Tag Archives: Chinese adoption

Smiling with Eyes Forced Open

Chinese adoption

 

Text message:   I’m so glad I realized I was in the wrong room.  I love my teacher.  He speaks English and is white.  Not being racist.  I’m so happy.

 

I’m not going to say who sent me this except that she’s a freshman at K-State, used to live with me until very recently, and is NOT white. And let’s just call her Helen. She got in the wrong section of business calculus because she went with a friend the first day and stayed there two weeks before figuring out it wasn’t her class. That first teacher was a new graduate student from India. From the imitation Helen did of the young woman asking questions that no one answered (well, to give her some credit, it was 7:30 in the morning), I could tell that she was trying hard to be a good teacher but was up against a triple whammy—a strong accent, lack of teaching experience, and little knowledge of the way American college undergraduates think. And they certainly aren’t very patient with any teacher, let alone one with the accent thing going on.

I asked Helen if she was really glad that her teacher was white and she said it was a joke. I want to believe it was.  She seems to take a lighthearted approach to her Chinese American status in a mainly white family (Rose helps move the percentage a little). She loves to tell me that “white chicks don’t tan” and I only wish that my reflective skin was the only thing I didn’t like about my legs. When she got comments from classmates at her rural high school, such as “How do you see when you smile?” she accepted that it wasn’t said in a mean spirited way. I, on the other hand, felt more offended and suggested she use her hands to open up her eyes super wide while saying, “So how do YOU see when you smile?” Quite a clever comeback, right? And so mature.

I grew up in Topeka, home of the historic “Brown vs. the Board of Education” with parents of differing views on non-whites.When a friend of my mother’s called to tell her I had been seen dancing with a black guy at the 9th grade party, she simply replied, “Really?  That’s nice.” But when a boy of Asian descent came to the door to collect me on a date one year later, it was my father who rushed to ask my mother if she knew about this. He came by his prejudice rather honestly. His mother, a quarter Cherokee herself, told my brother that he “should stone any nigger that came into his classroom”. My father was horrified at that advice, though not likely as much as my mother. I can clearly remember one morning as I was heading out the door to school.  My parents were discussing Rosa Parks. In one of the few times I ever heard her raise her voice, my mother, waving a newspaper in the air, asked, “Why should she have to sit in the back of the bus?” My father didn’t answer but he was surprised to see how much passion she had over this matter.

Always a southern gentleman, my father never acted anything but polite to that boyfriend he had rushed to inform my mother about, and never suggested that I shouldn’t go out with him. But I know he was relieved when the next guy at the door had paler skin. So when I announced that I was going to China to adopt a daughter, he looked stunned but said nothing. In fact, he continued to say nothing, refusing to mention it for the nine months that I waited to get her, something that hurt and angered me. My mother tried to excuse him—he was worried about me having enough money to take on a child and also, remember that he was in WWII when Japan was the enemy—and China, well, it’s also Asian. So I didn’t quite know what to expect when I arrived home with Helen, a child I thought was the most wonderful 20 month old in the whole world, an opinion my mother and brother seemed to immediately agree with.

I don’t remember when things changed. It’s been a long time since I showed up at their door with Helen dressed in a red and black checked dress that I still keep in the closet. And it’s been a long time since my father died, two years later. I just remember certain things. Like the way he called her “my sweet little girl”, the same thing he called me at that age. Like the way they would sit together on the front porch, not doing much, just hanging out together. Like my mother’s favorite story about the two of them. It was in the last months of his life, when his feet were so swollen they couldn’t fit in his shoes. We were at their house for Sunday dinner and when he and Helen didn’t show up at the table, my mother went searching, fearing he had fallen.  She found him sitting in his chair, smiling down at a little girl who was so gently putting his feet into slippers.

I have to say I feel relieved that Helen can now understand her teacher in a class that will be difficult in the best of circumstances.  And I see how it’s what she wants (at some point she also said that he’s rather cute). It certainly is easier to stay with what we’ve known, and what she’s known is mainly white teachers born in this country.  But how sad for her if she does what some students do, avoiding classes with teachers whose names don’t sound “American”.  I think about what my father would have lost if he hadn’t had Helen as part of his family. At some point in the civil rights movement, he came to agree with my mother about Rosa Parks, but he never spoke out with any of her passion.  Later, he was forced to view it much more closely. It was then that this passion showed as he looked down on his “sweet little girl” from China.

Chinese adoption, grandfathers

 

 

Remembering a Rocky Mountain High

Chinese adoption, growing up

 

 

It’s not every 22 year old woman who’s told that she looks like John Denver.  This happened in the summer of 1974, the year Patricia Hearst was kidnapped and Nixon resigned.  I had managed to get a job as a camp counselor in Colorado by rather overstating my experience with all sorts of things, including horse riding and navigation.   Although this got me into some trouble, like being thrown off a headstrong horse after saddling up the calm ones for the campers, and temporarily losing 8 ten-year-olds in the forest at dusk, I didn’t cause any serious injury to me or others. I even managed to scare away a bear cub by throwing my tennis shoes at it, much to the awe of the on looking adolescent girls.  But back to the resemblance to John Denver.   I had light brown straight hair that was chin length with long bangs that flopped over round wire rimmed glasses and apparently a friendly easy going smile.   I felt rather complimented by the remarks of the resemblance as I loved John Denver then and will still catch myself trying to sing his songs forty years later.

But still it was rather a shock to me when several days ago Rose saw a picture of John Denver and shouted, “Mom, he looks like you!”   Oddly enough, I again felt complimented but this time it had to do with the age thing—could there be anything alike in the faces of a thirty-something male folksinger and a sixty-something (early sixties, by the way) woman?  It made my heart warm to my child in a way that happens less often as the teenage years approach.   And so we sat on the porch and I drank beer while she played John Denver songs on her ipad (actually Wayne’s ipad that he gave her as he never got the gist of how to use it).   I asked Rose to play “Annie’s Song” and with the opening chords I was transported back to that summer of 1974.  I had been given the not-so-desirable job of alpine camping with the youngest girls and we slept out in the open (this must have been before lawsuits as I also led a white water raft trip down a river with let’s just say no experience).   Those were also the days before we worried about drinking the seemingly clean spring water,  which in this case was a huge mistake.   In the early hours of the third morning there, I woke up to a light tap on my shoulder.  I looked up to see a little girl shivering in the chilly air.  “I threw up in my sleeping bag.  Can I get in yours?”  There was no possible answer except yes and so she got in beside me and immediately fell asleep.   I, however, could only think about how I’d used all the money I’d saved to buy that expensive North Face bag and what if she threw up again.  But in one of those rare moments of knowing what to do, I got up just before dawn and set out walking up a trail, eventually coming across deer.  The light was shining down behind them and it was a moment of pure joy—-I was young and strong (and looked like John Denver don’t forget) and the world was good with so many things yet to experience.  And I remember too that while I stood alone on that path, I was hearing “Annie’s Song” in my head.

Sitting on the porch last night, thinking about that, a great sadness came over me, accepting my aging and how far I am from that person who was 22, walking on that mountain trail at dawn, with her whole life ahead of her.

I hope Helen feels the way I did that early morning in Colorado.  She is now 18 and 16 years ago I brought her home from China, a scared little girl, in her own way tapping me on the shoulder and asking to crawl into my sleeping bag, a bag that I knew would never stay as clean again.  This June I went with her to freshman orientation at K-State.   After signing in (and noticing that the other parents looked way too young to have college aged kids) the students went off in one direction and family members were led to an auditorium where we got coffee and rolls and talks about children growing up and learning to make it on their own.  Helen had been quite nervous about not knowing any other students and began texting me.

Helen: I’m in the college of business.  See you at 11:15.

Ann: OK I ALREADY SPILLED MY COFFEE AND FAILED THE TEXTING SURVEY    (note:  also have trouble getting the all caps turned off)

Helen:  Lolol I threw my coffee away

Ann:  WAS IT THAT BAD?

Helen:  I finished almost all of it.  I have to carry a bunch of stuff.  The big nose guy is talking.  Did you have to watch the students do a skit?

Ann:  No skits only lectures    (note:  managed to turn off all caps)

Helen:  Sucks ____    (note: not very nice word here)

Ann:  Really?

Helen:  I think I should return my books.

Ann:  Why?

Helen:  They said I could go on amazon and get it super cheap

Ann:  OK  you scared me  I thought you were going to say you already wanted to drop out

Helen:  No its actually going pretty well

Ann:  GOOD     (note:  all caps on purpose this time)

 

John Denver died in a private plane crash at the age of 53.  I’ve already lived nine years longer than that and have had a pretty incredible life, with few regrets.  But that doesn’t keep me from grieving what is lost.   What I didn’t tell Helen in our texting was that when I sat in that auditorium by myself on orientation day, my eyes got all teary, and I don’t think it was because of the spilled coffee.  I sometimes want that little toddler from China back, just like I sometimes want to be 22 again and walking in the forest at dawn, the world so open to me.  But for now,  I need to cherish Rose’s desire to sit with me on the porch, Helen’s wish that I help her on moving day.  These are things still not to be taken lightly.

 

Chinese adoption, high school graduation

 

 

 

To read more about the adoption and raising of Rose and Helen, see my book “Spiders from Heaven” at the link above.