“You’ll get over it…” It’s the clichés that cause the trouble. To lose
someone you love is to alter your life for ever. You don’t get over it
because ‘it” is the person you loved. The pain stops, there are new
people, but the gap never closes. How could it? The particularness of
someone who mattered enough to grieve over is not made anodyne by death.
This hole in my heart is in the shape of you and no-one else can fit
it. Why would I want them to?”
~Jeanette Winterson "Written on the Body"
If I told you I lost my mother at birth the usual reaction is one of sympathy. If I told you I was adopted the usual reaction is "WONDERFUL". It is the same thing. ~Adoptees
If I told you I lost my mother at birth the usual reaction is one of sympathy. If I told you I was adopted the usual reaction is "WONDERFUL". It is the same thing. ~Adoptees
You took away my family.
You took away my home.
You erased away my history now most of it is gone.
What gives to you the right to do this injustice unto me?
How can you be so blinded?
How is it you can’t see?
You’re stealing from the innocent are you so unaware?
You’re playing God with all our lives did you think we
wouldn’t care?
Who gave to you the authority to decide how we should live?
Who granted you this power?
It was not theirs to give.
You treat us as possessions, we are not yours to own.
How did you get the notion you can tell me where is home?
Do not dictate to me about how I should live my life.
Or who I can call mother, then take away my rights.
The answers to life’s questions you say I need not know.
You’re asking the impossible the questions only grow.
What it is I am asking for is for you to understand.
Until I have the answers I can not know who it is I am!
The angry adoptees are at it again! Ruining the feel good wonderful promotion of
adoption during National Adoption month!
I woke up this morning to a blog about “The War on National Adoption Awareness Month” from an
adoptive parent with all kinds of adoptive parent responses as usual commenting
on adoptees speaking so ugly about adoption through the #flipthescript campaign. Ummm yeah, and here is more of why we
are.
I wrote the above poem about fifteen years ago and although
geared toward the system of adoption and the archaic policies, laws, and
adoption procedures, it can apply to those who continually dismiss adoptees and
focus on what adoptive parents have to say instead. I do get how people don’t get it, the whole ultimate reality
of adoption. The underbelly, the dark
side, the reality adoptees speak of is hard to hear. I know most people are missing the point in
what adoptees are saying. The point IS that adoption is based on loss and that
loss for adoptees is usually undermined, ignored, and dismissed.
If we were promoting a "War on divorce" we would
be widely supported. Both adoption and
divorce are the severing of families permanently (and many times rebuilding
through step families as in adoptive families) but of course adoption is celebrated because the focus
is always on the win-win for the adoptive family and never about the demise of
an original family. If you first acknowledge and recognize the magnitude of
loss adoptees suffer THEN you can help them rebuild their lives into something
more positive." Yet again, people are not hearing the voices of experience, those of adoptees.
And then there was THIS part of the blog that TRULY makes it
evident that adoptive parents and others aren’t listening or really hearing
what adoptees are saying.
“I’ve heard an adoptee who was adopted from another country
say her family was waiting for her back in “her country.” Where was her family
when she was in the orphanage?”
Again, adoption permanently attempting to sever the ties of
an adoptee’s biological family without recourse and discounting the fact that
they will ALWAYS have another family be they absent, or across the world, dead,
whatever the case or scenario might be they exist! Even IN an orphanage adoptees still have a
family “back there”. Generations of them
in fact! Descendants and into the future,
adoptees do not deserve to be expected to not want to know about, hear about,
or reconnect with their families of origin.
The pain and loss divorced
children, orphaned children, or abandoned/neglected children experience is
widely recognized and often children are counseled to help them over come these traumas. Adoptees
experiences via adoption are mostly discounted and trivialized. We as adoptees are
criticized, ridiculed, called perpetual victims for voicing our emotions, feelings, and pain adoption has caused us. The hypocrisy that exists in
adoption is blatant to adoptees and the rest of the world writes us off and white
washes all of it and repaints it as a lack of gratitude.
I always have wondered about the
two weeks before I was adopted, where I was, who I was with, what kind of care
I received. In 2000 at an AAC conference I heard a older nurse speak about how
adopted children were taken at birth and isolated in the hospital from the
other babies. Hospital staff could not get them to stop crying and it was regular
procedure to give them drugs to tranquilize them. I tear up to this day
thinking about how horrific that whole scenario is. Now of course open adoption is promoted and
children are placed immediately and yet again that original loss is dismissed.
I never deal in absolutes because
life is not black and white nor is adoption totally good or totally bad. There are always going to be children in need
of good homes, however adoption should always be a last resort but more than
often it is not. Even adoption from foster care
systems often siblings are separated, names are legally changed, and original family
members are lost to one another forever.
Our system of adoption in this country resorts to adoption first instead
of family preservation and support.
One of the greatest experiences
for me ever was an AAC conference in 2000 with hundreds of adoptees in
attendance. After five days I didn't want to leave it felt like "home"
amongst so many that completely and immediately understood me, how I felt,
without a word or explanation. I knew
then it was never “my issues” with adoption, is IS the issue of adoption itself.
Until the time the voices of
those who truly experience adoption firsthand is heard first and not last,
adoptees will continue to suffer from the long term ramifications of the
judgment that haunts them in the “real” world of the nonadopted.
“From childhood's hour I have not been. As others were, I have not seen. As others saw, I could not awaken. My heart to joy at the same tone. And all I loved, I loved alone.” ~Edgar Allan Poe
“From childhood's hour I have not been. As others were, I have not seen. As others saw, I could not awaken. My heart to joy at the same tone. And all I loved, I loved alone.” ~Edgar Allan Poe
Truely touching article. Why does nobody listen to the voice of the children?! How is this justified?! #flipthescript
ReplyDeleteTY and...mostly because adopted children know they are expected to be grateful and they believe, and many need to believe, in their new families love and the message is usually "we saved you be happy and grateful". Any other reaction than that is considered negative and wrong and adoptee quickly learn to become silent believing their innermost emotions are incorrect and learn to not trust their gut feelings and instincts. Adoptees then grow and become adults and begin to realize the magnitude of loss that has been buried, unrecognized, and denied them and as it surfaces the loss and trauma becomes evident. As I said I never deal in absolutes loss and trauma or none at all are personal to each adoptees adoption experience. The point of #flipthescript is to acknowledge all adoptee voices from happy, to sad, to painful, to all of them if that is the case. Most people who are unaware, hence the reason for the #flipthescript campaign, and uneducated to the depth adoption issues can bring to the family unit. Adoption creates families in a very different way than other families hence each adoptee has a unique voice about adoption. Many adoptees feel very misunderstood and unheard about how adoption has impacted their lives. #flipthescript reaches out to all adoptees to empower them to be heard and better understood. Thanks for your comment!
ReplyDeleteThank you. That was perfect.
ReplyDeleteCan't get enough of that poem. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you my adoptee sisters!
ReplyDelete