Updated
I'm just too tired to think of a whole lot right now, but I had to update you on the current situation. I was on the phone with J tonight as we were driving home (separately, P was with him) and saying that I didn't know what to do, that I was completely at a loss. I'd spent all day composing e-mails in my head to Ms. IU, saying things like "Thank you so much for your concern, and your apology about sending us a referral and forcing us to make this heart-wrenching decision. We really appreciate knowing that you were there for us...oh, wait. You DIDN'T do that. You never even bothered to write back," and there were various invectives and cleverly insulting sarcastic phrases that were built in to what probably would have been an enormous e-mail berating them for their treatment of M and of us.
Rachel, I was going to ask you to go to Ms. IU's desk to just tell her "I'm just going to stand here until you call Erin. Just stand until you pick up the phone and call."
Then my call waiting beeped and I recognized Ms IU's area code. So I told J that I would see him at home and took her call. She started out with an apology, saying how sorry she was and how she knew that it was immensely painful for all of us, that she just feels terrible for not waiting for the report. She said that normally the pediatricians catch anything major, and the initial report did say there were no neurological or musculoskeletal problems, so she assumed that the further neurological testing was just to be on the safe side. She figured that if there were such a problem, the initial tests would have revealed it. She said she was absolutely blindsided by it as well, and immediately knew that it was the worst possible news that we could have gotten.
She apologized for not having called sooner, but apparently our social worker (who was sent all of our information about our referral and also this new information) assured her that she would call us and offer us her support and anything we need. You might remember our social worker. That was just one of many issues that we had with her. Needless to say, we never heard anything from her. We also never heard from the homestudy agency for whom she contracts, who also assured Ms IU that they would be sure we had the support that we needed. I know for sure that they got the information, because Ms. IU sent it to all of us in one e-mail. We heard nothing from them. We've been getting through it because we were blessed with such wonderful family and friends. The people who truly care about us. Those that we've paid thousands of dollars? Nada.
Then she felt terribly sorry for having not called sooner. She said that she didn't want to just e-mail us, because this was something that needed to come in a phone call so she could talk to us. Her daughter was ill today and she was with her all day, and had to wait until she could get some time alone so that she could talk to us. She felt bad for doing it but thought that we had other support from the homestudy agency and would be OK until she could call.
I told her everything that was in the e-mail again. Normally, I'm terrible about confrontation but all I had to do was picture the look in P's eyes to keep my resolve to get this straightened out. I explained how we had gone through a lot of guilt back then to get the special-needs page filled out, and it was so hard then. She apologized again, explained again that she had never dreamed that this would happen--they've only ever had something like this happen once before, when a baby girl was discovered to be blind after the family had already accepted the referral and were about to travel. I told her that I wanted so much for us to be M's family, and it was killing me that I knew we couldn't be. She said she admired that we were able to make this decision, because she'd been partly afraid (after she heard the diagnosis) that we'd try to take on something we'd said we couldn't handle and not realize that we were right about not being able to handle it until after M was home. She assured me that there is another family with a dossier already accepted who will be given his referral and who has indicated that they can handle his type of cerebral palsy--he will not sit in the care center without a family for a long time, which was another huge worry and fear of mine. I was so afraid that a little boy with CP wouldn't find a family, and I'm so relieved to know that someone out there is the kind of angel that we just couldn't be, and will love and care for this beautiful little boy the way he deserves to be loved and cared for.
She said all the things I needed her to say. She truly made me feel like it was a terrible mistake, a completely unexpected situation, and one that she never, ever would have made if she'd known. It was just want I needed to hear her say to help me feel like we can still work with them through this. And then she said something else.
She told us that it's up to us to decide when we're ready. She didn't want to color our thoughts, but there's another option. I asked "Another referral?" and she said "Yes."
I said I would talk it over with J and we would get back to her. I didn't ask anything about the little boy, not even his age (though I wanted to), because I want us to make the decision about if we're ready without another "real" little boy in my mind. I know there are people behind us in line at our agency who can be given that referral if we're not ready, and so I'm not worried about that.
It just seemed like everything was so right with M's referral. Even part of his last name was a typically American name that happens to be a family name on both J's and my sides of the family. He and P were the perfect ages apart to share a room and still be only one grade apart in school. And by damn, but he is such a perfect little boy. I told a friend that part of me had wondered what our son would look like, but when I opened M's picture, there was a sense of knowing. My first thought was "Of course that's what he looks like." Not surprise, just knowing that was him. As if I'd known him forever. I had almost the identical response when P was born and they told me he was a boy (we hadn't found out ahead of time)--my first thought was "Of course he is!"
I'm doing better than I was. I cried a lot yesterday. I spent the day on the verge of tears, cried a lot at home after P went to bed, and cried a lot more when I went to bed. I think it was cleansing. Today, I didn't cry. I almost cried once, but didn't really need to. I actually felt hunger, and I even ate two meals (and Christy, you are an angel for bringing us dinner...thank you so much, you have no idea how much that helped us). I hadn't really eaten since we got the news--I had a milkshake last night and that was the sum total of my calories for yesterday. The day before, I had part of a Sprite.
I'm still really sad, but knowing that M will have a family soon is helping. Having cried enough to let it out helps. The fact that I'm insanely busy with a major conference in town (I'm just attending), a choir concert tomorrow night, P's birthday party on Sunday, P's birthday Monday, Hanukkah starting Tuesday, the last week of classes is this coming week--all of that helps me keep it off my mind. I find myself tuning out of things to think of M, but it doesn't make me so sad that I have to excuse myself from a seminar to cry in the bathroom (that was yesterday). I look at his picture a lot, and I talk to him often as if he could hear me. I'm going to write him a letter that I'll never send, that he'll never read, just to say the things that I would tell him if I could. But it doesn't make me feel so awful now, because I do know that it's the right decision.
I don't know if we'll ask to see this referral. J feels ready, but he admits that he had only started letting himself feel excitement about M's referral the night that we signed the acceptance paperwork, which was the night before we found out about his CP. He says it's up to me to figure out when I'm ready. He did ask "What if this is meant to be our son?" I don't know. I thought M was meant to be our son. Now I feel like I can't trust myself. And truthfully, it's not fair to the other little boy to compare him to M. Now there is a picture in my mind, and I need to figure out if I'm OK with something different yet.
If we do decide to see it and end up accepting it, or even if we wait a while and accept another referral another time, we won't tell P until we're through courts--probably not until we have a travel date. He needs the time to grieve and recover, and I never want to be responsible for putting that look on his face ever again. If we're through courts and have a travel date, it'll give him about a month or so to get excited--which, for a 4-year-old, is probably plenty of time. We probably won't tell our families until then either. I don't know if I'll write about it here. I just feel this need to protect us and not open up my heart to congratulations or even good wishes, when I'm not sure if I can handle them yet. Gee, sounds a lot like infertility. At least we're back on familiar ground.
I just don't know what we'll do. I'm going to do a lot of heart-searching this weekend and see what I come up with. And then if I'm not done, I'll keep one searching until I find an answer.
Thank you all again. Your anger on my behalf really, really helped me. Feel free to put it aside and know that I really do believe Ms IU didn't just try to pawn M off on us because she thought we could take care of him (especially because there is another family already who can accept his referral with that diagnosis). Maybe I'm being naive, maybe I just want to believe it, but I really do need to believe it or I don't know that we could keep going. And I do believe her.