The way home
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By John Towriss
Special to CNN.com
Web posted: November 21, 2001
MOSCOW, Russia (CNN) -- I can see a half-foot of snow on the ground already and more falling through the bare birch trees as Trans-Aero flight 206 settles softly on the runway of the Russian capital. We are four members of the Towriss family traveling now and though the journey has been trying at times we know we have crossed the summit and there is a weary contentment to being on the downhill passage.
As Dara and Johnny stare at the world outside the window, I wonder what thoughts must be rushing through their little minds? Do they sense how their lives are irretrievably changing? Are they afraid? It was only 48 hours ago that their lives had a regiment and schedule that provided a sense of routine. Now the only world they have known has been turned upside down in the most sudden and invasive of ways. We hold them close.
Carole and I have enjoyed getting to know our new children. Johnny giggles when you tickle his feet, Dara laughs with her eyes. Dara loves to slowly nurse a bottle while Johnny gulps his down. In Russian they say Dara is "spokoynaya" - calm. Johnny flops like a fish when you let him roll around the bed in his diaper. We've been up since 4 a.m. I'm awed by their resilience.
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We had to show documentation to prove our children have been orphaned before the U.S. Government would issue the one piece of paper you must have for the children to enter the United States -- the immigrant visa. We had to go to Moscow to get ours.
On Monday morning, we are up early sitting outside the office of a doctor, waiting to get a required physical for the children. He pokes, prods, and looks in ears, mouths and noses, then gives both Dara and Johnny a clean bill of health.
Then at last, we visit the U.S. Embassy at our assigned time for our immigrant visa interview. It is somehow anti-climatic in that it takes less than five minutes to attain the last and most significant piece of paper in the entire process.
Leaving the embassy, I find my thoughts drawn to my daughters back home. Carole and I have sorely missed Emma and Mira and with all the excitement sure to come about our new additions I'm worried about how we will make sure they feel as special as ever.
Each of my children has a special story and I want to make sure they know that, while at the same time making sure they feel it is their story -- not mine. It delves into the realm of one of the most sensitive of adoption issues: How and when to you tell your children they are adopted.
Volumes have been written on this subject and there are many excellent books. Each family must come to their own conclusions but Carole and I have decided to tell our adopted children from the outset how they have come into our family. The story will never change, although it may come with more detail as they grow older.
But having said that, it feels to me that the question of how I tell my child they are adopted misses the point completely. To me, it's more a matter of how I will build a net of love and trust around them so strong that if this issue causes them to stumble they won't fall very far before we catch them. It's less about how I tell them and more about what I'm doing to make sure they will never feel unwanted.
The day will come when each of my adopted children will have to face the issues surrounding their birth. After all, these lives started out as broken and that will require healing. But is that issue any different than any other emotional issue faced by my children, biological or adopted? Frankly, who better to help my son or daughter through a difficult emotional issue than one who has for years embraced them and loved them unconditionally? I see it as an honor.
The snow has stopped here in Moscow and Dara and Johnny are sleeping peacefully as Carole and I finish packing. There is but one item left on our agenda now: Go home ... that sounds good.
John Towriss has been with CNN for 21 years, a journalist covering stories the world over. He is deputy bureau chief and director of news coverage in CNN's Washington bureau. Towriss can be reached at TOWRISS@aol.com
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