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Savannahmann

(3,891 posts)
Sun Jan 11, 2015, 11:11 AM Jan 2015

Adoption, the conventional wisdom is it's bad. I have a little experience, and I say Pfui. [View all]

Now, that means I was adopted. But wait, there is more to the story. My brother was also adopted. Now, I don't know if he's my real biological brother and I don't care. My Father was adopted by his parents.

There has been a growing trend in the media, that children who are adopted are always missing something because they don't have access to their genetic roots. I say this is nonsense. A family is about love. I mean unconventional love, understanding, and support. I have come to the aid of my brother, and he's come to mine. My Father supported me and loved me until the day he died. http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/please-dont-tell-me-i-was-lucky-to-be-adopted/2014/12/31/9e9e9472-6f48-11e4-ad12-3734c461eab6_story.html

I've never searched for my biological mother, father, or siblings. I have no intention of doing so. Part of my outlook on life is that People make the best choices for themselves and their families. So whoever my biological mother was, it doesn't matter. She made her choice, and I don't need to understand the why, the why doesn't matter. I was loved like any child. When I was a boy and I got hurt I saw the terror in the faces of my parents. I saw the horror that I had been injured. They paid for clothing, toys, school, braces, dental work, and all the other associated costs.

I don't care what my genetic tree looks like. I don't care where my ancestors came from. Nothing they did is my fault, nor my problem. I don't care if my ancestors were pirates in the Caribbean, or peasant workers in Lithuania. I am speaking of my biological family.

A Father is more than the guy who injected the semen that combined with the egg to start you. A Father teaches you right, and wrong. A Father tells you when you've done well, and when you haven't. He shows you the strength it takes to work a long career, day in and out, through good times and bad. A Father stands up beside you when you've done well, and when you've done something wrong and are about to have punishment handed out. I was fortunate to have one that loved me, and stood by me in good, and bad. When I had earned accolades and chastisement, he was there.

A Mother is more than the woman who carries you in her womb. She tends to your injuries, comforts you when you're sick, smiles when you're happy. She watches you and works with your Father to teach you those lessons you need so desperately. She teaches you that there is more than you, and then more than the family. They teach you your duties, and responsibilities to the family, the community, the society, the nation, and the people of the world. Decades of effort go into being a Mother, and I can't imagine having a better one than I had.

Decades go into being a parent.

Now, neither my Brother, nor I have ever had any desire to seek out our Birth Parents. When I called to talk to my folks about my decision to marry. My mother blurted out that she thought I had called to say I was searching out my Birth Parents. I know she could hear my frown over the phone. Why I asked her. She explained that those stories were all on the news, and she just figured I would want to. I told her then the one truth I have known since my earliest memory. I have parents, and I love them, and they have never shown me anything but love. Even when they punished me to teach me a lesson, I knew love.

Robert Frost said that Home was the place when you have to go there, they have to take you in. I had a home, and I put that to the test. During my life I have experienced some setbacks, as we all have. I had to go home. I moved into the basement, and I was welcomed. No questions other than how they could help me.

So to all of those who think that you are supposed to feel lost, adrift, or somehow incomplete if you aren't part of your biological family. I can tell you this. You are supposed to feel how you feel. I don't know why my Biological mother gave me up. I believe that she did it because she thought it was best for her, and me. I am in no position decades later to question her decision. I have no right to judge her now, decades later, for her choices. Those choices do not make me what I am.

While it is true we have genetic predispositions. Cancer, heart disease, and all of that and then some. What makes us who we are is our environment. The lessons we learn, from our parents, our schools, literature, and life make us who we are. I was not born a Democrat. I was not born Liberal. I was born. I learned the rest as time went by. I was not born to respect the ideals of right and wrong. I was taught that.

I have no idea who my Biological mother or Father was. I don't know why they gave me up. I don't know what happened to them afterwards. I don't care. While I obviously hope they lived long and fulfilling lives, I don't care about them more than anyone else alive at that time. My Family raised me, stood me on my feet, and gently nudged me out into the world. When I had to circle back to the nest, they welcomed me home. When they passed from this world, I wept at the loss, and thanked them for making me a good person, a good man.

I am grateful I had good parents. That they did not bring me into this world is irrelevant. I am grateful because I appreciate their sacrifice and effort. Because I was adopted, I know this truth. They would have done the same for any child that had been blessed to arrived in their hearts and called family. That's why I feel lucky. Because that child was me and my Brother.

Oh, and my Brother married a woman who had a child. That child did not understand why our family loved her without reservation. She did not understand for a couple years why we cared for her, and why we welcomed her so much.

She finally understood. You don't get born into our family. You get loved in.

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What conventional wisdom are you referring to? N.T. Donald Ian Rankin Jan 2015 #1
Several articles over the last few years. Savannahmann Jan 2015 #3
I've never heard of adoption being characterized as bad... Takket Jan 2015 #2
Not so much "bad" as "traumatic" Proud Public Servant Jan 2015 #6
I won't dare speak for you. Savannahmann Jan 2015 #22
then you've not met enough... Duppers Jan 2015 #24
There is an active "adoptee rights" movement that seems to think adoption is harmful pnwmom Jan 2015 #26
My Father and his brother were adopted yeoman6987 Jan 2015 #4
Gotta agree Proud Public Servant Jan 2015 #5
My sister and father were adopted... Adrahil Jan 2015 #7
Sounds like you have a good and loving family. I think it is a positive that these days, Sunlei Jan 2015 #8
Thank you for this. onecaliberal Jan 2015 #9
Just remember, theaocp Jan 2015 #10
I have seen trans-racial adoption slammed as "cultural genocide" here on DU. Nye Bevan Jan 2015 #11
I actually walked away from DU for a year or so over that attitude. Coventina Jan 2015 #12
Why can't it be both/and? intheflow Jan 2015 #13
I am adopted as well - el_bryanto Jan 2015 #14
I am truly happy for you. Tribalceltic Jan 2015 #15
I don't think I've ever met any adoptee who was sorry s/he was adopted. It isn't the adoption that 1monster Jan 2015 #16
adopting a child is an act of love. abakan Jan 2015 #17
I was adopted along with my siblings B2G Jan 2015 #18
The main reason adoptees have more problems surely has to do vanlassie Jan 2015 #19
Conventional wisdom says adoption is bad? SheilaT Jan 2015 #20
good point. nt Duppers Jan 2015 #27
i'm adopted as well -- couldn't love my folks more. xchrom Jan 2015 #21
As the father of two adopted children (now adults) I say "bunk" to that conventional wisdom. Scuba Jan 2015 #23
You brought tears to my eyes. Duppers Jan 2015 #25
My son and daughter in law adopted spartan61 Jan 2015 #28
Agree pathansen Jan 2015 #29
not adopted eccl Sep 2016 #30
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