Hi again! Sorry it took me so long to get back to this. Life with Cole is certainly keeping us busy--that's a two year old for you! [And just what we wanted. :-)]
So closing thoughts on the trip... I'd put the itinerary on my post a couple of times ago, so I don't need to list all that again. What I would like to list, however, is the many ways we saw amazing things and were blessed.
First of all, the trip was so much harder than I ever thought it would be. I needed someone to help watch Cole while I did paperwork, to help get him to sleep, to watch him so I could take a shower, to nod and say "you're doing the right thing" when he'd throw a fit because I wouldn't let him have his way, and to help get through those crazy, foreign-travel airports where nothing ever seems to go right or easy. I'm so thankful Marnie offered to go. And it was so great to have time to get to know, to really know, my sister-in-law. I can truly say, after that much time together when you see it all, that I think she's awesome. (I can only hope she feels that way too after seeing all of me!)
Tuesday was one of those days when things seemed just surreal. We got off the train, and my phone (that Yuri had sent home with me because I'd still need it when I came back) didn't really have a charge, and Nataliya's had run out of money, so we didn't have an easy way to call our driver that she'd hired for the day. He was there. He just showed up to meet us instead of waiting for a call.
Oh, and I can't forget that Tuesday was also "Puke Day." We went to McDonald's straight from the train station to eat and clean up in the bathrooms, which we had always been real pleased with because of how clean they were (many of the bathrooms over there were really not). Nataliya and I are in the bathroom; she's brushing her hair behind me, and I'm at the side of the sink putting my contacts in. Someone comes in and pushes her way to the sink and hangs her head over it. I look, thinking, "What? Rude..." I see saliva hanging from her mouth and think, "NO!" I grab my contacts stuff just in time as she hurls into the sink. We both just watch in shock and disbelief. Nataliya says something to her. I say to Nataliya, "In the US, we usually puke in toilets..." "Yes, here too. I told her, but she must be very sick." Smelled like it. We left.
Marnie was so disappointed. She had watched our stuff and would have had her turn next but there was no way that going into a puke-filled sink room that that was goingn to be refreshing and helpful in any way. We had Nataliya tell the gal at the register. She opened the locked "family" restroom for us and then the poor thing had to go clean out the sink. Yeah, it of course was not liquid and therefore clogged. Poor thing!!!!
After our refreshing McDonald's experience, we headed to the courthouse to pick up the court decision. It was pretty quiet there, since it was technically still their holiday until the 10th or so. Nataliya asked for it and they told us to wait. As we waited, she pointed out a sign that said something to the effect of unless you're "someone," don't come asking for stuff till after the 10th. Yeah, that would mess up all of our plans. She apparently has good "connections," because 20 minutes later, we had the 9 copies of the document that we needed.
It was common for us to borrow and exchange money from each other as needed, just to make things go quicker. On the way to the next stop, she asked if we had smaller change for a $100. Marnie did, and she stuffed it all into an envelope. Huh.
Then to get the birth certificate. Here, they told her that they had a year end report they needed to do and they weren't sure they could get to it. 45 minutes later, we had it. More "connections," which I'm figuring out at this point are connected to the envelope. Don't even care. Want my kid. Wild though, huh?
We stop at a shop and wait in the taxi as she makes copies and then head to the notary next to our favorite coffee shop. We go in to rest and have coffee while she goes to the notary. She's back too soon; the notary is on holiday. We enjoy our time of just sitting and talking, and even catching up a little bit with the coffee shop girls, who inquire about Emma and send her their love. Then we're off to find a different notary and wait in the car again. We get some reading and some napping in.
We hit lunch at the Fairy Tale restaurant, one of our favorites from before, and guess who's there but Olas, that other family the Penner's translator who is just a lot of fun. We enjoy a nice lunch and have some laughs about his plane rides home to Lviv over the holiday in the back of a cargo plane holding three chickens (he's kidding, but it's funny) and then get back to it. Next is the passport place. We're told to wait in the car. We do as we're told. She comes back in an hour with a passport and an empty envelope. We can get my son.
We head to the orphanage and things come back to reality of how difficult days at the orphanage are. Take your boots off. Don't take your boots off. Come here. You can't come in here. Just give me my son and let me get out of here. So to start, she has to finish some paperwork and then we're asked if we want to give a "gift" to the orphanage. We shell over some $$$, say the niceties, and then go to see Cole, who is sitting with his little group eating a roll. The ladies all say oh Cole, here's your Mama. He gives me the turn-away shoulder because can't I see, he's eating. Okay, I can wait, sweetie. Okay, we told you to come in here, but leave now because we're going to feed the kids. Ok.
As we wait, we're told that everything for the hand off has to be overseen by his group's doctor, so let's see the clothes you brought to take him home in. Don't feed him this, keep him out of drafts, don't take him in public because he still has a cough. Okay, okay, okay, okay. Smile. Don't forget to smile. (Can we GO yet?)
He's terrified of the car, maybe because it's dark out, or maybe because it's all different. He screams and beats on the window. This is going to be hard.
We stop at a store and buy diapers now that I know the size 5's fit, and I pick up a few toys that will work well with all the travel we have to do. Then we stop at a restaurant where the Penners are eating with their Nadia that they also got that day. She's happy and "in charge" so even though their experience is different than ours, they'll too have their hands full.
Into the taxi after tea and a roll. Now you have to remember that this isn't just driving, it's go as fast as you can until you have to brake, hard. Not too far down the road, poor little Cole's tummy just can't take it any more and he ralphs all of the himself, me, and the back of the car. As Nataliya later pointed out, it was closure. We started the day with puke, and we ended the day with puke.
Every experience at this point was pretty scary for Cole, but as the same time, once he'd have a few minute to adjust to it, he'd adapt, so we were thrilled to see that even in the face of extreme uneasiness, he's quite adaptable. The train was scary at first, but then we walked the hall over and over and over. Till bed time. He refused to go to sleep until Nataliya played bad cop and threatened him with the corner. There weren't really any corners, but he didn't know that! :-) He tossed and rolled so much that I finally figured out that I'd probably get more sleep if I just laid with him so that I didn't have to keep getting up to roll him back to the safe side of the bed. He did wake up one time before that, though, and he clearly knew where he was and wasn't scared. He simply said, "Mama?" I answered, and he rolled right back over. That was awesome.
Yuri met us at the train station, where I said a teary good bye to Nataliya. I wasn't ready for her to go and can truly say that I gained a friend. But no time for thinking too much. Off for the omelette that you've already heard about and then to the embassy doctor visit, where, after waiting forever, the impressive doctor examines him, somehow with a bedside manner that she didn't scare him, and says he has bilateral bronchitis, where is his medicine? Yeah, they didn't have him on any. So ticked. She sends us to the pharmacy for some herbal stuff that has him in good shape within in literally hours. Amazing stuff. Oh, and what's this huge scar on his belly? Yeah, nothing in his medical report from the orphanage about surgery for a bowel obstruction at 10 months. Hmmm.
He passes and we rush to the embassy before they close at noon to get his visa. Fill out some papers, got it. Just come back at 4:00 to pick it up. Cool.
We got to the apartment and crash. Finally.
Spend the next day resting, souvenir shopping, and getting to know Cole. We take Yuri out for dinner and discuss a cool ministry opportunity for bringing teenage orphans over this summer for people to be able to meet them, and then we're off to the airport next morning. 24 very long hours later, we're walking up to the baggage claim where Trevor, Emma and Marnie's family are waiting. I weep. I've waited a long time to be able to do that. There was no time, to space for it before. I needed to be strong. No more. What a blessed feeling.
Tears and love, and we head home. Trevor pulls into the driving three hours later with three sleeping passengers, and we all crawl into bed. We are home at last, our family of four. Home at last.