Adopted
"Children" and Natural Mothers
The
Respect We Never Got
by Joe Soll, CSW
Without blaming anyone, I suggest we take a look at respect.
To start with, we need to look at the beginning. The beginning
was birth and separation for the mother and child.
. It was like a big plane crash in a field. All the mothers
and babies lying there crying and the rescuers came and carried
them off in different directions. When they got to the Emergency
Room, they dusted them off, told them they were fine and sent
them on their way. The mothers went home and the babies went
to new homes. All were told they were fine. The most sacred
relationship in the world has now gone up in smoke. They were
told that there wasnt any accident, no crash, forget
about it, just get on with your life. The new caretakers of
the babies were told the babies were fine and they should
treat all the babies as if they were their own. "As If."
Thats a great little phrase. As If.
As if is sort of like treating my cat as if she is the German
Shepherd dog I really wanted. But I get so frustrated. She
wont fetch, she doesnt bark at the door and she
wont get my slippers. I love her, but I get so angry
she doesnt behave the way I want her to. As IF just
doesnt work.
So what really happened to each of those mothers and babies
from the plane crash? As I see it, there is no substantial
difference between the experience of losing a child to death
and losing a child to adoption except:
If there was a real death of a child shortly after birth,
the mothers family and friends would have gathered around
and said to her I am so sorry your baby died. You must be
sad, let me comfort you, I know you hurt, let me ease your
pain. I know you must be angry, let me help you. There would
be a funeral and grieving and acknowledgment of what really
happened, and there would be a grave to go to and there would
be validation and healing. This mother would be given respect
Instead, the mother who loses her child to adoption experiences
the psychological death of her child, But instead of comfort,
she gets told she did a brave and noble, unselfish, loving
thing and she must forget about it, go on with her life. No
one wants to help her talk about it, acknowledge it, cry about
it, or mourn the loss of the her child. So the loss becomes
almost unresolvable. The grief stays stuck in her body and
keeping pain in is destructive. She has to go into a kind
of shock to survive, hit the pause button on her life and
she goes numb. Life is forever changed. You cant really
live that way, but you can exist. She gets no respect.
If there was a real death of a mother shortly after birth,
at some point, the childs father would tell the child
that mommy died and it is so sad that this happened to you
and you must hurt, let me comfort you and ease your pain and
I know you must be angry, let me help you... .and there would
be pictures and stories and a grave to visit, and grieving
and eventually the child would find out that mommy didnt
die on purpose. This child would be given respect.
Instead for the child whose mother gives her up for adoption,
the child suffers the psychological death of her mother. But
she is told that she is special and chosen and lucky. She
is supposed to forget that there was another mother. Make
believe this is your only family, make believe that all is
well. As IF it is your own. The message is that it is a good
thing your mother is not there for you, is dead for you. You
are not allowed to be sad about it, acknowledge the pain,
anger or sadness, perhaps even to yourself. You are not allowed
to mourn the loss of your own mother. The grief gets stuck
in your body and keeping in pain is destructive. (So is keeping
in anger and sadness) The child has to go into a kind of shock
and to numb. You cant really live that way, but you
can pretend. And we adoptees are great pretenders. This child
gets no respect.
What would happen if one of your mothes died today
and you were told you couldnt cry, you couldnt
go to the funeral and to make believe she never existed. What
would happen to you. Take a moment and think about it. Isnt
that what happened to most of us, in some way?
It occurs to me that if we really had respect for the mother
and the child we would do all we could to preserve the sanctity
of that relationship and not separate them at all.
If the mother and child could not possibly stay together,
then giving her respect when she lost her child, the mothers
family and friends would have gathered around and said to
her I am so sorry you couldnt keep your baby. You must
be sad, let me comfort you, I know you hurt, let me ease your
pain. I know you must be angry, let me help you. And there
would be grieving and acknowledgment of what really happened.
If the mother and child could not possibly stay together,
then giving the adoptee respect when she lost her mother,
the new family would say you must be sad you lost your first
family, its okay to cry about.. Im sad too, you
must hurt, let me comfort you, you must be angry, let me help
you, be with you and hold you.
Ignoring the realities of adoption increases the pain and
hurt. How can anyone function well if theyre told that
what is true isnt and what isnt true is? For example,
what if I lose my leg in an accident right after birth? And
they tell me I didnt lose my leg right after I was born,
I was mistaken. But it hurts, mommy, and yet it still feels
like something is missing. And I keep stumbling around as
if I had only one leg (they wouldnt lie about that would
they?) and I dont know why Im having trouble managing
as a two legged person...
Our society doesnt want to acknowledge what has happened
to all of us, to give us respect. And truth be told, I lost
more than a leg, I lost my mother. But wait, I got a prosthesis,
a new mother, a substitute. Why doesnt it work just
as well?. Why does it still hurt?
Of course our mothers lost a baby... but they got no replacement,
no substitute. Respect is truth, no secrets, absolute honesty.
We can all deal with the truth. Have we in adoption had our
eyes wide shut? Isnt it time they were wide open?
Well, how can we give ourselves the respect we never got?
By learning to experience our feelings. By learning to make
I statements about our experience. By learning to say I feel
sad because, I feel angry because, I hurt because. And when
we say these things out loud for the first time and get validated
for the first time, the feelings become real in a way they
can never be if un expressed. And once the feelings become
real, we can start to understand why we feel what we feel
and once we understand why we feel what we feel, we can start
to change the way our experience affects us today.
We can respect ourselves by expressing our anger at what
happened to us.
Having anger about something that happened to us and expressing
it does not make us angry people. We need to express it. If
we dont talk our anger out, we will surely act it out
or act it in, in either case, it is destructive. It is poison
and will poison our lives and relationships unless we release
it.
We can respect ourselves by expressing our sadness. Feeling
sad about something sad that happened does not make us crybabies
or wimps. We need to express it. Keeping our pain in is destructive.
It is poison and it will poison our lives and our relationships
unless we release it.
The only way that I know of to be truly happy is to give
ourselves the respect of feeling all of our feelings. If we
dont feel the bad ones, we cannot feel the good ones.
Those around us often try to minimize our losses, our experience.
We must not buy into that. We can respect ourselves by acknowledging
the true extent of the effects on us of the events at the
beginning. If we dont acknowledge the full extent of
our wounds, we cannot heal. Only by acknowledging the truth
can we begin to heal from our wounds.
If I am in an accident and go to the ER and they dont
examine my wounds, dont clean the depths of my wounds
and get the dirt or poison out, I will get an infection, the
wound may heal superficially, but the infection is there never
the less and I will pay a price. Only when I respect myself
and take the risk of opening that wound again and clean it
out will I be able to truly heal.
Healing involves a lot of pain, but the alternative.. I
guess we have all lived it. We need to give ourselves the
respect to climb the mountain of pain that leads to healing.
The mountain is steep, but climbable. There are many crevices
on the way up, but each crevice still puts you closer to the
top. And we are all here in this adoptive family to help each
other, nurture each other, support each other, share with
each other and learn from each other on this road to respect
and healing.
Clarissa Pinkola Estes, who wrote Women Who Run with
the Wolves, has said
that those who have been abandoned and face it
and work it through can become the strongest people on the
face of the earth. Dont doubt it for a second, Only
the Brave do this work, come to a conferences and support
groups and work it through.
The alternative to doing the work: Well, we can continue
to bury our heads like an ostrich, but if we do, we will likely
get kicked in the behind and not see it coming.
Or to put it another way, if we continue to swim in Denial
we will likely get bitten by a crocodile
- Back to Adoptees Speaking
Out -
|