One month ago the most miraculous thing happened. I didn’t realize that basically I’d been holding my breath since January. I didn’t realize it until one month ago when our team finally breathed a collective sigh of relief.
He made it. He survived. He made it out. His family took him out forever, never to return.
Our baby Ben was saved.
I think we all hoped with all of our hearts that it would happen, but until I watched Ben’s mommy and grandma walk him out of the Isolation Hall, down the sidewalk, and actually get into the van with him, I’m not sure I believed it would really happen. It was just too good to be true. FREEDOM!!!!
Ben is at home with his loving daddy and mommy and two brothers. He is doing amazing. He is a survivor and he beat the odds. And now he has a future! It’s what we want for every single one of our boys. It’s the perfect end to a beautiful love story…actually I guess it’s the perfect beginning, because only now does Ben’s life truly begin.
Freedom. It’s what we want for every single boy and man within the walls of the institution. That’s why we moved here. That’s why we purchased the land. That’s why Jed spoke in Switzerland yesterday and in Germany today. Many, many people need to know about our boys because it will take many, many people to help set them all free.
Almost all of our boys are trapped in the cycle of institutions forever unless we get them out into group homes. They are too old to be adopted or their parents still maintain their rights. They are stuck.
BUT Stephan. Stephan is not stuck. He is one of the very few who is available for adoption. His fate doesn’t have to be the same as the others. He could have the freedom and love that Ben now knows- and he could have it soon! All that is needed is one loving family to step forward and claim their son.
Stephan is such a tiny little love. He’s thirteen years old but about the size of our 6 year old, Seth. If you didn’t know his age you’d swear he’s 6 or 7. Years of neglect, physical and emotional, have stunted his growth. He loves to eat, and eats well, but he’s still so tiny.
I’ll tell you what, Stephan is all boy! There is nothing he likes more than to be spun around and around and to sit on a walker or in a wheelchair and be pushed FAST. The faster the better for our boy. He loves to play rough and he loves tickles. See, the thing is, our sweet Stephan is blind. To be in darkness in that place, oh my heart can’t even comprehend. The institution is a rush to all of your senses. The smells, the sounds, the sights, all of it rushes you like a freight train upon entering, but when I think about hearing and smelling all of that and not being able to see? Yeah, I get a little panicky just thinking of it, and I’m a grown woman! No person should have to sleep one night there, let alone spend years there in darkness. It’s just too much. Too much. Someone please get him out of there.
I’ve been wanting to hardcore advocate for Stephen for a long time. There was just one major detail that kept me from it. We knew that he was blind, but then several nannies told us that he was also deaf! This was news to us because deafness was not in his medical file. Yet several insisted that yes, he was deaf. I did not believe it, but I needed to be 100% sure before I could ask a family to come for him and be confident on that very big detail.
You might be thinking “How could you NOT know if a child is deaf or not? Wouldn’t it be obvious?” In a typically developing child in a safe environment, yes I guess it would be fairly easy to detect if there was a problem, but at our institution it is not. I told you before that the your senses are assaulted upon entering, right? I don’t even know how to fully explain to you what it is like there. It is loud: screeches, screams, some laughter, crying, yelling. During the day the noise is just about constant. And then there is the lack of stimulus. There is just nothing there. Unless the interns or a team is there, the Isolation Hall is just pure nothingness. No books, no toys, no music, nothing. Years of pure nothingness, lack of stimuli, has left our boys with many inappropriate behaviors and responses. Pure nothingness leads them to self-harming behaviors and autistic-type behaviors. Now imagine that nothingness coupled with darkness? Yeah, horrible. Stephan, like many of the other boys, does not respond appropriately much of the time. He has learned to tune out the world around him. It’s survival.
A few weeks ago I was sitting on a bed with our Vitya, cuddling him to sleep because he had a horrible toothache. Stephan came and was sitting at the other end of the bed. I sat quietly and just observed him, hoping to get my questions answered about his hearing. I called his name, no response. He sat quietly twirling his sock in front of his face, twirling and twirling. Then a nanny came in and saw that his socks were off. “Stephan, why are your socks off? Give me your foot” He stuck his foot out. “Now give me your other foot.” He stuck out his other foot. She wasn’t touching his feet, she was only speaking, and he listened and obeyed. Question answered. He hears. I told that nanny what others had said about him being deaf. Her reply “Maybe he doesn’t want to listen all the time, but of course he hears!” Haha. Sounds like a typical kiddo to me!
Stephan is potty-trained and goes to the toilet independently. He does not self-harm, nor have I ever seen him harm others. He doesn’t really interact with the other boys at all. He could learn to feed himself, but at this time he’s not interested in learning. He can walk and run, but he does not speak. he spends all of his days standing under the window or sitting in the kitchen waiting for the next meal. He spins and twirls to get his sensory needs met and he adores going outside. But, his quality of life is very poor and will remain that way until he is free.
I believe with all of my heart that there is a family out there for our sweet boy. He has SO MUCH potential!!! Please don’t be scared off by his age. He’s like a toddler in behavior, and like a first grader in size, yet in a little over two years he will age out and his chance to be adopted will be gone forever. He has waited too long in unsafe darkness.
Would you please pass on Stephan’s face to others? Would you please consider him for your own family? Maybe you have said that you hope to adopt someday but have never considered a special needs adoption. Would you consider it now? Would you at least promise to pray and ask God how He would like you to respond? We always said we would not consider special-needs adoption…uh yeah…never say never. Ha!
This boy lives in a very bad place and he needs out yesterday. I know that I know that the family who chooses him will be so blessed to see him blossom before their very eyes. He is an absolute treasure.
I am happy to answer any questions you may have about Stephan. Just comment here or email me at kjohnson@wideawakeinternational.org
Also, our Stephan has a $10,000 adoption grant through Reece’s Rainbow!!! That removes a HUGE barrier to his adoption. Please share him far and wide and let’s find this boy a family!
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