An adoptee

Mar 20, 2007 21:02

The saddest thing I've read in forever

The Ungrateful Little Bastard Blog

Leave a comment

norwegian_wood March 22 2007, 04:00:45 UTC
from this blog
1.Educate yourself, read every book you can find on adoptees and on being an adoptive parent. (If you need any recommendations, ask me)
2.Decide now, if you are doing this for a child, or for yourself. (Is it about image or love? Is it about your own needs, to be a parent, to be needed, to fit in society?)
3.Mourn what you may not have. (As in blood children of their own.)
4.Never say, “We love you as our own.” The adoptee will be your child and that’s a mixed message if there ever was one.
5.Don’t overdo the “you are so special/lucky” thing. They aren’t going to feel that, so actions will speak louder than words.
6.Always be there for them, they may have anxiety when you leave them at daycare, or anywhere else. This is normal for most kids, but often worse for an adoptee.
7.Join a support group, somewhere they can play with other adopted kids and you can talk about your life with your child.
8.Love them unconditionally. Even when they shout you are not my family. Even more so then.
9.Find out everything you can about your child’s heritage and family and try to incorporate some of it into your own. Allow them to freedom to explore their history as well as yours.
10.Don’t take it personal if they decide to search for their blood. It’s not about you or something you did wrong, it’s about wanting to know where you came from. After all, you probably know where you came from right?
11.Be honest in all things. Don’t LIE to your adopted chid about their origins.
12.Love them, UNCONDITIONALLY.
13.If a member of the birthfamily comes around searching, be honest and truthful with the adoptee about it. Let them make the decision or if still very young, ask their opinion. Don’t hold it against them and don’t think you need to “defend” your child from these people. After all, from a biological stand point, your child is theirs as well.
14.If the adoptee is reunited, try to not hold animosity toward the birth family. Also understand that the adoptee may spend more time with them for a while. He or she hasn’t forgotten you, they are just reveling in something new, like looking at someone who looks like them. (Want to know what I mean? If you are ever around a bunch of adoptees and one of them just reunited and is showing pictures, the first comment is probably going to be “Wow, you look just like them.” It’s one of the first things we notice, because we don’t see it in ourselves.)
15.Encourage them to talk about adoption and their birth family. Never give them any sense that it is not okay to talk about it -by a look, tone of voice, etc.
16.Do not expect that if you “love them enough” that will solve magically solve all adoption issues that they might have.
17.Never say anything negative about the birth family. Part of their identity comes from their birth family. Insulting the birth family is like insulting the child.
18.Never “make up” anything about the birth family. If you do, it may come back to bite you later.
19.Encourage contact with the birth family. Never withhold any letters, pictures, etc. unless it is necessary for safety concerns.
20.Do not wait to “tell” a child they are adopted. Make it something that they have always known.
21.Never say “I understand how you feel or I know what you are going through.” Unless you have been adopted yourself, and even then, you have no way of truly understanding the pain and hurt that an adoptee may be feeling.
22.LOVE THEM, UNCONDITIONALLY.
Wraith was kind enough to add the last one after I left a comment about the importance of validation.
23. Validate the adoptees feelings. Just like every other human, we have feelings such as pain and loss and should be allowed to feel them and work thru them, not bury them. Comments like “get over it” just say that you aren’t willing to allow us to process and we need to hide our true feelings from you.

Reply

norwegian_wood March 22 2007, 04:03:55 UTC
also, reading all of the adult adoptee blogs they can wouldn't hurt!

Reply

norwegian_wood March 22 2007, 04:12:24 UTC
this site is pretty great.

Reply

babyslime March 22 2007, 04:13:53 UTC
Some of these are horrible. I don't mean they're horrible like that, I mean it's horrible someone wouldn't do them... like lie about the origins? Adopt for image purposes? Not explore their origins and heritage? It'd be awful to grow up not knowing your ethnic background due to your adopted parents complete lack of consideration in at LEAST finding that out.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up