I guess that I should have posted this article back in October when I received it, but I was busy with paperwork for the agency after we decided to move forward with them. It is still appropriate and it may give others considering adoption something to think about as well. Many adoptive parents face some, but not all of these things discussed below.
As quoted from the article "What to Consider before you Adopt"
Adoption is not the same as having a baby:
Many women have a need, deep within, to get pregnant and give birth. Adoption does not fill that need. Most American girls are raised with the belief they will grow up and have a baby. When that does not happen due to infertility, it can challenge the self-confidence of women who find themselves competent in all other respects. Many men need to pass on their legacy to a child of their own genes. They believe that adopting a boy or a girl that is born to another couple is not the same.
If your need is to be a parent, adopting fills the bill nicely. After all, parenting lasts pretty much for a lifetime. Nurturing, guiding, education, and enabling children into adulthood is a rewarding endeavor.
Adopting won't fix a troubled relationship between parents:
Bringing a child into your homne is most successful when it comes from a desire to share your lives rather than from a need to fill emptiness. A new personality in the family changes everything. There are new demands, new expenses, and more opportunities to argue and misunderstand. If you find yourself thinking of a sentence, which sounds like, "When we have a baby, ___________ will be better" think again.
You will give up control, at least for a while:
Like most people who have been sucessful in life, you have set goals and met them. You have made decisions for yourselves, and now you are about to put your future into the hands of people you have never met. Strangers will assess your stability to adopt, guide toward a particular country, and make decisions about which child you are offered.
The agency, the court, INS ( Immigration Naturalization Service), and others will eventually get out of your lives. But for many months, they will be present at your breakfast table conversation. Their paper work will clutter your desk, and their bureaucratic regulations will challenge your patience.
Not all of your family members and friends will be thrilled with your choice to adopt:
A lot of people have heard stories about adoptive parents who have had their hearts broken or lost custody of their children. Some do not believe it's possible to love an adopted child or will think you are settling for second best. Don't be surprised when you meet people who think you are selfish and those who are sure you are saints. Though you never intended it, adopting internationally is a political statement of sorts. You may discover that some of your co-workers or neighbors believe that Americans should not uproot children from their home countries. Some relatives will not notice the difference between your adopted child and all of the other nieces and nephews. Others will. You will learn first hand what it means to be different.
Your child's life did not begin when she was adopted by you:
Regardless of how young your child is, she had a different life before she came into your family. Her genetic makeup is not of your lineage, and the differences will probably be more apparent 15 years from now then when you first adopt.
You are forever linking your family with that of another family largely unknown to you. It is their genetic yearnings that course through your child's veins. In time, their medical history will come to life in your household. Their talents and propensities may be more obvious in your daughter than the skills you nourish through athletic and music lessons you make available to her. You job as her parents, is to encourage her to become all that she is meant to be.
This adoption-like all others-was born from a profound loss. Grieving this loss is only natural. If you have sturggled with infertility or the lost of hoped for children, you know what I am talking about. You may have already considered that your adopted child was once bonded to his mother (and perhaps to others in his family or to care givers in his early weeks or months). We are told that an infant knows the sound of its mother's voice from long association in the womb. Imagine the terrible loss when that voice is suddenly gone. Your adopted child froma broad will travel in unfamiliar vehicles to get to America. He will eat unfamiliar foods, be exposed to foreign smells and sounds. He will sleep in a strange bed and be comforted by your hands- the hands of strangers, murmuring unfamiliar words to him and singing unrecognizable nursery songs.
You may not yet have considered that you too will grieve as you raise your child. You will ache for his losses and hurts. He will become yours, and yet you will be powerless to heal all the hurts of his beginning or the new hurts that will visit him. As your child grows, he will experience those losses in differing ways. He may long to see or know about his birth family, or he may wish for a relative who looks like him. He may fear that he will be abandoned again.
Most adults know that no one ever totally "gets over" a major loss. We learn to live on and enjoy life, but the loss is always present.
Adopted children are over-represented in the offices of counselors and psychotherapists:
That doesn't mean that they have bad lives or bad parenting. It means that adopted persons have psychological challenges that those who are not adopted don't have. For them, growing up means learning to integrate their beginnings and losses iwth their missing parents without the advantage of having them around to help with the process.
Love Grows:
People worry whether they will love their adopted child right away, and they worry about whether the child will love them in return. After the rush of the first days or weeks together, some worry that they don't feel the way they think they should feel. But love is not a feeling. It is a process of growing. It is a decision to commit your life to another. Ted, an adoptive dad, recently observed that loving his son sort of sneaked up on him. He noticed one day that when something went wrong, his first thought wasn't about how he would explain the situation to his adoption worker or what his neighbors would think. he said, "When my first though was concern for my son, I knew I loved him."
Knowing all of these things won't lessen your enthusiasm. Knowing however might make you a wiser consumer and perhaps less surprised as a parent. Good wishes on your journey.
By: Dixie Van De Flier Davis, ED. D - What to Consider Before you Adopt
6 comments:
Thank you so much for visiting our blog...your blog is wonderful!!! What a beautiful spirit you have...and the article you posted was very informative. It's amazing how adoption has changed our lives...it makes me want to be a better wife, sister, daughter, mother, and friend. I am so blessed God chose us to create our family thru adoption..what an amazing blessing. I will keep checking in on you. Good luck!
Chassidy,
Thanks for visiting mine as well. Thanks for the compliments on the blog. I am new at this and many times my time is limited on the blog. I am going to do what I can while I am on vacation.
I will be following your blog as well looking at your beautiful son grow. You definitely have a testimony. I agree with you, it does make us learn things about ourselves and our faith going through the process.
Thanks for the well wishes!
What a beautiful post Kristy. It's very true. I'm will definitely read it again. Acknowledging your adoptive child's grief is important. I wish everyone will understand this.
My bio-father died when I was 2 months old and I was reared by a loving step father around family who loved me.
However, even as a very small child, I knew by biological father loved me. I felt just felt it. I know what it's like to yearn for your bioligical ties and am very prepared to help my adoptive child when that time arrives. God chooses the right people for the right task.
Thank you for this post.
Angela,
Thank you for sharing such a personal response. That is so deep. Only you would understand that and it is difficult for someone who has not experienced the same thing to really relate. We can empathize but not relate exactly to someone's feelings who experienced something that we havent. Thats amazing and truly "God" that you felt your fathers love.
I am trying to remain humble, because it is so easy to get caught up in the newness of our little ones, loving them unconditionally, spoiling and pampering them through their early years that it may be difficult to see or recognize their pain as they get older and understand their loss and their gain, no matter how much we love them and do for them, it still must be recognized.
I am trying to keep all of this in my mind because the time will come. Like your story, only you can relate.
Thanks again for sharing such a personal testimony. You will truly be able to relate to your daughter's loss and transition to your family. You will truly have a story to tell your daughter that she can relate to. Your angel will definitely understand.
This is all true :) Thanks for posting, I enjoyed reading and relating to it.
Thanks Ali,
I wanted to share some of the information that we received through training just to prepare myself and others for what the reality is once we bring home the bundle of joy.
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