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Fooled
by Desire
by Tricia Shore, Reunited Adoptee
Desire
When I was four years old, I stood watching as a car with
a Virginia license plate pulled into my North Carolina driveway.
Ours was a driveway that had been surveyed, like the rest
of the house and land, by social workers, certified that
a child should grow up using it to ride a bicycle and eventually
to drive a car into it. Even at four, I did not feel the
level of comfort that the social workers had planned for
me. It was a nice driveway, yes, but it was not my driveway,
not my family, no matter how many legal documents had been
signed. A part of me, one that dared not express itself
at the time, longed for my real mother and father.
Although I loved Beauford and Ann, the wonderful people
who adopted me, I hoped that the young couple in the car
were my natural parents. Adoption separated my mother and
me when I was four weeks old. I do not consciously remember
what it was like not to be adopted. Other people take family
resemblances and kinship for granted. As a child, these
familial rights were as foreign to me as soil in China.
Psychologists in the 1960s usually recommended that adoptees
be told we were adopted and I was. No one told me it was
bad to be adopted, but almost inately, I knew that adoption
meant being rejected by my parents. As I had watched the
car enter the chosen driveway, I hoped that my parents realized
they had made a mistake, that they had missed me and wanted
to see me again. I did not express my sadness when I learned
that the couple was lost and looking for directions. Over
thirty years later, when I gave birth to my first son, I
would understand the desire I felt that day, the bond that
nature creates from conception to childbirth. It is a bond
that cannot be broken or changed by legal documents or anything
else.
Foolishness
My desire to find my mother was strong, so intense that
when my college roommate met a man who told me he would
find my mother, I believed him. I was twenty when Sharon*
brought Gary* to our dorm room. She had met him at the beginning
of the semester, while she was working in the library video
room and he, claiming to be a graduate student, came in
to rent tapes. When we did not find his name in the student
directory, he made up a story about why his name wasn't
there. We believed it.
Sharon was fascinated with the tall tales he told about
"working for the government" and "flying planes" for secret
government missions. He took us out to eat; he told us stories
about foreign countries. His claim of being from the Middle
East seemed plausible, considering his strong accent. Somehow,
his dark features and different pronunciation of words made
him much more appealing to us, European-American Southern
young women. By fall break, he offered to take us from the
supposed safety of North Carolina State in Raleigh to the
unexplored-to-us jungle of Florida. We accepted.
He rented a car. We were soon headed South on I-95. With
more courage than sense, we watched the pine trees of North
Carolina leave our sight and saw the palm trees of Florida
for the first time. It was the 1980s and although we had
a sense that what we were doing was dangerous, television
was not yet filled with stories of young women who had been
left for dead by serial killers. Those things happened somewhere
else, not in the South that we loved so dearly.
After we survived our trip, we felt even safer with him,
knowing that he had not physically abused us, or left us
for dead. We had gone to Disneyworld and Epcot Center, a
much more educational experience than we would have had
going back to our respective hometowns, or so we reasoned.
Despite protests from my roommate's mother and my boyfriend
at that time, we continued seeing this man, spending my
birthday, November 3, with him in Washington, D.C. He told
us that our trip to D.C. was something to do with some mission
with the government. We believed him, both of us appearing
as though we were fresh off the proverbial turnip truck.
Regret
As an adoptee, my birthday has always been bittersweet.
Beauford and Ann had tried to make it a happy day, but to
me there was always sadness. Now that I am a mother myself,
I understand the happiness of knowing that you have created
and delivered a baby. For my mother and me, however, my
birth was the beginning of the end, the day that she would
see the child she would give to strangers. The days surrounding
my birthday are the most vulnerable of the entire year for
me. My roommate knew this and thought it would be wonderful
if Gary could help me find my mom. Sharon was only trying
to help.
During my sophomore year, I had been determined to find
my mother. Away from the confines of the small town in which
I grew up, I wanted to know where my natural family lived;
I wanted to see people who looked like me, not by coincidence
but because they were related to me. At the end of my first
sophomore semester, I made a trip to the adoption agency.
I wanted answers; I wanted to know the names of my natural
parents. The social workers told me that they were unable
to release any information because of the laws. Only much
later would I learn that the agency itself was influential
in making those laws, in falsifying my birth certificate,
and in assuring that I would never legally be able to find
my parents. After driving two hours of highway hypnosis
from the agency to my boyfriend's house, listening to The
Police's "Shadows in the Rain," rewinding it each time the
song ended, I sat down on my boyfriend's couch. I drank
until I passed out.
Desperation
Less than one year after that experience, Gary assured
me that he could find my mother. I not only wanted to believe
him, I also knew his promise was the closest thing I had
to finding my family. The desperation with which I searched
for my natural parents was evident in the zeal I had for
his plan. Shortly after taking me to a doughnut shop in
Raleigh one night, he told me that a woman at the end of
the counter was my mother. It was late and the shop had
not been crowded; it was easy to see who my supposed mother
had been.
Her hair was dark, like mine. She was shorter than I, corresponding
to the 5 feet 2 inch height that the non-identifying information
of the adoption agency had stated. Gary's excuse for my
not being able to talk to her was that she was the daughter
of French royalty and that he had arranged for her to see
me but that I would never be able to talk with her because
of her position with the French government.
It would be quite easy to chide myself for being fooled
by Gary, but I know that if I had been able to find my parents
legally, I would have had no use for his information. Sharon
and I were careless teenagers on the verge of adulthood,
but we were also trying to find out something we thought
was impossible—where I had come from.
As a person with three college degrees, I find it odd,
even now, to think that I was so naïve as to believe such
a scheme. However, I was desperate to find my family. Even
today, I cannot completely explain the desire I felt to
find my parents. While some people believe that the reason
I so desperately sought my mother was because I was not
happy growing up, I find this claim ridiculous. The unhappiness
I felt was due to being away from my natural family. I would
not expect my children to be happy if they were growing
up away from their father and me.
Resolution
After a $2,500 search by a detective agency found my mother,
and after interviewing mothers who have lost children to
adoption, I believe that perhaps my mother's words to me
as a helpless infant, "find me someday," somehow stuck in
the subconscious regions of my brain. Now that I have found
my parents, I cannot imagine not knowing that my older son's
blond hair comes from his maternal grandfather, or knowing
that my sons' blue eyes are so recognizable as traits of
my family that a stranger once guessed correctly that my
mother belonged to the Smith clan in Wilmington, just by
noticing her eyes when the stranger passed my mom in a department
store.
Believing that a woman I had seen at the doughnut shop
was my mother provided more hope than I ever had in a system
that had closed my records. It was easy to believe such
a bizarre plan as Gary's when a social worker had sat across
from me, file with my mother's name in her hands, telling
me that she could not relay that information to me.
A few years later, finding my parents would become so important
to me that I would have an abortion rather than carry a
child to term who would not know its true grandparents.
Only in hindsight do I see that I did not feel it was fair
to bring a child into the world without knowing my own family.
The importance of finding my family overrode all common
sense and that night at the doughnut shop gave me the best
shot I had ever had at having that information, facts most
people take for granted.
After I saw what I had been told was my mother in the doughnut
shop, I broke up with my boyfriend and held on to my belief
that the woman was my mother. I took a French class, hoping
to bond with what I thought had been my mother's language.
I desperately wanted to believe that I had seen my mother.
An internship that summer took me to New York City and
less than two weeks into my work there, I realized what
I had refused to believe from other people: the whole thing
had been a hoax. My newly found honesty cost me the fantasy
of having found my real mother and the reality of losing
a boyfriend. In the foggy impersonal air of Manhattan, I
began to accept, once again, that I might never know my
ancestors.
Of all the harm that Gary did, however, he also did something
that I sorely needed. Before I went to New York, he introduced
me to a therapist. I worked with her for over eleven years,
talking about growing up with Ann and Beauford and trying
to find out how I could squelch the desire to find my family.
I left therapy still trying to undo my desire. A few years
later, I began to realize that my desire was most natural.
A few months after I found my parents, I became pregnant
with my firstborn son, Caleb. I cannot imagine having a
child who would only know one side of his family, or missing
out on my mother holding a grandchild she thought she would
never see. Caleb loves my father, his Grandpa Sherrill,
and I can only imagine how different Caleb's life would
be if he did not have his maternal grandfather with which
to share his love of trains and photography. I treasure
the pictures I have of my father holding my younger son,
Micah, a few weeks after his birth. Despite beginning as
an unplanned pregnancy, Micah was born two days after his
Grandpa Sherrill's birthday.
Beyond the Truth
I still receive financial updates and newsletters from
the adoption agency that told me I should be content with
the supposed "parents" they selected for me. I think of
the many businesses and individuals that support the agency
financially. Despite the numerous mailings that Ann and
Beauford and I receive, my natural mother and father have
received nothing. As my husband says, "They got what they
wanted from your mom." Indeed, they did, but legal documents
cannot change nature. I am proud that my children will know
their ancestors. Most people take knowledge of their natural
family for granted, but I do not. After finally finding
my family, I pray that my children and their descendants
will always understand the importance of blood ties. A child
is born into a family and that familial bond lasts forever.
*Names have been changed.
Check out Tricia's website at www.Comicmom.com
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