Welcome Home

I am not a counselor; therefore I cannot offer professional advice or take responsibility for anyone else's life by my own. What I can offer though are words of encouragement and wisdom from my own journey - a journey of healing that is ongoing and lifelong. I am a 44 year old birthmother. Twenty one years ago, there was no venue for me to express my grief and receive the support from others who had walked in my shoes years before. I created this blog for that very purpose. I want to share my story with you - the highs and lows, the memories, the heartache, the joy – and encourage you to keep on. On this page, you will find inspirational songs, birthmother stories, buttons connecting you to additional birthmother support and to faith-based websites and sources for professional help . Together, let's celebrate the heroic choice that each of us has made to put the precious life of another human being before our own. Welcome home!

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Joy Cometh in the Morning!

"Grief is the one pain that heals all others. Grief is the most important pain there is."
How People Grow
Henry Cloud and John Townsend

Gerald Sittser wrote in A Grace Disguised that “the choice to love requires the courage to grieve”. If we choose to love, our hearts will eventually be broken - death, abandonment, abuse, betrayal and for the birthmother, great sacrifice. But if we choose to protect our hearts in fear of the inevitable, we miss out on one of life's greatests treasures - Communing with another human soul.


Tears: the best gift of God to suffering Man.
John Keble (1792-1866)

And while grief can be overwhelming and for some, debilitating, our tears are not in vain. God sees our pain. He hears our cry for help. Psalm 56:8 says, "You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.

 . . . weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning" (Psalm 30:5)

Although there is not a direct correlation between this verse from scripture and individual suffering, there is also no scriptural problem with this interpretation.  God does promise his children that although we may suffer many trials while on this earth, there is a joy that is extended to all Christ-followers that comes from the hope we have in a better future.

I'm waiting for the joy...
I never  imagined that twenty years after placing my son for adoption,  I would begin to experience a pain so profound; a gutt wrenching, hard to breathe kind of ache in my heart that knaws away at my soul. Although human beings are resiliant, there is for some, a pain that is far too great to process. As a result, our heart shuts down and we move forward without resolution for years.

I am just now coming to terms with my loss - lost dreams, lost memories, the label of "mother" that I will never hear him speak. Tears flow freely these days. They come and go as they please. The only way through such a loss is hope - hope that one day I will figure out how to move on with my life while still maintaining a relationship with my son; hope that the intensity of my grief will subside and I will experience joy once again after twenty years of sadness. To be honest, I don't remember what it feels like. I hope to find out someday soon.

Friday, August 17, 2012

A Mother's Love

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Disenfranchised Grief and Ambiguous Loss

I decided to choose birthmother grief as my research project for grad school this year. What an amazing journey the past few months have been as I have prepared for this semester. There is so much to read about birthmother grief and surprising to me, numerous studies have been done researching the impact of relinquishment on birthmothers over the years.

There are a few common threads that I have found in my reading. I'll share two with you today.

DISENFRANCHISED GRIEF
Because grief from relinquishment isn't recognized by society as a whole, few understand the profound pain and feelings of loss that most birthmothers experience after relinquishing. After all, she chose to place her child for adoption, so why should she be upset? This is a common question. Let me clear things up for everyone. Just because something is the right thing to do doesn't mean that it's easy and that there isn't pain and loss. Most birthmothers choose adoption because they know that their child will be better off in another family, NOT because they are selfish and want to remain in a promiscuous or party lifestyle.

Because society as a whole doesn't understand and recognize the need for birthmothers to grieve, we are often left to grieve alone, attempting on our own to figure out why we feel the way that we feel, afraid to ask for help and afraid to express the indescribable pain that we feel on and off throughout lives. Birthmothers most frequently grieve in isolation and that isolation along with the questions and fears and uncertainties that she feels can and often does lead to psychological trauma, PTSD, depression, suicide attempts, anxiety, unresolved grief, physical complications, etc..

AMBIGUOUS LOSS
I have a friend on facebook who shared about two young girls in her area that disappeared a few months ago. They have few leads and the community is heartbroken. But there is still hope. Hope that the girls are still alive and will be returned home one way. And then there are pictures of missing children, just inside the door at Walmart. Have you seen those? Some have been missing for a short time. Others have been missing for years.

Have you ever wondered what the parents of these children must feel? There is no closure because there is no dead body. There is always that hope of a reunion. Hope that someone will find their child and return them home safely. For those children who have been missing for a short time, the hope is more fresh. It seems more of a reality. But it gets tricky for those who have children that have been missing for years. Are they dead or alive? Do we grieve a death of that which we are uncertain? Do we continue hoping that one day, our child will return and we can wrap our arms tightly around them and remind them over and over again how deeply they are loved and how much they were missed.

Ambiguity is something that is uncertain. Ambiguous loss results when there is no finality or resolution to a situation. Something that can't fully be grieved because it can't fully be acknowledged. For birthmothers of open adoption, ambiguous loss results from the "what if" and the "when" type questions that remain in their heads. When will I get another letter from my child's adoptive family? When will I receive updated pictures? When will I have another reunion with my child? What if my son or daughter wants more contact with me someday? Exactly who am I to my child and what role do I play in his or her life? Technology complicates things even more. Do I befriend my child on facebook or twitter (something I just learned how to use, by the way) and if so, will that make it even harder to grieve my loss?

Denial can result from the waiting game. Denial that a loss has occurred because there is an ongoing relationship. Confusion about what exactly I am grieving. Uncertainty about a future relationship with my child and even what a future would look like without him. My son is alive and well but living a life without me. He has had a wonderful upbringing with amazing parents and I have been around his entire life so a relationship with me is not high on his list of priorities. So do I grieve and move on with my life? And if so, what exactly am I grieving and what did I lose (a question that I recently found the answer too and will share with you another time)?  Do I wait in hopes that one day we will have a great relationship? Do I wait in hopes that he will one day tell me thank you, tell me how much he loves me and maybe even let the "M" word slip once or twice. I'm referring to the word, "mom" for those of you who didn't catch that. Do I wait in hopes that one day I will be able to wrap my arms around him, just as the mothers of missing children long to do? There is NO END, which makes grieving this loss very difficult. Although open adoption saved my life, I spent the better part of the last 21 years since my son was born, trying to figure out the answers to all of these questions. If my son had died, I would have been able to grieve and move on but my son is alive and well (Thank God!).

I continue to wrestle with these questions and many others. I don't have all the answers but I am learning new things every day. I am learning about myself - who I am, why I am the way that I am, why I feel the way that I feel, and why I do the things that I do. What I have discovered through my research so far is that the answers to most of these questions are directly correlated to what happened August 31st, 1991, the day that I relinquished my son.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

"Get over it!" and Other Things that Grievers Cannot Do

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ashley-davis-bush/grief_b_1721057.html?utm_hp_ref=gps-for-the-soul&ir=GPS+for+the+Soul
Great Article! Read on...

I have been working with grievers for over 20 years. My grief book, Transcending Loss, was published 15 years ago and continues to help readers. One of the reasons for its enduring appeal is that it acknowledges the lifelong impact of grief. In it, I give grievers permission to feel their pain, find meaning in their loss, and stay connected to their dearly departed.
Our pain-averse culture wants to sweep grief under the carpet as quickly as possible. We prefer grievers to finish mourning in a timely manner so that we can all get back on schedule. Grief, however, is ongoing. It has many twists and turns that defy our best attempts at orderliness.
If you or someone you know is grieving, the following grief resource will help you understand what to expect.
What Grievers Cannot Do
  • Get Over It -- Although stoicism is often admired, it is not healthy for grievers. The truth is that a major loss is devastating -- physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Grievers don't simply "get over" such a life-altering experience as one might get over an illness. Grief is a necessary, ongoing journey that fluctuates over time. Grief has no closure.
  • Forget Their Loved One -- Grievers cannot and should not pretend as if their loved one never existed. Most grievers think of their beloved one daily, no matter how many years have gone by. If you, as a friend, never mention the loved one who has died, you are acting as if you've forgotten.

  • Move On -- Grievers are often told to "move on" with life. It is impossible to move on as if nothing has changed when the foundation of one's life has been shattered. Severing a tie to a deceased loved is not possible, nor should it be the goal (see "Moving Forward" in the next section).

  • Be Their Old Self Again -- Grievers are irrevocably changed. They cannot return to being their old selves again. They are no longer the same person after a major loss.

  • Stop Hurting -- Grievers and their loved ones often wish for the pain of grief to stop. The hard truth is that painful feelings of grief will arise again and again over the years. They will continue to "burst" into life at the most inopportune moments. Sometimes a holiday or anniversary will stimulate renewed pain and, at other times, a simple rainy Tuesday is all that it will take.


What Grievers Can Do
  • Integrate Loss Into Life -- Grievers must live with loss, but they do have the choice to reengage with life. The way to begin this lies in the understanding that loss is an inevitable part of life and that their loved one is always with them in their heart.
  • Move Forward -- Grievers may not be able to simply "move on," but they can "move forward" as a changed person with a willingness to accept the many facets of being alive. When grievers move forward they do so with their loved one ever in their memory, their heart, and their spirit.

  • Remember and Stay Connected in Love -- Grievers can make it a practice to honor their loved one and stay connected to them. They can keep journals and letters written to their loved ones, display photographs and speak about them. Grievers are still in relationship to their loved one even though their physical form is no longer on this planet.

  • Embrace a New Self -- Grievers can understand that being forever changed means that while the old self has died, a new self is emerging. This new self has the potential for increased strength, wisdom, compassion, insight, and perspective.

  • Channel Their Pain Into New Energy -- The human spirit is remarkably resilient. Grievers can pour their pain into new life missions, causes, and callings. They may reach out with compassion and understanding to others who suffer. Grievers have a choice to transcend their loss by making meaning out of unspeakable pain.


Grief is a universal human experience that all of us will encounter eventually. Understanding what we can and cannot expect will help ease the process as it unfolds. Loss may change life as we know it, but the unknown is full of possibility.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

PUBLISHED!
My story was published today on a birthmother website. How fun. It was the short version but I have been working on a book so maybe I should start sharing some of that on my blog. I am still on this lifelong journey and find that I get so much encouragement from other birthmothers. We understand each other - regardless of race, religion, open or closed adoption, etc. Check out this link, read on and share your thoughts below. God bless you today.

http://bigtoughgirl.blogspot.com/2012/08/btg-spotlight.html