Hello,
Imagine my shock to discover a part of an article I wrote years ago was used on this forum in regards to adoption. I would love to add my two cents about adoption.
I am a birthmother who relinquished my child in 1975 into a closed private adoption. I was young and this was a decision my parents made for me, and a decision we all had to live with for years. Years that I spent "crashing and burning" filled with grief and anger. Years that I would never take back though because as wierd as this may sound, those years helped form me into the person I am today and I like that person. Let me tell you what I have learned: the adoption was a good thing. It hurt me far more than I can express, it caused me to hate my parents for what I felt was a selfish decision made because their pride would not allow them to admit they had a daughter who had gotten in "Trouble". I wasn't allowed to see my son, wasn't allowed to know anything about him, had to give him up to a Jewish couple even though I refused to do it when I was told (at the actual signing of the relinquishment that his new parents were Jewish). Seems I couldn't refuse and be taken seriously because they quite simply ignored me when I said no. What saved my life was the birth of my other son 11 years later. It was the start of healing for me, I was determined to be the parent to this child that I wasn't able to be for my first child. I found my first son when he was 18. I found out that he was alive and well, found out what his name was, and found out that I was totally unwelcome in his life because his parents were threatened by my presence. I was sad but the silver lining to the cloud was that I finally talked to my parents and discovered how much they regretted the decision they made and the reasons why they made the decision and how they had suffered over the years. It made me really think and the truth is that I would have been a rotten mom at that time of my life and my parents wouldn't have been able to take my place and raise him very well either. My son got a good family that loves him deeply and I think he had a better life with them than I would have provided for him.
However, there are things about the adoption system that need to change and the system is slowly changing. The system as it is damages birthmothers far too much. Noone should have to relinquish a child and not have access to information about that child's welfare. I am not saying that we should be involved in their lives on a regular basis but to be totally fair, what would the harm be in yearly updates and photographs through a third party? If I had been given something like this I honestly feel I would have been able to heal much sooner and while I can't be certain I don't know if I would have felt such a need to find him the minute he turned 18. I would have given him some years to mature and be more capable of handling my entrance into his life. I often wondered if his adoptive family would have been given contact info for me if he needed anything medically. When I found them, I found they knew who I was all along. So the only one kept in the dark was me. I find that hypocritical and cruel. I also found out that there was alot of money exchanged between the adoptive parents and the private adoption attorney who handled the adoption. In fact the attorney turned out to be the US's largest baby broker and was disbarred some 20 years later for unsavory adoption practices.
Don't confuse parents who lose their children to the system because of neglect or abuse with parents who relinquished at birth. Totally different situations and to be honest, lets face it, most of the kids taken from abusive parents end up in foster care because they are older when they are finally taken away. They are much harder to place because the majority of potential adoptive parents want babies not kids with problems.
There has to be a happy medium to this problem. More open adoptions, though I don't know that I would opt for completely open adoptions. I do feel that the adoptive families have the right to be parents, not co-parents. They should be educated more though, they should know how very important of a gift they were given and be more open towards information exchange without revealing identities while the child is a minor.
The system in America has created this kind of secrecy and condemnation of the birthmother while canonizing the adoptive parents and this creates some of the problems with adoption today. More openness is needed but not to the degree that the child is left confused as to who he is and who he belongs to. More people should be willing to adopt a child in the foster system and give those kids a shot instead of searching for that elusive baby.
I often felt guilty for finding my son and setting in motion the angst his parents lived with once I came into his life. You know what helped me get over that guilt? Remembering that God arranged the first birthfamily reunion: he led Moses to his birthfamily! Good news for those Israelites that God was openminded about adoption, search and reunion.
Oh, and by the way, I met my son when he was 21 years old. I waited 21 years to see that face, that glorious face. Now, I am not a stupid person, and I was thrilled to see him but a tiny part of me was disappointed, deep down there was this foolish desire to see the baby I never got to see, and I will always mourn the fact that I will never see that babies face. Its really hard to live with the fact that I gave birth to a child that I will always be a stranger too. Real life shouldn't be that way.
Jaymie Frederick