10 Things Transracial / Transcultural Adoptees Want Their Parents To Know

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1. Racial Mirroring is Crucial for Identity Development

Transracial and transcultural adoptees often express the need to see and interact with people who share their racial or ethnic background. This mirroring is vital for their identity development, helping them to form a positive self-image and understand their place in the world.

2. The Challenges of a “Color-Blind” Approach

While a “color-blind” approach may stem from good intentions, it can hinder an adoptee’s ability to explore their racial identity and navigate experiences of discrimination. Recognizing and discussing race openly is essential for fostering a healthy understanding of identity.

3. Experiencing Racism and Microaggressions

Adoptees may encounter racism and microaggressions that their adoptive parents might not fully recognize or understand. Parents must educate themselves about these experiences and provide support when their children face such challenges.

4. Importance of Birth Culture Connections

Maintaining connections to their birth culture is essential for adoptees’ sense of self and belonging. Parents should actively encourage and facilitate these connections to help their children feel grounded in their heritage.

5. Identity Confusion from Cultural Disconnection

Many adoptees report feeling disconnected from both their adoptive family’s culture and their birth culture, leading to confusion about their identity. Open discussions about these feelings can help alleviate some of this confusion.

6. Open Communication About Adoption

Having open conversations about their adoption story and birth family is important for adoptees’ emotional well-being. Parents should create a safe space for these discussions, allowing their children to express their feelings and questions.

7. Active Involvement in Heritage Exploration

Adoptees benefit from their parents’ active involvement in helping them explore and celebrate their heritage. This can include participating in cultural events, language learning, and engaging in activities that reflect their background.

8. The Need for Mentors and Role Models

Having mentors or role models from their racial or ethnic background can significantly impact an adoptee’s self-esteem and identity. Parents should seek opportunities for their children to connect with individuals who can provide guidance and support.

9. Exposure to Diverse Environments

Living in a diverse community or having regular exposure to diverse environments can help adoptees feel less isolated. Parents should consider the importance of diversity in their children’s social circles and experiences.

10. Addressing Emotional Challenges

Adoptees may struggle with issues related to attachment, anger, anxiety, or perfectionism due to their adoption experiences. Parents must know these potential challenges and seek appropriate support and resources to help their children navigate them.

By understanding these key points, adoptive parents can better support their transracial and transcultural children, fostering a nurturing environment that honors their unique identities and experiences.

Navigating the Adoption Journey: Insights for Adoptive Parents and Professionals

Adoption is a complex and emotional process that requires understanding, patience, and ongoing support. This article aims to provide valuable insights for both adoptive parents and the professionals who work with them.

Understanding the Complexities

Joyce Maguire Pavao, a renowned adoption expert, emphasizes:

“Adoption is not about finding children for families, it’s about finding families for children.”

This perspective shift is crucial for both parents and professionals to internalize. It places the child’s needs at the center of the adoption process.

The Lifelong Nature of Adoption

Adoption is not a one-time event but a lifelong journey. As one adoptive parent notes:

“The adoption journey doesn’t end when your adopted child is finally in your arms. The journey is one that never ends. It is a journey filled with joy, pain, fear and love.”

Professionals should prepare adoptive parents for this ongoing process, providing resources and support for various stages of the adoption journey.

Openness and Communication

Open communication about adoption is vital from the earliest stages. Experts recommend:

“Start telling your child that s/he is adopted from day one. A child should never remember finding out they’re adopted – they should just always know.”

Professionals can guide adoptive parents on age-appropriate ways to discuss adoption with their children.

Addressing Loss and Grief

It’s important to recognize that adoption involves loss for all parties involved. Pavao notes:

“The stages birth parents go through are very real and need to be understood… The initial period of grieving lasts roughly five to seven years.”

Professionals should help adoptive parents understand and navigate these complex emotions, both for themselves and their children.

Cultural Competence

For transracial or transcultural adoptions, cultural competence is crucial. Pavao advises:

“The challenge to adoptive parents, and to others connected to this child, is to help the child to develop his/her own identity within the framework of both cultures.”

Professionals can provide resources and guidance on cultural integration and identity development.

Ongoing Education and Support

Adoption requires continuous learning. One adoptive parent shares:

“You commit to education. You commit to learning other perspectives. You commit to growing.”

Professionals should encourage adoptive parents to engage in ongoing education about adoption issues, trauma-informed care, and child development.

Conclusion

For both adoptive parents and professionals, understanding the nuances of adoption is crucial. By recognizing its lifelong nature, embracing openness, addressing loss, promoting cultural competence, and committing to ongoing education, we can better support adoptive families throughout their journey.

Remember, as Pavao states, “Adoption is intergenerational. It lasts a lifetime and beyond.” With this perspective, we can work together to create positive, supportive environments for all members of the adoption triad.

Citations:
[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/AdoptiveParents/comments/1ercoiw/starting_our_unexpected_adoption_journey/
[2] https://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/487220.Joyce_Maguire_Pavao
[3] https://abidinglovecharities.org/2022/11/16/being-open-to-grow-in-your-adoption-journey/
[4] https://www.adoptimist.com/adoption-success-stories/a-proactive-and-prayerful-adoption-journey
[5] https://www.waitnomore.org/the-adoption-journey/
[6] https://blog.nchs.org/adoptive-families-challenges
[7] https://www.modernheirloombooks.com/new-blog/2020/3/18/what-to-save-for-your-adoption-journey-book
[8] https://www.boulderpsychologicalservices.com/understanding-common-challenges-adopted-children/

The new normal in adoption: Birth parent no longer a secret

A new survey shows that more than 55 percent of adoption cases are fully open – and 95 percent involve at least some relationships between birth parent and adoptive family.

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Based on a survey of 100 adoption agencies, the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute reported today that the new norm is for birth parents considering adoption to meet with prospective adoptive parents and pick the new family for their baby.

Of the roughly 14,000 to 18,000 infant adoptions each year, about 55 percent are fully open, with the parties agreeing to ongoing contact that includes the child, the report said. About 40 percent are “mediated" adoptions in which the adoption agency facilitates periodic exchanges of pictures and letters, but there is typically no direct contact among the parties.

"The degree of openness should be tailored to the preferences of the individual participants,” said Chuck Johnson of the National Council for Adoption, which represents about 60 agencies. “It points to the huge importance of the right people being matched with each other.”

The Donaldson institute, citing its own research and numerous other studies, said most participants find open adoptions a positive experience. In general, the report said, adoptive families are more satisfied with the adoption process, birth mothers experience less regret and worry, and the adopted children benefit by having access to their birth relatives, as well as to their family and medical histories.

“The good news is that adoption in our country is traveling a road toward greater openness and honesty,” said Adam Pertman, the institute’s executive director. “But this new reality also brings challenges, and there are still widespread myths and misconceptions about open adoption.”

The challenges, according to Mr. Pertman and other adoption experts, often involve mismatched expectations as to the degree of post-adoption contact. The Donaldson report recommends counseling and training for all the adults involved, as well as post-adoption services to help them and their children work through any problems that arise.

The president of one of the largest US adoption agencies, Bill Blacquiere of Bethany Christian Services, said his staff encourages expectant birth mothers to meet with the prospective adoptive family to discuss the array of options for an open adoption.

“As much as possible, we allow the parties to design that themselves,” Mr. Blacquiere said. “We mediate to make sure both parties are getting what they need.”

The post-adoption relationship may start out warily, then become more comfortable as time passes, but Blacquiere said each party should keep the other’s expectations in mind even as circumstances change.

“For adoptive families, they need to make sure they live up to their commitments, and not try to go back on their initial agreement,” he said. “On the birthparent side, they need to remember that this isn’t co-parenting – part of their role has to be blessing the new home that their child has.”

One common pattern, according to adoption agency officials, is that the birth parent initially wants more frequent contact with the child than the adoptive family prefers, followed by a gradual shift.

“When the children get older, it’s often the adoptive families wanting more contact, and the birthparents may have moved on in their lives and at that point are interested in less,” said David Nish, director of adoption programs for New York-based Spence-Chapin Adoption Services.

Mr. Nish said Spence-Chapin espouses the principle of self-determination in working with birth mothers on their hopes for post-adoption arrangements. But he said the agency won’t work with adoptive parents who insist on having no contact with the birth mother.

“We try to educate them,” he said. “If they’re really set on it being closed, we tell them we don’t do closed adoptions.”

For Dawne Era, a psychotherapist from Warwick, R.I., the decision to embrace an open adoption evolved step by step 23 years ago when she and her husband decided to adopt after unsuccessful attempts to conceive on their own.

They made contact with a pregnant 18-year-old from Nebraska who’d decided to place her baby up for adoption, then got to know her as the young woman spent her pregnancy in nearby Boston.

After the birth and adoption of a baby boy named Grady, the birth mother and the adoptive parents agreed to remain in contact. It was an informal pact, yet it led to a mutually satisfying relationship that has continued throughout Grady’s life – occasional phone conversations, a handful of face-to-face visits and, more recently, ongoing contact via Facebook between Grady and his birth mother and his younger half-sister.

For Ms. Era, there was a stressful moment when she and her husband got divorced while Grady was a toddler, and she had to inform the birth mother.

“That was very difficult,” Era said. “We had promised to take Grady in and raise him in a two-parent family. I thought she would be very disappointed in me, but she took it well.”

Overall, said Era, the open adoption "has been very positive for all of us.“

Mr. Pertman of the Donaldson Institute has a daughter adopted 14 years ago. He said challenges can sometimes arise even after adoptive parents and birth parents grow comfortable with the rhythms of an open adoption.

He recalled how many members of his daughter’s birth family – including her birth mother, grandparents, a brother and an uncle – came to her bat mitzvah.

"For us and them it was normal, but not for everybody else in the room,” Pertman said. “They got some looks, like ‘What’s this all about?’ ”

 

Source: Christian Science Monitor