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I know I am opening a can of worms but I am curious how others have walked this out. In reading about open adoption. It states. Although birthmother will always be the birthmother they are not the parent. This is a very vague statement. I realize open adoption is supposed to give the child security of knowing the birthfamily loves them. And also to allow the birthfamily to have contact with their offspring. But Have you found the lines sometimes get blurred. When our birthmother calls and asks specific questions I feel like I am the babysitter and she is critiquing my parenting. I see how the relationship benefits the birthparents. But how does it benefit the adoptive parents? Couldn't the same level of security etc.. be established through a semi-open adoption where when the child desires more info the birthparent can be contacted. IF the adoptive parents are the parents and the birthparents have GIVEN this role over to them.. WHY share the role with them.It seems confusing to me. What is the definition of parent. If the birthparent gives up all the responsibility that parenthood requires but is still allowed all the benefits of parenting.. Seeing his milestones.. Visiting him. being apart of his life. I really desire some perspective.Thanks,
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All relationships are like three legged stools. For them to be sustained, there must be three things - love, respect and trust. Great insight. Very well put. The respect and trust have been broken. Having complete access to his medical and family social history has helped too - I wish I could say that was the case... We didn't get to see the medical history before the adoption But yes we do have access to the birthfamily. A lot of our issues cannot be dealt with until we are done with this legal matter. Until then we have to ignore them. BTW.. I have two older children and was a childcare professional before I was a mother, so it not a new mother issue in fact I think it makes it worse.. She is questioning stuff that I know is correct and She is speaking out of inexperience so it is frustrating. Lastly, I have a sense of security knowing my son has complete access to everything about himself, just as a child born to me would. He knows his social, genetic, emotional and physical history. There are no 'blanks'. For me, that is important Again I am questioning couldn't this be obtained through a semi-open adoption.Re: counseling.etc..Again this is a matter we have to delay until the legal mess is over.. They do not trust the lawyer, the social worker or anything we provided. When this legal mess is over we will discuss a third party negotiator and counseling for the birthmother. Open adoption is so vague in definition it ranges fromLetters and phone calls to integrated families. Establishing boundaries and defining roles is very complicated because they are not clearly defined. These roles should come out of respect love and trust but When one side is unrealistic in their demands instead of considering the other side It seems only one side is getting what they desire. One side has the control. There is always compromise in a relationship. But at whose expense. Right now it is at our expense. We are accomodating they are demanding. Defining roles is a process that will take time and a lot of work in our case.
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drama mama
A lot of our issues cannot be dealt with until we are done with this legal matter. Until then we have to ignore them..
drama mama
BTW.. I have two older children and was a childcare professional before I was a mother, so it not a new mother issue in fact I think it makes it worse.. She is questioning stuff that I know is correct and She is speaking out of inexperience so it is frustrating.
drama mama
Again I am questioning couldn't this be obtained through a semi-open adoption.
drama mama
Re: counseling.etc..Again this is a matter we have to delay until the legal mess is over.. They do not trust the lawyer, the social worker or anything we provided. When this legal mess is over we will discuss a third party negotiator and counseling for the birthmother..
drama mama
Open adoption is so vague in definition it ranges from
Letters and phone calls to integrated families. Establishing boundaries and defining roles is very complicated because they are not clearly defined...
drama mama
These roles should come out of respect love and trust
drama mama
but When one side is unrealistic in their demands instead of considering the other side It seems only one side is getting what they desire. One side has the control.
drama mama
There is always compromise in a relationship. But at whose expense. Right now it is at our expense. We are accomodating they are demanding.
drama mama
Defining roles is a process that will take time and a lot of work in our case..
Enjoying your input giving me lots to chew on... Re: Does it bother you also when others who are not your child's biological parents question stuff you do? For instance, if your relatives, friends, strangers, neigbors make comments about your parenting choices, is it also frustrating and upsetting for you? ...If someone were to ask the questions the bmom has to me regarding any other one of my children I would of told them to mind their own business. My role as Mother allows me to make the decisions for my childs health and wellbeing. Friends may give advice but to question my parenting. That is way over the line in any friendship. They spent a long time interviewing us, and they choose us based on our parenting style and abilities. In this case that is clearly not respecting us as the aparents. When someone treats you like a babysitter instead of a parent then the roles are not defined.. Questioning what and when I feed him etc..Asking what kind of brain development toys he is playing with at 4 months old Questioning his medical care etc.. Is not allowing us to be the parent. .. If it benefited the child and no one else That is supposed to be the whole purpose..Thus leading to my discussion starter. How do you define roles etc..In long term studies.. from what I have read...In some cases Birthparents are very consistent for the first five- seven years and then they begin to lessen their envolvement as their live gets more complicated. Their love does not lessen but their involvement does. There are many reasons this may occur and it is understandable.. They have accepted and trust the adparents they know their offspring is well taken care of etc.. HOWEVER, This creates insecurity and confusion to the child.Who does this hurt the child... Who was the relationship for? Who benefited from the frequent visits? Who is suffering rejection and loss? Often the adoptee is wondering why don't they visit anymore don't they love me...Wouldn't it be better to have to have once a year for eighteen years than three times a year for five and then poof vanish? I am merely weighing and expressing my thoughts.I am still committed to an open adoption.. I am just unsure how to walk it out and how to clarify roles...Most responsible people are capable of making an agreement and sticking to it with acceptable boundaries, respect, honesty and trust. HOwever, there are others,who do not have good decision making ablilities, thus honoring this type of a commitment is next to impossible. To expecting them to understand personal boundaries and respect based on current life choices is unrealistic, for this pattern of behaviour is what made them choose adoption in the first place...Thus defining role in a relationship must be personalized to each unique situation.
[QUOTE=numbr1dbcksfan]Im going to try to give input... First... the father contesting. Were his rights legally teminated? Is the mother supporting him contesting? Is he refusing to give up his rights... or contesting the way his rights were terminated? The father is contesting. We have legal standing based on abandonment. His rights have not been terminated but will be soon.MOther is not legally supporting him, but defending him, acting as a go between asked us to give him back to the father. Take that for what you will He originally was for the adoption but its a long story It is a control issue He took a long time going back and forth leaving the child in limbo so the adoption was filed without his consent... We thought he would consent. Lastly. If you promised an open adoption, I feel that you really need to keep your word. The mother may not have even considered you as parents if you didnt want one. To change that after the fact, IMO, is wrong. We are still committed to an open adoption. My debate is When lies, betrayal accusations etc.. cloud the relationship this has caused me to say??? Remind me WHat are the benefits to an open adoption? Couldn't this be obtained in a sem- open adoption.? etc.. Our relationship has been damaged and it will take time to repair. Our relationship has been affected by this legal action, thus we have been unable to fulfill some of our commitment, this saddens me. My desire for a baby dedication etc.. has been put on hold because of the complexity of our situationPlease know, that having pictures or seeing a milestone doesnt make us parents... it is a small consolation for all that we are missing. I appreciate this insight. And we trully are trying to have compassion for someone who is going through a severe loss, not accepting counseling and allowing a very controlling manipulating man to cloud her thoughts.For these reasons we have been more accomadating than we originally had agreed to. But to continually be betrayed, lied to, accused etc.. It is hard to continue to turn the other cheek when you get punched every time.She is being fed lies and is paranoid. She is afraid and she is confused. What a mess! We are hoping that once the legal mess dies down we can begin to rebuild the relationship. It hurts that we have done everything she has asked and more and she spits in our face.To her it is all about her. Not about the baby, not about the emotional H*LL it is putting us through or the sacrifices we have made etc..What matters is her pain and her grief, her demands.We have become the enemy.. WHY because when THEY (the birthparents) if we would parent their offspring we said yes. We put our life on hold, we opened our hearts and our home and our meager pocket book. Only to be continually stepped on, taken advantage of, betrayed and financially drained.... They came to us, They chose us. The drama has not stopped since it all began.At some point, when the legal mess is over for the sake of our family and our children. We will have to establish boundaries I refuse to let my children this in this emotional whirlwind. at some point.. When someone becomes unsafe to be around your family... Redefining the roles may happen.The question is I don't even know what the roles are in the first place....
DramaMama,
You're already gotten some excellent advice here. I sense that most of what you're expressing is due to the stress you're under, and who can blame you? I hope things get resolved soon so you can all work this out without the cloud of legal action hanging over your heads.
You asked about benefits to the AP's in an open adoption. While I don't think this is the primary goal of open adoption (and I'm not saying you do either), allow me to share the benefits that my bdaughter's parents have expressed to me and I have observed:
1. There is no wondering who I am or where I am. No need to panic every time the doorbell rings and it's a woman about the right age with vaguely similar features... "Is that her? Oh my God, is she just showing up?"
2. No need to wonder or worry about search and/or reunion. I'm already there. No mystery, no fantasy. No daydreams that I'm a fairy princess who lives in a castle.
3. Easy access to medical history, bfamily history; much of that that information might be missing from closed or "semi-open" situations, despite our best intentions. K's mom can call me up any time and say "Did you ever have this? Are you allergic to this?"
In addition, I have gained a close relationship with K's family, and they with mine. We have a true friendship, but keep in mind that this is the result of nearly 13 years of experiences together. K has the security and love of her family and the security and love of her birthfamily as well. I know my boundaries, and so does my family. K isn't confused; she knows exactly who her parents are and who I am in her life. She has from the beginning. I think confusion over who's the parent is a common misconception about children in open adoption. I've never found it to be true. I don't think the same sense of self, of security, or confidence, can ever come from "semi-open" situations. I know there are many children out there, complete and happy, in those scenarios, but I don't agree that it's the same by any means. I think it still leaves too many unanswered questions.
I realize that right now you don't have much access to the types of benefits I've described, but if you hang in there, they can come to you, too. You're right that respect and trust can't be established without honesty, but do what you can to build those bridges from your side, to accept the bparents as best you can for all their flaws, as hopefully they will for you, and I think you'll begin to see the benefits to you and most especially to your child, sooner than you think.
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I'd like to weigh in here, with a different angle.I'm a b-dad. Not real proud of what happened but...My ex got pregnant and not only didn't tell me but kept her family in the dark. I was told 3 days after the birth and only because of parental rights termination issues. Her parents then got involved and wanted contact, then the a-family decided an open adoption may not be the best option.Needless to say I was crushed. Years have gone by and I've come to the realization that the a-parents closed the door because of percieved control issues, and I got caught in the middle.I honestly don't know what was best, I just have to trust the a-parents. I gave up my rights. Who would want to raise a child with that kind of start? I'm not without blame, but I'm not a control freak either. In conclusion, my dear DRAMA MAMA, You have to do what you feel best. You have a responsible decision to make. What is best for the child?(I know that is a WAY overused sentence) A delicate balance of love and cold hard logic must overcome anybodys willingness to use a child as a pawn in a game of control and/or manipulation. Raymond
drama mama
...If someone were to ask the questions the bmom has to me regarding any other one of my children I would of told them to mind their own business. My role as Mother allows me to make the decisions for my childs health and wellbeing. Friends may give advice but to question my parenting. That is way over the line in any friendship. They spent a long time interviewing us, and they choose us based on our parenting style and abilities. In this case that is clearly not respecting us as the aparents. When someone treats you like a babysitter instead of a parent then the roles are not defined.. Questioning what and when I feed him etc..Asking what kind of brain development toys he is playing with at 4 months old Questioning his medical care etc.. Is not allowing us to be the parent.
drama mama
In some cases Birthparents are very consistent for the first five- seven years and then they begin to lessen their envolvement as their live gets more complicated. Their love does not lessen but their involvement does. There are many reasons this may occur and it is understandable.. They have accepted and trust the adparents they know their offspring is well taken care of etc.. HOWEVER, This creates insecurity and confusion to the child.
Who does this hurt the child... Who was the relationship for? Who benefited from the frequent visits? Who is suffering rejection and loss? Often the adoptee is wondering why don't they visit anymore don't they love me....
drama mama
Wouldn't it be better to have to have once a year for eighteen years than three times a year for five and then poof vanish?
drama mama
Most responsible people are capable of making an agreement and sticking to it with acceptable boundaries, respect, honesty and trust. HOwever, there are others,
who do not have good decision making ablilities, thus honoring this type of a commitment is next to impossible. To expecting them to understand personal boundaries and respect based on current life choices is unrealistic, for this pattern of behaviour is what made them choose adoption in the first place....
drama mama
Thus defining role in a relationship must be personalized to each unique situation.
fuglydog
I'd like to weigh in here, with a different angle.I'm a b-dad. Not real proud of what happened but...My ex got pregnant and not only didn't tell me but kept her family in the dark. I was told 3 days after the birth and only because of parental rights termination issues. Her parents then got involved and wanted contact, then the a-family decided an open adoption may not be the best option.Needless to say I was crushed. Years have gone by and I've come to the realization that the a-parents closed the door because of percieved control issues, and I got caught in the middle.I honestly don't know what was best, I just have to trust the a-parents. I gave up my rights. Who would want to raise a child with that kind of start? I'm not without blame, but I'm not a control freak either. In conclusion, my dear DRAMA MAMA, You have to do what you feel best. You have a responsible decision to make. What is best for the child?(I know that is a WAY overused sentence) A delicate balance of love and cold hard logic must overcome anybodys willingness to use a child as a pawn in a game of control and/or manipulation. Raymond
Thanks for your insight All of you... I appreciate that you gave me honest feed back yet respected my feelings no matter how rational or irrational they are at this time. I am sure a year from now things will look and be very different. I am trying to see it from the BP perspective. Keep it coming
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Sorry, I just found this thread.....
I am interested in knowing which studies you have read.
In my experience in working with birthparents in open adoption (something I've done for 18 years) many birthparents slack off because they really do not know that their presence benefits the child. They are told when they place what a great thing open adoption is for them. They are not told how it benefits the child, nor is responsibility or committment discussed. Most see their kids as thriving regardless of their involvement. Take a look at the "birthparent" info that agencies give out. There is little on birthparent role or responsibility. It is all about "what you want. You make all the choices. You do what is confortable for you."
I see that as the main reason birthparents "drop out". There is little telling them they are needed.
drama mama
In long term studies.. from what I have read...
In some cases Birthparents are very consistent for the first five- seven years and then they begin to lessen their envolvement as their live gets more complicated. Their love does not lessen but their involvement does. There are many reasons this may occur and it is understandable.. They have accepted and trust the adparents they know their offspring is well taken care of etc.. HOWEVER, This creates insecurity and confusion to the child.
hey brenda,
thanks for resurrecting this thread-I didn't see it the first time round either :) .
I think that if you (as an aparent) are afraid of bmom/bdad not maintaining consistent contact, then you can reach out to the entire bfamily. we fully expect that bmom will grow up and have a life, and that our role will change over time and that's fine with us. (She does know how important she is to dd, but I expect she'll go to college, things change etc.) We also have bgrandmas and bgranddads, who are always going to be there, baunts, bcousins, etc. That gives dd that bfamily connection no matter what.
tobeafamily
I remember Brenda Romanchik telling us what her 15 YO birthson said. Something along the lines of "You guys make this all way more complicated than it is." BTW if you haven't checked her out at Open Adoption Insight (google it) you should. She's got some wonderful information and insight.
Regina
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I had to ressurect this thread because there is still so much confusion.
I view bparents roles as similar to Mother and father-in laws. They did not raise me, but they love me as their own. They do not get to PARENT me, but they still give advice, suggestions etc....
My in-laws are my OTHER PARENTS. And I feel strongly that it is a perfect starting place to define bparent roles as such and also to gauge our responses. "If my MIL said this, how would I respond?"
Obviously there is a deeper connection than an ACTUAL In-Law relationship, but it's a good start. I can go weeks and be fine with no word from MIL, and sometimes I need to talk to her more often. Openess gives all involved the power and control. My open relationship with dd's bparents is letters and pictures for now and a few phonecalls, but mainly it's more comfortable for ALL of us to write rather than call.....BUT I can call if I need to. Openess gave me that.
drama mama
My debate is When lies, betrayal accusations etc.. cloud the relationship this has caused me to say??? Remind me WHat are the benefits to an open adoption? Couldn't this be obtained in a sem- open adoption.? etc.. Our relationship has been damaged and it will take time to repair. Our relationship has been affected by this legal action, thus we have been unable to fulfill some of our commitment, this saddens me. My desire for a baby dedication etc.. has been put on hold because of the complexity of our situation But to continually be betrayed, lied to, accused etc.. It is hard to continue to turn the other cheek when you get punched every time.It hurts that we have done everything she has asked and more and she spits in our face.To her it is all about her. Not about the baby, not about the emotional H*LL it is putting us through or the sacrifices we have made etc..What matters is her pain and her grief, her demands.We have become the enemy.. WHY because when THEY (the birthparents) if we would parent their offspring we said yes. We put our life on hold, we opened our hearts and our home and our meager pocket book. Only to be continually stepped on, taken advantage of, betrayed and financially drained.... They came to us, They chose us. The drama has not stopped since it all began.At some point, when the legal mess is over for the sake of our family and our children. We will have to establish boundaries I refuse to let my children this in this emotional whirlwind. at some point.. When someone becomes unsafe to be around your family...