Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
1 2 3 4
Sorry for the loss of your parents. I have two daughters. Oldest one is 30 and the other is 23. We had fertility issues but I always knew that I wanted to adopt a child. We adopted our oldest daughter and were planning to adopt a second.

We had planned a trip to New York and just before leaving I was going to mail the final paperwork for our second child. I didn’t have a stamp and figured as soon as we returned home I would mail it.

We were in NY for 10 days and we attended mass at St. Patrick’s while there. During the prayer intentions I prayed that we would be able to adopt another child soon. I have no idea why I did this, absolutely no idea! I stopped in the middle of my silent prayer to God and told him that I was not going to limit Him, that if He wanted me to have a baby, no matter what I had been through medically (I went through hell and back, told I would never have a baby) that I was open to an adoption or biological child. Then after mass I burned a candle in church as I always do.

Absolutely loved NY, had so much fun but later became very irritable in NY! Nothing tasted right, smells got to me, etc. My brother was living there and suspected I was pregnant because I wasn’t acting like myself but didn’t dare tell me knowing all I had been through.

Came home, my friend came over to visit and told me that I looked awful, exhausted and so forth. She is a very close friend so she is comfortable being honest with me. I said to her that I was tired from the trip. She looked me dead in the eye and told me I was pregnant! I thought she was crazy. She insisted I go to the doctor. I bought a pregnancy test, was pregnant and was in shock! 7 years of fertility issues! I remembered my prayer in mass. I feel God was preparing me for being pregnant. I was already 3 months along when I went to doctor.

Horrible high risk pregnancy, I almost lost the baby, I almost died but we made it!

I volunteered at highscools to speak about adoption. I served on my local auxiliary board for years with an adoption agency. I allowed the students to ask me questions after my presentations. I wanted them to feel comfortable with me. I told them they could ask anything they wanted to ask.

Great questions from those kids! One girl said, “My aunt is 40 and having a baby. Isn’t that too old?” Haha! I was 40 but have never looked my age. I giggled and told her, no! and that I was 40 when I gave birth to my child.

But the best question that day was from a young man who asked me if I loved my biological daughter more than the one I adopted.

At first his question crushed me, (I didn’t show him his question hurt) because love is love to me and there is no difference if a child is adopted or not. I love my kids the same. I was so glad that he asked me that because I had the opportunity to share that with the class. I told him it was a smart question and I was glad to tell him the answer and that I appreciated that he wanted to ask me instead of assuming or wondering.

I miss my outreach work. I also worked with birth mothers and had them tell their side. It was healing for them. They were comfortable with me because I knew both sides, adopted a child and gave birth to a child. My love is absolutely the same for both!

You sound like an amazing son and I am sure your parents loved you. I told my daughter very young. I wish you and your brother had been told.

A long time ago some adoptive parents did not know how to handle it. People are better educated now.

I had a closed adoption because open adoption wasn’t legal then. I would have welcomed an open adoption and told my daughter if she wants to meet her birth parents that I would never see it as a threat. We are secure in our relationship.

There is no right or wrong here. Follow your heart. Be at peace.
Helpful Answer (13)
Report
AnnReid Apr 2019
Your story is incredibly sweet to me. Thank you SO MUCH for sharing it.❤️
(6)
Report
See 2 more replies
Did your parents love you and your brother? That is what's important. I don't think my dad was my dad (since I was born 4 years after his death), but I considered him my dad anyway.

I'm sorry for your loss.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
NeedHelpWithMom Apr 2019
Good answer, he was your dad. 😊
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
Sorry about the loss of your parents.  I am glad that you had such wonderful parents who loved you very much.
 
In the 1950's, 1960's and early 1970's,  there was still a BIG stigma regarding out-of-wedlock pregnancies, so often the unwed mother would "go visit" an aunt or other relatives because she (the unwed mother) was "sick" and would have the baby while "visiting the aunt".  (Or the unwed mother would go "on vacation" or took "another job" way across the country until the baby was born.)  Once the unwed mother had the baby, she would return home "cured" of her "infliction".  In some cases, the aunt and uncle or friends of the aunt and uncle would "have a baby" (in other words, they would adopt the baby secretly). Only the aunt and uncle and those adopting the baby knew where the baby went to, often the unwed mother did not even know where the baby went. It might be that your mother is/was a close friend of the family and your parents adopted you without telling anyone else. So it is possible that very few relatives even knew that you where adopted.

"Closed adoptions" were normal and "Open adoptions" were frowned upon. It is also possible that other relatives knew that you were adopted, but everyone agreed NOT to talk about the fact that you were adopted. It all depended on the circumstances.

I know of adoptive parents who did not tell their children that they were adopted because they were scared that the children would hate them, the children would love them less, or afraid that the children would feel less loved or even unwanted by both their birth mother and their adoptive parents.

You have some wonderful memories of your adoptive parents.  Now that they are gone, it is time for you to take care of yourself and to be kind to yourself.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
Yes I agree, my parents were wonderful (difficult at the end) but they did give us a great life. I never for once thought of this scenario. That is why I think I am so shocked. I even look like my Mother, or so we all thought.
(4)
Report
Surprisingly, this doesn't really surprise me! We had the same thing going on in my extended family--and the mother took the "secret" to her grave. How her 11 sibs DIDN'T is still beyond me.

I don't know if they did this to protect you, somehow, adoption, at least when I was a kid was a kind of "stigma" although I never saw why! I had one friend who was adopted and she lorded it over the rest of us as she was CHOSEN and we were just whatever our parents' DNA made us.

Sounds like mom wanted you to know, but didn't want to tell you. This sounds like something my mom would have done, and I imagine our mothers to be of the same generation.

The 23 and me thing--amazing. My BIL had it done and found out he (so my husband also) was >5% Malawi--so BIL was thrilled to tell his mother (an enormous racist!!) and she flipped out. He doubled down and told her he also knew he was a '9 lb preemie'--meaning his parents "had" to get married. She about passed out, thinking she had kept this secret for 70 years. Big secret; his parents married 33 weeks before he was born and MIL hated FIL with a grand passion---so we all knew long before she knew we knew.

Yes, there is your DNA, which makes you who you are, but your true parents are the people who raised and loved you.

Having said that--my world would be spinning too. We ALL have skeletons in the closet. Luckily, things that were once considered taboo, or embarassing are not even blinked at.

If you choose to seek out your "birth parents" I would caution you that there may be a great chance that their family never knew about you--or it was hidden away. A friend of my daughter's "broke through" a closed adoption and showed up on he birth mother's door one day--no announcement, nothing. The woman's husband didn't even know. It has not ended well and the woman who was adopted felt twice "thrown away" although he adoptive parents could not have loved her more. Tread carefully in that arena--although sheer curiosity would eat at me!
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
LOL about your BIL. Thanks for the laugh :-)
(4)
Report
Wow. I think it's wrong your parents didn't tell you this. Other relatives had to know too. Like there was a big "we don't talk about it!" taboo. But you had the right to know your own story. Finding out your bio-family story now is in no way discrediting your family.

But, as others have mentioned, they came up in the era of adoption being a family secret or even shameful. I can't imagine why it was like that... what would ever be wrong about giving kids a good home they otherwise wouldn't have?

When a friend and her husband were looking to adopt, they had wanted a closed adoption-- no contact at all from birth mother. They were told that would be almost impossible, as they're not done much anymore. In this case, the agreement was birth mom (age 16) could visit once a year with adoptive parents present in a neutral location (they lived in different states). Birth mom knew what state they lived in, but not their address. Adoptive parents could send her photos. Over time the birth mom drifted away and is no longer in touch. Birth mom then had two more kids in as many years. :(

When I was growing up (70s-80s) I had friends who were adopted and the common story was "I don't remember being told; I just always knew."
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
Yes I found some letters of recommendation from my Aunt and my Grandparents to the adoption place. So some of my relatives knew and no one ever said anything.
(4)
Report
Did you have trouble getting a Passport? Did they ask you for a fee to reasearch the problem?

My Mother is my mother but my Dad adopted me. Never knew my bio Dad. I was not told this till I was about to be married. A lot of things made sense. My daughter was adopted by my now DH. We went over seas just after my daughters adoption. To receive a passport, you must prove every name you went by. So, I sent daughters old birthcertificate, her new and adoption papers. No problem. Didn't think to do that for me until the letter came that there was a problem with my birth certificate. It was dated five years after my birth. I then had to ask Mom for my adoption papers. She had destroyed my original birth certificate. The papers were excepted and I received my passport. Do not get rid of those papers. They are legal proof of a name change.

At one time there was a stigma that went along with adoption. I had an elderly Aunt that felt her granddaughter was the way she was because she was adopted. The GD is your age. So, your Mom was probably protecting you.

Just curious, are u and brother full siblings?
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
I did not have any trouble obtaining a passport. My birth certificate was apparently changed a few years after my birth from what I can tell by looking at all the documentation I found in the bag. It's like my original birth certificate had never happened.
One other thing I found out is Mike is not my birth name.

Oh I forgot to answer about my brother. He is 3 years younger than me and was adopted from a different agency in a different state we had moved to. So it seems like it would be almost impossible for us to be connected by blood in any way.
(4)
Report
See 1 more reply
Snakes alive!

Er, Mike, just in case you're inclined to try to take this on the chin - don't. It IS an enormously big deal, even if you do think you're old and big enough that you ought to be able to cope.

What are you going to do about telling your brother, just for example? Presumably he was as much in the dark as you.

I should get professional advice sooner rather than later. Adoption agencies can point you to experienced counsellors.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
Thank you. I plan on telling my brother as I am sure he would have told me had he known. We don't cross paths often but perhaps this will an excuse to search for him more diligently.
(7)
Report
mikejrexec - I am sorry for the loss of your parents and glad that your caregiving days are over. Now is your chance to focus on your life and do what you want.

I heard a very wise woman once said: "The real parents are the ones that raise you and love you, not the ones that gave birth to you."

From the view of the parents, I think there is a fear that the child will not love them as much once the child finds out he/she was adopted. Perhaps, your parents had this fear and didn't want to tell you.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
I had not thought about my parent's possible fear. Thank you for that insight. We were very very close. Perhaps they did not want that to possibly change.
(14)
Report
Wow. I'm so sorry for your great losses. You've had so many shocks in a short period of time it's no wonder you're numb. I'm so glad for you that you can come here and get things off your chest. It is amazing what typing out such occurrences and getting support here can do for one's soul. {hug}

Yes, I agree with others who state that adoptions--to many families--were top secret. I'm so relieved for you that you had such loving parents! And you continue to be considerate to your brother.

I hope you can find peace in the coming weeks with finalizing your mother's business, taking care of you, and coming to terms with your news. {bigger hug}
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Very interesting... you were supposed to find the papers! Sounds like the beginning of an intriguing book/movie...You’re right when you said she left it up to fate & there’s nothing wrong with investigating your background if you’re curious. Also, its great that you had a positive childhood/life, not everyone does....best of luck !!
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

Omg what a shock, no wonder you feel numb!

I'm fairly new here and don't know your story with your parents, but I'll assume unless you say otherwise that they were good and loving parents. I'm sorry for your loss, but glad the toll of caregiving is over.

I wonder if your mom kept those papers because she intended to tell you one day?

Did you tell your brother yet?

I don't know what to say except to offer you a cyber hug, and remind you that adopted families are real families. Your parents chose you and your brother with the desire to love you and raise you. They will always be "your parents" just as you were always their child. Nothing changes the love you all shared for a lifetime.

Please be extra kind to yourself during this time of grief and shock with this news.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
Thank you very much. Yes we had a great life and I agree that they are "my parents" no matter what. I have not told my brother as he comes in and out of my life for long periods of time. I will the next time I hear from him as I feel he deserves to know. As for whether mom intended to ever tell us I think not. I do guess that by leaving the papers where they were found she was leaving it up to fate whether I found them or not.
(13)
Report
I think being numb is a normal response. If I were in your shoes, I would wonder if she intended to destroy those papers or show them to you eventually. Sadly, you will never know. That generation was so stubborn and proud. For a lot of us, they were more worried about what their friends thought than what their kids thought.....Maybe she never got up the courage to tell you.

Now that you are free of caregiving, do not let this be an anchor around your neck. Now is the time to take care of YOU. Seek the counsel of a good friend, counselor or pastor. I have found a few weird things when cleaning out paper work as well, but I have decided to shred it and move on....as we cannot fix the past. We can only work on today and tomorrow. Hugs to you.
Helpful Answer (20)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
You are so right. I am definitely not going to dwell on it right now and I am the same person I am today as I was last month. Thank you for reminding me about that generation. It may have been some advice they got from a doctor or someone to not tell us. It's in the past and I had a great childhood. I need to remember that.
(14)
Report
Oh WOW!

I have a friend and colleague (also 57, by the way) who had a cousin's child visiting recently from their home country.

The cousin's son (an adult) said, well, it's really nice of you to let me stay here seeing as how we're not really family.

My friend said "come again?" The guy said , well you're adopted. Wait, you didn't know that?

No, my friend did NOT know that.

He's taking it well; immediately went ot 23 and Me to get his DNA done. Is researching possible relatives, to see if he can find out who is bio parents were. But he says that he had the best possible adoptive parents (they apparently realized he was gay before HE did; loved him unconditionally and allowed him, always, to be who he was. Protected him from bullying by children and teachers (he says "I was always a little fairy") and launched him into the successful human being that he is.

Just big (((((((hugs))))))) from me. I hope that you can find your way through this; if you find yourself having difficulties, please seek out counseling; there is NO need to suffer this revelation alone.
Helpful Answer (20)
Report
mikejrexec Apr 2019
Thank you Barb. Very good advice. For now I am just letting it settle and taking my deserved rest from care giving.
(12)
Report
1 2 3 4
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter