June 26, 2007

Maine Rocks ~ Come on, Nation, Let's Follow !!!

Maine Lighthouse
© Photographer: Histcreatr | Agency: Dreamstime.com
BASTARD NATION PRESS RELEASE

ANOTHER ONE BITES THE DUST!

MAINE RESTORES THE RIGHT OF BIRTH CERTIFICATE ACCESS!
HB 1084 PASSES OVERWHELMINGLY AS GOVERNOR SIGNS

Bastard Nation: the Adoptee Rights Organization congratulates Maine on becoming the fourth state since 1998 to restore the right of original birth certificate access to adult adoptees. Following in the footsteps of Oregon, Alabama, and New Hampshire (Kansas and Alaska never sealed records) Maine's activist organization OBC for ME has shown that through focus, perseverance, and a refusal to compromise the rights of all for the privilege of a few, that a clean unconditional access bill can be passed. Overwhelmingly passed,
Despite naysayers, on June 18, near the close of the legislative session, the Maine House overrode and over ran the HB's 1084 "Do Not Pass" recommendation from the Joint Standing Committee on Judiciary, 104-39. The next day, the Senate followed, passing, the bill 20-15. On June 20, the bill returned to both houses and passed "by the hammer" with no amendments. Bim! Bam! Boom!
Bastard Nation was highly critical of the 2006 records access campaign which began with a clean bill and finished threatened with compromises that made it unrecognizable. This time, OBC for ME (love the name!) ran a mostly under-the-radar operation. Activists emphasized the "localiness" of adoptee rights and the state's responsibility to its adopted people.
HB 1084 had an extremely strong sponsor, Rep. David Farrington, and the quiet personal lobbying of adoptee Sen. Paula Benoit to shepherd it through with non-partisian support. Benoit's dignified presentation for records access is credited by friends and foes of access with keeping the debate from the bitterness and acrimony that marked last year's circus.
Rep. Farrington's June 18 statement on the House floor ranks him as one of BN's heroes, though we were not involved in the bill. You can listen to Rep. Farrington and Sen. Benoit and other supporting speakers, along with a bit of anti-adoptee gas baggery (especially from the House side) at http://www.obcforme .org/
Governor John Baldacci signed the bill on Monday, June, 25, 2007. It will take effect on January 1, 2009 and gives anyone adopted in Maine 18 and older, upon request, the right to their original birth certificate.
Bastard Nation salutes the come-backs kids of Maine! And we thank those legislators who agreed to undo the wrong done to Maine's adoptees in 1953 when their records were sealed from them. Other states take note: You can win without compromising your principles and the rights of adopted persons. Maine rocks!
Bastard Nation: the Adoptee Rights Organization
PO Box 1469
Edmond, OK 73083-1469
415-704-3166
email: bn@bastards. org
www.bastards. org

June 22, 2007

"Adoption's Shadow History"

Map and the shadow of hand
© Photographer: Devonyu | Agency: Dreamstime.com
http://www.mmdnewswire.com/adoptis-shdow-history-1762-2.html

Adoption's Shadow History
June 21, 2007
by Barbara Bisantz Raymond (Adoptive Mother & Author)

Adoption, a respected institution that has brought millions of people joy, has a secret history. Its architect was a criminal named Georgia Tann, who from 1924 to 1950 operated out of Memphis, Tennessee, terrorizing poor, often single parents by stealing their children and placing them with wealthy adoptive parents, including Joan Crawford and Dick Powell.

Mothers kept toddlers indoors, and the mother superior of a local orphanage hid children in attics, but, protected by political boss Edward Hull Crump, Georgia Tann arranged more than 5,000 illegal adoptions. She also killed so many children through neglect that the Memphis infant mortality rate soared to the highest in the nation. She sexually abused some of her female charges and placed some children with pedophiles.

While building her black market business, she also invented modern American adoption. It’s hard to underestimate her influence. When she began working in Tennessee in the 1920s, adoption as we know it didn’t exist. Eugenicists had made Americans afraid to adopt, and thousands of children were languishing in orphanages.

Sensing a business opportunity, Tann declared the children blank slates – and, at the same time, falsified their histories, transforming them from the children of parents she considered “poor white trash” into the children of debutantes and medical students. Her ploy worked. By 1935 she had placed children in all forty-eight states, as well as in Canada, England, Mexico, and Panama.

She did more than popularize adoption. She commercialized it, charging adoptive parents large fees and marketing children in newspaper ads that are heartbreaking, by today’s standards. One, headed “Wants Home,” was accompanied by a picture of a sad-looking little girl in a short dress, posed with her hand on her hip. The copy read, “Madge is five-years-old, and ‘awful lonesome.’”
Another, illustrated by a photo of a handsome five-year-old boy, was headed, starkly, “Yours for the Asking!”

Tann affected more than the parents and children she dealt with directly. Her boasting of the benefits afforded by adoption – two-parent homes and college educations – persuaded social workers more well-meaning than she that the “best interest” of children born to single mothers was adoption. By the mid-1940s, young women across the country were being coerced, even forced, into surrendering their babies. They did so with incredible pain – and, often, the hope that they might meet their children years later. But another of Tann’s legacies often made that impossible.

She corrupted adoption with secrecy. To hide her kidnapping crimes, she falsified adoptees’ birth certificates, sealing their true ones and issuing them false ones portraying their adoptive parents as their birth parents.
This practice was adopted by legislators in other states who believed it would spare adoptees the onus of being known to have been born out of wedlock. Every state ultimately falsified adoptees’ birth certificates.Incredibly, they still do. And only seven states – Alaska, Kansas, Tennessee, Delaware, Oregon, Alabama, and New Hampshire – allow all adults who’ve been adopted in their state access to their true documents.

The withholding of adoptees’ original birth certificates hurts them psychologically, and physically. Lack of knowledge of their medical histories has caused some adopted persons to die prematurely.

It’s time to end the secrecy begun by a criminal. It’s time to give adult adoptees access to what those of who haven’t been adopted take for granted: the original birth certificates that tell them who they are.

###Barbara Bisantz Raymond is an adoptive mother, and the author of The Baby Thief: The Untold Story of Georgia Tann, the Baby Seller Who Corrupted Adoption (Carroll & Graf, May 2007).Copyright Barbara Bisantz Raymond 2007.Barbara Bisantz Raymond718-626-5313

June 21, 2007

Fire & The Frog

In Hot Water
© Photographer: Lumaxart2d | Agency: Dreamstime.com
FIRE AND THE FROG (A Devotion by Morris Cerrullo)
Have you heard the story of the chef who was teaching his assistant to cook a frog? Referring to a live frog the chef said, "Now, son, if you drop him right into boiling water, he'll jump out. But if you put him in cool water and slowly turn up the heat, he'll never know what hit him."
This may describe some of you tonight...your inner anguish is intense; you feel "out of sorts" with God, but don't know how it happened. "Suddenly I feel like I'm in the fire," you cry. "How did I get so far from Him when I thought everything was going so well?"
Sometimes that's the problem – everything was going well. Little by little you became successful; accumulated riches; engaged in more pleasures, and learned how to pay the price for success. But God got lost in the shuffle.
God's Word warns us that we are most tempted to fall away, not in times of need, but in times of plenty. Satan can slowly turn up the "heat" of worldly values and material greed until God becomes only a name. The Lord warns, "When you have eaten and are satisfied...Be careful that you do not forget the LORD your God, failing to observe His commands... Otherwise, when you...build fine houses and settle down, and when your herds and flocks grow large and your silver and gold increase and all you have is multiplied, then your heart will become proud and you will forget the LORD your God..." (Deuteronomy 8:10-14, NIV). Tuck this scripture in your spirit tonight and heed it's warning so you can be sure, when you think you're immersed in "the good life," you're not in the boiling pot instead!
Our Evening Prayer - Let's Pray Together…
God loves you and wants to answer your prayer. Say this prayer with me:
Heavenly Father, help me to keep re-evaluating my life by Your standards. Forgive me for having fallen away, even a little, covering it with pleasures, success and striving to maintain a new "status" in life. Turn me back to You...I surrender it all! In Jesus' Name, Amen.

June 18, 2007

~ Ebb & Flow ~

Man in waves
© Photographer: Mvaligursky | Agency: Dreamstime.com

Not all "adoption" is bad, per se. I realize that there are babies and children without their Mothers, and need to be raised in a loving home. What needs to change is the "business" aspect, the "marketing & advertisements", the amended birth certificates, and the sealing of records. That would "clean up" adoption and possibly send it on a much healthier road for the future.

What is bad, however, is the fact that adoption has evolved into a "business." No child should be the "product"of a business.

I once heard a very wise First Mom say that every adoptee can both "love their adoption, and hate their relinquishment". This at the same time? YES. It is EVEN possible for an adopted person to both grieve and also embrace parts of their own relinquishment and adoption.
It is not black & white.

I've found that in order for me to truly embrace my life and family as an adoptee, and not just live out of my "false" self (which refused to explore the entire spectrum of emotion), that I had to find the courage and audacity to search for not only my biological family, but also who "I" was/am in THAT context.

Adoptees many times grow up not being validated, (and go in to "hiding") because adoption is "Celebrated" for the new family created, without allowing for the child's experience and reality. "Sealed records" follows us into adulthood and sometimes to the grave, with this very same message ~ "Don't focus on the loss ~ Focus on the gains ~ Ignore the entire part of yourself that you must "hide" from in order to avoid creating waves ~

WAVES ARE GOOD ~ LOOK AT THE OCEAN ~ The ebb and flow is what DEFINES Life ~ Not allowing adoptees the freedom and validation in their journey to wholeness ~ is like telling a wave of the sea to only flow one direction.

Waves can crash and hurt ~ they can move mountains ~ they are essential for Life as we know it on the Earth.
 
Without allowing an adoptee the freedom to experience the full range of their identity, grief, joy, and emotions, Life is forfeited.

June 15, 2007

Adoption & God

God's hand saving man
© Photographer: Giko | Agency: Dreamstime.com
If it was "God's perfect will" and not "2nd Best" for children to be adopted, then it must be His perfect will when someone's leg is amputated, when people get cancer, when a child's parent passes away, when a tornado blows away an entire town.....need I go on?

Holy Cow.

Saying that it was in God's perfect plan for you to be able to adopt your child is ridiculous. It is insulting to your child, and to God. He did not want that child to be separated from his/her Mommy, to lose their heritage, their name, their lineage, their relatives, and original identity - just so you could have a child. Sorry. It doesn't work that way. And saying that it was God's plan or will only rubs salt into the wound of a child who has lost everything, and is being forced to live your fantasy at the expense of his/her reality and pain.

When Joseph was sold into slavery and then reunited with his family years later, he wisely said, "What the ENEMY has meant for evil, GOD turned for good." He knew that it wasn't God's original plan and will for him to be separated from his own family and blood-line. Only a sadistic God would be that cruel. God is LOVE.

It is cruel to say to an adopted child that God "meant" for you to be the "Mom". It is just using "God" in your OWN way, to do your OWN will. I know that sounds harsh, but it is just downright true. Your child lost their Mother. And so much more.

You may be a great substitute Mother, but don't put God into an equation that will only cause your child confusion, saddness, and insecurity in his/her relationship with Him.

June 14, 2007

The Big Lie

Lie or truth?
                              © Photographer: Slyadnev | Agency: Dreamstime.com

Yes, everyone experiences loss.

 
But not everyone has their birth certificate falsified and sealed from them.

Not everyone is, in a sense, told to "suck it up" by the business that claims to "serve" them; to remain invalidated their entire lives to please those who participate in a billion dollar per year industry, hiding behind a charitable front called "adoption."

Not everyone is legally transferred from the family God placed them in, to another family (sometimes half-way around the world), for the purpose of fulfilling the new family's need to "parent".

Not everyone is at the center of expensive and clever marketing/advertising agendas.

Adoption is the Big Lie, and it is called CHILD ABUSE -
"being used for the sake of something other than its intended purpose". Children have a right to be loved and reared by the parents who give birth to them, protected from separation caused by a money-making, supply/demand-driven industry that seeks to provide babies to those who will pay money to purchase them.

Children have a right to know who they are, and not have their identities stolen from them in a legal transaction.  

Children are not property.
When will our society and government listen to adult adopted individuals and open our own records to us; and stop financing a greed-ridden system?

Must we somehow be "amended" to be acceptable or receive care?

It isn't the LOSS that people don't want us to talk about...
everyone experiences LOSS.
 

It is the LIE that people don't want us to talk about.
We are used to replace children for those who have none.
We don't want to live that Lie our entire lives.

We can and do LOVE many people in our lives.
But that doesn't negate our reality.

June 12, 2007

"Happy Adoptees" by Julie A. Rist

Mask
© Photographer: Agg | Agency: Dreamstime.com
Happy Adoptees by Julie A. Rist (http://lizardchronicles.blogspot.com/)
I am not the happy and grateful adoptee that you want me to be. Don’t get me wrong. I was happy and grateful for almost 45 years – or so I believed. Had you asked me then how I felt about being adopted, you might have heard something like, “Great! I am so grateful to my (adoptive) parents for all they did and, no, I am not interested in finding my ‘real’ family. My adoptive family is my ‘real’ family, thankyouverymuch, and they are a wonderful family. I’ve had a wonderful life. Of course, I am grateful to my natural mother for giving me life. Oh, you’re adopting? How wonderful!”I enthusiastically expressed that view all those years because I needed to convince myself that my life was normal and right and that I was okay. I did it because everyone else wanted me to feel that way, too. And I thought I would die if I ever looked deeper.Happy childrenYou’ve seen adopted children who seem to be perfectly happy, too. They smile and have fun just like those whose families are intact. They act happy and, occasionally, they are.Yes, adopted children smile and laugh. Did you stop smiling after you lost a loved one? Didn’t you still laugh when someone said something funny? Weren’t you still capable of having some fun? Did you ever smile and act happy to hide your grief? Of course you did. But even when you smiled, those close to you knew it didn’t mean you were happy. Those close to you accepted and expected your pain and sadness. They did not expect you to be happy about your loss. They gave you something most adoptees do not get: acknowledgment of, empathy for, and permission to express your grief. What grief?In the early ‘50s when I was adopted, little was known about the power of the bond between mother and child. Society still accepted Locke’s theory of tabula rasa – that we are born as blank slates. John Locke died in 1704, yet his theory survived until the mid- 50s. Now, however, we know that even before birth babies are intelligent, remembering and aware beings with their own personalities. We know that much of who we are today was created in the womb. We know that mother and child are a single entity, profoundly connected physiologically, emotionally and spiritually – even through early infancy. A baby does not understand that he or she is an individual until at least 9 months after birth. Through their research, authorities have determined that, when the mother/child entity is split, it causes an acute and lasting trauma in both mother and child. The repercussions are ominous and tenacious. Though they become buried deep inside, the repercussions follow both mother and child throughout the remainder of their lives.It is difficult, emotionally, to imagine a tiny baby’s very real feelings about the loss of his or her mother -- the terror of losing all that is familiar, all that is comfort – the unique heartbeat, scent, taste, voice, rhythms and vibrations. Babies are born needing and expecting these familiar things which only their natural mothers can provide. Even with this knowledge which has accumulated over the past 20 years, there remain those in our society who sever the mother/child entity as casually as they would cut a common earthworm in two.Ignored trauma is another trauma A child’s first experience in the adoptive family is usually joining in everyone else’s happiness over his or her tragedy. The child’s first trauma is ignored or dismissed, perhaps in the belief that enough love will make it disappear. It will not. In essence, the adoptee is expected to dance along with everyone else on his or her own mother’s virtual grave. Most experts in the fields of adoption psychology and trauma consider this dismissal to be the adoptee’s second trauma.The first and second traumas are the root causes for a number of issues and for additional traumas, which accumulate one upon another (what Betty Jean Lifton calls “Cumulative Trauma”).We may not want to imagine these things because it is uncomfortable to do so but, to act in a child’s best interest including protecting his or her emotional health, we need to suffer through such discomfort.DenialOver 14 years ago, I began 9 years in therapy, struggling with a boatload of issues that are utterly classic in adoptees. I didn’t accomplish much. The problem was that I did not connect them with my adoption experience. In all fairness, my therapist encouraged me to recognize the connection, but I was so deep in “De Nile” that I could not see it – indeed would not see it. I needed too desperately (like most of society) to believe that my adoption experience was the positive part of my life – not the source of my problems.Denial is powerful and, in many ways, a gift. It is a state we create in order to avoid feeling the pain of seeing the truth. When a baby’s world is gone, he or she does whatever it takes to survive. If the child does not get empathy and permission to grieve, he or she has no choice but to psychologically deny the trauma. And that includes smiling to hide the grief. The child begins to believe that his or her feelings are unimportant – even wrong. The child learns how not to feel.I do not use the word “denial” in a damning or judgmental way. It is a normal and natural human survival tool. I not only acknowledge it but, knowing intimately the pain that comes with shedding that denial, I am reticent to nudge others out of it. Denial can be a trauma victim’s most effective tool for survival, because revisiting the event that caused the trauma can feel literally life threatening.The downside of denial unfortunately outweighs the upside. Denial prevents us from understanding and effectively managing all the issues that stem from the disintegration of the mother/child entity. What are the most common issues?IdentityIssues of the adoptee are barely acknowledged by society and then only in those who are of a different race than the adoptive family – as if physical differences are the only ones that matter. But there are reasons why we see repetitive generations of lawyers, healers, scholars, actors, artists, etc. in natural families. It is not just a matter of continuing a family business or tribal tradition. It is a matter of like characteristics being perpetuated, generation after generation, being nurtured by genetic mirroring. Even if we are not transracial or biracial adoptees, we still do not get the genetic mirroring that we so desperately need. We don’t know how tall we’ll get, or whether our hair will get darker or lighter, our skin clearer, our bodies thinner or thicker. We don’t know who we’ll look like when we’re older. Our own natural characteristics are unfamiliar, so we don’t know what we should or should not choose to develop.Although such things may seem inconsequential to those around us, they are monumental to us, and serve to make us feel even more alienated, more lost.When an adoptee’s characteristics do not fit those of the adoptive family (or the extended adoptive family), there can be trouble. In my case art, writing and psychology were all frowned upon by my adoptive family. Yet those characteristics run happily in my natural family. Though my adoptive parents meant well, I grew up feeling like a bad seed. Out of desperation for approval, I pursued career paths that I thought would please them but even those successes were never enough to overcome their disappointment.Carrying the surname of someone else’s family also contributes to identity problems. The child is expected to embrace the adoptive family’s ancestry, as if his or her own is immaterial -- as if living in the dark is no big deal.Low self-esteemIdentity issues can explain some low self-esteem, a classic adoptee problem. Another cause is some adoptive parents’ – and society’s – (unmistakable yet unspoken) low opinion of the stereotypical “birthmother.” Not only is this an unfair and incorrect judgment about our mothers, but adopted children incorporate these attitudes into their own self-image. Along with this message, adopted children are often told that, essentially, their mothers loved them so much that they gave them away. This makes no sense. If my mother really loved me that much, she would have kept me -- therefore there must be something wrong with me. This creates low self-esteem. Low self-esteem leads to people-pleasing. Adoptees are exemplary people-pleasers. That is why we so often appear to be happy and are pleasant to be around. Lots of smiling! Our original purpose as adoptees was to fulfill the desires of others, to make them happy. Early on, our authentic selves are sacrificed to fill those needs.Powerlessness and controlFor many adoptees, it is easy to fall into despair and feel powerless over circumstances that emotionally healthy people can overcome with relative ease. This is rooted in our separation experience, when we felt powerless, helpless and hopeless. Paradoxically, we can become obsessed with controlling other parts of our lives, those things and events that we can control. This is conflict waiting to happen.DepressionOften, depression can come from the sheer exhaustion of maintaining pretense (being in denial). No matter how much love and care we are given, the truth is that we are (and will always be) someone else’s children. Yet we exhaust ourselves emotionally, pretending otherwise because we believe it will ensure our survival and prevent another abandonment. We also expend a lot of energy fantasizing about our natural mothers, and a lot of energy burying our authentic selves in favor of people-pleasing. All these things take a great deal of energy yet offer little reward -- fertile ground for depression.TrustOne of our most common problems is that of trust. The original disintegration of the mother/child entity can literally destroy a baby’s nascent sense of trust. Once lost, it can never be recovered. Only a tentative sense of trust can be painstakingly built by the adoptive family, yet it will always be difficult and sometimes impossible. Again paradoxically, we tend to casually trust anyone and everyone. It is when deep trust is required, as in intimacy, we tend to fall short.AbandonmentAbandonment is the most common issue of the adoptee. Despite the true circumstances of the separation from our natural mothers, we experienced this emotionally as abandonment. Even with later knowledge of those circumstances, the early emotional experience of abandonment never leaves us. Relationship troubles abound. Other issues such as trust, identity, low self-esteem and control compound these troubles.Many people have abandonment issues. For adoptees, however, abandonment is not just painful. It can feel like annihilation.“Only eyes washed by tears can see clearly.” – Louis MannStaying in denial, while it may be a refuge, hurts everyone involved. Although seeing the truth also hurts, don’t parentless children deserve what they truly need? How can society continue pretending that the smiles are genuine simply because it is easier than acknowledging the underlying problems?For those who genuinely care about these children and want to take that first step toward seeing clearly, start with one of Betty Jean Lifton’s books, such as Journey of the Adopted Self or Nancy Verrier’s The Primal Wound. They offer insight into the issues of adoptees, adoptive parents, and of mothers who have lost children to adoption. Such knowledge and understanding can open our minds and hearts to alternatives that are better than adoption.Smiles as masksDespite all these traumas and issues, adoptees smile. We smile to hide a world of hurt that neither we nor the rest of the world want to face. We smile because the world needs us to smile. They need to believe they are doing the right thing for us, to forget those silly “issues,” and call us “happy.” By smiling, we help them do that. Next time you encounter a “happy” and “grateful” adoptee who had “wonderful” adoptive parents and a “wonderful” life, look a little closer.
Written by: Julie A. Rist (Adoptee, Artist, Activist)

June 10, 2007

Big Fat Wish

Listening to minds
© Photographer: Theodor38 | Agency: Dreamstime.com
....to be able to mind-read what others are thinking. I know some would say that it would create more harm than good. But right now, I would LOVE that ability. Just to REALLY know what my natural family is thinking. My adoptive family too. My "reunion" is off the charts good compared to most. But then things happen that make me question and wonder, and hurt. Right now I'm hurt and angry at my natural father. And upset over a statement I made which could very well be completely misconstrued, but not intended at all. So I'm mad that it all has to be so complicated, and can't just be easy. I feel accepted, but not as accepted as I would like to feel. Then again, I see "their" relationships with each other in my natural family, and they aren't even near perfect either. So many things to ponder in reunion land.....when it gets real. I guess I'm thankful it got to this point - being real. Before "real" is hard, and after "real" it's hard(er). Knowing who I am, who I could have been - with all the losses and changes forever etched and even restored never the same. All because of the word "adoption."

Yes, I wish I could read minds, at least for today.

Reunion Relationships

Speed
© Photographer: Sutprattana | Agency: Dreamstime.com
I am so thankful to be "in reunion" with my natural family. But goodness gracious does it make me jittery at times, with both excitement and the feeling of being on an episode of "Twilight Zone".
Today for example.

The thoughts and feelings are running so fast through my head and body that I feel like I'm "alive" with electricity. Like a jolt of electricity just went through me, so much so that I cannot think straight or calm down easily. Yet, when I try to mentally "process" it all, I'm just not capable yet - guess it is all too fresh.

I have known my natural family since 1990. I was only 21 years old and from day one I was welcomed and embraced by all of them. But it took me many, many years to "unthaw" my emotions enough to be able to "feel" anything. I was just going on "auto-pilot" with a deep subconcious need to find them and know them, but unable to truly process or feel my own emotions. I felt like they were just "being nice" because they didn't want to hurt me, but they were kind of tolerating me back in their lives without really caring either way. In fact, after 17 years I still sometimes feel this way, even in the face of evidence that completely debunks that theory. I don't know why it is so hard to believe that they truly love me and want a relationship with me. Some of it is because we go several weeks or months without any contact, and it makes me feel abandoned and rejected. But that's a whole other story......
Anyway, I had a very interesting day with my natural family today - so thankful for the memories and good feelings, even though I continually "second-guess" everything, which I hate. I'll write more as I'm able to emotionally and mentally.

June 2, 2007

Here I Lay ~ Cries of The Adopted Infant

Crying baby
                                      © Photographer: Barsik | Agency: Dreamstime.com


Alone in the nursery I lay
Cries ring out like radar
Searching, searching, searching
In circles around my bed they reach
Striving to find the woman I know
Her breath, her hair, her touch
No where.

Alone in the nursery I lay
The ceiling so far away
Arms flinging hoping to find
Nothing but emptiness I feel

Where is she? Why isn't she here?
I am lost and alone. I can't feel.
The cries stop. There is no use
She is long gone
She or me? I do not know
Here I lay in the nursery alone.
 
by Samantha

June 1, 2007

My Biggest and Baddest

Digging
© Photographer: Beckyabell | Agency: Dreamstime.com
Pet-Peeve: When others "touched" by adoption (or not) use black and white language and overly simplistic rationalization to "explain" why they view some adoptees as "angry and bitter" - because they supposedly had a "bad experience" in adoption - SO NOT TRUE.

Adoptees can have a truly wonderful experience and family, or just a downright "NORMAL" (whatever that is) family environment - AND STILL NEED TO GRIEVE their losses in adoption. Adoption is based on LOSS - no matter how badly some people want to ignore it. LOSS is LOSS.

Truely healthy individuals will not ignore or deny this reality. To become whole, it must be validated, acknowledged, and greived - there is a continual onslaught of those who try to quiet and marginalize adoptees who face reality in this world of adoption.