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← Back to 2018

God’s plan all along

by Alesia Tabone
Sammi Hatfield, 45, a Mapleton Elementary School teacher, and her son, Cam, 4, leave their house at 5:15 a.m. Sammi and her husband, Troy, have adopted two children from China after trying for several years to conceive their own. They are both educators, and they are hosting an exchange student from China.

Troy and Sammi Hatfield met in their first year of college, when both were pursuing dreams to become teachers.

They were married 25 years ago, and for many years they tried to have children. They endured several rounds of in vitro fertilization, a complex series of treatments used to assist in conception, but their efforts ended in two miscarriages. The process was long, expensive and emotionally draining. After years of trying, they decided to adopt.

“This was God’s plan all along,” Troy says. “Once we let go of our plan and gave into his plan, it all came together.”

First came Carson. Shortly after she was born, Troy and Sammi applied to adopt her in China. After waiting a grueling 18 months, they got the call to fly to China and bring their daughter home to Kentucky.

In the midst of their joy over having a new child, the family learned Troy had Stage 2 prostate cancer. Carson was 6 months old. He went through treatment, and six years later he is cancer-free.

When Carson was about 4 years old, Sammi began receiving emails again from the adoption agency in China.

“At work she would read these emails and just pray, that all of these little ones would get their forever family,” Troy says. “She kept coming back to this one child on the email blasts, months went by and no one had adopted him or attempted to, and something kept pulling her back to his picture almost every day.”

Sammi told Troy: “I feel like God is talking to us, telling me this is our son.”

Ten months later, they were back in China to get the boy they named Cameron.

“Cam had a rough start to life,” Troy says. He was labeled as “struggle to thrive” and would require several surgeries as he grew.

Today Cameron is 4 and Carson is 8.

“Life in the Hatfield house is often moving a mile a minute, and we wouldn’t change a thing,” Sammi says.

In addition to raising their children, the Hatfields are hosting a Chinese student in a high school exchange program.

Today, despite his medical challenges, Cameron is only about six months behind in his development. Seeing how far he has come is “truly amazing,” his mother says.

Carson is thriving academically and in sports. She is becoming an excellent violin player.

“We feel truly blessed by God every day,” Sammi says.

Sammi helps Cam brush his teeth early in the morning before starting their day. Cam is being treated for dental problems that resulted from his poor care in a Chinese adoption center. He has had two oral surgeries, and two more are planned.
Cam spends time with Sammi in her classroom after he leaves his preschool class. He likes to help his mom in her room at the end of the day. Sammi is an advocate for public schools, and she makes that clear with a bumper sticker on her desk.
Sammi sees Cam for a few minutes before his grandmother picks him up at the end of the school day. "Don't you trick your grandmother into any ice cream after school, young man," she tells him.
On a brisk autumn afternoon, Troy enjoys a quiet moment with Cam in their front yard. Cam loves to play with bubbles.
Four-year-old Cameron Hatfield plays in a treehouse his father built for him and his sister, Carson, in 2016. Troy Hatfield said he wants his children to experience everything they possibly can. Cameron and Carson were adopted from China.
Sammi and Cam cook dinner together. Cam loves to watch and help cook his favorite meal, macaroni and cheese.
Carson practices her violin as Cam and Troy play together. Cam was attempting to handcuff Troy. "My father worked away a lot during my childhood, so I do everything I can to be around for my kids, especially when they are young," Troy says.
Cam, Sammi and Troy pray before Cam's dental surgery in a Lexington hospital. It was Cam's third dental operation to correct issues resulting from his early life at the orphanage. His doctors are hopeful Cam will get adult teeth when the time comes.
Troy hugs Sammi after a long day. Troy and Sammi have been married for 25 years. They met in college. The welcome sign in their home says, "If I could do it all again, I would still choose you."

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