Thursday, January 04, 2007

I need to make some things clear...

My blog address has been included in the new article that I had published in Adoptive Families Mag. I want to quickly make clear a couple things that aren't in that article and that matter to me. First of all I in no way shape or form believe that adoption is some perfect option for tough times. Sometimes...many times to be with the natural parent even if times are hard is a Much better option. It is my opinion that if the adoption can not be open with all family members (natural and adoptive) concidering eachother as family than in MANY cases adoption will be very damaging to the adoptive child and not live up to the dreams an adoptive family may have had. I would be happy to dig into this deeper but I have a daughter that needs to play the flute in this room and well...I'm not going to be able to think, type and listen all at once. Please feel free to leave comments and we'll see if I can get back to being active in the field I care so much about!!

Thanks to all of you who have stayed checking in with me through out this last year that I haven't been so on top of things...and welcome any newbies that are first time visitors due to my article!!

Shannon
adoptionevolution@yahoo.com

I GOT published!! Adoptive Families Mag.

Here is the copy and pasted version of what is pubished this month in "Adoptive Families" Mag. I don't know how to put the PDF files on here with the picture and all but here is the story!!!

Promises Kept

The time I spent alone with my newborn daughter meant a

lot. But the fact that she has grown up knowing me has

meant the world. BY SHANNON THOMPSON

I wanted to take my baby home and spend two days alone with her before she began

life with her new adoptive parents.

Everybody said it was an impossible

dream. But I found a way.

Growing up, I remember wondering who

I was, whom I looked like. I had been adopted

at birth, but my adoption was far from open.

Seventeen years later, and only two weeks

before I was due to give birth to my first

child, I made the difficult decision to place

the baby for adoption.

Determined that my

daughter would not grow

up without knowing her

birthmother, the way I

had, I thought about

what I'd need to help me

go through with an

adoption plan. I decided

that I needed time to

say my own goodbye.

Lisa and Charlie, the

couple the agency

found to be my baby's

parents, understood

this, and agreed to let

me spend two days

alone with my child.

My due date

came, and I gave

birth to an eightpound,

six-ounce girl

via Cesarean section.

Lisa and Charlie

arrived on the day of her birth. They

had driven through the night, from

Idaho to Montana, to become parents

for the first time, and I could sense

their excitement. Chariti was beautiful

and perfectly healthy from the

moment she entered the world. I was

the one who had to spend seven days in the hospital

recovering. But when I was finally ready to

go home, I didn't have to go alone.

Lisa and Charlie, who both have beautiful

voices, had been scheduled to sing at a friend's

wedding back home soon after Chariti's birth.

But when it became clear that I'd just be getting

out of the hospital on the day of the performance,

they cancelled it. They were committed

to giving me the two days I'd asked for, and

never pressured me to change the plan or cut

short my time alone with my daughter.

Goodbye, for now

The two days I spent with my baby will always

stay in my heart. But they convinced me that I

wasn't ready to be a mother.

At 17, barely able to take care

of myself, I got up every three

hours to feed, rock, and hold

this tiny baby. I felt the

weight of it all in those 48

hours. A baby would depend

on me to survive, but I did not

have the focus or strength to

meet her needs. No matter

how badly it hurt, I knew

then that an adoption was

the right thing to do.

The day finally came to

let go. I was up for most of the

night before, feeding my hungry

child. But even if Chariti

had slept soundly, I wouldn't

have been able to, because I

couldn't stop thinking about

the future. I vividly remember

the thoughts that ran

through my head: Will this

really be as open as I would

like it to be? Will Chariti hate me and feel that

adoption is a terrible thing? What if I place

this child and never have another one? This

tiny being is the only person on earth that I

know to be my own blood and bone. Is this

really going to be OK?

There was a knock on the door, and my

heart sank Still, I already loved these wonderful



I had been

adopted at

birth, but my

adoption was

far from open.

I wanted my

daughter's

experience to

be different.

people. I didn't want to hurt them by changing my mind, especially

since I knew I couldn't be the kind of parent I wanted

Chariti to have.

There were pictures and promises, tears and smiles. I was

nervous about saying goodbye, but excited for what lay ahead for

them. It struck me, at that moment, that "giving a child up" is

the wrong terminology. This adoption was not about "giving up"

anything, but about gaining an extended family.

I took our baby outside and put her in her tiny car seat. I

buckled her in, kissed her over and over, and couldn't stop

repeating, "I love you, baby...always." I hoped that, somewhere in

her nine-day-old mind, she'd remember this and understand

that I really did love her.

When Charlie shut the car door, it was as if a dam had broken.

I'd been strong until that moment, but I couldn't hold back

any longer. My tears started falling and didn't stop for hours. I

yelled, "I love you!" one last time, but I wasn't afraid that this

adoption would turn out like mine. I would know this beautiful

child, and she would know me. I was giving Chariti a life she

couldn't otherwise have, and I had faith that Lisa and Charlie

would keep me in her life. This would not be the last time she'd

hear me say that I loved her.

The car pulled away, and the first day of the rest of my

daughter's life began.

Life goes on

Years have flown by, and all the promises we made that morning

were kept. In some weeks, months, and years we have been

in closer contact than in others, but we always knew how to

reach one another. The last time we saw each other was when

our families had Thanksgiving dinner together in 2005, and

we're planning a visit for this coming spring.

Our relationship continues to evolve. Chariti and I are now

best friends on MySpace and correspond frequently. When I

think of my daughter now—16 years old, confident, beautiful—

she is everything I could have ever wanted her to be and more. I

have never regretted my decision to place her for adoption, and

I believe that's because there has been no mystery, no secrecy, no

wondering. She's known me all her life.

SHANNON THOMPSON is a freelance writer currently working on a book.

Read her blog at adoptionevolution.blogspot.com. She lives in Missoula,

Montana, and is parenting her 12-year-old daughter.

JANUARY/ FEBRUARY 2007

I couldn't stop repeating,

"I love you, baby...always."

I hoped that, somewhere

in her nine-day-old mind,

she'd understand