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See Amazing Transformation Of 8-year-old Boy Rescued From An Orphanage In Bulgaria
After seeing a heartbreaking photo on Facebook of a starving
seven-year-old orphan with special needs, Priscilla Morse flew all the
way to Bulgaria to adopt him. When she made it to the Bulgarian
orphanage to sign all the adoption papers and finalize the process, Ryan
weighed just seven pounds and had extra hair all over his body due to
malnutrition. His skin looked ghostly and pale, and due to his
condition, doctors didn’t have much hope for him.
However, in spite of all this, Priscilla and her husband felt called to adopt Ryan. They both felt confident that Ryan could improve with the proper love and care, and plus, they had both already adopted their seven-year-old daughter McKenzie in 2012 from an orphanage in Russia. She has Down syndrome and a conprivate part heart defect, but this didn’t stop her adoptive parents from trying to give her the life she deserves. They want the same for their new son, Ryan.
Already after just over a year with his new family in Tennessee, Ryan is showing dramatic improvements. He’s been steadily gaining weight, and currently weighs 23 pounds. He’s starting to babble like a baby and even moves a little bit on his own. He smiles now just like any healthy, happy 8-year-old boy should, and pictures of him taken this month show just how much he’s improved over the past year.
Mrs. Morse told DailyMail that she first learned about Ryan back in June 2014 on an adoption page on Facebook.
However, in spite of all this, Priscilla and her husband felt called to adopt Ryan. They both felt confident that Ryan could improve with the proper love and care, and plus, they had both already adopted their seven-year-old daughter McKenzie in 2012 from an orphanage in Russia. She has Down syndrome and a conprivate part heart defect, but this didn’t stop her adoptive parents from trying to give her the life she deserves. They want the same for their new son, Ryan.
Already after just over a year with his new family in Tennessee, Ryan is showing dramatic improvements. He’s been steadily gaining weight, and currently weighs 23 pounds. He’s starting to babble like a baby and even moves a little bit on his own. He smiles now just like any healthy, happy 8-year-old boy should, and pictures of him taken this month show just how much he’s improved over the past year.
Mrs. Morse told DailyMail that she first learned about Ryan back in June 2014 on an adoption page on Facebook.
She and her husband David decided pretty quickly that they wanted to adopt Ryan.
So, toward the end of
October 2015, Mrs. Morse flew halfway around the world to Bulgaria to
finalize Ryan’s adoption. Due to his worsening health and the doctors’
predictions, Morse thought Ryan might die before she could even finish
the paperwork.
‘The first meeting was pretty scary,’ Mrs Morse told Inside Edition.
‘He was bones and skin, he literally looked like a skeleton. The first
thing that went through my head was, “he’s going to die.”
As soon as she brought Ryan to the U.S. in
November 2015, she rushed him to Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital where
doctors put Ryan on a feeding tube immediately.
“I had never in my life seen doctors look
at a child and burst into tears,’ she said. ‘They did call social
services. They said, “I’m sorry, he’s probably going to die.”
Ryan spent his first two weeks in America
in the hospital, where he was monitored and given the proper care for
his condition. Then, he was released and readmitted shortly afterwards
for an additional month.
Since coming to America, however, Ryan has
gained a considerable amount of weight and shown other signs of
improvement, such as losing the layer of hair that once covered him due
to malnutrition. He’s also gained color in his lips and skin as his
health has improved over the past year.
The Morses have even been able to enroll him in
public school where he will continue to improve under the guidance of a
special needs teacher.
Doctors have determined that Ryan has cerebral
palsy, microcephaly, scoliosis, clubbed feet, and dwarfism, which
explains his small size. Despite all of these problems, Ryan has made
great progress, all because two people believed in him and literally
saved his life.
“His progress has been nothing short of a
miracle in my opinion. The first time I saw him I couldn’t even
formulate a sentence. I was convinced he would die before I got him home
and now he is a happy, giggly, active boy,’ Mrs Morse told DailyMail.
Doctors say it may take years for Ryan to
make a full recovery, and they still aren’t sure how much he will grow
or how well he’ll be able to speak.
However, the Morses have a positive attitude and believe he will continue to improve.
Being adopted herself and having a special
needs brother who died at nine years old, Mrs. Morse says she’s
inspired to adopt special needs children because of how much her parents
loved her brother.
‘I was pretty young when he passed away,
[but] I remember how much my parents loved him in spite of all his
special needs,’ she said. ‘I wanted to give that to a child that was
given up because of his special needs. Everyone is deserving of a
family.’
In addition to their adopted daughter
McKenzie and son Ryan, they have two biological sons, seven-year-old
Jack and 13-year-old Dylan.
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