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Helen House's avatar

Eek! Pulling my hair out over here as I just spent an hour writing a long comment, wasn't signed in, forgot my password, and then lost everything I'd carefully written. Now I'm weighing the decision to just move on... try to re-write all I wrote... or just offer a recap.... DECISIONS... the topic of the DAY!

here goes....

As you know, I'm an adoptive mother of 2 via open adoption, adopted one at a time as infants about 3 years apart. Between these two we had an adoption that didn't go through after having the baby home for 10 days. We also had a chance to adopt two older children - siblings and the niece and nephew of my then husband. We ultimately made the impossible choice to say NO and then closed the door to adoption opportunities going forward.

At the time when our son came into our world, we lived out in the country, made our living as artists, had a horse, a dog, and just enough cats. Even though I married a guy who was nothing like what my younger self fantasized about, we were quite happy when our own childhood traumas weren't leading the show. I couldn't safely get pregnant naturally, we'd each imagined adopting kids one day since we were children, and we lived far away from anyone doing IVF at the time. Adoption was the natural choice. Open adoption was fairly new in the 90s, so we read all about it, interviewed people, and realized that was the only path that made sense to us.

Like you, I have a rich imagination. I thought love would be enough to conquer all. I fantasized about our kids loving the land like we did, making maple syrup with us, toiling in the garden and eating our fresh food with us, and being makers of things, curious about how it all works - just like us. I thought all of that was "nurture" vs "Nature". We would nurture that and it would be so.

God laughs!

Our son is deeply introverted and would pretty much prefer to do everything without us. He's a very bright, unique human with very clear preferences. He loves his cat, but is not so keen on us humans. He suffered from profound anxiety as a kid, had asthma and allergies, missed school often as a teen, and didn't sleep through the night till he was NINE YEARS OLD. I love him profoundly, and he was never the kid leaning over the car engine with his dad wanting to learn how it all works.

Our daughter came along and spent the first 17 years of her life pushing every button she could find - literally and figuratively. She came into the world with her arms braced in front of her energetically proclaiming "I DARE YOU TO LOVE ME!" She pushed me away so hard that most of my sessions in therapy and coaching through the years were about my relationship with her.

He's a braniac with social challenges. She's a social butterfly with learning challenges. Neither have any interest in horses, gardening, or making art. They find it interesting that we once made maple syrup. They don't even LIKE maple syrup. They tolerate one another, maybe even love each other, but don't find much comfort in their sibling relationship.

God laughs some more....

We now have 5 grandkids through our "bonus daughter" - the ex-partner of my partner's son. Three of those kids are my partner's grandkids (not biological, as his son is adopted too). The last two came from her current partner, but since neither parent has parents any longer, we asked if we could be their grandparents too. Why I tell you this is that this is more family by choice that wasn't anything like I fantasized. I wouldn't change a thing, and we dedicate much of our lives to supporting these kids and their parents in getting through some really tough stuff - much of it related to trauma the 3 older kids endured. The youngest of the 5 has a syndrome with vast challenges - one of which is that she'll likely never communicate with us. She is angel sweet, beats her head when she's unhappy, and she will never be able to say 'Mama'.

That fantasy life just never happened. Just like Alaska, there were moments resembling things I'd imagined, moments far worse than I ever let myself picture, and experiences far richer and more expansive than I ever could have dreamed.

But the fantasy? What my kids would love and the life we would share? Yeah... not so much.

We gave up our lives as artists, moved away from the country to have better access to support, and ultimately divorced because children triggered our own childhood traumas so deeply and we just could never find our way through. That may have happened without kids too, and it was a factor. Our Kids don't feel connected to the deep legacy in a property that has been in our family for generations. They just don't share many of the interests or concerns that I assumed would be part of the life of any child I nurtured into being.

I was willing to let everything go, partly because I have a deep history of codependence and sacrificing self for others. (No lie.) I had to commit to deep inner work so I wouldn't parent via resentment. I found work that deeply satisfied me and filled a need to do something I LOVED that would nourish me over a lifetime. I readjusted my expectations and hopes and dreams again and again and again. Everything about choosing to adopt changed the direction I thought my life would go. It gave me a life that I deeply love, that I'm often surprised to find myself living, and it helped me see that I just don't always have any true idea of what my life is going to look like.

I think the questions I would urge any person considering becoming an adoptive parent ask themselves are: Can I trust myself to care for myself emotionally if NOTHING goes according to my plan? Am I truly and honestly willing to change everything about what my life looks like if my child's needs require it? Am I willing to have them hate me, reject me, and push me away for years while I love them anyway? Am I willing to claim them as my own, even when they are nothing like me or my husband or my great Aunt Edna? Am I willing to do the INNER WORK required to not screw them up more than life naturally screws us all up? Am I willing to be surprised by life?

Of course... sometimes the fantasy plays out. Sometimes the imagination is more of a prophet than a dreamer. And sometimes the fact it DOESN'T go according to plan is the best thing ever! I wouldn't trade ANY of it for all the made read fantasies in the world - truly truly - and parenting, especially adoptive parenting, is not for those who will resent their kids for the road not taken. If you find that's you, saying NO is the choice of integrity and self-respect. If you don't believe it is you, then saying YES is the risk worth taking.

Whatever you two decide - We're rooting for you! xx

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Mimi's avatar

Two entirely different choices. One easy. One harder. Reading along I felt your anxiety / how joyful adventuring is for you. How frightening being suffocated by the children’s inevitable & exhausting demands. Whatever you choose you will succeed at. You are so gifted and deeply thoughtfulness. You won’t fail. You will choose the right road because both offer so much. All my best, Mimi

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