I turned in the edits on the disruption article yesterday and then sometime later in the afternoon, I found a video of the “still face” experiment (I can’t remember where). I find this video kind of hard to watch because of the baby’s stress; I’ll just warn you that if you have a hard time watching babies cry, this might bother you.

Look how hard that is for that baby. You can see that if that still, unresponsive faces were that child’s reality, that she might have trouble being able to connect to other people once she leaves that environment. For a child who has depressed parents or is in an institution where there aren’t enough time or resources, learning how to accept and manage relationships might be a normal reaction. In this video that came up in the youtube related box, Dr. David Arredondo makes a distinction between “attachment” and “connectivity.” (I don’t know anything about Dr. Arredondo — I’m going to read about him more after I post this but I was struck by his distinction.)

So when we’re talking about narratives around adoption, the type that are perpetuated by agencies like EAC where the kid comes home and wraps her arms around her new mommy’s neck and everyone goes to Disneyworld to celebrate Christmas, we can see that those stories are at best lies by omission and at worst outright falsehoods. Because it is normal for children to have long-term challenges when their early lives are deprived. It is NORMAL. It is not pathological for any child to have some serious struggles when they have experienced the kind of neglect that many kids in fostercare or orphanages may have experienced. It makes sense, you know? It makes perfect sense. It doesn’t make for bad kids anymore than calling a child who limps because of an injury a bad kid. Babies and children are certainly resilient (thank goodness) but resiliency can only go so far and resiliency can also include coping mechanisms that may not work so well outside the orphanage. It may take time to unlearn survival methods that make perfect sense in one environment when we are moved to another.

And when adoption agencies tell stories that leave out the reality, they clearly don’t give a damn about those kids and they don’t give a damn about the prospective adoptive parents either. Because they don’t give those parents a chance to properly prepare.

Anyway.

Totally off-topic but sort of on (because there are some adoptive parents over at Support for Special Needs and some — not all — of their children have special needs in part because of their experiences that led them to be available for adoption), we have another giveaway there. I’ll quote the site!

So on behalf of Hachette Book Group USA we’d love to give away a set of books to a special SfSN member. Because Mother’s Day is SUNDAY (I’ve only asked for a nap. No really, I just want a nap.) we’d like to overlap this promotion with our launch blanket giveaway.

Now that you’re registered why not get the groups going? For the member who is most active with the groups between today and Sunday at  5PM PST, we’ll send the special collection of books direct from Hachette Book Group USA to you or to someone special to you!

The heart of Support for Special Needs is the social networking. We have great content there and more coming but our primary goal is to foster connection. Anyone can create a group there and you can also livechat. We hope that folks will find their people but also connect via state, (which is why when you register it asks you to check your state — that adds you to that group) so that you can get support from someone who has a similar experience (for example, parents of children with Language and Auditory Process Disorders) but also find out where’s a great wheelchair accessible playground in your community. So please, go check out the groups and consider starting your own. Even if you don’t win our five book giveaway, you may end up finding someone who will make a positive difference in your life!

And now Marley and Suz shoot us right back into adoption territory!!

Not that I’m ignoring Joy, there’s a busy discussion happening in the comments to this post. But I’ve written so much of it before (that Pennie has a right to her decision, that I refuse to dictate how she or Madison should feel — good or bad — about the adoption) that I’m not up to writing it again. I understand, too, that the divorce anology is way imperfect but I think the parallels work — it’s a legal family decision made by adults that hugely impacts kids often negatively but is made without their input. Also it’s another place where adults tend to downplay how the kids feel about it. So that’s why I chose it.

Reading the comments did make me think more about the term “parent” and “parenting,” which segues nicely to linking up Thorn‘s thoughts on Shannon saying that open adoption can queer a straight family. While Pennie and I don’t co-parent (because I hold the legal reins in our relationship) I think she’s still a parent. I think that when she’s with Madison she does parent by definition. I mean if she’s a mother, wouldn’t she be a parent? She tells Madison to calm down or helps her pour herself some milk or wipes a tushie now and then. Plus she gave birth to her, which is pretty darn parental. I don’t know. The terminology sometimes makes me so tired. We get so hung up on what Pennie IS and what she ISN’T but there aren’t words to help people understand her place in our family and in Madison’s life that don’t have a whole lot of baggage.

Thinking today about the “queering” of our family made me think about how people sometimes say of a gay couple, “Wait, so who’s the husband and who’s the wife?” I feel like that’s what they try to do to Pennie — but who’s the real mom? On the Facebook relative widget, I have Pennie labeled as “My Daughter’s Mother” because that’s it, isn’t it?

(sigh)

Marley asked:

Why do facts mean nothing when working on “progressive” adoption legislation–or even talking to people about adoption.  You can spew out a list of facts a mile long and all you get back is yabutt. If there is a response at all. Obviously people prefer their personal mythologies and you/we are “uninformed,” “uneducated” or plain stupid. And, of course, there are also agendas, which are sacrosanct.  Adoption saves babies, for instance, and you’re just a baybee killer.

Marley, you answered your own question. Sacrosanct agendas and baybee killers. (sigh again) And being deathly afraid of queers of any stripe. There’s one way to be a family and that family can have one mom, one dad and a smattering of babies although one boy and one girl for best results. God forbid anyone screw with that. I DON’T get it — especially when adoptees and first parents are standing there saying, “BUT THAT WASN’T OUR EXPERIENCE!” Truthfully I am still naive as hell because sometimes I read Marley‘s blog and think, “You have GOT to be KIDDING.”

Now we throw up our hands in frustration and note that this makes for another smooth segue right into Suz‘s question:

Do you think women, infertile women, will ever come to realize that they dont have a “right” to take the child of another simply becuase they cannot have their own? Do they realize they are transferring trauma? Why do some women think they deserve a child and others dont? Is it true that as long as there is no “cure” for infertility women will be actively harvesting the children of others?

Well, I think this misses the mark. It’s true that “family building” drives the industry and that the people who generally want to build families are we infertile types but we’re all operating under these huge fallacies about parenthood and womanhood and motherhood. I mean, we’re all buying the same bill of goods that motherhood is the be all and end all if you can do it right (i.e., one mom, one dad, one of each kid) and that we are living lives unfulfilled if we don’t have kids. Couple that with a hard-driving biological urge and you’ve got some pretty fierce entitlement.

Plus for infertiles like me, you have a whole world telling us to never give up — your child is out there somewhere. (I think the infertility industry does a number on women, too.) And we all know that any serious issues with adoption are dismissed out of hand (look at Marley’s question) and so the whole issue is pretty loaded to tilt towards getting grabby.

Most individual infertile women I know (and I know a lot) are pretty lovely people just like anyone else and — other than some screwy ones online — I haven’t met any that are actively harvesting the children of others. I mean, most of us want to build a family through adoption and when we start down that path we’re operating pretty blindly. If we come across an unscrupulous agency or lawyer, it’s not always easy to tell. Plus we have a whole world telling us that adoption is grand (it’s the same world telling potential birth moms that adoption is the most unselfish choice they can make). And the adoption reform movement is still hampered by constituents whose education tends to skew toward caustic. But I feel like the internet has also made a stronger, more effective dialog possible and that with institutions like Ethica and the Evan B. Donaldson Institute there can be real change made.

I think it’s important to bring the discussion to people outside of the adoption world — to people interested in families and in women’s rights and in parenthood. I know that people outside the triad are interested because many of my readers (and most of y’all aren’t connected to adoption) tell me so. I also think that we have to work on the rest of the world, too, because you’ve got folks like Ann Coulter saying that single mothers can only raise strippers and rapists and murderers and it’s those views — far more than baby yearning — that makes adoption possible.

More of what Ann said on FoxNews:

HANNITY: Let me go to Ann. Let me go back to this single mother — this single mother issue here, because you make a pretty profound point that isn’t often made.

You know, I thought we live in a land of the free and home of the brave — brave. You have choices in life. You know, for example, if you decide to get in the back of a car, and you start making out with your boyfriend and girlfriend, and you start removing one article of clothing after another.

COULTER: Right.

HANNITY: This is a choice to get in the car. This is a choice to take off the clothes. This is a choice to have sex. You do it of your own volition.

COULTER: Right. And it’s a choice not to give an illegitimate child up for adoption, which is, I say, surprisingly, I think to me, an interesting statistic, is that adopted children rank better on every measure of well-being.

They don’t think about being adopted. Their parents don’t think about them being adopted. They have less use of drugs, less run away, less criminal behavior than non-adopted children.

And adoption is discouraged while legitimacy and single mothers are elevated as if they are, you know, the personification of selfless virtue.

She may be one of the most offensive people saying it but she sure isn’t the only one. The money from us infertiles may drive adoption but it’s our economic and moral damning of “inappropriate” mothers that keeps us supplied.

Ann Coulter isn’t getting paid by adoption agencies, she’s just steeped in anti-woman rhetoric and wants to create policy based on it. She’s not the only one.

Not much news but it’s something:

Ohio.com – Adoption decisions questioned

A state appeals court judge has expressed concern that teenage mothers are allowed to give up children for adoption in Ohio without their parents being consulted.In a decision released Wednesday in a local adoption case, 9th District Court of Appeals Judge Donna J. Carr said it’s troubling that minors are restricted from entering into other legal contracts, but not adoptions.

”We allow 16-year-olds, and those even younger, to independently decide to permanently terminate the relationship of parent and child without the advice of their own parent or perhaps the counsel of a guardian ad litem or attorney,” she wrote in a three-page addendum to the court’s decision.

I tried to comment on Krississippi‘s blog but my comment got eaten somehow so I’m bringing it over here. (I’m rushing — I have an 11am meeting across town and it’s seven ’til ten but I will try my bestest to make sense.)

Krissi was talking about an article about Bethany Christian Services in Modesto, CA, specifically about a first mom’s unhappiness with this part of the article:

“One of the things that needs to be said is it’s very rare (for a birth mom to change her mind about adoption). But for those who go through it, it’s one of the most painful experiences they’ve every had. It’s like a death in the family when that happens. It takes a toll on us as staff members, too.

“But assuming that the birth mother is making a choice that she can raise the child with the support of the family or a boyfriend, that’s still positive.”

The original post that called my (and I believe, Krissi’s) attention is not available for public consumption so I’ll try to fill y’all in. A first mom was bothered by the emphasis on adoptive parent loss and the complete neglect of first parent loss. Krissi responded with:

I don’t understand why adoptive parents aren’t allowed to have the same feelings about an adopted child who is removed and returned, as the birth mother/family has in surrendering a child?

I wanted to talk about that, as an adoptive parent, and about some of my other issues with the article.

Now I’m not crazy about Bethany and wasn’t crazy about them before I really started thinking on ethics. I need to say that upfront. Their worldview is not mine, obviously, since I’m a feminist Jew and they’re coming from a place of conservative Christianity. Their beliefs — as they appear to practice them in the agency — run right up against my own from their emphasis on adoption over other choices to their bias against unmarried parenting.

But in this article I had two big concerns: One, that they believe that their push towards adoption is appropriate in their counseling:

“One thing that is true is that while we promote adoption, we’re helping her make an informed choice. We’re not about persuading them one way or the other. We provide counseling for (a woman) regardless of her decision.”

Looking at their web site, I see a lot of promotion of adoption but very little of that information one would need to make an informed choice. Which leads me to my next concern, the “death in the family” for wannabe adoptive parents when the mom decides she’ll parent after all.

If you look on their site, you can see a whole page devoted to “disrupted adoption“.  (They’re using the term wrong because there is no adoption when this happens — it’s an adoption plan turned into a parenting plan.) There’s a whole lot of sympathy there for adoptive parents just like there is in the article. This although they say, “it’s very rare.” By their own admission, adoptive parents rarely have to face this pain (if they’re using Bethany because I learned early on in my adoption journey that when an agency says “it’s rare” it can be code for “we are coercive” but there, that’s my bias showing again).

What we do know, because research tells us this, is that first parents definitely feel grief. Best practices (as set out here by the Donaldson institute) can help but there’s no way around it: “grief … invariably accompanies such a profound loss.”

Thing is, in the popular understanding of adoption most of what we hear about is the loss of the potential adoptive parents when an expectant mother changes her mind. I’m not downplaying this. I’m not arguing that it doesn’t hurt when an adoption plan doesn’t happen. But it’s almost a legendary part of our understanding of domestic infant adoption. And — at least over at Bethany — it happens rarely.

First parent grief? It happens every time an adoption happens. Every. Time. It “invariably accompanies such a profound loss.” It’s documented. We’ve got smart folks crunching numbers to back it up. Only we rarely hear about it. (Ironic that — we hear a whole lot about a rare thing and rarely hear about a thing that happens a whole lot.)

We hear about first parent grief when we talk about reunion. We hear about it as if it happened only way back when in the baby scoop era. We hear about it when we want to talk heroics (in another coercive strategy) but somehow we never hear it in those counseling sessions where we help women make “informed decisions.”

Back to the Bethany site, here’s the “unplanned pregnancy” list of resources. Do you see anything like the “disrupted adoption” page for adoptive parents? Wait, we’ll dig deeper — it’ll be on the “adoption” page, right? Because that’s where they explain the pros and cons, right? I’ll check so you don’t have to click through. Let’s see, I learning that Bethany will take care of legal arrangements. I see they’ll help you with living and medical expenses. I see (with an enthusiastic Yes!) that you can choose your baby’s family. I see that you can visit with your baby in the hospital “as much … as you want” and can arrange a open (or semi-open) adoption. I’m seeing that you can choose an adoption that dictates how much your child knows about you (no mention of how all of that is actually out of your control), that birth father’s have rights and that state laws dictate your (and your child’s) right to search. Nope, nothing about the long-term repercussions in choosing adoption.

This bias is evidenced in the article in The Modesto Bee as well.

I have to run to my meeting but that’s my argument against this article.

And quickly, I wanted to share this post from Seeking God Knows What about her last meeting with a Bethany agency.

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