Monday, January 24, 2011

Being Adopted

I don't know much at all about my story or why I was placed for adoption. Each of my kids have amazing stories to tell as to why they were adopted and what their birth family was/is like. I know nothing. I don't even know what nationality I am. (I was listed as American on my paperwork) I know I was adopted through Highlands Adoption Agency in Kansas City, Missouri.

I was five days old when my parents got to take me home. So this is the only family I have ever known. My parents always told me I was adopted, it was never a secret. It was talked about as if it was a positive thing to be adopted. I had two families that loved me. When I was about seven it really hit me what being adopted really meant. I don't know why, but for me it hit me like a ton of bricks. Wow, I wasn't REALLY a part of this family. Who was I? Where do I belong? Why didn't my birth mother want me? I really struggled with those questions for a long time. I didn't have any friends that were adopted, so I didn't have anyone who really understood what I was feeling. My sister was my parents biological daughter, so that really made me feel out of place. But it was all my own thinking, there was nothing anyone ever did to make me feel that way. But you can't control the way you feel about something sometimes, it just is.

I have gone through times where I have wondered what my birth family was like, mostly in my adolescence. Like many teenagers, I hated my parents and thought it had to be better somewhere else. Because I am adopted, I had another family I could think about. My birth family had to be better, right? What were they like? Do I look like any of them? Do I act like any of them? I planned how and when I was going to meet them all the time.

I never did extensive research to find my birth family. It wasn't important once I grew up and figured out what really mattered in life. There comes a time in your life when it's time to grow up and realize what you have and be grateful for it. I have a family, a great family, and we are all pretty close. I still think about finding my birth family from time to time, mainly to just know my medical history or some of my past history, but I am in no rush. I think some day I will have some extra time and start the process. Who knows.


Wednesday, December 1, 2010

My Adoption Triangle

I have decided to start a blog like so many others have done.

The main purpose of my blog is to share my stories, views and experiences surrounding adoption. I have 40 years experience dealing with adoption. I am an adoptee (I was adopted by my parents at five days old), I am a birthmother (I placed my daughter, Sarah, up for adoption when I was 18 years old), and I am the mother of four amazing children we adopted. (We got our son, Avery, when he was 9; Ashley at 7; Tabitha at 8 and our baby Sabrina at 3 months old.) Each of my children have a story of their own, as do I and I plan on sharing these stories and what I have learned from this life God has blessed me with.

There have been great experiences, as well as some painful times in this journey (growing up as an adopted child, not knowing anyone else who was adopted, letting my baby go that I loved and grew attached to in the nine days I had her, being infertile and the challenges of adopting children that come from painful pasts) but now that I am older and wiser, I can see God had a plan for my life. I have grown so much from all of the 'character building' my life has provided. And now God is calling me to share my experiences to help others understand better what it is like to be an adopted child, birthmother and an adoptive parent.

I hope you like my blog, and make sure you share it with others who you think would benefit from my knowledge.