Who is Confused?

 

I have had a couple adoptive parents make weird comments when we told them we searched for L’s family in China.  The one that always leaves me scratching my head is “Oh, I wouldn’t do that. I think it would be confusing for the kid.”

I don’t get that one. What is confusing about it?  Is it more confusing to A)have two sets of parents and to know them both or to B)have one set you live with and one who may exist out there somewhere but you don’t know who or where they are or what they look like?

We talk to L about her family in China when it comes up. It does come up frequently, but not in an angsty way (because L is just not in a place yet developmentally where she is processing it as a loss most of the time).  For us, you know, it is just Life.

Last week, L was interviewed for a research study about internationally adopted kids who have contact with their birth families.  She was asked if she talked to her birth family and could ask them questions if she wanted.  She said she talks to them and it was pretty clear she didn’t think this was a big deal.  She was all like “Yeah, I talk to them. Of course I do.”

The researcher asked her what kinds of things they talk about.  L said “I told them about the birthday party,” because the week before in a phone call, for the first time, L actually sat still for a few minutes to talk to her family through the translator. I think she also told them about her recent snow skiing lessons.  She just told them about her life.  It was nice.  (The researcher also asked her if she remembered the first photo she saw of them. She said yes. Then they asked L where she got the picture. L said “From the printer,” which was entirely true. )

The picture below is of L in her new Chinese class.  (Yes, the teacher is a white guy. He is great, but that is a post for another day.)  The teacher asked the class to draw a picture of their families.  Some kids drew their mom, dad, siblings, pets, and step-parents.

L drew eight people.  The teacher looked at me, a little confused by the number, but I just told him to ask L who they were.  She identified two mamas, two babas, two jiejies, one didi and herself.

L isn’t confused.  It is *other people* who are confused.

L knows who her family is. She knows where she came from.  She knows who she looks like. She knows who she lives with.

We talk about “Family” being as big or as little as you want it to be.  Sometimes we talk about our “lives in our house” family.  Other times we talk about “family”and mean all our cousins and grandparents and aunts and uncles.  Our mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers, obviously they are  family too.

Family is the people who love us and the people we love.

L knows exactly who she considers family.  She isn’t confused at all.

Sharing your child with other parents (as seen on tv)

Is anyone else watching Switched at Birth?   It is a story about two teens who were (wait for it…..) switched at birth.  When they discover the error, there is a lot of introspection and thinking about what is nature/nurture/family etc.

Maybe it is just me, but there were a lot of threads in it I could relate to.   It isn’t about adoption, but it is, kinda.  Also, several of the main characters are deaf, which adds an additional plot point (and reminds me of the communications problems we have with L’s family).   It is a teen show and is a little cheesy, but so far it hasn’t jumped the shark.

You should check it out. The first season is free online or it is on netflix.

Speaking of adoption and L’s family, this week I googled “adoption reunion stages” and it was funny to see the results that came up.  This one lists the stages of reunion as 1) Excitement 2) Obsession 3) Confusion (including pullback) 4) Figuring it out and 5) Acceptance.

We all know that the “reunion” with L’s family is not MY reunion, so I am embarrassed to admit that I can look back on the past year and see myself going through these stages.  Even though my intention was to be careful and rational, bringing L’s family into our lives –as wonderful and complicated as it is– created a lot of emotional upheaval for me.

A few months ago, I was solidly in Confusion which I would also have called Regret with a Side Order of Pullback.  Pullback from contact, pullback from thinking about it, pull back from my blog where I process anything that is on my mind.

I recently talked to someone who also just made contact with her child’s birth family.  Seeing the tiniest bit of someone else’s experience made me realize how turned upside-down and stressful things have been for me.  I told her that her feelings will come in waves and you just have to ride them out.  Things will settle down eventually.

I wish someone had told me that before.

It is getting easier, but it still isn’t easy.  I am getting to be ok with that.

 

backing up

You all may not have noticed, but I gave myself a nice little blog break there.  In part, this is because I feel guilty because I still haven’t answered all the questions I requested…way back in OCTOBER.

The questions I have left are complicated, so I haven’t been eager to answer them.  But if I am going to blog, it looks like I am going to have to suck it up and do it already (probably like I have  been a few at a time).

Stillplayswithbarbies asks several questions all at once, so I am breaking them up:

I would like to read more about Taiwan and family dynamics in Taiwanese families.  I have a daughter adopted from Taiwan, and while I am interested in everything you have to say, I am especially interested in anything about Taiwan.

Mr. A’s family is not a typical Taiwanese family.  I suspect that the dynamics of his family are much more informed by mental illness and the immigrant experience (which can make even non-crazy people dysfunctional).  It was interesting to see Mr. A’s relatives in Taiwan and find normal and sane. They had normal jobs/businesses and seemed much more like regular American families than like Mr. A’s family.  I suspect if they had stayed in Taiwan, Mr. A’s family would still have been dysfunctional but they would have been less dysfunctional because the kids would have had some extended family support they lacked in the US.  To sum it up, I can’t help you.  If you want to talk about the dynamics of a family riddled with mental illness, then I would be more helpful.

As for Taiwan itself, we decided it was the Midwest of Asia. Not so sexy, not so flashy, not cutting edge, but people there were industrious and nice.  It seemed like a pretty pleasant place to be, but everyone thought somewhere else might be more interesting.  This is how I always felt about Ohio, so I could relate.  I also found it less easy to get around without being able to read Chinese (less written english) but the spoken english of the average college graduate seemed very proficient.  We also thought it was much more Chinese than China. There seemed to be much less focus on luxury/flashiness, much more traditional Chinese culture, etc. Like China without the trauma of communism and 40 years of intense, government-imposed poverty and crazy.

This answer is not so helpful, I know.

 A specific question I have is about birthparent search in Taiwan. We have names and addresses. It is an open adoption in the sense that all identifying info on both sides is in all the court documents. Our daughter is three years old. When/how should we make contact?

If it were me, I would do it by letter. I would update her on your daughter’s development and lay out your reasons for wanting contact.  I would also outline how I would like that contact to look (letters? timeline? etc.).  Learn from my mistakes and go with less contact at the beginning. You can always add more, but it much harder to do less later.   I would also assume she has been told it is healthiest if she just forgets about the baby and moves on.  The letter may be intercepted by her parents or spouse or something, so I wouldn’t assume a lack of response meant she was choosing to not have contact.  I would also make a webpage with photos of your daughter (updated from time to time) so you can put a statcounter on it to see if anyone is looking.  That way, even if they don’t respond, you know if  someone is interested.

A more generic related question: L’s birthfamily is intact and mature. What are your thoughts on approaching other types of birthfamilies such as mature single mom, teenage mom living at home with her parents, divorced parents, etc.? How to gauge if they would be receptive to contact, or if waiting a few years is better? I am thinking that making contact too early may scare them off forever, perhaps? Would love to hear your thoughts.

I always try to think what I would want if I was the birth mother.  If my child were out in the world without me, I would want to know she is ok asap.  It seems almost cruel to me to withhold that information. I would also be afraid that they would move or something and you would lose the ability to contact them later.

What I am hearing in your post is that you are concerned about the wellbeing of the birthmom, which is great. And you also want the best possibility of successful contact.  I don’t think waiting will necessarily ensure that.  Every birth mom is going to be different so you won’t know until you reach out to her.  There is no patented best practices in international open adoption. You are just going to have to feel your way through it.  It is hard.  Also, I suspect reaching out is not going to get easier of you wait a longer time.