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Making Room in the Family
Article Index
Making Room in the Family
Page 2 - Unique Tasks
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BookTrends: The Whole Life Adoption Book

In the spring of 2006, five-year-old Jeffrey and his two-year-old sister, Janelle, joined their new family.

The arrival of these beautiful children brought indescribable joy to Rob and Angie Cordova. Parents by birth of one-year-old Alise, they longed for a larger family. Now it was happening. A phone call changed their lives. They are adoptive parents.

Kimberly was a severely neglected, malnourished three-month-old when she was placed into the foster home of Bob and Debbie Jackson. For two and a half years the Jacksons’ desire to become Kimberly’s permanent family grew with each passing month. Their hope teetered back and forth from court decision to court decision. After waiting twelve months for the decision of an appeals court, the word finally came. It was over. Kimberly could now be adopted. She would stay with them forever. Bob and Debbie are adoptive parents.

Years of humiliating medical exams, endless questions, and emotional pain brought no hope to Catherine and Michael Johnston. “You have unexplained infertility,” doctors told them. “There is nothing else we can do for you medically.” They made a decision to pursue adoption. That was four years ago. Their son, Michael, born in Central America, steals the heart of everyone who meets him. Catherine and Michael are also adoptive parents.

These families, along with thousands across this country, all have in common the choice they made to love, nurture, and embrace a child for a lifetime. It was a promise made to a genetically unrelated human being: “We want you to become one of us. We will be your family forever.”

“Is she your real daughter?” they asked me. “Real?” I questioned. “What do you mean by real? She is a child not born of my flesh, that’s true. But she is a child truly born within my heart...within my soul. Yes, she is real.”
An adoptive mother

The events that brought these families to this common decision, however, are as diverse as the families themselves. For many of these couples, dreams of a household filled with the noisy, delightful confusion of children lay crushed by the distressing reality of infertility. For them, adoption was the very last hope for ever having a family. For others, involvement in the temporary supervision of a child through a foster care program encouraged them to make a permanent home for the one they had grown to love. Still others, already biological parents, felt called to assume parenthood of an older, emotionally fragile child with a traumatic history of abuse, neglect, or abandonment.

In most ways, parenthood for adoptive couples is just like parenting a biological child; the required skills overlap. However, from the inception of the adoption relationship, adoptive parenting presents additional responsibilities that biological parents do not face. Without laying the proper groundwork in knowledge of these issues, parents who adopt can walk into their responsibilities without adequate understanding.

There are unique perspectives to be aware of in this relationship of promise. For example, families considering adoption must often prepare differently for this distinctive parent-child relationship, especially when the child has special needs or has suffered neglect or abuse. These preparations present challenges not faced within the usual biological parenting experience. Before the family takes the first step into the process, they must decide that the journey into the adoption experience is a viable option for them. And then throughout the adopted child’s life, adoptive parents need to be sensitive to her evolving interest in and understanding of adoption and help her with the questions that will naturally arise. Parenting is always a labor of the heart, and adoptive parenting is even more so because of these potentially tender issues.

Making the Decision to Adopt

Most couples or single parents ponder the decision to take the first step toward adopting a child for a long time. They know that the decision to adopt, just like the decision to have a biological child, is a decision that will alter the course of their life. The idea emerges first as a hope. It grows and gathers energy, and finally a family is born. Before families involve themselves in the adoption process, it is important that they engage in a thorough assessment of attitudes about themselves, their current situation, their current family life, and their support system. The following questions are written for prospective adoptive parents who are married couples since these are the most common adopters. It is understood that single adopters would need to address these questions as well.

  1. What are the reasons we want to adopt?
  2. How do we see adoption as a positive way to build our family?
  3. In what ways do we have the kind of lifestyle that will be enhanced by the addition of a new family member?
  4. How will our extended family respond to our adopted child?
  5. Do we have personal problems that we think may improve if a child enters our family?
  6. Is our motivation for adopting to “save a child”?
  7. What is our perspective on the potential relationship: Do we want a child for ourselves, or are we a family for a child? In other words, what are our expectations for the child in this relationship?
  8. Are we adopting to acquire a playmate for our biological child?
  9. Can we love and nurture this child without knowledge of his or her history, no matter what may arise because of that history? Are we prepared for any special needs our child may have?
  10. Adoption is a team effort involving parents, agencies, attorneys, and other individuals. How capable do we see ourselves of working through the system?
  11. When we think of a child, do we envision a child who comes with a history or a child who comes with a blank slate?
  12. If infertility is an issue, what point of resolution have we reached regarding our inability to conceive? How has infertility affected our marriage?
  13. If singleness is the reason I don’t have children, what point of resolution have I reached regarding the possibility that I may never marry and have biological children with a spouse?
  14. How has childlessness affected our relationships with relatives, friends, and their children?
  15. Have we asked ourselves, “Who in our extended family or circle of friends would best understand the unique needs of our adopted child?”

These questions may prove helpful in assessing a family’s readiness for the adoption experience. After potential adoptive parents explore their own outlook on adoption, the preparation can begin.

Preparation: Charting an Unknown Course

When Sam and Cynthia first contacted an agency because of their interest in adoption, they had no knowledge of how to prepare for the process. As they attended a training course, they became familiar with six sensitive areas that set apart readiness for adoption from readiness for parenting biological children.

Their new understanding enhanced their own attitudes toward adoption and helped prepare them for the uncertainties ahead. What did they learn?

Infertility: The Stealer of Dreams

When most young adults approach marriage, they assume that at some point they will start a family. In their childhoods they likely filled hours of playtime rehearsing mother and father roles, projecting that someday in the future they would be just like Mom or Dad. They instinctively and naturally desire to parent.

For some, the assumption of this natural course of events disappointingly proves false. Infertility steals the dream. Forced to face the reality of their situation, couples find themselves coping with feelings and fears totally foreign to peers loaded down with babies and diaper bags. In a survey conducted several years ago but still relevant to the infertile couples of today, men and women provided emotionally penetrating responses to the following question: “There was once a time in your life when you wanted children but could not have them. What word or words describe your feelings at that time?”

Women, with a profound sense of hopelessness, responded that they felt “forlorn, unfulfilled, useless, absolutely heartsick, bitter, utterly desolate.” Men, projecting feelings similar to those of their wives, replied that they felt “disappointed, concerned for their wife’s reaction, frustrated and inadequate.”

Catherine and Michael lived under the shadow of unexplained infertility through four years of painful tests and procedures that shed no light on their circumstance. Chained to a calendar and thermometer that dictated the timing of their physical relationship, they felt trapped in a pursuit that had no end. Those circumstances nearly destroyed the joy and beauty God intended for them to experience in this dimension of their marriage.

“I can take you back to the hospital room where I made a decision,” Michael commented. “As I stood beside Catherine while she endured the pain of her sixth artificial insemination procedure, I knew right then and there—this was the last time. Four years on the roller coaster, hoping from month to month for a positive word, were enough. No more attempts at anything. We would have to change directions. We would have to struggle now with being childless or deciding what steps to take next in relation to adoption.”

As the biological clock ticked away in the lives of Doug and Dorothy Hammon, their hope for a family diminished with each passing year. “I came from a family of seven children,” Dorothy said. “Doug came from a family of five children. We loved large families and planned to follow the same course. I couldn’t imagine anyone not being able to have a baby. It was beyond my belief that God would require that heartbreak of anyone.”

Involuntary childlessness produces what adoption expert David Kirk calls a role handicap. Couples moving toward adoption as a result of infertility enter parenthood from a different direction than they had expected. They have to alter their plans. Their disappointed hopes and dreams of having children may overwhelm them emotionally. Most couples who move on to adoption from this disappointment do so maturely and soundly, after grieving their loss. Some, however, turn to adoption in desperation, on the rebound, not fully prepared for the additional responsibilities of adoptive parenting.

Couples who view adoption as their last and desperate hope for a family face potentially major losses, especially in their expectations of themselves and what they perceive to be the expectations of others. These include “the loss of oneself or one’s partner as capable of conceiving a child, and the loss of the status of a biological parent and the presentation of a child to grandparents.” In addition, they face the loss of “the hoped-for birthchild to carry on the family line.”

A primary challenge in preparing for the adoptive parent role is to mourn the loss of the dream. Couples should also realize that if they do not resolve this loss, it may quietly follow them all their lives, subtly affecting their responses to their children.

Prospective adoptive parents may perceive they have other challenges to deal with as well, and we’ll explore all the issues mentioned below more deeply in later chapters.

No Model to Follow

Forced to change course, couples find themselves facing still other challenges and role handicaps in preparing for adoptive parenthood. John and Marilyn Martin had finally decided that children would never be a part of their future unless they adopted. But they were troubled by the fact that they didn’t know anyone who had taken this route. There was no one they could turn to for guidance. They needed answers for their questions but hesitated to keep calling the social worker, figuring that what was important to them would probably seem insignificant to her. So they didn’t call.

Unlike biological parents, who are likely to have seen this type of parenting modeled in their own family of origin, “adoptive parents have little or no intimate contact with other adopters as adoptive parents.” They might not even know an adopted child. David Kirk noted that this may present a second major challenge in the preparation process: Adoptive parents may feel that they have no role models to steer them through the process.

While this may have been the reality for adoptive parents in decades gone by, role models and mentors abound in our culture today. According to a national adoption survey, over two-thirds of the American population has been touched by adoption in some way. Many people have known someone who was adopted, know a family who has adopted, or are related to a person who was adopted.

Our Business Is Not Our Own

In addition to the emotionally charged motivation to have a family, complicated by the perceived lack of role models, couples entering the adoption journey lack a sense of privacy and control. Biological parents are rarely subject to the personal scrutiny, decisions, and influences of others in the process of building a family. Adoptive parents have no choice. Each step of the way they must seek direction from professionals in the field. They must walk through a network of intrusive examinations by outsiders, ranging from social workers to court officials. They feel that they must monitor what they say and how they say it out of fear that a trivial comment may disrupt the procedure.

These factors create a third concern during the preparation stage: Adoptive parents soon begin to feel that their future is out of their control. Their hopes and dreams are in the hands of strangers.

The Wait Can Be So Long

A fourth difficulty for adoptive applicants is the time factor. When anticipating the arrival of their baby, pregnant couples have a pretty good idea (usually within a few days or weeks) of when to plan for the event. Adoptive parents must wait indefinitely just to get on an agency list for a homestudy. The homestudy is that process which enables agencies and families to assess if adoption is right for them. This is fully explained in chapter 2. Then they must wade through a maze of paperwork and interviews during this process. Finally, once the homestudy and training has been completed, the suspense really begins. Each ring of the phone may be the agency informing them of a child in need of a family.

When should couples tell their family and friends that they are adopting—when they first decide? Or during the homestudy? Or should they wait until they get the phone call? How can couples gather support around themselves when all they can answer to the when and who questions is “I don’t know”?

Therefore, the fourth frustrating challenge in making the transition into adoptive parenthood is that these expectant adults have no sense of a reliable timetable.They have very limited knowledge of what to expect regarding when their new family member will join them.

Other People Don’t Always Understand

“Why would you want to adopt?” “Why would you want to take on other people’s problems?” “Can’t you have any children of your own?” These are questions encountered by prospective adoptive parents every day. Questions like these can come from inside the family as well as from friends and acquaintances, and such comments can feel very invalidating to adoptive parents.

A fifth challenge for adoptive parents is to understand that people in their life may not validate their role in their child’s life to the extent they hoped they would.

“With my family and my husband’s family, they view it as different from biological parenting. In fact, they were quite negative about it before we adopted,” said one adoptive mother. “They actually said that the children would not really be ‘their’ grandchildren. However, as soon as our parents met our children, all those feelings were gone. I think they just didn’t know how they would fit into the lives of these children who came to us at six and nine.

Shared Parenting for a Season

A sixth obstacle in preparing for adoptive parenthood crops up immediately after the child arrives: the question of parental rights over the newest child in the home. When are adoptive parents really the parents? On the day the child enters the home? Physically, yes. In many states, legally, no. The child may still remain in the legal custody of a birthparent, an agency, the public, or the court. A social worker and/or a court worker will regularly visit the home for a period of six months prior to finalization.

These visits can be a reminder of how parenting by adoption is different in those early months from parenting by birth. For the child’s best interest, parental status is not fully granted in most states until that trial period expires and the court processes the finalization paperwork. And so a sixth and final test for adoptive parents as they enter their new role is that they must cope with the lack of full entitlement as parents while functioning in the position as if they were.

Preadoptive families who realize that they must prepare for their role differently than birthparents do will be more successful in managing the uncertainties that are a natural course of events. They will be better prepared for encountering adoption’s four unique tasks, which will be introduced in this first chapter. The rest of this book will explore the adoptive family relationship in depth and give practical guidelines for dealing with the additional responsibilities.

It is most important that during the preadoptive stage parents begin to understand the unique tasks and realities of the relationship they are entering. It is equally important that mothers and fathers in the midst of parenting stand back and evaluate how they have approached the unique tasks of adoptive parenting.