Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Flower Power

      
 
 
Over the last several months things have been moving very slow in Ethiopia!  They have a new Prime Minister, orphanages have been investigated, and they have made changes to the adoption process.  Things are finally moving forward again, and so are we!  Our social worker is wrapping up our home study and we are working on our I-600A and Dossier (more paperwork for me!)  This new milestone also means it's fundraising time!  We have funds to cover the next payment for the homestudy but need to raise $890 to cover the I-600A. 

FLOWER POWER - We have a great fundraiser just in time for Mother's Day!  Our family will receive 50% of all orders at Flower Power Fundraising.  They are backed by a 100% guarantee, so why not order some flowers or strawberries (yum) for Mom!

NORWEX - I am a new Norwex Consultant.  Let me show you how to GREEN your cleaning and save some GREEN in your wallet by switching to Norwex.  I receive 35% commission from all of my sales.  Book a party with me today and earn FREE products!

KIDS CONSIGNMENT - As the weather is changing and you are cleaning out your kids closets, please consider donating their old FALL/WINTER clothes.  Contact me to make arrangements to pick-up or drop-off.  All clothes will be sold at the Sweet Repeats consignment sale this fall, and all profits will be applied to our adoption expenses.

RECYCLING - We are accepting used/empty toner and ink cartridges, yes even the cartridges you use at home.  We are recycling them through Funding Factory where we receive a minimum of 10 cents per cartridge.  One man's trash is another man's treasure!

AMAZON - We are an Amazon Affiliate!  When you shop using our link a small percentage of sales is donated to our adoption fund!  Linked at the right for your convenience!

Please be in prayer for Ethiopia, and prayer for our family to speed through this next process!

Blessings!






Sunday, April 6, 2014

Vacationing on a Budget


One thing on my bucket list this year was a vacation!  And I am so thankful for the extra time that I had to spend playing with my family on Spring Break last week.  But vacations don't come cheap and we are still saving for adoption expenses so we did our best to pinch our pennies.  Here's how:

1) Booking the Room - We booked our room through ebay.  Tons of timeshare owners sell their weeks on ebay and it is possible to make a legitimate vacation purchase on ebay.  But remember a few tips, first check out the sellers rating and read through their feedback from previous customers.  You should be able to verify that other customers have successfully purchased a vacation and had a positive experience, if not keep shopping!  Also, never leave positive ebay feedback for your purchase until after your stay!  This is key, if you do have any issues you can always report it to ebay for a refund, but if you have already given positive feedback it may be difficult to argue your case.  We purchased a 2-bedroom condo for 5 days at Wilderness at the Smokies for $688 (waterpark passes included).  I had been selling on ebay for a few months so we had a Paypal balance of $125.95, bringing our OOP total to $562.05.  This averaged out to $112 a day for our family of 4 to sleep and play!

2) Meals - We typically ask for gift cards from our parents for Christmas, and we were able to save them for our vacation!  We were able to treat ourselves to dinner at Red Lobster completely free, and it's a favorite for our whole family.  Before the trip, we used our weekly grocery budget to purchase drinks and snacks for the condo.  This included our breakfast and most of our lunches.  Total dinners out over the 5 days was $114.71.  This averaged out to $22.94 a day for our family of 4!

3) Entertainment - The majority of our entertainment was the waterpark at The Wilderness resort.  We did allow $25 per kid at the arcade (which is hefty considering Ashton is only 2).  Personally I hate arcades because they are a money pit but all those flashing lights and sounds are kid magnets!  So to keep the peace, we caved to the arcade.  We also took the kids to a pottery shop at the resort where they painted their own pottery, which cost about $30 but they each came home with a souvenir that they painted themselves.  We spent a day in Gatlinburg at the Ripleys Aquarium and strolling through the town looking at all of the shops.  We attempted to purchase discount tickets for the aquarium at the resort, but they only had one ticket for us, the other two we had to purchase at the aquarium (Ashton was free!).  This cost us $62.56.  On the last day of our trip we took the kids on a bear hunt at Cade's Cove.  Cost for this was FREE!  Woo hoo!  Total entertainment was about $142.56, an average of $28 per day for our family of 4!

A vacation was long overdue for our family and it may be a LONG time before we see another one! 

ADOPTION UPDATE: We are currently working on our USCIS application and our dossier!  Ethiopia was in a slow period for several long months but things are finally looking up again :) 

Monday, February 17, 2014

Divine Intervention

This post has nothing to do with adoption but is something that so many of us struggle with.  God's Divine Intervention was my saving grace!

After Ashton was born I struggled, as so many women do, to get my body back to pre-pregnancy conditions.  (Now while writing this I realize that I am a mere 115 pounds so some of you are cringing and ready to close this blog, but keep reading.)  The baby weight fell off pretty quickly, it was the squishy mushy gut that was left behind that bothered me most.  Before I had kids I never had a belly and I longed to get those ab muscles back in shape.  I saw a news program about moms having tummy tucks to remedy abdominal separation.  It was the latest craze in plastic surgery, the "mommy makeover".

So, I had to find out what this abdominal separation was, which resulted in endless hours of online research for me.  And yep, I have it.  To save you some time, occasionally during pregnancy the ab muscles will stretch to a point of no return and you are left with a gap between the muscles, and I have the gap.  I did tons of exercises to remedy this, and talked to my doctor.  But the only solution is a tummy tuck.  Based on all of the research I had done I was able to justify that I NEEDED a tummy tuck.  There is a risk for hernia with abdominal separation and chronic back pain.  Insurance would not pay a dime for the surgery unless I was suffering from a hernia, but the cost would be worth it right?  I mean, I would be saving myself from all of this pain in the long run.  So I talked to some friends and got the number for (supposedly) the best plastic surgeon.

When my appointment came, I chickened out.  I cancelled at the last minute.  Something just wasn't right and I knew it.  But I continued to look in the mirror and hate what I saw.  I wore tummy compressors, but they are not so easy to find in a size small.  I also used Ace bandages to wrap my tummy down tight so that I looked better to myself.  It probably didn't help my situation any when a coworker asked if I was pregnant again, on a day when I had a big lunch and was feeling bloated.  So I made another appointment.

The night before my appointment both of my girls were sick with a stomach virus.  And let me say, if there is anything that will keep a mother home with her babies, it's a stomach virus.  So I cancelled that appointment too.

But weeks later I was still struggling with myself so I made one more attempt to see the surgeon.  And you probably wouldn't believe it, but Ashton got sick again that night.  Stomach virus, again.  So I cancelled AGAIN and stayed home with her.  Can we say, Divine Intervention? 

Clearly this just wasn't meant to be at this point in my life so I pushed it off to the back burner.  The kids were getting sick so often and I would need some recovery time but I just didn't think I would have time for recovery with the girls needing me so much right now.  So I moved on to find more things that I hated about myself. 

While helping Abby brush her teeth I had her put her teeth together so I could brush the front.  I have an underbite that I have had all my life.  Most people don't notice it so it usually doesn't bother me much.  But this night, Abby extended her bottom teeth in front of her top teeth so that she could smile like mom.  And at that very moment, I hated my teeth.  And for days she kept smiling with her teeth that way and I kept having to tell her to smile the right way because Mommy's teeth are not right.  So you could probably guess what happened next.  I found a seat at the Orthodontist.  I had braces as a kid but had a bad orthodontist.  And for the cost of $7000 I could "probably" fix the underbite.  But then I would need veneers to fix my splotchy teeth and that would be another $5000.  But they were willing to work with me on financing.  In my mind I kept trying to figure out how to work this out.  Maybe I could use my tax refund each year to pay for my teeth to look pretty....

And then it happened.  I had a meltdown.  Since Ashton was born I had been struggling with my hormones fluctuating, some days I was irritable and angry and could hardly deal with Abby if she did anything wrong.  She was 4 years old and on this morning she was fighting me trying not to sit in her seat in the car.  She kept taking her seat belt off and I lost it.  I said things I shouldn't have said and I treated her like she was worthless.  My husband stepped in.  We finally got her in the car and I was able to drop the kids off so I could go to work.  But I couldn't go to work that day.  I couldn't stop crying for how I had behaved and how much I hated feeling so angry inside.  I didn't want to feel like this and I didn't want to treat my family this way.  They didn't deserve it. 

I called my Dr knowing that if I didn't talk to someone right then it would be easy to look back and justify my behavior or act as though things weren't as bad as they were.  But my Dr's office was booked.  So I called another Dr, and they were booked too.  But I guess my sobbing on the end of the line worried the receptionist at the first office, because she called me back in a few minutes telling me they were going to squeeze me in right now.

That day I was prescribed an anti-depressant to help control my mood swings.  My husband was upset with the way I had acted that morning, but he supported me in seeking help.  And a million times I apologized to Abby and promised to never treat her that way again.  I never wanted to be "that" person.  You know the one that we so often stigmatize who relies on anti-depressants to deal with life.  But looking back I can be sure of one thing, this was the work of God's Divine Intervention over my life.  Within a matter of weeks my poor self image had dissolved and I was able to remember that I am a child of God, created in his perfect image - even with my squishy mushy gut and bad teeth.

Since that day a lot of things have changed at our house.  If we receive magazines or other things in the mail featuring women in bikins or similar ads, they go straight in the trash.  Because the truth is, those women are not real.  They are air brushed and digitally enhanced to make up someone's fantasy of what an ideal figure should be.  I am real, and YOU are real.  We are far from perfect, and we never will find perfection.  The answer isn't found in cosmetic surgery, but in accepting that God made YOU.  He formed you in your mother's womb, wonderfully and perfectly made.  How can it get any better than that?

So if you are reading this today and hating yourself, I encourage you to talk to your doctor.  Medication is not evil, it's only evil if we abuse it.  God gave us the ingredients to create the medicine and gave man the knowledge to make it.  It is HIS.  Everything is HIS.

And in case you are wondering about the adoption....it's still going good, it's just slow, and will be slow for awhile.  But today I can say I would much rather invest $12,000 in the life of a child than wasting it on my teeth!

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Bucket List



I'm not much on New Year's Resolutions because I rarely keep them.  So here is my bucket list for 2014!

1. Read the Bible in a year - I received a Chronological Bible for Christmas!

2. Take one last vacation as a family of four - I'm thankful we are part of a timeshare group so this will actually be possible!

3. Work on my knitting and possibly start an Etsy shop

4. Serve at VBS - working full time had always kept me from doing this

5. Go to the Zoo

6. Finish Abby's 1st grade homeschool curriculum

7. Complete the adoption home study (almost there) and send off our dossier

8. Get a passport

9. Start preschool curriculum with Ashton in the fall

10. Sponsor a child

11. Go on a mission trip

12. Visit the Creation Museum

13. Trust God with all things in my life

14. Spoil my girls and my hubby!

13 Things We Did in 2013


In no particular order, here are 13 fun or interesting things the Crowe family did in 2013!

1. Decided to adopt :)  Ethiopia here we come!

2. Abby started the year with Upward cheerleading

3. Ashton turned 2!  And she is keeping us VERY busy!

4. Shawn rebuilt a motor for his truck

5. We ditched our car payment and one of our student loans (one more student loan and our mortgage left)

6. Abby lost her first tooth last week - and she swallowed it!

7. I have been unemployed since July

8. We started homeschooling

9. We got our first dog - Daisy

10. Abby played fall softball

11. Shawn took on various home remodeling projects

12. I learned to loom knit a scarf

13. Abby is a Girl Scout Daisy - cookies anyone?

Monday, November 4, 2013

STUFF: Do we really need more?


The last 3 months have been a bit crazy!  We have been adjusting to being a one income family, and I started homeschooling Abby.  We are about half way through our home study and we have decided to accept a sibling group rather than just one child.  And my baby girl, Ashton, recently celebrated her 2nd birthday!  Let me tell ya, it's a crazy life!

Meanwhile, we have been taking some amazing classes at church to help us figure out what else we are being called to do.  (And to fuel all of the craziness inside my head.)  We read Orphan Justice, by Johnny Carr and we are currently reading When Helping Hurts by Steve Corbett & Brian Fikkert.  I don't know where God is leading us next but I know I have not been living the way I want to live.  We have been blessed with an abundance of STUFF.  Yep, STUFF.  If you look around, you probably have more than enough STUFF too.  It just doesn't seem fair that we have all of this STUFF while others don't have clean water to drink.



It's a difficult cycle to break.  Where do you draw the line?  How much STUFF do we need?  How much STUFF is too much?  How much STUFF will we buy for Christmas?  How much STUFF do my kids need?  How much STUFF do I really need?  How much STUFF am I wasting money on?  How much am I teaching my children to love STUFF?

Today I unloaded a car full of STUFF.  Donated our STUFF to bless others at Shoes for Orphan Souls, The New Life Center, and Goodwill.  And as I look around my house, you can not even tell that anything is missing.  We still have too much STUFF.

This brings me to Christmas....yes, I said Christmas...

Most of my Christmas shopping is already done.  We bought a few toys and games for the girls (yep, more STUFF) and I'm hoping to make several homemade Christmas gifts this year.  Hopefully I'll be able to make a few things for the girls that they will cherish and that won't just become more STUFF. 

To the left are some stats from last year's Christmas.  The average American family spent $749.51 on Christmas.  In Ethiopia the average annual income is about $100.  Yep, $100 a year and we spend 7 X's that amount on Christmas alone. 

This year I don't want any material gifts.  Instead of the new iPhone whatever, I want clean water around the globe.  I want shoes on the feet of all the children, clothes on their backs, and full tummies.  I want families to be restored, rather than ripped apart by poverty.  I want Christ's name to be praised from the highest mountain tops to the lowest valleys!

I just can't handle anymore STUFF!


Friday, July 26, 2013

Trust

So it has been a LONG time since I last posted.  We've been busy, crazy busy.  And I've been wrestling with my mind on lots of things.  So here's a recap....

In the spring we got really busy for a couple of months volunteering at the local concession stand with Maggie's Hope raising money for lots of local adoptive families.  It was tons of fun, we met lots of people and made so many new friends.  It was exhausting at times, but I truly hope I will have this same opportunity next year to serve with my brothers and sisters in Christ, defending the fatherless.

We got this crazy idea to sell our house.  SO we painted, repaired, de-cluttered and cleaned like crazy.  And I guess it has paid off because our house is S-O-L-D, we are just waiting for a closing date.  And we found a perfect house for our growing family! 

We eliminated our car payment.  We were fortunate enough to trade our two cars for only one car with NO payment.  Having one car will be a bit of a struggle at times, but hey, it helped us ditch $14,000 in debt and about $400 a month :) 

Through all of these great things, I let satan in.  Yep, he was there lurking at the door and I let him in.  I love blogs so it's no surprise that I have been reading adoption blogs to my hearts content.  It's amazing hearing about how others walked this same walk and where their families are now.  But in one particular week I read a number of blogs that were a bit on the negative side.  And I questioned if adoption was actually a GOOD thing.  Seriously people, I questioned whether adopting a starving child from an orphanage was a good thing!!!  I mean on one hand the answer is obvious, but on the other hand, I was reading about child trafficking and children being placed in orphanages with loving families that simply could not afford to care for them.  On the broad end of the spectrum, the answer is CHANGE and an end to the poverty.  If there were no poverty, no disease, there would not be so many orphans, and there would not be as great of a need for adoption.  And in no way would I ever want to be any part of child trafficking. 

My struggles with adoption kept growing and I finally vented all of these crazy thoughts to a friend and our social worker.  I kicked satan to the curb and I'm keeping my faith that God has called us to adoption.  Yes, there is a bigger answer to the orphan epidemic, and while I can pour my heart into ending poverty it is bigger than me alone.  But for ONE child, I can be the safe, loving arms that she comes home to.

So we are moving forward with the adoption process, this week we took a marriage survey :) and we are preparing to get fingerprinted.  And as I type, I am having an Adoption yard sale.  Everything we earn goes to the adoption fund, and we won't have to move all this stuff to our new house.  It's a win-win!

I also suffered a job loss this week.  But God will provide for our sweet little family.  And our adoption will stay on track!

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.  -Proverbs 3:5-6