This year it coincides with Daylight
Saving Time. As we move the clocks back an hour, I am reflecting back, as well.
I remember the days of wondering if I would be a mother. If a birthparent would
choose me. I remember talking to and meeting birthmothers, one at the time of
placement and the other when my younger daughter was 15 years old. I remember talking
to my daughters about their adoptions and their histories - sharing what I knew
when I felt they were ready to hear it.
I remember so many conversations with
hopeful adoptive parents during homestudies and post placements, consultations
about the adoption process and counseling before and during the adoption process
and later, in the years of parenting. With parents who only wanted the best for
their children and who wondered if an issue was adoption related, who were considering
whether to search for additional information, arrange a reunion, or if it was
time to adopt again. With parents who were grappling with how to help a child
complete an academic assignment, helping a child share or answer questions
about their adoption or how to handle other issues at school.
I also remember meeting and working with
birthparents for whom social pressure or unethical adoption practices led to
relinquishments of their children. Where limitations on contact with children
lead to continued concerns about the decisions they had made. Where agreed upon
open adoption agreements were later challenged by adoptive parents.
I remember many conversations with children of all
ages who just wanted answers to their questions. Who shared close and loving
relationships with their adoptive parents and siblings, but wanted to see whom they
looked like, if they had birth siblings and if they would ever meet their “real”
mom or dad. Conversations with them about the loss of a biological or cultural connection
and questions about who they are and where they belong.
National Adoption Day and Month were created to
raise awareness for the children in foster care who are freed for adoption, but
who are still waiting for a permanent home. Over the years it has come to
include all forms of adoption still with the focus of finding homes for these
children, but with the added attention to providing support services to make
those placements successful.
As National Adoption Month gives us a moment to reflect, let’s
not lose sight of the fact that whether you are an adopted person, the birth or
adoptive parent or an extended family member, adoption has an impact.
Kathy Ann Brodsky, LCSW is a New York and New Jersey licensed social worker, adoptive mom and advocate for ethical adoption practice. Through her private practice and agency affiliations, she has prepared thousands of adoption homestudies, counseled expectant, birth, pre/post adoptive parents and adopted persons, as well as trained professionals to work with adoptive families. She was Director of the Ametz Adoption Program of JCCA and a member of the Advisory Board for POV’s Adoption Series and the Adoption Advisory Board of Path2Parenthood, She is currently a Adoption Professional Advisory Council of HelpUSAdopt , a member of the Advisory Board of the Family Equality Council and active in the Adoptive Parents Committee in New York. Her blogs and written contributions can be seen throughout the Internet, including her BLOG and as Head Writer for ADOPTION.NET She was named an “Angel in Adoption” by the Congressional Coalition on Adoption in 2001. You can reach her directly
Kathy Ann Brodsky, LCSW is a New York and New Jersey licensed social worker, adoptive mom and advocate for ethical adoption practice. Through her private practice and agency affiliations, she has prepared thousands of adoption homestudies, counseled expectant, birth, pre/post adoptive parents and adopted persons, as well as trained professionals to work with adoptive families. She was Director of the Ametz Adoption Program of JCCA and a member of the Advisory Board for POV’s Adoption Series and the Adoption Advisory Board of Path2Parenthood, She is currently a Adoption Professional Advisory Council of HelpUSAdopt , a member of the Advisory Board of the Family Equality Council and active in the Adoptive Parents Committee in New York. Her blogs and written contributions can be seen throughout the Internet, including her BLOG and as Head Writer for ADOPTION.NET She was named an “Angel in Adoption” by the Congressional Coalition on Adoption in 2001. You can reach her directly
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