Kimberly H
12-08-2003, 08:41 PM
Yippee! CCAI received our travel approvals from China today and faxed the US Consulate in Guangzhou to request our consulate appointments. Once that appointment date is received (please, December.. PLEASE!!!), then the travel agency can get to work on our itinerary.
Something I didn't share with my husband until today - I was scared that we would find out Mia would not be available for adoption. You see, the orphanage sends the dossier of information to the CCAA (China Center for Adoption Affairs) and there it sits until it's matched with a family. Mia's information is from June and she was matched with us in November. That's a long time.
Once the CCAA receives our acceptance letter - meaning we accept our referral and want to adopt this child - then they contact the orphanage to make sure the child is still available. She could be adopted out domestically, found to be special needs and thus not qualify for the program we're adopting under, or even became ill and died.
When the CCAA sends us travel approval, we know Mia's okay and is ready for us.
My husband had no idea it was a possibility that we would not be receiving our Mia. I'd told him a LONG time ago in the process and he didn't remember. It's not something that happens often but it actually did a couple of months ago - a child became too ill to be adopted out and the mother received another referral.
Now I can breathe again! Here we come, Mia!!
Something I didn't share with my husband until today - I was scared that we would find out Mia would not be available for adoption. You see, the orphanage sends the dossier of information to the CCAA (China Center for Adoption Affairs) and there it sits until it's matched with a family. Mia's information is from June and she was matched with us in November. That's a long time.
Once the CCAA receives our acceptance letter - meaning we accept our referral and want to adopt this child - then they contact the orphanage to make sure the child is still available. She could be adopted out domestically, found to be special needs and thus not qualify for the program we're adopting under, or even became ill and died.
When the CCAA sends us travel approval, we know Mia's okay and is ready for us.
My husband had no idea it was a possibility that we would not be receiving our Mia. I'd told him a LONG time ago in the process and he didn't remember. It's not something that happens often but it actually did a couple of months ago - a child became too ill to be adopted out and the mother received another referral.
Now I can breathe again! Here we come, Mia!!