Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Dawit: Another Look

We posted yesterday about one of LoPa Art's first artisans in Ethiopia.
We just didn't add a picture of our beloved Dawit.
Here you go.
Showing Dawit with the art we bought for your purchase.
Check us out on Facebook at LoPa Art
and on Twitter on @Lopa_Art


Monday, July 25, 2011

Artisan Spotlight: Dawit

We at LoPa Art are asked all the time why we do what we do and if we really think that we are making a difference. While in this day and time it is easy to be a cynic and wonder where your purchase dollars are supporting, we at LoPa Art, take our position as stewards of God's provision very seriously.
We are always brainstorming, discussing and determining where we can do things better and stretch our dollars further. It is not always that you are able to directly see how God uses your dollar to impact someone else. But if you've made a LoPa purchase in the last year,
let me introduce to you one of our artisans,
meet Dawit.








These works of art are made by one of our artisans in Ethiopia.
 Dawit was an artist that we purchased from during our first buying trip to Ethiopia.
 His paintings were such a hit that we purposefully tracked him down again this time.
 As we approached his one room house, we noticed immediately that things were different at Dawit's than the first time we met him almost a year ago.
Dawit's house looked amazing, with a new room and electricity!
And both of those things were possible by YOUR purchases.

Dawit was so excited to see us that we all were teary.
The paintings shown above are still available and all proceeds
from LoPa sales go directly to fund our feeding program for the people of Korah in Ethiopia.
Thank you for your support of LoPa Art and the Christ we serve.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Lori on the Floor

Josh and I started our family very early.  At 19 and 21, an unplanned pregnancy led us to consider all options that might be best for our son, whom we carried.  We read statistics.  We explored placement.  We researched parenting.  Ultimately, God’s plan for us was to raise our precious son; but this rough beginning served as an introduction to the beauty and sacrifice of placing a child for adoption and founded in us a love for birth parents, whose best option is to place their children. 

Three and a half years later, God readied us for our next child, our daughter.  Our second pregnancy remained problematic from beginning to finish; yet in the end, she arrived right on cue.  Little did we know this would be the end of the “easy road” to family growth. 

Over the next four years, Josh and I lost four pregnancies.   Rather, four babies.  Ranging from six weeks to twenty plus weeks, each loss stole our breath.  By the third loss, our doctors scrambled to diagnose the cause.  We followed all the rules.  Our friends and families prayed.  Ironically, days after our fourth loss (yes after), our doctors called with a diagnosis of a genetic clotting disorder and a possible treatment.  It was too late.  We grieved and questioned.  We closed the door to carrying another child in our womb.  Adoption seemed reasonable. 

The research began.  Only months into preparing adoption papers, Josh realized my significant pain, the damage, and the gaping hollow that co-existed with the loss of our pregnancies.  He understood that adopting would be a way for me to fill this hole.  He knew God needed to heal the hurts in my heart before we were truly prepared to adopt.   Josh stymied our adoption.   The pain of my losses festered and took root into an insatiable desire to mother and took me to a place of complete brokenness.  A day arrived when I was finally inclined to relinquish it at the foot of the cross.  I yielded my hopes for more children through adoption.  I surrendered my agony. God began the work of restoration. 

Time passed and on a routine visit, my doctor and I were both stunned to discover I was pregnant.  We followed protocol for experimental treatments to sustain our pregnancy.  We knew the risks.  We anticipated the difficulty ahead.  All of us expected another loss.   At each turn we were cautioned against being too hopeful.  As tumultuous as this pregnancy was, God sustained the life of our child.  He was born.  God granted us more than we could have imagined possible, yet He wasn’t done. 

A year and a half later, Josh arrived home from work with an announcement.   After years of dormancy, God awakened in him the passion to adopt.  Josh caught me off guard.  God caught me off guard.  I had not considered adoption since the day I released my dreams.  Josh had not mentioned adoption for years.  Yet here we stood.  God took our years of waste, our losses, and our pains and cultivated them into a passion that would transform our family.  God directed our hearts to Ethiopia where our fourth son first lived. 

On our placement trip to Addis, we fell desperately in love with Ethiopia…the culture, the people, their giftedness, their kindness, the simplicity, and beauty in the midst of penury.  We realized that this would not be a place we left easily or permanently.  Ethiopia imprinted herself on our hearts.  Looking into the eyes of each orphan, each child on the street, each poverty-stricken woman and man, we glimpsed our son and the life he could have lived.  We were compelled to touch those, who were left behind. 

LoPa Art was born from our hearts' desires to touch those left behind- to feed, to educate, to trade train, to employee, and provide medical care and employment through profits produced by micro-enterprise.  The giftedness of Ethiopian artisans makes easy this task.  Following God’s plan makes each step a treasure. 
Happy, Ababa, Mez-e, Lori, Big Tiger, and H Man


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

We're Baaaack!!!

If you have been wondering where we've been,
well...
we've been out of the office.

For a month, our LoPa Art shopping crew has been in Ethiopia.
We bought paintings from new artists,
visited old artists,
loved on some orphans,
began our feeding program,
had our hearts broken and renewed in the same day
and now we are back home.

Rested. Check.
Inventory. Check.
Refreshed. Check.
Ready to return business. Double Check.

While we will have plenty to tell you over the coming weeks,
here's a peek of some of the amazing pieces we bought:

"Blue Oxen" by Aklilu


Leather Rose Cuff Bracelet by Yami



"Pom" by Nitsusew


While it was hard to come home,
we are glad to be able to share these amazing things with you.

Check us out on Facebook and see more of our amazing products.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Lindsey on the Floor

Finding your spouse is supposed to be a hard part, a big deal of life. That was the easiest thing I ever did. Le and I were talking and planning a wedding within weeks of dating. Le's challenge wasn't talking me into marriage; his challenge was talking me into kids. I told him two days before our wedding, for the one millionth time, "I don't EVER want kids and if you do, it will probably be a deal breaker." 


It wasn't many days later that I was sitting on a beach over looking the water when God pierced my heart. I knew why I was miserable. I was too selfish to see past my own plans for my life. I knew God planned children for our family.  


Our medical challenges started when we wanted to start a family. Having a baby is difficult, uncomfortable, and hard. Making a baby is supposed to be romantic, exciting, and sensual. PLEASE! For three years we took my temperature, timed my body clock, read every ridiculous wives tale about positioning and the placement of the sun, and we kept a detailed calendar. It was frustrating.  It was embarrassing. For me, it was ridiculous. 


Doctors were stumped. They tested me once a month for months, gave me  new prescriptions, new lists of reading material, and assurances that we would get pregnant. NOTHING HAPPENED?  They finally tested Le.  We almost laughed at our results. We had less than 20% chance of having a baby without serious medical intervention. Throughout our trying to get pregnant, it was obvious that if we ever did, I'd most likely only carry one baby to term.  We heard that in itself would be a miracle. Le and I knew what we wanted.  A family.  Children.  More than one.  We wanted our child to have siblings.  Adoption answered that desire.

I stopped asking God for a baby. I asked God for an answer. We weren't just given the regular IVF speech by our doctors. There would have to be surgical procedures on Le and I. If that didn't work, we would have to discuss eggs and sperm donation and surrogacy. I laughed out loud in the specialist's office. I asked him if he had lost his mind. He tried to smile, but I knew he secretly wanted to slap me. I told him that Le and I wanted a family, not a baby growing in someone else's belly who may be half-mine or half-Le's.  It made sense, if he was going to tell me that such a child would be biologically neither Le's nor mine, we would adopt. I thanked the doctor and said, "God's given me an answer. Our baby isn't coming from my womb." 

I cried all the way home and most of the next week. I wasn't devastated about the pregnancy, or the lack thereof, I just wanted to mourn this period of my life so that I could look back and say that I gave it the dignity it deserved.  I knew the loss from infertility came with issues that required resolve.  I mourned.  I prayed.  I left it at the Cross. I've never looked back.

During months of researching, discussion, and becoming fluent in Adoption Parent lingo, we had discussed and received paperwork from over twenty-five adoption agencies, including DHS here in Oklahoma, international adoption, and domestic adoption. Our families were pushing for a Caucasian, fresh from the womb infant.  Le and I were being called a completely different direction. 


I contacted an agency on the East coast. The caseworker asked what our parameters were.  Parameters?  Huh?  I told her I had no clue what she meant. She said all prospective parents had a criteria of what was acceptable and what wasn't acceptable in a child for them. I asked her where the largest need existed.  Who was the hardest for which to find parents.  "Africa. Anywhere in Africa," she replied, "Most white couples don't want to adopt a black baby, and most people want them as young as possible. The percentage of kids adopted who are over 3 years old is less than 3% and the statistics go WAY down for sibling groups."  That was it!

I came home and told Le. I had never been one of those women who cooed and coddled other people's babies. It makes me uncomfortable.  I thought it was a sign I wasn't supposed to be a mother.  Instead, it was the instinct God established in me to parent the exact children HE had for us.  (My mom later told me she was that way, too, and it changed when she had the three of us.)  We chose our agency and sat down with their 3 page form of what we would accept.  


Le will tell you that we fought the most about this stage of the game. He is right!  I would have taken a teenager right out of the box. He hesitated.  As we prayed about it more, I knew that I would never want to be in the place where I had lost my mom and dad and if I did, I surely wanted my brother and sister beside me. Le agreed. Siblings it was.  One year later we were introduced to our 2 year old son, "dinosaur," and his almost 6 year old sister, "princess."  I know we didn't grow these children in our womb; but I promise, God grew them in our hearts.  

  


Here I am:  Lindsey.  Christ follower.  Wife.  Mother.  Lawyer.  Advocate.  LoPa-ite.  Doing my part to change the world one child at a time.


The hero, Lindsey, the princess, and the dinosaur.