HONOR YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER:
The Surprising Virtues of Open Adoption
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Common Misconceptions
Open Adoption's Emotions
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Secrecy Usually Hurts Someone
"Re-Conceptions"
Honoring the Birth Family
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The Opportunity
of a Life-Time
Living Trust Consecration Ceremony
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"Adoption is about finding families for children,
not about finding children for families."
--- The Family of Adoption, p. 24,
by Dr. Joyce Maguire Pavao
Of all conventional family structures,
adoption involves the most complex emotional adjustments.
It is fraught with misconceptions and confusion,
even for people who have lived with it for years.
- Misconceptions Are Common, Even Within Triads
Most triads (birth parents + adoptees + adoptive parents) cope with misconceptions about adoption well enough. But there is much room for improvement. Society doesn't understand adoption. Many adoptive parents don't understand adoption as well as they could. Fewer pre-adoptive parents understand adoption. Many birth parents resent adoption. And too many adoptees feel like secret visitors from outer space --- "lonely" even in the most loving of adoptive homes.
- These Misconceptions Come From Natural, Understandable Emotions
Many in the adoption community want to "blame" adoption's problems on "The System." (Of course, no system is perfect, and adoption in the United States is downright chaotic. "The System" is actually different in every state, confusion is practically guaranteed, and misconceptions are rampant.)
But emotionally, the misconceptions
surrounding adoption are quite understandable.
Most people "approve" of adoption, yes, but even so, they view it as a drastic remedy for (two) desperate situations. Adoptees aren't just children, they are refugees from domestic catastrophe. Adoptive parents aren't just parents, they are infertile-but-heroic rescuers. And birth parents, ... well, let's not even go there.
- The "Conventional" Wisdom Is Not That Wise
The above are adoption's stereotypes --- the "conventional wisdom" that is not so wise. These stereotypes are understandable because they may validly describe past events in some adoptions. (Many adoption activists angrily attack the very existence of these stereotypes, and that's understandable, but angry attacks don’t change many hearts.) Here’s what’s wrong with the "conventional" wisdom:
Adoption's stereotypes cause misconceptions because
they focus on the past causes of adoption,
not on its present potential or its hopes for the future.
- Adoption's Un-Conventional Wisdom
So here’s the real, unconventional wisdom about adoption: Wise adoptive families aren't dwelling in the past. Wise adoptive families are trying to live otherwise normal lives in the present that strive for a brighter future. Adoptees, whatever their past, can have ordinarily healthy childhoods. Adoptive parents, whatever their past, can be ordinary parents (and they sure won’t be told they are "heroes" once their kids become teenagers!). And birth parents, whatever their past, can move on, knowing they have provided good families for their biological children.
- Adjusting to Adoption Is an Acquired Skill
As suggested by the above quote from The Family of Adoption, by Dr. Joyce Pavao, many of us have the wrong focus in thinking about adoption.
Successful adoptions focus on good parenting, not on past problems.
Adoption is not just damage control.
It is a unique opportunity to love as God wants us to love one another.
Adoption may address some big, adult problems, but after it is legally final, the primary focus needs to shift from damage control to good parenting. And remember that parenting --- whether "normal" or adoptive --- means helping children develop into fully autonomous people, not just clones of their parents. This is hard for all parents.
- Adoption Is "Different," But Every Child Is Different, Too
True, parenting an adopted child IS different, precisely because of the scars left by the issues that make adoption necessary. But good adoptive parenting means helping children get past those issues, just as "normal" parenting means helping children get past many other issues that arise as they grow up. Actually, adoptive families face a dilemma that is common among families with "special" concerns: They are striving to be as "normal" as possible, but they must deal with the issues that make them different. When you think about it, that's true for all of us. We must deal candidly with our past in order to realize our present potential and our hopes for the future.
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Open Adoption's Emotions- Respecting Others . . . and Their Limits
Every adoption is different, and each person in the triad has limitations. As the Open Adoption section of our Finding a Match page notes, some people just can't cope with open adoption at all, and forcing it on them can be unwise or even dangerous. But in general, every child should learn and follow this rule of thumb:
"HONOR YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER" Exodus 20:12.
OK, but what does that mean for an adoptee?
- Adoption Changes Parenthood, Not Biology
Adoption affects the hearts in at least two households. And while some want to believe otherwise, an adopted child has two sets of parents: "Mom and Dad," and "Birth Mom and Birth Dad." (Of course, only half of this applies to step-adopted children.) Ideally, an adopted child can honor both sets of parents. It's not always easy, but with open adoption, it can happen.
- Win/Win/Win
Open adoption can be a win/win/win solution --- a redeeming victory for the child's best interests, not a shameful "cover up" for adult failings. Birth parents can "adopt a family" to parent their children. Adoptive parents can finally love a child of their own. Children can get the parenting they need. Parenting problems can be solved for two families. Stepchildren or relatives can be shown full parental love and commitment.
- Open Adoption Mimics Adoption Within the Family
If open adoption is a new concept for you --- if it sounds radical or dangerous or "kooky" --- back up for a moment and think about the "first resort" when a child needs new parents: Staying within the family. When a child is adopted by grandparents or an aunt and uncle, contact with the birth parents is normally kept as open as reasonably possible --- for the sake of the child. In fact, the extended family parents the adopted child, not just the adoptive parents.
- Keep the Focus on the Child
OK, now keep your focus on the child, where it belongs. If open adoption is better for the child who is adopted within the family, why would it be different for the child who is adopted outside the blood family?
- A Better Extended Family
It's not. And open adoption can imitate the benefits of in-family adoption --- creating a new extended family --- for the sake of the child. Again, every adoption is different from every other adoption, and the humans involved have their limitations. But an extended family can usually offer a child more than a nuclear family by itself.
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Secrecy Usually Hurts Someone- Open Adoption Benefits the Adults, Too
The anonymous, secrecy-shrouded adoption practices of the last century were understandable efforts to avoid the shame of illegitimacy. (Many of today's open adoption advocates don't realize that adoption was not shrouded in secrecy by law until early 20th century birth mothers began demanding total anonymity when placing a child for adoption. Of course, some will even blame that on society, or some sector of it, but that's a debate for another day.)
- Secrecy Hurts
Whatever its supposed benefits, secrecy almost always hurts someone's feelings, and in adoption, it hinders expression and processing of complex emotions. Today's more open adoption practices help everyone involved understand and express their feelings about the arrangement.
- Trust Is the Foundation of All Relationships
As with all human relationships, trust is essential. Some birth parents cannot earn the trust of their adoptive families, whether because of safety, health, or other reasons. And some adoptive parents let down their children's birth parents by failing to honor the agreements they made with them. Some human limitations cannot be conquered. But we must always try. And where it is possible, trust within the adoption triad allays fears and allows the adoption to be more of a blessing to all involved.
- The Fears Adoption Can Produce
While closed adoption may have helped avoid shame, it sometimes had unintended side-effects that could be worse: near-paranoid fears for all members of the adoption triad. Adoptees, fearing they would never know their true genetic origins, sometimes lashed out at the system --- or even at their adoptive parents --- for hiding their biological past from them. Many birth parents only wanted to tell their birth children they loved them --- and to be reassured that their children were doing well, but they feared rejection by the children and resentment by angry adoptive parents. And adoptive parents feared most of all: What if the birth parents tried to interfere in their families, or even kidnap the kids? And what if their adopted children "rejected" them and started searching for their "real" parents?
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"Re-Conceptions"- The Old Conceptions
If all of your ideas and experiences of adoption come from the days of closed adoption, open adoption may sound like a lot of ridiculous Pollyanna optimism. You may think adoptees would be confused by having "too many" parents. You may think birth parents need to put their pasts behind them. You may think adoptive parents need to be unchallenged as the "real" parents.
- Facing the Issues
Open adoption doesn't pretend that these aren't valid concerns. Rather, it addresses them the way all problems must be addressed: head on, with the affected parties working out solutions among themselves. It is closed adoption that hopes these issues won't come up if the people involved are kept apart. But real lives and real emotions don't work that way. Covering up part of one's past --- living a lie --- always makes things harder.
- Curiosity Is Normal
Children who are old enough to understand where they came from, are old enough to understand that they came from different birth parents. That truth cannot be hidden from most children who did come from other parents, and once they know it, they will want to meet those parents. Adoptive parents who oppose this perfectly natural desire may bring on the very rejection they fear by their adoptees. No matter how good a life adoptive parents provide, if their children feel they are being kept in the dark, a huge rift can develop in the family. Adopted children should honor all of their parents as much as reasonably possible. Open adoption allows that to happen.
- Children Need Real Answers
Moreover, the usual closed adoption cover-up stories can cause significant unintended trouble. Adoptees will ask about their birth parents, and they deserve true (age-appropriate) answers with details. Children hearing that their birth parents are "best forgotten" will only become more curious. Children who are told without specifics that their birth parents were deficient in some way --- or that adoption "rescued" them from their birth parents --- will get more curious too, but they may also conclude that they inherited some genetic deficiency from those birth parents. (By the same token, adoptive parents must resist the temptation to paint themselves as rescuing saints; perfection is a mirage no parent can live up to.) On the other hand, dismissing adoptee questions with vague assurances about how generous their birth parents were will similarly not end the matter --- it could easily make them wonder, "If my birth parents were so good, what's wrong with me that made them place me for adoption?"
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Honoring the Birth Family- They Don't Stop Loving Their Biological Children
As for birth parents --- the people most often snubbed by closed adoption --- they may indeed have pasts they need to put behind them, but they love their children all the same. And no matter what their past (or present) faults may be, most of them want their children to know they love them, and they want to know that adoption has been good for their children --- giving them a better life than they would have gotten without it. In placing a child for adoption, most birth parents don't want to "give up" the child to new parents; they want to give new parents to the child. Now true, some birth parents may at times be too dangerous or unreliable to play a role in their adopted children's lives. But whenever possible, adopted children should have the chance to know that their birth parents loved them then, and still love them now.
- Extended Birth Family Members Don't Stop Loving Them Either
In fact, even when birth parents are too dangerous or unreliable to play a role in their adopted children's lives, those children can still benefit from knowing other members of their birth families. Birth grandparents, birth aunts and uncles, and even birth siblings can have beneficial roles in the emotional lives of adopted children. In addition, these people might have ongoing contact with the troublesome birth parents; they might be able to help persuade those birth parents to "straighten up and fly right" by being more supportive of the adoptive families raising their children.
- Adoptive Parents ARE the "REAL" Parents
And adoptive parents? They ARE the "real" parents. If anyone asks an adoptive parent who the adoptee's "real" parents are, the reply should be, "Don't I look 'real' to you?"
- The Price Birth Family Members Have to Pay for Open Adoption
One commitment birth family members MUST honor if they are to have relationships with their birth children is affirming the adoptive parents as THE parents. When birth parents support adoptive parents in this way, it is beneficial in several ways. First, the adopted child is not confused about who has parental authority. That alone is supremely important, but there are benefits for the adoptive parents as well: They will have less reason to fear interference (or even kidnaping) by those birth parents. And they also will have less reason to fear rejection by their kids in favor of those birth parents. Freed of these fears, adoptive parents will be more confident, and will unquestionably be the real parents. And finally, by affirming the adoptive parents as THE parents, birth family members earn a continuing role in the child's life.
- Emotions Are Always Complex
It's complex, alright. But if you think through the natural emotions involved, you discover that open adoption is the approach that best faces reality and moves it in a positive direction. Hiding hard truths is harder than dealing with them openly, and living a hard truth is better than living a comfortable lie.
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Adoption: The Opportunity of a Life-Time- The End of the Beginning
Like childbirth, adoption does take time. But parenting takes a lifetime. Childbirth and adoption are the first steps; parenthood is the journey. The first steps are thrilling, but you want a happy ending, not just a happy (re)beginning. Adoption is a complex, life-long journey. Placement of the child is only the beginning. Finalizing the adoption in court is only the end of the beginning.
- Parenting Is A Privilege and a Responsibility, Not a Right or Reward
Harking back to Dr. Pavao’s quote above, we should remember that parenting is a privilege and an ongoing responsibility, not a right or reward. Our office sometimes sees pre-adoptive parents who think of adoption as an end in itself, not the beginning of parenthood. As noted on our Match page, some pre-adoptive parents don't want any complications or difficulties in the adoptive process: The whole process is a (potentially) disagreeable "job" they want to "outsource" to an agency or lawyer, or both. Others think their decision to adopt IS heroic; but the adoptive process, rather than "rewarding" them, is one big obstruction --- a scam or "money grab" that serves only to frustrate their heroism. The problem with both of these attitudes is that adoption is indeed the start of parenthood, and parenthood IS complicated, difficult, messy, unglamorous, and rarely heroic in any palpable way. Romanticized views of adoption as an end-in-itself should not be allowed to obscure the mundane, daily burdens of parenthood that adoption will lead to. Otherwise, adoptive parents could find themselves dealing with the "post-adoption blues," as reported in the May 22, 2008, Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz.
- Transcending Pain
Both families --- and eventually the child too --- can be hurt in their own ways by the problems that lead to an adoption plan. The beauty of adoption is the hope that shared love can transcend pain. And yet, while adoption is "Plan B" for everybody --- including the child, who can easily get lost in the shuffle --- a shared love of the adopted child can bring two families together in surprising ways. In their shared love, they can respect and ease yesterday's pains. And the child can grow to love both families in their proper, legal roles. It takes hard, honest work, but it will pay off richly if everyone stays focused on parenting the child well. "Plan B" can still be a miraculous, joyous, and loving success!
Adoption: The Choice You Can LIVE With!
< < < Home > > > < < < Match > > > < < < Emotions > > > < < < Legal > > > < < < Resources > > > The Living Trust Consecration Ceremony
"You have received a spirit of
adoption, through which ...
we are children of God."
Romans 8:15-16.
This ceremony was developed as an additional free benefit to our clients, and as a tribute to adoption itself. It is a separate, religious ceremony --- not a legal process or an alternative to a legal process --- it does not have any legal effect by itself. Clients certainly need not use it, or even approve of it, but its purpose is to promote support for triad members, and give due public recognition to the blessing of adoption.
Celebrating Adoption
Adoption has changed in recent years. If you're familiar with these changes, you may know about "entrustment ceremonies," where the child's birth mother or birth parents ceremonially entrust the child to the adoptive parents. A member of the clergy may preside, but entrustment ceremonies are usually private affairs, attended only by those involved in the adoption.
The Living Trust Consecration
The Living Trust Consecration brings the whole people of God into the entrustment.
Jesus was presented at the Temple for consecration by His mother, Mary, and His adoptive father, Joseph. In the same way, a child entrusted to adoptive parents should be consecrated and entrusted first to God and His church.
If the child's birth parents want to be present and participate, one or both can entrust the child to the presiding Clergy, or to a church member, representing the whole people of God. (If the birth parents are absent or not comfortable participating, a representative can entrust the child on their behalf.) God's church then entrusts the child to the adoptive parents. So in this Consecration, the adoptive parents receive the trust --- not only of the child's birth parents --- but of all God's people.
The Living Trust
This is only proper: Through adoption into His Spirit, we are all children of God, and thus members of the Living Trust of adoption. By adding our prayers and support to the adoption, we participate spiritually in its sacred entrustment.
With scripture verses and prayers at each step for all involved, entrustment of the child proceeds from the birth parents to God's people --- the church, and then to the adoptive parents.
The celebration concludes with prayer for all of us in the Living Trust. Everyone present participates in and supports the adoptive entrustment, and we renew our trust in God and in each other --- the Living Trust.
Foundational Principles of The Living Trust
If children are a sacred trust from God, adoption must be no less sacred. Entrustment of a child to adoptive parents is as sacred as a biological birth from God. All parents are Trustees of living assets: The Living Trust.
Trust: Foundation of the City of God
We need to rediscover trust. Trust is a foundation that needs rebuilding. But what is trust?
Trust is a bond between people who love something --- or someone --- together. (We all know people who love only themselves. And sure enough: They only trust people who love them!)
But what happens when, together, we love God? Our trust grows into a faith that will take action. Our loyalty --- both to God and to each other --- overpowers evil. Loving God together is the foundation of the City of God.
And loving God's gift of life together is the foundation of adoption.
Trust: Adoption's Foundation
We need to rediscover the sacred tradition of adoption too. Look what Trust can do when, together, we love God's gift of life through adoption:
Moses' mother entrusted him for adoption by the daughter of the very Pharaoh plotting to kill him. And today, we have the Ten Commandments.
Joseph adopted his stepson, Jesus Christ, and parented Him as his own. And today, we have salvation.
This is Living Trust in action.
The Victorian era came to view adoption as a shameful cover-up for adult failings. Today, people are rediscovering how adoption is a win/win/win, forward-looking, life-affirming solution that focuses on the child's best interests. As such, adoption is not a gift OF the child, but a gift TO the child --- the gift of parenting. And through prayer, we, the people of God, share in this sacred Living Trust of loving a child together --- supporting the adoptive parents, and joining our trust with the birth parents in entrusting their child's parenting to the adoptive parents.
Adoption: The Opportunity of a Lifetime!
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