I'm ready to admit that I struggle with blogging about adoption, and
the struggle surprises me. I have no mixed feelings to get in my way...
no ongoing grief or frustration to impede me. In fact, I have been
twice-blessed with adoptions that exceeded even my wildest hopes.
Twice-blessed with healthy newborns adopted domestically after meeting
their birth mothers, who are two of the most fabulous young women on
the planet, and an adoption attorney who is compassionate, wise, and
professionally impeccable. No drama. No trauma. No hardship worth
counting, other than financial, and that burden is universal among
adoptive parents.
So, what's my problem? I've thought about it a lot, and I finally realize my "problem" is exactly that I have been twice-blessed with adoptions that exceeded even my wildest hopes. I call it Adopter's Guilt.
My
"problem" is that when I go on the website of the adoption agency we
used, I see faces and faces and faces of people waiting to adopt, eager
to adopt, some desperate to adopt. Some of these faces I know
personally, others I know from reading their profiles online. Though
their smiling pictures beam, "Notice me! Pick us! We'd be great
parents!", I know that as day after day slips away Doubt plods in with
a heavy step and whispers, "Why has no one noticed you? Why has no one
picked you? Perhaps you're not meant to be parents after all. Ever."
My
"problem" is that adoption has brought people into my life. People like
Michelle, who of everyone I know is among the most full of love and
life and promise, yet she waits and waits and waits, with growing
despair. People like Charlene, who waited 7 years for an adoption match
and has suffered - since the day she brought her daughter home - with
debilitating depression and self-doubt. People like Dara and Jeff,
whose post-adoption experience has been a devastating legal nightmare.
People like the birth mothers who write to me about feeling remorseful
or inadequate or shut out.
My "problem" is that adoption means
gain for some and loss for others. There are winners and losers, chosen
and unchosen, the triumphant and the defeated. Some of us are made
whole by adoption and others are broken apart by it.
My struggle
to blog about adoption is really a struggle to reconcile the
irreconcilable. Why me? I have no idea. Why not you? I have no idea.
I
can't change anyone else's timeline any more than I could have changed
my own. I do believe that everything happens in the right way at the
right time (whatever that means), and that we almost never understand
that until we're looking back.
I'm supremely grateful to be one of those looking back. I trust that you will be too.
Tags: blogging, adoption, adoptvie parent, guilt, birth mothers, parenting
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I wish i had something great to add to this. I think it's wonderfully written. I've never been in anyone's shoes when it comes to adoption, so i can't say anything to that....other than, I really enjoyed reading this.