Archives for Community Wisdom

Do most open adoptions eventually close?

I feel we, as an open adoption support group, need to address the oft quoted, but unverified and un-cited statistic: “an estimated that 80% of all open adoptions are closed”

I see this stat on blogs, forums, answer sites etc. and have been unable to find the source for this. You can Google search it to see the prevalence.

So, my questions are:

A) If it is a reliable, verified fact, what is the source so we can properly cite it, then what can we, as advocates of open adoption, do to change it?

B) If it was made up, or misinterpreted, how can we correct the perceptions of those that believe and repeat it?

How do I heal a misunderstanding? Or should I let things go?

The birthfather told my husband and I that he and the birthmother got the distinct impression from us that we were not comfortable with them or any contact from them. It, of course, hasn’t stopped him or his parents… but it kinda opened my eyes to why the birthmother never contacts us, and rarely responds to e-mails.

So…that leaves me to this quandry…do I try to explain to her WHY we may have come across “guarded” or “uncomfortable” at first? Which, of course, would bring up the topic of the birthfather’s parents and what they put us through for the first 18months of the adoption. Which I don’t want to get into now…I already have in previous posts. She probably already suspects that his parents caused problems for us because she subtly tried to warn us before the birth of our daughter. I just don’t want her to think we don’t want communication from her…I actually would like to hear more from her.

Or…do I not bring this up at all and just remain deligent in my e-mails to her and continue to set up our annual visit, hoping that, in time, she will see that we are quite comfortable with her and her family.

My son calls us both mommy. Am I doing right by him?

I am pretty stressed out right now. I am a foster-mom of a 2 year old boy and am in the process of adopting him. Uniquely, the birthmom (her rights were terminated by the county) and I have forged a good relationship and we plan on keeping the adoption open. I guess I thought this would be easy but now that I feel like he is “mine” it is so hard for me to hear him call her “Mommy” and cry when she leaves. He also calls me “Mommy” and cries when I leave. I am getting so confused about my own feelings and trying to separate those from what is best for my son and also taking into account the BMoms feelings and it is all becoming an emotional bowl of spaghetti. My friends and family are no help. They try but they just don’t get it. I am a single mom too, so I feel so confused about what is normal. I was committed to an open adoption and still am, I think. I just have a lot of concerns now that it has “started”.

If you don’t think I sound too crazy, can you offer advice? Is it healthy for my son to call us both “Mommy”? How can I possibly tell the woman who gave birth to him that she can’t be called Mommy? I worry about the effect of the monthly visits on my son. He cries at the end of every one. I feel like he thinks his BMom is abandoning him every month! My friends say he is too young to be upset by that and that I am projecting my feelings onto him. I don’t know.

attachment disorder and a visit with first mom?

My oldest has attachment disorder. Her first mom has mental health problems which prevented her from understanding the complexity and demands of motherhood. When we assumed custody my daughter was a lifeless soul. Her eyes were hauntingly empty. Any attempts at giving her physical affection were rejected with scratches and bites that drew blood, hair pulling or angry screaming and kicking.

The first two years were spent rehabilitating her and helping her acclimate to a healthy home environment. All the while, we maintained visits with her first mother but in neutral, casual environments. Typically after visits, I became my daughter’s punching bag, literally, for then next two days. We assumed she was acting out her anger regarding her abuse as an infant in her firstmother’s care. Unable to verbalize her emotion, it made sense so I dealt with it. More than anything, I wanted my daughter to be well.

Seven and a half years later, two things have changed. First, we no longer have visits with the children’s firstmother. Her mental health challenges make visits difficult at best and she has since married a violent man who, at our last visit three years ago, attacked me. Second, my daughter no longer violently assaults the people that love her. Instead, she screams, whines and has insane temper tantrums at everyone and everything.

Psychological intervention has done little to abate her emotional distress. Likewise with medication. To say that as a mom, I am overwhelmed by my child and grieving for the loss of what I thought would be a delightful experience in motherhood is an understatement. I have spent a lot of time crying, a lot of time being angry myself, a lot of time trying to be the best damn mother I know how for a child that often makes it clear that if I were chopped liver, she might love me more.

She wakes up screaming at me. She goes to bed doing the same. Even now, she is generally unresponsive to my attempts at physical affection. Some times I don’t bother. Some times I hug and kiss her hard, hoping she’ll receive it finally. During my trials with my daughter, it doesn’t escape me that it is because of her firstmother’s mental challenges that I know face mine. I don’t begrudge firstmom for being impaired, I begrudge the extended first family that is unwilling to acknowledge the hardships my husband and I endure on behalf of our daughter.

Firstmom is remarried to a man older than her father. They have a child together even though between the two of them and their previous partnerships, six children have been removed from their custody by the state. They elude the same fate for their youngest child by moving away every time the state opens a case in their county. By the extended first family’s own admission and by the observances of my adoption lawyers, this child is in jeopardy. All I can think about is my daughter and the heart break we have endured attempting to repair the damage. I think of the same happening to this new toddler and I grieve all over again.

Firstmom’s youngest sister, whom I’ve taught or tutored for the last six years, is graduating in two weeks. She’ll be at her sister’s party, as she should be. But there’s the rub. Will we? With the current behaviors my oldest daughter is still facing and the resultant challenges I endure as her mother, the thought of a visit makes me ill.

I feel like a back stabber and a liar and a cheat. I agreed to an open adoption, an agreement I now find myself unable to honor due to circumstances. I hear the judge’s words on adoption day in my head, “do you promise to love this child, to do your best to protect her from harm, to raise her to adulthood and beyond, do you understand and accept the challenges of parenthood, will you do everything in your power to create a loving, nurturing home for her?” I said, “I Do and I Will.”

Right now, a visit seems contrary to what I swore to under oath in a court of law before the Honorable Judge. Unfortunately, that agreement is the only legal and binding one.

I’m sorry firstmom, but our daughter must come first.

I found my child’s first mom online; should I contact her?

We are in a semi-open adoption relationship with our son’s first mother. The first year we sent the agreed upon pictures and letters through the agency and on his first birthday we got a letter and some pictures back from her. The next time we sent a letter, pictures and a gift through the agency, it was all returned to us. The agency said to stop sending them stuff but to keep writing. She had moved without updating her address. I have asked the agency to try to find her new address and contact her but they won’t.

So, I just happened to type her name in to a search on Facebook and she popped right up! I am really tempted to create another more anonymous page for us and contact her by sending our email address through Facebook. I just want to let her know that we still would like contact with her and that we are still here hoping to hear from her when she is ready. I don’t want to inflict unnecessary pain on her. She can ignore the request or write back if she wants. My husband thinks that this is pushy and inappropriate. I feel like it might open the door for her a little. Is it wrong to do this without the agency involved?

Grandparent rights after adoption?

Are there any laws that allow the [first] grandparents of the adopted child to see them?

My agency is asking for more money, is this ok?

The agency I adopted from recently sent a letter asking for money to support their operations due to circumstance in the difficulties with 2 of the 7 countries they are affliliated with. Is this now a common practice for agencies to request monetary contribution to maintain their services? It feels so inappropriate – am I off?

Should I wait for them to contact me first?

how do I know if my birthsons parents want me to contact them, or should I wait for them to do so?

How do I decline a first parent’s requests?

When adopting our daughter, her birthmother had been out of her life for 3 1/2 year. It was obvious to all involved that she belonged with us. Our contract states the usual, quarterly visits, pictures, no friends, visits at our home etc. Yet verbally we talked about how it could be whatever we make the contact to be and there was no reason why she couldn’t visit more often that the contract outlined. We explained that the contract was to fall back on, if needed. TWO MONTHS into the new arrangement, our daughters first mother is constantly asking for extra’s; take her to her workplace to show all her friends, come early, stay late, hang out at the mall. Our daughter is only 4 years old. Many of the things her first mother is requesting are the exact things we want to protect her from! I am having difficulty staying positive and declining her requests with grace. Any suggestions?

What to do on Mother’s Day?

with mother’s day around the corner, does anybody do anything special for their child’s birthmother?

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