"Before
You Leave Home"
Written by Mina Bacigalupi
Lake Oswego, Oregon
Copywrite February, 2002
Packing
, airline reservations, Chinese visas, the final days of the long
wait to adopt can be busy and hectic. Here is a checklist to help
make sure that you remember it all before you settle down for that
13 hour flight.
MONTHS AHEAD
- Get
a passport if you don't have one. If your passport will expire
within the next year get it updated.
- Visit
an International Travel Clinic. Update any vaccinations and
get any prescription medications you might need.
- Get
in shape. If you are not used to physical exercise, start a
walking routine. Walking is the way to go in China. You will
be much happier if you can climb four flights of stairs carrying
an extra 15 pound baby, diaper bag, and a liter of drinking
water without getting winded.
- Don't
forget to visit your dentist. Having a dental problem in China
would be a memorable experience, but not necessarily a fun one.
- Start
a packing list. There are lots of packing lists that you will
get from your agency and from different websites. Pick one and
then start to adapt it to your own needs. Jot down any ideas
as you hear them.
Visit several Pediatricians and choose the one that will be
right for you.
- Practice,
practice, practice using that new camera or video recorder.
Don't forget trying to get shots out of the window of a moving
vehicle.
-
Make
your travel arrangements and obtain your Chinese Entrance Visa
with the guidelines provided by your agency.
-
Find
a good friend that has access to a fax and e-mail. Give them
copies of all of your adoption documents, your passports, travel
itinerary and emergency contact information. This person would
be someone you could contact if you lose or are missing a document
and need them to fax it to you.
-
Make
pet care arrangements for when you are away. Be sure to purchase
enough food to last until your return.
-
Schedule
your first appointment with the Pediatrician for the first few
days after you plan to arrive home. If your baby is sick you
can breeze right in. If you have no concerns and want to wait
a few days to get over jet lag, you can cancel that appointment
and reschedule.
-
Make
plans for a neighbor to water plants and keep an eye on your
house while you are away. Or arrange for a house sitter to stay
at your home while you travel.
-
Obtain
an absentee ballot if there will be an election while you are
away.
-
Do
your income taxes if the deadline will fall during your travel
time or shortly afterwards.
-
Break
in new shoes to avoid blisters overseas.
-
Learn
how to access your e-mail from remote locations so you can keep
in touch while you are gone and send home messages about those
special first moments.
-
Practice
carrying a twenty pound bag of flour in your baby carrier to
know how to fit it best to your body and to get used to packing
the extra weight.
-
Arrange
for a friend or family member to "live-in" with you
for a few days after your return. You will appreciate extra
help with housework, meals and answering the phone until the
jet lag is over and you are all into a routine. Give this person
a shopping list of perishables (milk and bread) to get on the
day of your return, so you won't have to run to the grocery
on the way home from the airport. (Include fresh produce and
cheese, two items that everyone misses when they travel to China.)
-
Fill
your freezer with easy-to-microwave meals for the first few
days when you are home.
-
Practice
packing to make sure you can fit in everything on your packing
list without exceeding the weight limits.
-
Order
extra prescription medications so you won't run out while overseas.
-
Notify
your credit card company that you are planning on traveling
overseas. Ask about any extra charges they may have for conversion
of foreign currency. Find out if you can make a cash withdrawl
or use ATM's in China in the event of an emergency.
-
Prepare
a list of addresses of people that you want to send postcards
to. Don't forget phone numbers and e-mail addresses.
-
Make
arrangements for travel back and forth to the airport. Remember
you'll need the carseat when you return.
-
Pack
your bags. Don't leave it until the last night, when you will
have lots of other last minute things to do.
-
Mow
the lawn if necessary.
-
Confirm
airline reservations.
-
Pick
up cash and traveler's checks at the bank.
-
Wash
clothes that you are not taking so you'll have clean ones when
you get home.
-
Stop
all deliveries of mail, newspaper, etc. or arrange for a neighbor
to pick them up.
-
Pay
the mortgage and other bills. You might want to arrange for
a friend to pick up and deposit any paychecks and mail off any
bills.
-
Plan
to have a good night's sleep on the last night.
-
Don't
forget to plan for a farewell dinner with friends and family
or a romantic, "last dinner without a baby" night
on the town.
-
Lock
all windows and doors. Close the blinds and curtains.
-
Put
lights and a radio on timers
-
Turn
on your telephone answering machine.
-
Wash
dishes and remove all perishable items from your refrigerator.
Empty waste baskets, take the garbage out and run the garbage
disposal.
-
Unplug
any appliances sensitive to power surges such as stereos and
computers.
-
Turn
your thermostat down or off depending on the season.
-
Turn
off and unplug the coffee pot.
This
article in whole or in part may not be reprinted, transferred,
copied, or used in any way without the expressed written permission
of the author.
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