I have a friend and reader who is also a birthmother who is going through something at the moment and I thought I’d bring this situation to the masses to possibly get some feedback from all of you reading.
Let me present you with the situation first…
M, is a birthmother who placed her son in an open adoption directly following his birth. He is now four years old. She has a pretty good friendship/relationship with his adoptive mother. She (M, the birthmother) is now pregnant with a baby girl that she will be parenting. As she nears her due date, she has... more
In my last post, I wrote about how there can be an initial change in the closeness between the adoptive mother and birthmother once the baby is born. Writing that post got me thinking in general about the friendship between adoptive mothers and birthmothers.
It is pretty common nowadays for adoptive mothers and birthmothers to be friends or be friendly with one another at the very least. This is very different from birthmothers and adoptive mothers of previous generations as they didn’t... more
Many times during pregnancy, the expectant mother may become close to the adoptive parents, usually the adoptive mother especially. While I think that bonding between these two mothers is great and could lead to a more positive open adoption experience later on down the road, it can also be a bit troubling at first post adoption.
I know many birthmothers who have become very close to their child’s adoptive mother during the pregnancy, but once the baby is born the level of closeness changes. They may have been chatting on the phone daily, emailing back and forth through... more
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Although we do have, for the most part, open adoptions with any number of birthfamily members, two of our children have biological fathers who are not involved, and we are not in contact with. One child’s birthfather is even an adoptee in a closed adoption himself. The sad thing is that both these birthdads do not have contact because they do not choose to be involved, not because we have really restricted them from participating. Not being able to see or know them however, has had very little to do with how our children think and wonder about them. The kids talk about their... more
One unexpected predicament that some birthmothers and adoptive parents may have to face initially after relinquishment is a change in the relationship between them. It’s almost a shift, so to speak and it happened in our relationship.
During my pregnancy I became very close to S, A, and N, but I was closest to A. I really wanted to get to know the family well before Charlie was born as I thought it might make things less awkward later down road. A went to doctor’s appointments with me, we talked on the phone at least daily, and probably saw each other at least... more
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Last evening I was happy to get a return phone call from my son’s birthmom. We have all been anxiously watching the news here, and wondering about her extended family, who are in Nairobi, Kenya amidst all the current political turmoil there. Right now this is a very unsafe place to be, and the full accounts of what horror is going there on have not even made it into main stream media yet.
During Kenya’s recent December elections, a dispute occurred about who the actual winner turned out to be, and some fairly intense ethnic clashes have been going on.... more
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With Thanksgiving pending, I have been going over all that I have to be thankful for here, and I am truly fortunate it is really a long list. One of the little things is that thankfully I won’t be cooking the turkey dinner tomorrow (a relief to all who know me), but there are also many, more important things I consider at this time every year.
I am thankful for a caring, supportive husband who works hard to provide for us all. Without him I would have never known that healing from the chaos that was my childhood was possible. I am immensely thankful for... more
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I have been reading online about the experiences of some birthparents in open adoptions, who have come to find out over time, that perhaps they really don't like their kid’s adoptive parents very much. I wonder at times if I, like those adoptive parents in question, am susceptible to some very high, unknown, and unattainable standards myself.
I will be the first to admit that it scares the pants off me. I always come away from reading something like that from a birthparent, however justified in their personal situation, and wonder if my own children’s birthparents think... more
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Yes It is National Adoption Awareness Month, and that has been on my mind all day today. While glancing around online as I made my own post, I could see that it is in the thoughts of many in the internet world, and in a variety of ways, not all of them positive. I personally prefer to take a positive spin on the purpose of the month, although I can understand some of the mixed feelings many have. Adoption has it’s negatives, but I believe it is good to put those aside for a time, and focus... more
One of the positives in our open adoption has definitely become my relationship with Charlie’s adoptive parents. I did choose them to be Charlie’s adoptive parents while I was still pregnant, so I did have the time before he was born to get to know them. Although he was born early, so it wasn’t that terribly long. Our relationship before Charlie was born and the time directly after he was born was like walking on eggshells. We were all treading new waters not really knowing exactly what the “right” thing to do or say was.
It was difficult and just as the there is the saying about “Rome... more
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