Hi, I'm Kristin! Some call me Kris, family calls me Kristi and my man calls me Missy Krissy. Most importantly, I'm called daughter to the King of Kings.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
About me & why I blog!
Hi, I'm Kristin! Some call me Kris, family calls me Kristi and my man calls me Missy Krissy. Most importantly, I'm called daughter to the King of Kings.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Infertility
infertile.
such an ugly word.
with an even uglier definition.
this word has been stamped on my forehead.
for years.
infertility.
it's dark.
it's lonely.
it's painful.
it's maddening.
it's isolating.
it's life changing.
infertility.
has changed my life...
for the better.
I am grateful
grateful for this trial
what it has taught me.
who it has shaped me into.
what?!
I know.
last year me would punch today's me in the face for saying that.
seriously.
I used to pray for babies.
lots and lots of babies.
time passed.
no babies.
I started praying for answers.
time passed.
no answers.
I started praying for peace.
peace to accept what I can not change.
that's when my perspective started to change
to find peace, I had to exercise faith.
faith in God.
faith in His plan.
faith in His timing.
through faith
I found peace.
I was broken.
and faith healed me.
I then began praying for direction.
and gently He said... remember your desire to adopt.
because I was able to find peace,
it allowed new doors to be opened,
doors I might have closed or forgot about.
it was His plan all along.
He knows.
He hears our prayers.
He knows our fears.
He has a plan.
and it's better
then we could ever dream.
the trials that come into our life
are for our benefit.
to help us become who we need to be.
they make us stronger.
I have grown.
I am stronger.
I don't take things for granted.
I have become a better wife.
a beter friend.
a better me.
I am a better person
because
I am infertile.
Friday, August 21, 2015
Adoption post
How I wish the title could be written backwards: Post-Adoption. Won’t that be a great day?!
I can’t believe we’ve been a “Waiting Family” for 90 days. Ninety looooooong days. I’d be lying if I said that waiting for that phone call doesn’t’ cross my mind a good 90 times an hour. It does. It TOTALLY does. I try to pray about it anytime I think about it, asking God for patience, but also letting Him know that we’re ready, too! Ha! As if He doesn't know already.
I always wonder how we will receive that magical call. Unless you’ve been through the adoption wait, you probably can’t relate to this level of crazy, but I constantly come up with all the different scenarios and how it might play out.
Maybe I’ll be at work and miss the call. Our social worker will call Adam, who will then call work and I won't be at my desk so they have me paged over the intercom. I’ll be all caught off guard and break into tears in the middle of the office when Adam gets to share the good news with me.
Maybe it will be a day that the house is a disaster and I haven’t left my pajamas. And the laundry is piled high, the yard needs mowed and the house needs cleaned.
Or maybe it will happen this fall, while we are at my dad's for Thanksgiving, surrounded by family.
Or maybe the call will come on an ordinary, boring day, where we’re just going through the motions and receiving our “matched” call is the furthest thing from my mind.
The truth is that in the back of my mind – and sometimes in the forefront – is the thought that every passing day was supposed to be the day. But then it wasn’t and I’m back to wondering whether the next day will be the day. Sigh. I wonder if it ever gets easier?
* * * * * * * * * * *
And, for those who’ve asked, we’re doing a domestic infant adoption. The agency says that placements usually occur anywhere from 6 months to 2 years after the completion of the home study (which we’ve completed), but, of course, it could happen at any time. I’m faithful that God knows the best time for it to happen for us, but I’m only human and can’t help but wonder when that time will be!
Thursday, August 13, 2015
Hebrews 11:1
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Adoption testimony
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
I'm Expecting

Thursday, July 16, 2015
Heartache in Adoption (reposting)
I loved this post so much I had to share.
by Rachel Garlinghouse
While I was waiting to adopt my first child, I spent a lot of time imagining what I thought would be the high points: the day we would get THE call stating we had been chosen, meeting our baby for the first time, our first family photo session, the child’s first birthday…
Each of these moments would be monumental if not divine. Cloud 9, the “Halleluiah” chorus, slow motion movements. Smiles, laughter, hugs. Perfect. Straight out of a Nicholas Sparks’ novel. We waited fourteen torturous months for our first child. On a sunny November weekend, we were painting our kitchen when my husband’s cell phone rang. Chosen. Baby girl. Already here. Come.
What I felt at times, while rocking my daughter in her softly-lit nursery, were waves of guilt, sympathy, confusion, and heartache. This wasn’t how adoption looked on the front of the agency brochures or in the Hallmark movies. Guilt. My joy was stemming from another mother’s loss and pain. How could I have willingly participated in such a severance? Sympathy. I couldn’t imagine my life without my child. Yet someone was living her life without her child.
Confusion. Why must someone else’s loss be my gain? How can I be happy when I know my child’s first mother is broken Heartache. Why did my child have to lose her biological mother through adoption? Would my daughter grow to resent me? Most days were as a lovely as I had imagined. My daughter’s mocha skin, coffee-colored eyes surrounded by an abundance of dark lashes, and her perfect, rounded afro accessorized by tiny bows were the center of attention from family, friends, and strangers. My husband and I marveled at her every yawn, smile, and sneeze. She had enough outfits to go without doing laundry for three weeks. She was loved, no, adored. But without warning, the feelings of guilt, sympathy, confusion, and heartache would snake into my soul. It was crushing, knowing that I had “won” at the expense of someone else.
The first time it happened was about a week after my daughter was born. My husband and I were standing in the waiting area of the courthouse, just a few minutes before our appointed court time where a judge would award us custody. Standing right next to us was our daughter’s biological mother, whom we were meeting for the first time. Strangers, yet soon to be forever united by a child, we listened carefully to the biological mother’s hopes for the child. With each sentence, I felt myself wanting to scream, “Are you sure you wish to give her to us? Are you sure you can’t parent her? She’s yours. She looks like you. She needs you. You are all she has ever known.” Our conversation was cut short when the biological mother’s lawyer alerted her that it was her turn to meet with the judge. And just like that, she was swallowed up by two heavy brown doors. When she emerged minutes later, she hugged us, told us to take care of the baby, and was gone. And immediately, we were ushered into the court room for our turn. With my heart in my throat, I listened to the judged, answered questions from the lawyer, and promised to take care of the little girl as if she were born to us.
About six months later, my first Mother’s Day dawned sunny and warm. I smiled for the camera while holding my daughter close, breathing in her milky scent, her sticky fingers on my cheek. I accepted cards and gifts, meanwhile hoping that the card I had sent my child’s first mother had arrived on time and was well-received. I hadn’t forgotten her. With each card I picked up at the store, I felt more and more heaviness in my heart. No card was appropriate for the occasion. There were no cards to express the bittersweet reality.
On the day my daughter turned ten months old, it hit me that she had been with me the same amount of time she had been with her biological mother. 40 weeks. 280 days. I loved my daughter with such depth. To lose her would devastate me. Break me. She was my world. The thought of not having her in my life, which I could barely approach, took my breath away. I remember holding my sleeping infant against my chest and quietly singing to her the alphabet, while praying for the woman who gave her life and praying I could be the mother my daughter needed. A few weeks later, my daughter looked at me and uttered the words every mother longs to hear: “Mama.” When we clapped and cheered and jumped around, she repeated it over and over and over. The word is sacred. Reserved for the woman who wipes runny noses, prepares food, cuddles and caresses, bathes, and plays pat-a-cake and peek-a-boo dozens of times in a day. But sometimes the word felt like it should belong to someone else, or at minimum, should be shared.
On the day my little girl turned one, I was busy and blissfully happy. We threw her a pumpkin-themed birthday party with many guests who snacked on s’mores and hot chocolate and cupcakes. There were mountains of gifts. Cameras flashed left and right. My daughter waddled around in her multicolored tutu, soaking up the attention. As we drove home from the party, our car full of streamers and gifts and food, my daughter napping in her car seat, I thought about the significance of this day one year ago. The day she was born, the day her first mother called the agency, the day she chose a family from amongst the profile books, the day we got the call, the day our new life began. Meanwhile, throughout the first days and months of my new role as mom, people (some I knew, some I didn’t) would “affirm” our choice to adopt with exclamations of “Oh, there are so many kids who need good homes!” and “God bless you!” and “She’s one lucky little girl!” And then there were the questions: “How could someone give her away?” and “How old was her mom?” It was all so overwhelming to process: my own emotions, the questions and assumptions from others, and, most of all, my tiny daughter’s huge brown, imploring eyes, reminding us that she was the innocent party, hopelessly reliant on adults to make the right choices for her.
Agencies and attorneys and even the general public tell us that birth parents often place and “more on with their lives” or “get over” or “move past” the placement. Do they say these things to help us feel better about adopting? Do they say these things to grant themselves false peace about the complexities of adoption? Or is that most of us don’t want to stop and think about how heartbreaking it must be to carry a child and give him or her away, forever?
When I am faced, as I still am five years later, with guilt, sympathy, confusion, and heartache, I stop, I breathe, and I embrace these. These feelings are not to be feared or ignored. They are part of the journey. This bittersweet adoption path has conditioned me to see with clarity, respond with love, and simmer in possibility.
Rachel Garlinghouse is the author of Come Rain or Come Shine: A White Parent’s Guide to Adopting and Parenting Black Children. She’s mothering three brown babies, baking without ceasing, and in her “spare” time, writing and talking about transracial adoption. She’s been on MSNB’s Melissa-Harris Perry, The Daily Drum national radio show, and her family has been featured in Essence magazine. Her articles have been published by MyBrownBaby.com, Madame Noire, and Adoptive Families. Keep up with Rachel on her blog at www.whitesugarbrownsugar.com