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05/13/07

How to Make a Birth Mom Angry

Posted by : Jan Baker in Adoption Search Blog at 01:17 am , 614 words, 840 views  
Categories: Anger, What Not to Say to a Birth Mother, How to...

For a birth mother in reunion, all sorts of remarks will be offered once you volunteer the news that you have been found or found your child. One of the main reasons I never told anyone that I was a birth mother until reunion was my fear that people would reject me once they heard my "secret." All in all, I was fortunate to receive lots of support and few insensitive comments.

Here are some of the ways and comments nearly guaranteed to stir up reunited birth moms and set their blood boiling:

1. One of the all time favorite comments made... more


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03/27/07

More on Abandonment Part 2

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 09:38 am , 440 words, 198 views  
Categories: Triad Issues, Adoptees, Abandonment

The term or word abandoned has negative connotations not only in adoption but in every aspect of the word. However, there is a different between how and adoptee can feel abandoned and saying that all adoptees are abandoned. The word abandoned really doesn’t define what happened and doesn’t it invalidate the trauma of the initial loss and the ongoing pay that is carried?

Maybe the term surrender is a more appropriate word for natural mothers because it seems they didn’t have a choice. At least during the closed adoption era.... more

03/26/07

More on Abandonment Part 1

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 02:12 pm , 346 words, 168 views  
Categories: Triad Issues, Adoptees, Abandonment

The more I think about the subject abandonment the more I think I should write a little more on the subject.

Doesn’t the word abandonment itself seem to cause a lot of hurt feelings? Don’t all triad members have their own strong feelings about the word itself?

Maybe adoptees want an acknowledgement that they felt abandoned. It doesn’t mean that the adoptee blame the natural mothers or think that they had a choice about it. I am not saying to deny the natural mothers experience. The closed adoption era was a different... more

03/21/07

Primal Wound of Adoption

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 08:55 am , 329 words, 136 views  
Categories: Triad Issues

The article published on March 1, 2007 titled “Family Counsel: The Primal Wound of Adoption" caught my eye.

The article made me think of the book titled The Primal Wound: Understanding the Adopted Child by Nancy Verrier. Although the book is mentioned another book is also mentioned titled Babies Remember Birth. In this book psychologist David Chamberlain writes “minutes after birth a baby can pick up his mother’s face which... more

03/18/07

Birth Mother Baggage at Reunion - Part 2

Posted by : Jan Baker in Adoption Search Blog at 04:36 pm , 319 words, 136 views  
Categories: Birth Mothers, Understanding Birth Parents

If you read a post of mine on any given day, you might believe that I am stuck, and angry. Read another day, and you will find that is not the case. Although I have angry moments, I use those to fuel my fires and give me the incentive to keep working to change some bad adoption practices, and faulty counseling for pregnant women.

Although adoption continues to tinge my life with sadness, I embrace life and lead a full and rich life. In my day to day life, I have made some peace with my adoption loss, and it no longer prevents me from a measure... more

03/12/07

Birth Parents' Rights at Reunion - Part 2

Posted by : Jan Baker in Adoption Search Blog at 09:45 am , 324 words, 147 views  
Categories: Birth Mothers, Reunion, Expectations

Part 1 ended up focusing more on what birth parents at reunion are not entitled to receive, rather than what they are. However, I think it is important to know both.

As for a relationship after being found, that is something that you cannot legislate. Although I encourage at least one meeting between the parties, you cannot force a relationship. If an adoptee or birth parent who is found refuses to form a relationship, you cannot force them to connect with each other. It is helpful to realize that a relationship is a privilege, and not a... more


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Birth Parents' Rights When Found - Part 1

Posted by : Jan Baker in Adoption Search Blog at 09:45 am , 400 words, 232 views  
Categories: Birth Mothers, Issues, Being Found

There is a great deal of talk about how birth parents deserve their privacy and are entitled to refuse contact if they wish to do so. However, I find it interesting who normally makes those kinds of remarks. Birth parents rarely do. Generally, adoption social workers tend or those adoptive parents opposed to open records often voice their opinions on what birth parents want. Once in a while, a birth parent will agree that they are entitled to their privacy. However, most birth parents that I know believe saying that they need... more

02/26/07

Twice Adopted Part 5

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 09:28 pm , 346 words, 114 views  
Categories: Adoptees

That night I proceed to get drunk so I could just not worry about the situation, because I remember that when my mom and dad left the party my dad said we would be talking about it tomorrow. The next day while I was home my heart started pounding extremely fast and hard. I told Tina to call an ambulance because I thought I was having a heart attack. I ended up in the ICU for three days but the doctor’s said it wasn’t a heart attack but actually an anxiety attack. I spoke to a therapist a week later and he started giving me Paxil for depression, I was... more

02/21/07

Fear of Abandonment

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 04:27 pm , 510 words, 186 views  
Categories: Triad Issues, Adoptees, Abandonment

When it comes to how people feel the bottom lines is that each person feel the way they feel. No one can make them feel any differently and each person must work through their own feelings through time.

A natural mother may feel as if they didn’t abandon their child. They may try to find peace with that. They may feel or thing that the adoptees that feel abandoned could never understand what the natural mother s went though. Some natural mothers may not be able to understand what adoptees deal with in their every day lives.

I think... more

01/17/07

Adoptee Issues Part 2

Posted by : Karen Sterner in Adoption Search Blog at 11:58 pm , 306 words, 118 views  
Categories: Triad Issues, Adoptees

The feeling of differentness causes some adoptees to isolate themselves from family and friends and to feel they are less of a person than others. Some typical behaviors for the adoptee who feels different are chemical dependency, seeking out lowlife peers, distancing from family members, and trying on new identities that are very different from their adoptive family.

Some adoptees no matter how old they are chronologically feel that there is a part of them that will always be a child. Depending of the state of birth and adoption the fact that... more

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