The first of three videos made for the Adoption Summit Experience, 2015. Hear my story and learn about some important truths necessary for birthmother survival post placement. I hope this is helpful.
Building up Birthmothers
"The greatest miracle of adoption is that we survive." - Birthmother
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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!
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Adoption Summit Experience: Come Climb with us
Processing grief is difficult, especially when one's grief is not acknowledged by others. Birthmothers are rarely afforded the opportunity to express their grief and share their placement experience with others. There is often a discomfort on the part of the recipient, not knowing what to say or how to respond. Others are surprised at the grief and loss felt by a birthmother. After all, in many cases, she made the decision to place her child for adoption. Shouldn't she be okay with it?
This month for National Adoption Awareness Month, I was blessed to be part of a new adoption initiative spearheaded by LeAnne Parsons, adult adoptee and life coach. This free on line event offers fresh perspectives from all three sides of the adoption triad - adoptive parents, adult adoptees and birthparents. The videos not only provide an opportunity for people to better understand adoption, they also give a voice to those that are often unheard.
Please join me today, as birthmothers share their stories, resources available across the country and tips for self care. It's a free event. Sign up at the website below.
http://www.adoptionsummitexperience.com/
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
The Benefits of Equine Therapy for Members of the Adoption Triad
How Equine The Seven Core Issues
"Equine therapy can provide an adoptee with a full-circle form of treatment that can touch upon each one of the seven core issues they might face, plus many more. These seven issues are as follows, and can be addressed with equine therapy in the following ways:
- Loss – By working with a team of professionals and establishing a relationship with a horse through equine ground exercises, adoptees can begin getting settled in an environment where they feel comfortable discussing their feelings of loss and begin addressing them.
- Rejection – It can be easy for an adoptee to feel rejected by their biological family, so equine therapists can help them begin to develop a relationship with their horse that is reflective of their efforts to make the relationship successful. This can show them that in many cases, they will get in return the efforts that they put into their relationships, making them less fearful of rejection in the future.
- Guilt/Shame – Feelings of guilt and shame surrounding their abandonment can cause an adoptee to carry these emotions with them like a burden. Similar to dealing with loss, working with a therapist and a horse simultaneously can allow an adoptee to open up about their emotions in ways that allow both of them to address the issues with purpose.
- Grief – Grief can quickly make an adoptee slip into depression, therefore their participation in equine therapy can be hugely beneficial, as it keeps them active both mentally and physically, and provides them with an outlet for emotional distress.
- Identity – Equine therapy, its exercises, its counseling and the horse’s overall power of delivering an emotional connection can greatly improve an adoptee’s self-esteem. By doing this, equine therapy can help an adoptee develop their own sense of identity, rather than feeling like they do not have one as a result of their adoption issues.
Intimacy & Relationships – It can be complicated for an adoptee to get close to others, as they are fearful of being abandoned once again. Therefore, similar to how equine therapy works on addressing rejection, it can help an adoptee develop strong communication skills, establish understanding of others and learn the true value of relationships so they can prevent withdrawal from friends, family and significant others.
- Control – Because most adoptees have nothing to do with their adoption or their abandonment, many of them can begin to naturally desire to control everything around them to prevent anything else life shattering from occurring. Working one on one with a horse can quickly show an adoptee that they cannot control everything because horses are often confident enough in themselves to push back when someone tries to negatively control their behaviors. This allows adoptees to understand positive control and learn how to apply it to their lives." http://herdbyahorse.com/2013/04/12/treating-adoption-issues-with-equine-therapy/
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Being A Child-less Mother on Mother's Day
Mother’s Day – for many, this is a day of celebration and gratitude - a time to show thanksgiving towards the woman who sacrificed years of her own life to prepare you for yours. For others however, those feelings of gratitude are overshadowed by feelings of tremendous grief and loss. Women struggling with infertility, women that have miscarried, women that have experienced the pre-mature death of a child and even women that have chosen to place a child for adoption struggle to survive this celebration with a smile on their face and an ache in their heart.
Society has validated the necessity of grieving the loss of a loved one but what happens when friends and loved ones are unaware of the ongoing torment within the soul of a child-less woman - a torment that in some cases, doesn’t diminish with time? I have never struggled with infertility nor have I experienced a miscarriage. I can only imagine the pain these women struggle with on Mother’s Day and throughout the year. I have however lost a child through adoption, a unique and painful kind of loss that few people are even aware exists.
I am the birthmother to a son that I placed for adoption over 23 years ago. Although I never doubted the decision I made, I engaged in years of self-destructive numbing and running to distract myself from the pain and avoid my feelings of grief and loss. It was only after a friend suggested my need to grieve the loss of my son that I realized I had never allowed myself to feel the pain and loss from placement. Yes, adoption was a choice that I made and a good choice, but not all good choices feel good. This one most definitely did not!
Approximately 2-4% of women experiencing unplanned pregnancy choose adoption for their child. And although it is a good choice for some, it can still result in tremendous feelings of grief and loss. Knowing that her child may have a better chance at life and success if raised by another family, a birthmother willingly chooses to break her own heart for the betterment of her child. “Had I loved him any less,” one birthmother writes, “he would be here with me now.” With that choice however, comes not only the loss of a child but a lifetime of forsaken memories as the mother of that child.
Whether voluntarily or coerced, numerous studies reveal the impact of relinquishment on birthmothers. They include:
- Ongoing feelings of unresolved grief.
- Higher levels of depression and mental health issues.
- Drug and alcohol dependency as numbing agents.
- A lower likelihood of marriage and subsequent children, and
- A higher chance of secondary infertility.
This Mother’s Day and throughout the year, there are things you can do to support the birthmothers and other child-less mothers in your social circles, your faith community, and even your family. Let me suggest a few ideas.
- Acknowledge her mother-hood - Although she may not be parenting, she still experienced a pregnancy and may have even given birth. Let her know you are thinking of her on this special day (Mother’s Day) and that she is not forgotten.
- Let her talk about her child - When a child-less mother is denied the freedom to tell her story, she is being asked to deny that her experience ever happened. Telling her story and talking about her child can bring healing.
- Don’t limit her grief to your timeframe – “The only people who think there’s a time limit for grief, have never lost a piece of their heart.” Unknown
- Lastly, if you think she needs help coping with her grief, encourage her to seek professional help to talk about it.
I often wonder where I would be if someone had offered this validation and support to me when I became a birthmother many years ago. Don’t misunderstand. There still would have been tremendous pain and loss but perhaps with the support of others, I could have avoided a lifetime of heartbreak and regret from the years of self-destructive behaviors that ensued. So I say Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers that engage in the hard, yet rewarding job of parenting. And to the child-less moms that are suffering in silence this month, I acknowledge you; I recognize the incredible strength that you possess as a result of your experience and I validate your journey. Never give up on your journey towards health, healing and happiness! For more information about birthmother grief, loss and support, visit www.birthmotherwellness.com.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Thursday, December 4, 2014
Letting Go Was the Best Decision I Ever Made
Last year, I couldn't stand it any longer so asked my 22 year old birth son what he thought of me. We have had an open adoption for most of his life but I have spent very little quality time with him. He has always known how I feel about him but has never reciprocated those feelings. I wanted to find out if I even mattered to him or if I was just an obligation...and his response, although heart wrenching, was what I needed to hear.
I have spent every day since his birth living for him - hoping he would one day want some sort of relationship with me. And selfishly, I hoped that he would somehow miss me, yet still be grateful for the life he was given. Over the years, his amazing family included me in their lives. I am sane today by the grace of God and because of their commitment to me as well as to our son. But I discovered later from his adoptive mother that each reunion caused feelings of sadness and confusion to surface all over again for him as it did for me. It was a wound re-opened, causing a need to grieve the loss all over again. But it was worth it to me just to have him in my life.
As he grew older, became independent and able to make his own decisions, he reluctantly agreed to seeing me when I would visit his state. Each visit, especially the last one, was amazing. We interacted well and it was clear that he enjoyed our time together just as much as I did. But in the past few years he has more often than not, ignored my invitations to interact and found excuses to avoid a visit.
When he was younger, my constant desire for interaction and reunion was facilitated by his adoptive parents. I lived my life in anticipation of the next letter or picture in the mail or with hopes for another reunion. The desire to see my son came to fruition because they made it happen. But for the past few years, my longing to see him, my yearning to hold him in my arms as a mother holds her child, my desire for him to acknowledge me as another mother of sorts and my anticipation of reunions have all been denied, causing enough let down and heartache that I have had to question whether or not my heart could continue on this birth mother journey.
That brings us back to the question I asked him last fall. After realizing that I had been living my life on hold in hopes of a relationship with him and still seeing him as my son, I knew I needed to re-define my relationship with him and my role in his life and find some answers so that I could begin living again - with or without him. When I didn't get the response that I was hoping for, I knew I had to make some significant changes in my life if I was to ever move forward and have a future. I knew it was time to "let go" and attempt to "move on."
I have heard from him twice since then and most of the time, I am okay with that. Since I made a conscious effort to "move on" with my life, my heart doesn't ache as much. I rarely sense a deep longing to see him or know him better. I have been able to tend to the issues in my life that I neglected for so long.
While addressing coping strategies of a birth mother post-relinquishment, one author said, "Sometimes the best a birth mother can do is to remain in denial and numbness for the rest of her adult life." Perhaps that's more realistic. I wonder if those of us birth mothers who have "let go" are choosing denial. Denial of our heartache. Denial of our loss. Denial of the void in our lives. After all, it's not a pan of brownies that we are walking away from, but our very own flesh and blood. Part of our soul that will never be filled by anything other than the child that we once relinquished.
I have spent every day since his birth living for him - hoping he would one day want some sort of relationship with me. And selfishly, I hoped that he would somehow miss me, yet still be grateful for the life he was given. Over the years, his amazing family included me in their lives. I am sane today by the grace of God and because of their commitment to me as well as to our son. But I discovered later from his adoptive mother that each reunion caused feelings of sadness and confusion to surface all over again for him as it did for me. It was a wound re-opened, causing a need to grieve the loss all over again. But it was worth it to me just to have him in my life.
As he grew older, became independent and able to make his own decisions, he reluctantly agreed to seeing me when I would visit his state. Each visit, especially the last one, was amazing. We interacted well and it was clear that he enjoyed our time together just as much as I did. But in the past few years he has more often than not, ignored my invitations to interact and found excuses to avoid a visit.
When he was younger, my constant desire for interaction and reunion was facilitated by his adoptive parents. I lived my life in anticipation of the next letter or picture in the mail or with hopes for another reunion. The desire to see my son came to fruition because they made it happen. But for the past few years, my longing to see him, my yearning to hold him in my arms as a mother holds her child, my desire for him to acknowledge me as another mother of sorts and my anticipation of reunions have all been denied, causing enough let down and heartache that I have had to question whether or not my heart could continue on this birth mother journey.
That brings us back to the question I asked him last fall. After realizing that I had been living my life on hold in hopes of a relationship with him and still seeing him as my son, I knew I needed to re-define my relationship with him and my role in his life and find some answers so that I could begin living again - with or without him. When I didn't get the response that I was hoping for, I knew I had to make some significant changes in my life if I was to ever move forward and have a future. I knew it was time to "let go" and attempt to "move on."
I have heard from him twice since then and most of the time, I am okay with that. Since I made a conscious effort to "move on" with my life, my heart doesn't ache as much. I rarely sense a deep longing to see him or know him better. I have been able to tend to the issues in my life that I neglected for so long.
While addressing coping strategies of a birth mother post-relinquishment, one author said, "Sometimes the best a birth mother can do is to remain in denial and numbness for the rest of her adult life." Perhaps that's more realistic. I wonder if those of us birth mothers who have "let go" are choosing denial. Denial of our heartache. Denial of our loss. Denial of the void in our lives. After all, it's not a pan of brownies that we are walking away from, but our very own flesh and blood. Part of our soul that will never be filled by anything other than the child that we once relinquished.
Monday, December 1, 2014
Thankful
http://adoption.com/our-placement-story/ |
Thankful
Today, a woman places her child into the arms of another. A birthmother loses a piece of her soul and the soul of an adoptive is complete. There is no anger; no resentment; just love and gratitude from two different women brought together from love, for love and to love a child.
Thankful. Sometimes the pain seems too intense; the loss so profound that it seems impossible to be thankful for anything. But in the midst of darkness, there is always something to be grateful for.
I am grateful for a woman that loves my son as much as I do.
I am grateful for a woman who sacrificed so much to raise my boy.
I am grateful that my son has a father to teach him how to be a man.
I am grateful that he has a mother to nurture him and demonstrate lasting love.
I am grateful that my son was raised with a strong faith.
I am grateful that my son had the opportunity to follow his dreams.
I am grateful that my son was able to use his athletic ability.
I am grateful that my son has had experiences that I never could have given him.
I am grateful that my son was raised in safety.
I am grateful that my son was never in want.
I am grateful that I was loved by my son's family.
I am grateful that I was included as his extended family.
I am grateful that I wasn't forgotten on holidays.
I am grateful that my son's mother was courageous enough to remember me on Mother's Day.
I am grateful that I was cared for by a wonderful adoption agency.
I am grateful that they advocated for me, my needs and my desires.
I am grateful that I have been able to use my loss to help others through theirs.
I could go on. I don't always feel thankful but there is always something to be thankful for. Last week, as I grieved my 23rd Thanksgiving without my son, I am still thankful for his amazing adoptive family - his real family - for making memories with him that will last a lifetime. So Happy Thanksgiving to my son and his family. Happy Thanksgiving to all the adoptive families and birth parents on this journey of love and loss. I am so very thankful for all of you!
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