THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! WOW!! We are so thankful to those that are helping us help others in Ghana by giving monetary donations or helping us fill our suitcases...
Our family:Gene and Laura Meyer, Tom and Kathy Davidson, Gene and Mary Warne, Noel and Elaine Simmons, Joanne and Lyn Simmons, Kristen Spencer and Scott Sanders, Kristen and Gray Fontenot,
and friends: Ginny Westerby, Char Fujino, Pam Bradley, Rebecca Dorsett, Bryan Thomas, Mark Wagner, Todd Muilenberg, Bonnie Cross, Mary Garcia, Fran Klein, Chris Hall, Colleen Gaba, Chief John Cocca, Director Helen Gandara- Zavala, Commander Burl Haenel, Kevin/Christine Furia, Ginger/Jeff Golden, Doug/Diane Montemayor, Bill/Mary Ita Smyth, Chief Sean Duggan, Kim Miller, Cody/Carla Standage, Mike Hanafin, Pat Lomonaco, Terri Terlazzo, Donna Mulvey, Steve Capone, Bruce/Marcy Fredette-Roman, Denise/Mike Mueller, Molly Lyons, Dr. Matt Jones, Coach Michael Doerr, Gloria Roberts, Paul/Nicole Rogers, Brooke Scritchfield, Monty Thomas, Soccer teammates- Jason, Edward, Jack, Gunnar, Jarret
Our family:Gene and Laura Meyer, Tom and Kathy Davidson, Gene and Mary Warne, Noel and Elaine Simmons, Joanne and Lyn Simmons, Kristen Spencer and Scott Sanders, Kristen and Gray Fontenot,
and friends: Ginny Westerby, Char Fujino, Pam Bradley, Rebecca Dorsett, Bryan Thomas, Mark Wagner, Todd Muilenberg, Bonnie Cross, Mary Garcia, Fran Klein, Chris Hall, Colleen Gaba, Chief John Cocca, Director Helen Gandara- Zavala, Commander Burl Haenel, Kevin/Christine Furia, Ginger/Jeff Golden, Doug/Diane Montemayor, Bill/Mary Ita Smyth, Chief Sean Duggan, Kim Miller, Cody/Carla Standage, Mike Hanafin, Pat Lomonaco, Terri Terlazzo, Donna Mulvey, Steve Capone, Bruce/Marcy Fredette-Roman, Denise/Mike Mueller, Molly Lyons, Dr. Matt Jones, Coach Michael Doerr, Gloria Roberts, Paul/Nicole Rogers, Brooke Scritchfield, Monty Thomas, Soccer teammates- Jason, Edward, Jack, Gunnar, Jarret
Friday, October 2, 2009
As Dora would say.... We Did It!!
We did it!! Five days and over 20 hours later, Selina's braids are done!! I had no idea when I started on Sunday if she would even let me do braids again. We did them in April but I did most of it while she slept, staying up until 3 or 4am two days in a row.
After over a year of disliking having her hair combed, braided or touched the majority of the time, she sat down for 20 waking hours and let me braid her hair!
We did about nine hours on Sunday alone and then every day this week, we sat down as soon as we got home from school and work and braided until bedtime. It usually would not take that long but I used really small pieces of hair and did about double the braids I did last time. I think they look better now than they did last time but I am interested to see how they last and look over time. This time I also did two knots to hold the beads in place at the bottom instead of one as I found last time that as the braid got older, the knot got smaller and sometimes the beads would fall right out.
Selina usually does not like having her hair combed and does not have much tolerance for having it done. I think this is partly because when she was younger, she had her hair done while she screamed sometimes and so it was kind of traumatic for her and I also think she is extra sensitive on certain parts of her head.
My recommendation to other adoptive moms regarding hair if you are having some of the difficulties we have faced would be the following...
1. Make hair time fun. We watched movies, sang songs, had snacks and laughed a lot. For your own sanity, I would not recommend the 30 episodes of Dora that we watched but Selina did best with Dora. If I turned something else on, she was not happy so Dora it was!
2. Do a little at a time at the beginning. If you don't finish in one session, it is okay. Selina could not handle too much and so we would stop when she got tired of having her hair done so that our experience was positive.
3. If you can get together with others and have a hair party, try it. That helped us a lot. When she first came home, I went to several gatherings of a local adoption group I belong to where we got together to do our kids hair. Sometimes Selina and I just went to hang out and I would just comb her hair and let her see that doing hair is fun! We also would go hang out with Rita and Racheal as they got their hair done or go visit them and see their hair if they had it done in a new style.
4. Consider the hairstyle you do. If I am putting things in Selina's hair, puffs and things where I am not manipulating her hair as much works best. The braids while taking longer are much better than cornrows or twists where you are doing something where you keep grabbing and tightening hair. For the braids, once I got started, she did not feel it at all because I was done touching her hair. So for her, 20 hours of braiding is more desirable than two or three hours of cornrows.
We have slowly eased into this the past 16 months and I have not stressed out about it. I figured that she would do better with time and as she got older. I have to laugh as when we got home today, she started pulling me over to the area where we braid her hair and asked for Dora. She wanted more braids! I don't know how she is going to react tomorrow when she doesn't get all of mom's attention or watch all the Dora she wants!
I have to say that I think that Selina was truly happy to have her hair done. Tonight we laid down together as she went to bed and she was just beaming and she kept saying, "I love you mommy" "Thank you mommmy!" "We did it!"
I hope this is a new beginning for us...and hair time will be less hairy in the future!
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2 comments:
It is BEAUTIFUL!! I can't believe how long her hair is - are those yarn braids or is that all her own hair? Good job, mom!
They look beautiful! Great job!
It will take less time as you get more experience. The first time I did it it took 12-13 hours per girl (with a 12 y.o. assistant the whole time). Now, we are down to 8-9 hours per girl.
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