Thursday, December 13, 2007

We are DTC!

You never could have guessed it from the title, but we found out today that we are DTC! Actually, our dossier goes out to China tomorrow, but we decided to go out and celebrate tonight anyway. Yeah, we're crazy like that. We went to Torrini down the street and allowed ourselves to have appetizers and dessert in addition to our very own meals. That's right. It's was a pretty special night.

We thought once we became DTC, it would be a month until our LID, but checking the Holt website, it might be sooner. For example, a couple that had a DTC on 11/16 got a LID of 11/28. Then again, last year a couple had a DTC of 12/15 got a LID of 1/24. My guess is China will find our application so fetching they won't be able to help themselves and we should have a DTC by the end of the week. A boy can dream.

This is Tim typing, by the way. That'd be weird if Danielle called herself a boy. I mean, I'd still love her, but...

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

How Long?

I get asked a lot "how long?" which I take to mean "how long until we're sent information about who our child is?" It's such a hard question to answer. Once our dossier is sent to China (DTC) China looks it over and gives it their approval. When that happens we are given an official date of entering the process. That's called our Log In Date (LID). This date is really important. It's the date families live by because we're matched with a child by this date. Each week the CCAA, the government organization in charge of matching families with children,
http://www.china-ccaa.org/frames/index_unlogin_en.jsp
goes by the family's Log In Date to see who is next in line for the child matches.

In order to answer the question, "how long" it's difficult to say. The 24 month wait from LID is for families getting their referrals now. These families logged in in December of 2005. Every month that the CCAA refers only a few days worth of LIDS, the wait grows. It is taking the CCAA several months just to get through one month of LIDS. There is no way to know how long someone logging in now will wait, though there are algorithms online that can render a guess.

http://people.wwc.edu/staff/stirra/china/stats/statsdisplay.htm#QUICK

We're hoping the wait won't increase but you can't know. People tell me how patient I am but that's not true. There's just nothing I can do about it. Plus, we don't even have a LID date yet, we're still waiting for our DTC.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Not Quite Sure

Tim and I headed to the notary on Saturday. It was seemingly uneventful as we waited in line for our last document to be stamped. Emmanuel, the UPS store notary, was behind the counter as usual. He's now to the point where he recognizes us: I'm the uptight one (shocker), Tim's the jokey one (double shocker). Usually we have several items to take care of but on Saturday it was simple, one document, one signature, $10 and we were spit back out onto Wilshire Boulevard. We headed next door to Fed Ex where we have an account so I could overnight the I-171h to Masha Ma. Masha is my contact at Holt who is managing our dossier. She is in charge of certifying all our documents and then once that happens they'll be sent to the San Francisco Chinese Consulate for authentication. The good news is we expect our documents to come back from the certification process today which is sooner than I had expected. We might get the authentication process finished by the end of December which would be fantastic and pretty much the best Christmas present we could imagine but I'm trying not to get my hopes up. Having that done means our dossier is finished and to China but that's a pretty big hope with the holidays in December.