Most people who reunite are thrilled for the opportunity. No one ever said reunion was a piece of cake though. If they did....they lied! Maybe I am wrong, I suppose for some people reunion could be easy; I just don't know any.
Below are my top ten ways to survive reunion:
1) Find the best adoption therapist that you can afford. If you can find one who is a triad member, so much the better. I met faithfully with an adoptee/therapist during the first year of reunion. Wow, was she helpful!
2) Take lots of long, relaxing bubble baths - preferably... more

What one aspect of reunion makes the experience most rewarding for birth family members? Sometimes adoptees speak of having their curiosity satisfied. There is no more wondering about where their brown eyes came from, or their musical talent (or lack of it.)
Answers to many questions that they have thought about for years are often provided at reunion. Filling in the pieces of their lives is often satisfying and helps them feel more grounded. Even those who do not develop successful relationships after a reunion are still generally content with... more
As I read other bloggers’ thoughts on Halloween this morning, I began to reflect on past Halloweens and recalled which stood out in my mind the most. Since my children are grown now, my most recent memories are of three much loved grandchildren.
On a recent weekend, my granddaughter proudly showed me her costume for this year. She had a prepackaged combo this year, and as she pulled out the pieces from the bag, she explained each item in great detail. At eight years old, she is very articulate!
Eventually, she decided that she... more
Adoption reunion can spark some intense sexual feelings. This can happen in reunion natural mothers and sons, natural fathers and daughters, siblings of opposite sex, and more distant relatives. Some have engaged in a sexual relations with their natural relative while others have described experiences ranging from intense erotic feelings toward their relatives to sexual behavior such as fondling and touching. The best way to explain it is when the lost relative is met for the first time an overwhelming and complicated rush of emotions and an almost irresistible sense of falling in... more
After being away for 6 days, I came home to a full mailbox. It took me a few days to get through all of the emails and to respond but finished this task yesterday.
Yesterday was a busy day but also a rewarding one. There are times in my life that I wonder why I do what I do. Why do I continue to spend so much time on adoption search and support. There are times that I feel like I just want to let it all go and something happens to remind me that helping one individual find his or her natural mother makes it all worth while.
Well,... more
A colleague in Maryland wrote to me the other day bubbling over with excitement at a find made by her search and support group. Based on the adoptive mom’s recollections of a slip of the lip, and non-id information supplied by the attorney who handled the adoption, the group was able to identify the missing birth mother in less than the two hours that they spend together once a month. They found the birth grandfather, too. It took a couple days to update the information and to identify and verify the woman’s married name but,... more

I have been asked on numerous occasions the question of “where should my reunion take place?”
I have two places that I suggest for the first meeting to occur and they are first a neutral location such as an airport, a restaurant or a hotel. My second is someone’s home.
If a neutral location is chosen out of geographic necessity or personal preference a multitude of issues regarding intimate boundaries will automatically be eliminated.
For those who are more tentative or private in nature a neutral location can provide a buffer... more
My previous blog was about boundaries. After I posted the blog, I thought about what happens if the person you are in reunion with erects a boundary and doesn’t do it with open communication? From my experience of talking with triad members I understand that this type of situation leaves one person feeling walled out, powerless and desperate for answers of why are they pulling away.
If this happens it is important to understand what is behind the why. The reason that a boundary may be created and not communicate their thoughts and feelings... more
Many of you may not know it, I wear many different hats through out the work week. One of my hats that I had on today was as a Tupperware consultant. In seeing the different families walking by my cash and carry stand I wished that I had been on the other side shopping instead of working. Suddenly, a family came up from behind my stand and they had a child who was screaming, crying, and thrashing on the floor. I am not a parent yet, but it made me think about acceptable and unacceptable behavior and setting boundaries.
Watching this experience,... more
This comment that I referred to in Part 1 made me decide to look up the word “victim” in the dictionary. I prefer to think of myself as a survivor rather than a victim. “Victim” has connotations to me of cowering in a corner, meekly accepting your fate and not speaking up.
Victim is what I had to be to allow my son's adoption; I went along with the plan. Even though, it felt horribly wrong; I let it happen. However, victim does NOT define me now. Nor does "victim" fit now for any of the feisty, courageous birth mothers that I know who dedicate... more