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"God sets the lonely in families" - Psalm 68:6



Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Saying Good Bye to Mike's Mom

Mike's mom, Mary Kate Hawkins, passed into the arms of Jesus on December 5, 2013.  She had been admitted to the hospital in Portland in August for a number of medical issues.  "Granna" celebrated her seventieth birthday in the hospital in August and has been under medical care since that time.  Our family moved Mary Kate to Portland in October of 2011, where she has been living near two of Mike's sisters.  We had no idea at that time that we would be saying our final good bye's and are grieving the fact that Hailey never met her "Granna."  Here are some photos from that trip...





We are so thankful that Mike was able to fly to Oregon this September to spend a weekend with his mom, sisters and family.   They had a wonderful time and he will always treasure those special moments together in the hospital.  Mike's sister, Katie, has been caring for their mom selflessly for the past few months and we are so grateful for Katie and her family's unbelievable support and sacrifices in these final days.

Our family of five will be flying to Oregon on New Years' Eve to be with Mike's sisters and their families and to attend Mary Kate's "Celebration of Life" service, which will be held on Friday, January 3, at 2 pm at The Village Baptist Church in Beaverton.  We look forward to celebrating her life together.  Mary Kate loved Jesus passionately and was sharing her faith with all of her medical care givers until her final moments. We have great comfort in the fact that she is finally healed and free from the burdens and cares of this world.   We appreciate your prayers as we grieve and process many emotions.   Jordan has especially been very emotional, crying uncontrollably at times.   He told us this week that her passing is the hardest thing he's had to face in his life thus far.  The past month has been challenging as we moved to a new home, Jenni led a team to Guatemala and we've grieved the loss of Mary Kate.  Here are a few of our favorite photos of Mary Kate...



Thursday, November 21, 2013

Home, Sweet Home

We LOVE our new home and neighborhood!  We've been home for two weeks now and are completely moved in.  We hung the last picture on the wall a few days ago and it truly feels like home!  One of the things that we love the most about our home is the sense of community.  There are five parks, five pools, three basketball courts, three tennis courts and gorgeous walking trails everywhere.  We're looking forward to attending the holiday party next month at the clubhouse.  We constantly see friends walking by our home, at the park and pool and make new friends every day.  The boys are riding their bikes to school and often ride to the park or courts to play after school.  They're growing up!

Jenni and Aidan leave for Guatemala this Saturday, November 23, and it's great to be settled in before the trip. Please follow our journey at www.allblessingswest.blogspot.com. As we prepare to serve impoverished families, I am reminded of how abundantly rich we are to have running water, electricity, food in our refrigerator, heating/AC and modern amenities that we so often take for granted.  As Thanksgiving approaches, our hearts are overflowing with gratefulness for all that God has done in our lives!

Here is a little tour of our home...













Thursday, October 24, 2013

We're Moving to Irvine!

It's official!  We just signed a two year lease for a beautiful, three bedroom condo in the Northpark community of Irvine. We are so excited!  This fall our boys started attending a new school in Irvine (on a district transfer) and we've been hoping to move closer to their school for the last few months.  The condo is just one block away from Jordan's best friend, Cole, and about four blocks away from Aidan's best friend from our new school, Ethan.  This Tuesday I told the boys that we got the condo when I picked them up at school.  It was so heart warming to watch them share the news with their friends at school.  They were running around shouting, "We're moving to Northpark!".   Some of their new friends were even hugging them!  Wow!  The boys will be able to walk or ride their bikes to school and we're so grateful to be able to live in community with families from the school.
One of the things that we love about Northpark, Irvine, is the international diversity.  There are 27 different languages spoken at the boys' school and they have Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist friends who talk openly about their beliefs.  Our school is 40% Asian, so our family fits right in!  We're looking forward to living closer to our church and being able to invite families to join us.  As leaders of The Village Church of Irvine, we're thankful to be living in Irvine again!

We get the keys to our new home on Fri, Nov 1, and plan to move on Sat, Nov 9.  If you live in So Cal, we would LOVE your help!  Jenni will be leading our Guatemala trip (of 15 volunteers from 4 states) from November 23-20, so it's going to be a full and unforgettable month!  We're throwing a garage sale this Sat, Oct 26, and have lots of items to sell.  This is our third time downsizing and we're actually enjoying cleaning, purging and organizing.  As we downsize to a smaller home, we are reminded of the families we serve in Guatemala and El Salvador who have so much less materially, but are rich in faith, joy and contentment.  We are so grateful for the miraculous ways in which God provides for our family.

"The Lord has done great things for us and we are filled with joy" - Psalm 126:3

Monday, October 14, 2013

Steven Curtis Chapman Concert

Last night our family was honored to volunteer for Steven Curtis Chapman's orphan care ministry, "Show Hope".  We received an adoption grant from Show Hope two years ago and love to volunteer for them and share our story with others!  We were able to speak with people about adoption and our orphan outreach trips throughout the concert event.  The boys did a great job sharing their stories with families and promoting Show Hope.  What a night!





Thank you Show Hope for supporting our adoption!!!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

OC Register Article on Jordan and Aidan

Last month The OC Register featured a story on the boys' stuffed animals drive for El Salvador.  We are SO PROUD of our boys!  The article contains a few minor errors.  Neither of the boys traveled  to El Salvador this summer and Aidan took the Silly Bandz that were collected to El Salvador in 2011.  Jordan served in El Salvador in 2010 and 2012.

Tustin students collect stuffed animals for donation
By LUKE HAROLD
08/21/2013 12:28 PM


Two years ago, two brothers attending Arroyo Elementary led a project to collect multi-colored rubber bracelets from their classmates to donate to orphanages in El Salvador.
This time, Jordan and Aidan Ramsey have collected more than 1,000 stuffed animals from their classmates, their church and other sources.
"It was fun," said Aidan, 10, of the effort to collect the stuffed animals. "A little complicated, but we still got it."
They left for El Salvador on July 20 as a part of a team of 19; the toys are being distributed among kids in hospitals and orphanages there over the course of a week.
"They don't need stuff to be happy, but they're glad that they do," said Jordan, 11, who will be entering sixth grade.
The boys' mother, Jenni Ramsey is the aid and outreach director for the nonprofit group All Blessings International through Kentucky Adoption Services. She coordinated the trip in conjunction with Ripple Kids, a program implemented at Arroyo that recognizes community services efforts of kids. Volunteers have traveled to Guatemala, El Salvador and Haiti to help locals.
"The orphans in El Salvador don't have stuffed animals or toys," Jordan said. "They barely have anything."
He and Aidan spent a week in El Salvador in 2011 after collecting 4,000 Silly Bandz, which are silicone rubber bands molded into various shapes and typically worn by kids as bracelets.
"They really enjoyed them, they played with them all day," Jordan said.
Their mom began volunteering in El Salvador in 2009.
"I'm excited," Jenni said. "I feel like I'm blessed to love what I do."
It costs about $2,100 for each person on the team to make the trip. The team is comprised of mostly high school and college students affiliated with the Village Church of Irvine. Jenni leads 10 to 12 training sessions to help team members better acclimate to the culture. The group will stay in a nearby housing complex generally designated for people coming on goodwill trips.
"They're going to be pretty happy that the Americans care for them," Aidan said.
Contact the writer: lharold@ocregister.com, 714-796-7963, @luke_harold
To view the article online, go to http://www.ocregister.com/waptest/articles/salvador-518037-jordan-stuffed.html

Friday, September 13, 2013

GOTCHA DAY!

Last week we celebrated Hailey's first "Gotcha Day" in America on September 7.  Our annual tradition will be to celebrate Gotcha Day as a family at a Korean restaurant, enjoying our favorite Korean foods.





It's hard to believe that one year has already passed since Hailey became ours.  The docile, pale and quiet baby that snuggled in our arms in Korea has blossomed into a rambunctious, energetic, busy (and tan!) toddler who loves her big brothers, squeals in glee when she sees her cat, Maui, and dog, Rocky, and has grown with amazing progress through her separation anxiety and attachment issues.  Hailey's two favorite things are "Dada" and food.  She is definitely a Daddy's girl!

Here are our family photos taken on September 7, 2012 in Korea and on September 7, 2013 in Tustin, CA:



Happy Gotcha Day Hailey!  We're so glad we gotcha!

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Headed to El Salvador!

Jenni will be leading an orphan outreach team (of 19 volunteers from So Cal) to El Salvador from July 20-27. This is a photo from one of our team meetings.


Please follow our journey on our trips blog at www.allblessingswest.blogspot.com.  Thank you for your prayers and support!

Saturday, June 29, 2013

It's official!

On Wednesday, June 26, Hailey's adoption was finalized in an Orange County courtroom.  We began our adoption journey on June 21, 2007.  The past six years have been unbelievably heartbreaking, inspiring, and filled with a roller coaster of emotions and miracles.  It is finished.  She is ours!



We were absolutely overwhelmed by the love and support that we experienced from family and friends on Hailey's big day.  Hailey wore her traditional Korean dress for the hearing and we removed the dress to reveal a red, white and blue dress when the adoption was finalized.  Many people joined us at the courthouse and shouts of joy could be heard when the legal documents were signed.  The judge was warm, encouraging and engaging.  What a day!





Other friends joined us at our home after the hearing for Hailey's adoption and birthday celebration.  Our dear friend, Dawn Coleman, decorated Hailey's cake in red, white and blue.  We are indescribably grateful for the support that we have received from family members, friends and strangers these past six years.



We know that Hailey was fearfully and wonderfully made by her God (Psalm 139:14).  We are so grateful that her birth mother chose life, and not abortion, as she faced an unplanned pregnancy. 

Welcome to the Ramsey family, Hailey!

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Hailey's adoption story featured in The OC Register

Tomorrow marks exactly six years since we began our adoption journey.  Through a series of supernatural events, God led our family to adopt internationally.  That word was confirmed on Aidan's fourth birthday (June 21, 2007).  How fitting that the OC Register chose to print Hailey's adoption story today.  We're grateful for the willingness to share our story.  There are a few errors and omissions in the article.  The most significant error is the fact that Hailey's court date is next Wednesday, June 26 (not Monday).  Also, Mike's birthday is June 14.  We received Hailey's referral on June 12, 2012, accepted her referral on June 13 and received a FedEx package with photos and background information on his 44th birthday.  Everyone is welcome to join us next Wednesday for our court hearing and open house celebration after the ceremony (information posted below).

Here is the link for the article:

"Adoption Journey Brings Couple a World of Love"


Photos taken by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register


Johnson: Adoption journey brings couple a world of love


By BILL JOHNSON / ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
Life rarely is what you expect it to be. There simply are too many disappointments, unexpected hiccups, zigs when you are set on a zag.

For Jenni and Mike Ramsey of Santa Ana, wanting to adopt a little girl was a rather personal, borderline-selfish desire. After all, they had two young boys already. A girl, well, just would be nice, they admit now.

It goes back to 2007. Mike's sister had just adopted an orphan in China and it was such a nice thing. Why shouldn't they, the Ramseys asked themselves, do the same? They are, it should be noted here, a deeply religious couple. Mike in those days had worked with orphans in both Bosnia and El Salvador, even helping a family from their Irvine church turn property they own in El Salvador into a functioning orphanage. Yes, they would adopt.

"We thought, we have the room to expand our family, so why not?" Jenni recalled. They picked an agency in El Salvador. They raised the $15,000 they figured it would take to make the adoption a reality. They would need every penny of it.

There was a vast amount of paperwork to wade through - including an IQ test that would run them $2,000, simply to get qualified by El Salvadoran and U.S. authorities and to be matched with a suitable child.

For one year they waited. About 11/2years later, the adoption agency arranged a trip for waiting parents to come to El Salvador. Jenni Ramsey was made a leader of four other people.

"It was a life-changing event," she said. "It was heartbreaking to see the conditions at the different orphanages. It was awful. And I realized there that adoption is not culturally accepted there. We got there, and people thought we were crazy for wanting to do it. That's when I figured out our adoption wasn't going to happen."

Indeed, the couple soon learned their papers had been shoved to the side in deep limbo, from which they would never emerge. The agency and its adoption program would soon follow, forever shut down.

"The most significant thing that happened was we met a woman from a different agency, and she wanted to help us," Jenni Ramsey remembered. "She had a small adoption program, but knew the issues and the country. More importantly, she understood the desperate need to take care of orphans there."

The Ramseys went home, but something inside them had been altered. "I'd left part of my heart in El Salvador," Jenni Ramsey said.

Three years passed. It finally dawned on the couple that an adoption there would never happen. In 2010, the woman with the small adoption agency helped them to try again, this time in Korea.

Yet what they had seen those years ago was too much to ignore, too desperate not to do something. Mike became missions pastor at the Village Church of Irvine where they attend. Jenni became missions director. They would focus on orphans who, according to UNICEF's latest figures, now total 143 million worldwide.

In that time they have led teams of volunteers to El Salvador and to Guatemala, delivering basic necessities and medical care to orphanages in both countries. Next month, Jenni will make, with 20 volunteers from Orange County, her seventh trip to El Salvador. In November, she will make her third trip to Guatemala.

Three years ago, they started the SoCal Orphan Care Network, an orphan crisis organization of more than 100 adoptive and foster families, attorneys and adoption professionals with a passion for caring for orphans.

"That," Mike Ramsey said, "is really the heart of our story. It's about helping the least among us." They, at the same time, did their homework on Korea. It was, they soon learned, everything that El Salvador wasn't. Children actually were being adopted there. They would try again.

The process, though, would cost about $35,000. They sent out letters to hundreds of friends. They started a blog, ran raffles for items over the Internet. People responded. Two families who had gone through the same El Salvador nightmare donated half of what they needed. They applied for 15 grants. They received four. Donations poured in.

They qualified almost immediately to adopt in Korea. There was a barrage of visits from social workers and others, plus home inspections. The process started two years ago when Mike, a television commercial producer, was 43. Once he turned 45, he would be deemed too old to adopt.

"At one point we gave up," Jenni said. "Korea slowed down. I think they wanted to do all adoptions internally."


On June 12, 2012, Mike's 44th birthday, the couple received a call. There was a little girl for them. Yet the Koreans wanted the process expedited. "It was music to our ears," Jenni said.  Three months later, they traveled to Seoul to pick up their daughter. 

Haesook Hwang was 15 months old. They would name her Hailey, a name they said sounded similar, and to honor her birth mother. Hailey Jane, who is 2 now, came to me with her arms raised when I walked in the door. I picked her up, she tugged at my face and smiled sweetly.

Come Monday, a judge will officially change her name, and the young girl will become an American. Mike and Jenni will dress her in her traditional Korean dress for the occasion. When it is official, they will remove it to reveal a red, white and blue dress. The couple and their family and friends will then return home and celebrate.
Move to:    

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Summit 9 in Nashville

Last month Hailey and I traveled to Nashville to attend Christian Alliance for Orphans' Summit 9.  It was an honor to represent All Blessings Intl. at my third Summit, which exploded in registrations with 2600 participants from 25 nations and 49 states.  Registration actually closed the week before Summit due to maximum capacity.  Clearly God is moving His Church to care for orphans.


It is difficult to describe how it felt to worship, connect and even cry alongside believers from around the world who share my passion for orphans, foster care, missions and adoption.   Every speaker and breakout session was moving.  The session on deinstitutionalization examined the ramifications of institutionalized care and passionately discussed how to find permanent solutions for children without families.  I listened to a panel of multi-ethnic adoptive families and laughed and grieved as they shared the joys and challenges they face in daily life.  I was especially moved as I listen to Emily Richards, the daughter of Stephen Curtis Chapman, speak on the theology of adoption, God's father heart for his children and the "forever family" that we are adopted into when we become believers.


The above photo was taken for a Summit photo contest on "hopes and dreams" for orphans.

There were many unexpected surprises during the trip.  On the first day of Summit I received an email from our former adoption agency notifying us that our adoption paperwork had been returned to them by El Salvador.  They wanted to know if they should shred it.  This email stirred up painful emotions that had been hidden in the depths of my soul.  As I listened to David Platt, author of "Radical" (the book that all of my outreach team members are required to read), speak in the closing session, I was shocked by his heartbreaking journey of a failed adoption.  David and his wife tried for many years to adopt a baby girl in Nepal, but their dream died when Nepal closed for adoption.  They later adopted a baby in China and started a ministry in Nepal as a result of their passion for the country of their broken dreams.  I couldn't believe the parallels in our stories!


As David shared about their failed adoption, the floodgates opened and I began to weep uncontrollably.  I wept as though I was grieving a stillborn birth or a miscarriage.  I wept for the injustice that we experienced with our first agency and for a country that struggles to create family plans for abandoned children.  I had no idea that I needed to grieve so deeply and it was truly healing for my soul.  As I gazed at Hailey through my tears,  I was reminded of God's redemption.  He truly does work all things together for good.  If He had not led us to adopt in El Salvador, we would not have been led to Hailey.  We also may not have become aware of the desperation in orphanages in El Salvador and may not be leading trips today.  It was so special to be sitting next to Larry and Tammie May, dear friends who adopted in El Salvador and have supported our adoption journey, as I wept.  Larry served with me in El Salvador last year and their family has become part of our family.   I loved introducing Hailey to "Uncle Larry" and "Aunt Tammie".  We are forever family.


Throughout the week I loved spending time with other former El Salvador and Guatemala team members and numerous families who have adopted through All Blessings.  Hailey and I stayed at the home of Phil (Larry's brother) and Amy May, who served with me in Guatemala in 2011.  The Mays adopted their beautiful daughter, Sophie, in Guatemala four years ago.  It was so precious to watch Sophie and Hailey play together.  The Mays will be serving on our team again this November and have become very dear friends.  Thanks "Uncle Phil" for babysitting Hailey!



Lisa Bussard and her daughter served on our 2011 Guatemala team as well and hope to return this year.      The Bussards played a significant role in collecting jeans and raising funds for uniforms for the children at Casa Bernabe orphanage.  Lisa and Amy took me on a tour of Nashville after Summit and I fell in love with the city.  I was also struck by the Southern hospitality and hope to bring our family back one day.


I enjoyed another "girls' night out" with an amazing group of adoptive moms during Summit.  Heidi Weimer (pictured below in the middle) has a powerful adoption story and founded "We Have Room" with her husband.  I loved spending time with Heidi and Tabitha Lovell, the travel agent for our  outreach trips.  Tabitha has been a tremendous blessing handling all of our international flights and she is currently in the process of adopting in Congo.  I loved spending time with such inspiring women!


Jon and Christella Hudson recruited a team of twelve to serve with me in El Salvador last May.  The Hudsons also adopted their son, Freddy, through All Blessings in Korea.  They drove all the way from Kentucky so that we could spend time together and I even experienced Tennessee's famous, "Cracker Barrel" restaurant.  Aren't these kids adorable?


One of the highlights for me in leading orphan outreach teams has been the incredible people that I have met along the journey.  Every trip has been life changing and every team member has become like family.  I am so thankful to All Blessings for the opportunity to lead teams to experience the father heart of God for abandoned and orphan children.  The location for Summit 10 has not yet been announced, but I hope to be there next year!  Stayed tuned...

The Vision

God spoke this vision regarding our adoption journey to Barbara Lange on March 26, 2010...

"Jenni,


I have made the decision to speak our boldly when God speaks to me. Last night as I was washing the dishes I received this "vision" of you. I hesitate to use the word "vision," but what I saw was a slide of your life. As I watched the show in my mind I began to cry because I was so touched by what I saw. You and I have shared many tears these last couple of years, both sorrow and joy. The attachment is what I saw.

FRAME 1

Jenni sitting at the South Coast Community Church reception desk with the photo album of her courtship and engagement to Mike.

FRAME 2

Jenni performing the gospel message in mime at New Harvest Community Church, showing her heart for the lost and oppressed. Jenni performing the gospel in mime on missions trips everywhere she is able to go. Her Father rejoicing at her obedience and passion.

FRAME 3

The anguished look of a woman desperately wanting to have children. Unsuccessful fertility treatements.

FRAME 4

God watching over His daughter, His heart breaking as tears flow down her cheeks. He whispers in her ear, "My child, I know how broken you feel, but I have a great plan and purpose for your life. This anguish, this heartbreak, this pain will subside. Joy is on its' way. I needed you to suffer in this way because of My plan is for you. You are going to be an advocate for international adoptions. You are going to spread my gospel this way.

FRAME 5

The births of Jordan and Aidan! At last a MOM!

FRAME 6

Having experienced the heartbreak of infertility, Jenni's passion for adoption grows.


FRAME 7

Jenni's passion for missions and adoption begin to fuse.


FRAME 8

The Ramseys start the adoption process for a daughter.

FRAME 9

Jenni goes to Washington DC and connects with adoption leaders. Relationships follow, teamwork begins. Jenni begins a new chapter in her life in the intl. adoption network.

FRAME 10

The slow adoption process is agonizing to the Ramseys.

FRAME 11

Jenni leads a missions team to El Salvador and learns sad news about El Salvador adoptions and specifically their own plans. Heartbroken again, but resolved to press on.

FRAME 12

More networking with intl. adoptions, hope for their daughter and another trip to El Salvador. Jordan goes to El Salvador. The orphans are overwhelmed and ecstatic that Jenni returns. Jenni and Jordan build "forever friendships and family" in El Salvador. Jenni's passion increases.

FRAME 13

Jenni prepares for third trip to El Salvador in one year. Amazing things happen.

FRAME 14 - THE FINAL FRAME...

Mike and Jenni, standing now, older, graying hair, surrounded by their sons and their wives, their daughters and their husbands and their grandchildren. Below them are thousands of children joyously celebrating Jenni's life. Her passion to follow her Father's call and purpose on her life is fulfilled. These thousands of children represent all of the orphans, adoptions and ripple affect of her life's work.

A work that could not be accomplished without the pain, suffering and brokeness she endured trying to become a mom.


Well done, my good and faithful servant."

A Heartwarming Adoption Story.... the Howerton's Miraculous Haitian Adoption Journey

God's Heart for Orphans...

An Incredible Video...

"Cry of The Orphan" - Thoughts on orphan care from some of my greatest heroes!