing (phase 2) will be our challenge. We had a 50 lb. limit per checked bag on the international flight to China. Within China the limit is 44 lbs. So, we'll be leaving a few things behind....lightening our load by 18 lbs!!! We've eaten most of the food we brought and given most of the gifts so that helps some.

......back from dinner with the Harrell's and it was sooooo fun!! They are wonderful people and I wish we could have spent more time with them. Their new daughter is beautiful. She doesn't speak English but sat across from Sam and gave him a card that said in English and Chinese, "You are very beautiful". Awwww, she was so sweet and seemed to be attaching so well to her new family. I look forward to following the rest of their journey and perhaps meeting them again in Guangzhou.

Finished packing and all is good! Ready for our 8:30 a.m. pickup tomorrow morning. Off to snuggle with my lil guy!!! (favorite part of each day!). Goodnight from Beijing.... 

http://schultzfamilylife.shutterfly.com/pictures

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Random thoughts on Beijing

It's what I thought....and not what I thought.

It's HUGE....like 22 million people. It can take hours to get across town. Reminds me a lot of NYC....although, not as lively at night. Could be our area too.

Traffic is horrendous. The government is trying to encourage public transportation and limit the use of vehicles to certain days (i.e. if your license plate ends is 0 or 6 you can't drive on Monday, etc. The use of cars has skyrocketed way ahead of the infrastructure to support it.

Driving, walking, biking - it's all extremely dangerous. Walking never has the right of way and drivers weave in and out of traffic like nothing I've ever seen. Little children on the back of bikes and mopeds - never a helmet.

Chinese tourists are everywhere. This is their summer holiday and Beijing is a popular destination. I've seen a few European tourists but none that I thought were American.

The food is wonderful!!! Everything from KFC and Pizza Hut to the local Chinese restaurants are fabulous. Even our hotel "Happy Hour" and breakfast buffet is outstanding!

Chinese are very sensitive about their skin....women almost always carry umbrellas to protect against the sun. They wear fake sleeves with short sleeve shirts to pull off once inside.

Children wear what is called "split pants"....pants split down the crotch with no underwear or diapers. The children just squat where ever, whenever they have to go.

Chinese rest in the "squatting" position....like in the middle of a sidewalk they'll just stop and squat to rest. My knees can't begin to get me there!

The Chinese love ice cream, t-shirts with American words (I've never seen one with Chinese writing!), blaring music and staring at Americans with a Chinese child.

There appears to be a lot of poverty in Beijing but also a lot of wealth. It's very expensive to live here (think NYC). The Chinese say Benjamin is very lucky to be going to America. He will "have a good life". It's confusing to me why they say that....do they not like their lives in China? What makes America different in their eyes? I need to remember and ask this.

It's more "democratic" and uncensored than I thought. With the exception of blocking Facebook and a few other sites (we access via VPN), it's virtually transparent. The guides don't feel it's an issue in their daily lives. It is what it is. They feel China is a rising superpower right behind the U.S.

It's expensive...our hotel, the area we're in is quite expensive. We paid $35 at Haagen Dazs for 4 scoops of ice cream! I paid almost $60 yesterday at Gap Kids for 2 small tshirts and 6 socks for BenBen! Yikes! Don't even get me started on Sephora!! WOW! Ran out of my Clinique soap...

The Chinese do not drink tap water or use it to brush their teeth. All water is boiled or bottled. We have a sock over our faucet to remind us not to use the water for brushing our teeth. Our hotel provides unlimited bottled water and coca cola light (we're on the "Club" floor - highly recommend!!!).

I walked a few blocks around our hotel yesterday, by myself, shopping. Not one person spoke to me. I was surprised. Greg was accosted by at least 4 people on his solo journey!! I went to a local grocery store - the Seaweed Pringles were tempting but I had to pass. Non-touristy shopping is very inexpensive: I purchased baby wipes, hair conditioner, a huge bag of animal crackers, a bag of chocolate teddy grahams, a bag of Ritz crackers and a sippy cup for less than $15.

I have only seen 2 pregnant Chinese women since we've been here....and we've seen a LOT of people. Our guides say it's very expensive to have even 1 child in China and many couples do not want children because they are selfish (being raised as the only child in their family). Our guide, Lily, has a friend that adopted domestically in China from a poor province where the family had a 4th girl and wanted a boy. I'm not sure the adoption went thru the legal adoption process. It sounded like more of a gift....?

No one speaks English and if they do, it isn't very good. The only people who really understand us are the FTIA guides hired by our agency.

There are dogs as pets here!! We were surprised....we thought they were all eaten in China.

It's very noisy and polluted....hard to see the sun through all the smog. The prettiest day we've had since we arrived was "Gotcha Day" - sunny, breezy - perfect day to meet our lil BenBen.

The streets are extremely clean. There are always people sweeping and washing the streets. BenBen likes this!

The dress / style....is very odd. It's hard to describe...lots of high heels, bright colors and mixed patterns. Definitely NOT traditional Chinese dress unless it's a tourist spot.

We were warned the beds in China are hard....ours is actually very comfortable!!! Perhaps a little harder than home but we're so tired at night it doesn't matter!

Chinese beer (Tsingtao) is excellent!!! Wine, not so much.

Nearly every Chinese person we've spoken to comments on Ben's light complexion. We think he looks just like them!

The Chinese people are fascinated by Sam....they love his light hair and handsome looks. They love taking pictures of him with their families. Sam is NOT a fan but he's going with it for now.

In China, people have either single or double eyelids (per our guide, Shirley). Shirley indicated Ben has single eyelids but will develop into double eyelids as he grows up/hits puberty.....hmmmmm. She indicated her two sons have single eyelids but she/her husband each have double.

There are no outdoor play areas for children. There is an "amusement park" for kiddos but you pay. No swingsets, playgrounds, etc. Our guide indicated children do not "play" in China...they study. There is a lot of pressure on children to study and go to University. "No time for play like American children"....

Shirley, our guide, is funny. When touring with the other families everyone was asking her what zodiac sign they were.....Greg, "1972?", Shirley, "Rat" (same as Ben's)....every other adult in the van was somewhere between 1972 - 1975. I whispered (sitting closest to her in the front, "1967?"....Shirley said, "Dinosaur"....LOL!!!! Everyone thought that was quite amusing! 

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Sunday, June 19, 2011

Day 8: Beijing Zoo, Finding Place, Lama Temple

Happy Father's Day! One week ago today we met our BenBen!!! Hard to imagine how much this lil guy's life has changed in just 7 days!!!  

We knew it would happen eventually....Sam vomited....at breakfast. Too much bacon and apple juice is my guess. He felt better after a bit of rest and was excited about seeing the Pandas. Today was our last touring day in Beijing. Our guide, Lily, picked us up at 8:00 a.m. and we headed to the Beijing Zoo. The zoo is very large so our primary focus was the Giant Pandas and animals of "Chinese origin" as Lily explained it. We saw lions, tigers, pandas and monkeys. Ben LOVES animals - he gets so excited and calls them all "gow gow".....or dog in Mandarin. The zoo was very crowded (it was Sunday) and not particularly clean or nice at all. There was a lot of trash and garbage in the animal exhibits. We spent less than an hour.

The next stop was Benjamin's "finding spot"....the 7th waiting room of the Beijing West Railway Station. According to Lily, there are 4 railway stations (North, South, East and West) in Beijing and this station primarily serves the poorer/less developed regions of southern China. The station is HUGE and Lily was apprehensive we'd even have access to the waiting areas. We found a very helpful guard that pointed us to the correct entrance. He advised Lily to explain our story to the ticket lady and perhaps she'd let us through security without buying tickets. Lily worked her magic! The lady was very surprised (as are all Chinese) that we adopted a boy...and such a strong, handsome boy. She waved us through. The 7th waiting room was just up the escalator. I cried as we approached the room....taking in all the sights, smells, sounds of the moment. Imagining the person (perhaps his birthmother and/or birthfather) walking these same steps and placing this precious 2 month old child, wrapped in a cotton quilt, on a chair (or perhaps the floor)...and walking away. It is our only connection to Ben's past. Greg took a lot of photos. I stood mesmerized in silence and tears...wanting to spend a lot more time there. Sam pat my back on the way out, knowing how much it meant to me...and will someday mean to Ben. We are so fortunate to know so much about Sam, Ellie and Jack's birthparents. It saddens me we'll never know his birthparents, but we know this child was left to be found. Destiny defined.

Ben came dressed in orphanage clothing (including pink socks) but no personal belongs. Not a "blankie" or anything from his past. The orphanage did not complete the questionnaire we sent in advance to assist us with his transition and care .... ie. what is his daily routine? likes/dislikes? naptime? how does he go to sleep?)...nothing. We walked out knowing absolutely nothing about this precious child...other than his beauty and strength and breathtaking smile. 

We have learned a lot in these 7 days. BenBen does NOT like covers, he MUST have shoes on at all times. He doesn't mind water poured on his head during bath. He LOVES to eat but he's very picky! He LOVES water but doesn't appear to wet his diapers very much. He's okay with Mama putting gel in his hair!! :) He loves balls and looking at photos of his family. He LOVES dogs. He does NOT like to be away from his Mama :) His favorite foods (so far) are chicken sausage, chicken nuggets and noodles. He does NOT like messes, garbage on the street or shoes out of place. He loves stairs...makes him feel like a big boy! He does great with seat belts - this is a great thing, considering we're flying 3 hours tomorrow!!! He LOVES his big brother and wants to do what Sammy does (particularly the iPad!). He does not like Mandarin but LOVES flirting with the Chinese girls. He whines when he can't communicate and melts down when he's tired and inconsolable. He sucks his thumb when sleeping and moves wildly around the bed. He wakes up happy most morning....with his face right next to ours - staring at us with his big eyes and smiles when we wake up. He is apprehensive of the potty (it's likely much bigger than the orphanage) but tries to go (only pee'd once I think). He does NOT like poopy diapers and wants to be changed immediately. He knows the words: Mama, Baba, Sam, Ellie, Jack, happy, up, down, drink, eat, more, yummy, finished, please, thank you. I'd say that's pretty good for one week!!!   

Our final stop was the Lama Temple, a temple and monastery of Tibetan Buddhism located in the northeastern part of Beijing. It is one of the largest and most important Tibetan Buddhist monasteries in the world. The building and the artworks of the temple combine Han Chinese and Tibetan styles. It's comprised of various buildings and Buddhas within each. Outside of each building is a prayer spot...with fires burning to light incense. Each prayer requires 3 incense sticks. 30% of Chinese are Buddhists. Lily is not Buddhist - or any religion. The largest majority of Chinese are non-religious/atheists. It was very interesting, beautiful, and hot (especially with all the fire pits) but also strange and different. I'm sure they'd say the same about us!

Everything is China is placed a certain way for beliefs - roads, palaces, monuments, sofas (feng shui), etc. Everything is symmetric. Beijing is technically the center of China - hence the Forbidden City's location - in the center of Beijing. The Chinese speak a lot about earlobes, cowlicks/swirls in the hair at the top of the head that indicate strength. Everyone says Ganggang looks like a Buddha...that is a good thing here!! 

Our guide dropped us off for lunch at the same Chinese restaurant near our hotel where Greg had the Chinese beer and purchased our family scroll. This time we sat in a traditional Chinese room with no offering of a special "60th anniversary gift". Thank goodness! The food was excellent and Sam and Ben had McDonald's carry out. BenBen loves the noodles though and Mama is getting quite good with the chopsticks!! No utensils for me!!

We then returned to our room for Ben's nap and Greg/Sam's siesta. I went shopping for a few items we're running low on (diaper wipes, hair conditioner and socks for BenBen). I was gone a few hours and even managed to find a Baby Gap with the same clothes as the States...for much more $$$$. I also stocked up at the grocery for snacks for the flight to Guangzhou (animal crackers and teddy grahams!).

After Ben's nap we attended "Happy Hour" on our floor. Heineken's for Greg and I, dim sum, salami and veggie egg rolls for Ben and fancy desserts for us all. I was hoping to lose a few pounds on this trip...not happening! The food has been terrific. This was our dinner.

We headed back to the room for Ben's bath and skyping with the kiddos. They wished Daddy a Happy Father's Day and loved opening their present for the day in front of us. Meri (Greg's Mom) said they love the daily gifts and it has really helped the experience at home. We tried to purchase gifts that provide activity or crafts to help keep them busy. So far, so good!! We miss them so much and know we're 1/2 way through the trip!!!!

Ben is down for the night now...only cried for a few minutes. Kid loves to sleep!!! We hope he carries it home with him! :)

Sam and Greg are watching movies and I'm headed to bed to snuggle with my precious little one. My favorite part of every day. He loves to snuggle right up next to me, sometimes wrapping his legs over my side and staring at me...while he sucks his thumb. He's so cute we can't stand it. Every day gets a little easier for all of us. This is NOT a journey for the weak. It's stressful and heartbreaking at times but worth every second when you get a tug on your shirt, "Mama, kisses" and he plants a big slobbery one on your mouth. He loves to follow me everywhere....watching what I'm doing. He imitates a lot of what we do and catches on extremely quickly. He is definitely a smart little guy. No "orphanage delay" that we can see other than walking/leg strength...which we believe is very normal.

One more day in Beijing! Not sure what we're doing tomorrow other than packing and meeting a fellow adoptive family for dinner. We may try and visit another Hutong....fascinating. Over 1,000 Hutongs in China. The family we are meeting just met their daughter, age 8, in Beijing and they have a daughter (younger) also adopted from China that they brought along. Looking forward to meeting them!!

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