Jillian's Journey

Follow us to China, on our journey to Jillian. - An invisible red thread connects those who are destined to meet regardless of time, place, or circumstance. The thread may stretch or tangle, but will never break. ~An Ancient Chinese belief

Friday, February 17, 2006

We want some Snow!




Well, after a little snow and warmer temperatures, Jen & I were able to get out and make a snowman last Wednesday, then Thursday came with temp's reaching 10c+ with heavy rain, and did a number on our frosty. This morning the temp had dropped drastically, with wind & snow, and was not pleasant, we still have no real accumulation.( so much for my trail pass), frosty is looking rather skinny now. With the weather being unseasonal, we have resorted to staying inside, challenging our creativity.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Routine, Routine, Routine.





Well, it been almost three weeks, short one day, since we have returned home, and we are just settling back into our usual routine, or should I say new family routine. The girls are both having their afternoon naps right now, which gives us a break & them a chance to re-charge. We find it certainly helps with their attitude & concentration during the day. Jennifer is still warming slowly towards Jill, as Jen was use to all the attention before, but now has to share the star light. Jen thought the other day that the dog (Jack), would make a better play mate, so when Kerri & Jill were upstairs attending to business, Jen thought Jack would make the ideal horse for her to ride. Jack didn't think much of it, and quickly & forcefully made it clear to Jen that the horse idea was definitely not a good thing. Jack yelped, Jen ended up on top of the couch, with five red teeth marks on her jaw and neck.(sounds worse that it was), of coarse Kerri & Jill flew downstairs to investigate the racket. Thankfully, old Jack (13yrs old), is a well tempered & trained dog (Lab.), and only "kissed" Jen, had it been any other dog, the story might have been much different. I am hoping this lesson (be it a tough one), has taught Jen some new respect for other dogs, and not just ours. It certainly has not made her afraid of Jack, which is good, because she was right back at him latter, giving him hugs & pullin his tail, feeding him.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

One Week Later

Well, after one week at home, things are starting to return to normal. Jill finally slept through the night last night till 7:00 am. and Jen is starting to warm up more (not there yet). Everyone here has gotten a cold, I think it all started on the plane home. We are now in the process of re-organizing their bedroom and creating a play room to contain the multitude of toys. Jill has become even more active, and will climb the stairs with out hesitation if you are not looking.

For those traveling soon, a couple of tips we learned this time around, leave pre-made meals in the freezer for when you get back. You will definitely not feel like making anything in your sleep state. We also found that Jill seems to sleep better if she has a pile of blankets on her, which she was the way the slept before us. Also, in the hotel room, use the ice bucket has a receptacle for hot water, to warm baby food etc. Use the Chinese TV channel to sooth her to sleep etc.( in hotel). If staying at the Holiday Inn in Chongquing, it is extremely new family friendly, and had crib and stroller in rm on our arrival, so I would not bring a stroller to Chongquing, we should have left it in Beijing. A snuggly is good for the great wall ( or similar), nor stroller friendly. Don't sweat the gifts for the Officials, if it will collect duct in your house it will definitely collect it there with the multitude of gifts they receive,(think of the number that go through) keep it simple. The giving of gifts is probably the biggest headache, and I think too many people make a big deal of it. Especially for the Civil & Justice officials, all we did was pile them in the cornor with the others ( other groups going through that day), we did not meet the actual officials. They didn't accept each one personally and look at them, I am sure they go through them and divide them latter. As far as gifts for the Director & Vice Director, pretty much the same deal, they get tons of stuff over the year, keep it practical & simple. We loaded all of them on a table at the S.W.I. and the nanny gifts in a separate pile. Your nannies will probably not get the gift you intended for them, I know they divide up the gifts, and appreciate practical type stuff. ( seen nannies leave with nannie gift bags), so I would make up nannie gifts with the thought if will be shared among all. I feel the gift thing is become a formality, and don't be disappointed if it doesn't seem personal when you give them. This may be different if traveling to a orphanage that does not see many adoptions as some. We also made up a gift for foster family in our case, we just hoped it reached them, nothing special (honey, Old Port cigars, lighter, herbal tea ). Our guide was excellent in prompting us when we should have gifts ready, and how much to tip bellhops/drivers, she had a excellent understanding of westerners and we gave her the extra gifts that we had (just in case) at the end of the trip.