The Adoptee Experience - California Comic
Provides Adoption Insights
by Laurie Frisch
"A child needs two married parents." "Your
child will be better off." "A baby adopted at birth
wont know the difference." These are the words
many young pregnant mothers hear from well-meaning friends,
relatives and especially from those who profit from adoption.
But are they right?
Van Nuys, CA(PRWEB) July 28, 2004 -- Born in 1965 in a maternity
home in Richmond, VA to a 17-year-old unmarried mother, Tricia
Shore received a luxury kittens get, but many human babies
who are being adopted-out today are denied: She got to stay
with her real mother for four weeks before taken away by a
social worker. However, four weeks is not long enough for
a kitten much less a human child.
Now married with two children of her own and expecting a
third, Shore has come a long way. She has a Bachelor of Arts
in Speech Communication, a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics,
and a Master of Arts on English and Creative Writing. A few
nights a week she enjoys being 'Comic Mom,' a comedienne.
She has performances coming up at the Ice House in Pasedena,
the Berubian Second Stage Theatre in Anaheim, the Aztec Hotel
in Monrovia as well as the Laugh Factory Showcase in Hollywood.
To find her writings or her next show, go to her website at
www.comicmom.com.
Shore is still affected by her adoptive experience and the
loss of her mother at such a tender age. She tries to convey
what the adoption experience is like to those of us who've
never been there: "I missed knowing about myself, knowing
my roots, so much that I would not have a child myself until
I knew that I could tell my child who they were. I want people
to know that having a young mom is better than losing your
mom. People who can't have children have no right to separate
a child from her mother, family and heritage."
Being reunited with her mother and father as an adult has
helped Shore. She learned more about herself, got to see someone
who looked like her, and also to see where many of her talents
come from. But as with most adoptees, the reunion is a bittersweet
experience. In Shore's case, her mother was extremely happy
to see her again, yet she was so affected by the cruel shaming
she experienced as an unmarried mother in the 60's that she
could not bring herself to introduce her daughter to other
people. When Shore made the mistake of referring to herself
as her mother's daughter to a co-worker of her mother, her
mother reverted into her shame and broke off the relationship.
In adoption reunion, rejection like this is horribly traumatic.
But with so little realistic counseling available here in
the United States for moms and adoptees to process their feelings
in advance, it's not unusual for misunderstandings to occur.
Reunion is not the simple event as shown on television. Many
moms and adoptees find they need to pull back at times, sometimes
for years, to process their intense emotions before communicating
again. This loss of contact after so many years apart may
be devastating for the other person and for siblings and others
as well.
Shore sometimes works through her feelings with her comedy
act. "In my comedy I talk about being a mom and right
now about being pregnant. If I feel really comfortable with
a crowd, which I usually am, then I'll do my adoption material.
In comedy, the audience will laugh if you're honest; If you're
not, they won't." Asked what's funny about adoption,
Shore says: "Good comedy is often based on tragedy. Comedy's
a great way to get the message across to people about what
adoption is really like."
Speaking as an adoptee she says: "I always believed
I should feel good about being adopted. I was often told how
lucky I was and how special it was that I was 'chosen.' The
people who said that to me werent adoptees so I wish
I'd asked them 'Really? So I guess it's too bad you stayed
with your parents.' Maybe I should ask the next parent who
tells me such nonsense: 'Hey, well, which child are you going
to give away?' or 'Maybe my sons would have a better life
being brought up by some celebrity'. I just imagine my son
coming to me around age 25 and saying, ' Mom, I could have
gone to private schools and Harvard if you'd given me away.'
That's the bizarre logic used to promote adoption, as if someone
would trade their mom for some luxury!"
"Don't get me wrong. We adoptees all love our adopters.
But no one can replace parents, ever. Parents are made when
a child is conceived." Shore now refers to her adopters
by their first names: Ann and Beauford. "The main problem
which adoptees face is the pretense of family. If adopters
did not pretend to be parents and if they honored a child's
parents as such, many issues with adoption would resolve themselves.
I like to think some of us have integrity about parenthood.
This stuff about having 'two moms' and 'two dads' is not only
incorrect, it's insulting to real parents. Please don't use
the ugly 'birth' words. My mother is my mother is my mother.
She is not my breeder; She is my mother."
"Every time I think about adoption, or someone tells
me about someone who is adopting, I think of that mother and
baby being separated. It's horrible." Like many adoptees,
Shore is considering incorporating her mother's maiden name
into her own name to regain that part of her identity. "My
children's names are already true family names with the middle
names taken from my mother and father," she says.
Shore is a mom's mom, a woman who puts motherhood ahead of
her other endeavors. "As a society we try all kinds of
ways to separate moms and children, from daycare and bottle
feeding to adoption. Especially during the first year, a child
needs his or her mother more than ever. Sometimes a mom needs
to work, but so often moms throw their kids in day care all
day and don't breastfeed because the so-called experts say
its okay. Then kids grow up disconnected from mothers
and home and who knows how many problems that causes."
But don't get the idea that Shores self-esteem is derived
from motherhood alone. Her favorite quote is from Carl Jung:
"Nothing has a stronger influence psychologically on
their environment, and especially on their children, than
the unlived lives of parents." A writer and a comedienne,
Shore is an example of a mom who embraces life.
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