I Like Adoption: a new short film that will change hearts
New Film Premiere - I Like Adoption. from ILikeGiving.com on Vimeo.
December 17, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - This is the right time of year to focus on the things we like, the things weāre thankful for, the things that have changed our lives.
A few days ago, my wife and I didnāt know that one of those āthingsā would cause us tears as we sat and watched an incredibly powerful short film called āI LIKE ADOPTIONā. Iām adopted. My wife, Bethany, and I are adoptive parents. We really like adoption. But this creative effort struck us differently than anything we had seen before.
The story, with bursts of sun flares and gorgeous visuals, immediately takes ahold of your heart. Iām fighting tears, now, just thinking about it. One of the most beautiful pieces Iāve ever seen on adoption invites you into the hearts and home of a remarkable familyāThe Dennehys. With three biologically related children and nine specially chosen from around the world (with two from the U.S. foster care system), their home is an intriguing tapestry of hues, cultures, laughter and love.
āPeople discouraged us. They thought we were going to ruin our lives by taking all of these special kids, and they said āyou donāt know what to doā. And, itās true that we had no experience, and we didnāt really know how to raise them. But, you see what happens with unconditional love. You give a person unconditional love, and they blossom.āāSharon Dennehy, mother of 12 children (nine of whom were adopted).
As you watch the story unfold, you see a family with a mixture of children the world would consider ānormalā and those without limbs that many today would discard as a āburdenā. To Michael and Sharon Dennehy, these children arenāt a burden but gifts that helped two parents understand their own God-given purpose in lifeāto give and to love.

āI LIKE ADOPTIONā was recently released by a fascinating new website called ILikeGiving.com. I had to know more about the genesis of this site and its emphasis on living generously. The organization doesnāt ask for people to give money to them, but to, instead, give their action. In a narcissistic culture so obsessed with self, wealth and temporal gratification, this is counter-cultural. But thereās no guilt, no shame, no condemnationājust visual and written excellence delivering a simple message of the joy of giving.
The creator of the I LIKE GIVING campaign is Brad Formsma, a father of three and a dreamer whose vision has become a life-changing reality. In a late night conversation with this humble and inspiring producer, I couldnāt help but think about the power of social media to move hearts and shift culture. Brad told me he wanted to create a campaign that fostered awareness (about many social issues and needs all around us) that would become action and would help bring conversation about giving into family dialogue.
2 Corinthians 9:7 embodies the whole I LIKE GIVING campaign: God loves a cheerful giver. āWhen you give, we change, and others changeā¦for the better,ā Brad told me as he described the heart of this online effort. The site allows people to send in a film of their own, a picture, or a few paragraphs explaining what they like. In each personal account, the focus is on giving and how it transforms. With titles like I LIKE BIKE, I LIKE BUGSHELLS, I LIKE CAR, I LIKE BASEMENTS, you find out the tear-inducing substance with each story and video. The unique I LIKE _______Ā® concept allows you to fill in the blank. You tell the story.
āItās life-giving,ā Brad says. And it all started when a Sudanese family, in his community, had their bikes stolen. In I LIKE BIKE, Brad tells the story of how he and his family grasped the power of giving generously when they spent a Sunday afternoon buying new bikes and sharing in the joy of a father and son as complete strangers replaced what they had lost.
With no political ambitions or agendas, the siteās latest short film, I LIKE ADOPTION, simply gives us a glimpse of what couldāve been lost if a family failed to live generously or failed to act and give themselves to someone else. The Dennehys represent what giving is all about. Their adoption story is one of beauty that arises as a result of love and self-sacrifice.
āThe pure joy that will come from a rescue of a childās life is probably the most satisfying thing you can imagine.ā āMichael Dennehy, father of 12 children (nine of which were adopted).
I canāt imagine someone not being moved to introspection and action after watching this short film about the gift of family. It speaks to the heart without offense. Change is inevitable. You probably wonāt be able to make it through without pausing and fighting back tears. And when the video ends, your soul may just be whispering, I LIKE TRANSFORMATION.