COVID-19 and the recent protests bring about
similar concerns, only this time, it includes people not just in New York City,
but all over our country. Are birth and adoptive parents well? Are the children
safe? How has life changed?
For those who are in touch with one another, either
through text, email, phone calls or in-person meetings, this offers another
opportunity to check-in and reassure one another. For those who never had
“after placement” contact or who may have lost touch over the years, this poses
a different issue.
There is an inherent understanding in adoptions that
the arrangement was in the best interest of all (the child, the birth family and
the adoptive family). So, knowing how the people who made this decision fared during this
crisis will help in telling the child's story,
whether now or in the future
You are all one extended family, who may not see
one another or even communicate with one another, but are connected through the
child. Thinking about one another and wondering how everyone is doing occurs
throughout the year, especially around holidays, birthdays, and placement days.
Some of you reach out to one another. Others of you do not even have that option.
Will reaching out now change the pattern of
contact? Will finding out everyone is okay relieve your anxiety? What do you do
if you get some troubling news
These are not normal times. Do what your heart
tells you to do and just know that I and others are here to help.
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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