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T A B L E_T A L K

Are you an adopted child? Are you searching for your birth mother -- or dodging her attempts to reach you? Discuss adoption rights in the Social Issues area of Table Talk

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Find books about adoption at barnesandnoble.com
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R E C E N T L Y

My mother's daughter
By Kristina Zarlengo
A child of adoption wonders: How much is my nature a product of my nurturing?
(01/05/99)

The baby girl I gave away
By Ceil Malek
Putting up a baby for adoption was the first act of my adult life, but it took me almost 30 years to face what that decision meant for me and my daughter
(01/04/99)

Millennial family values
By Stephanie Coontz
The legislators who are piously "voting their conscience" have been consistently screwing the future for our children
(12/24/98)

The last waltz
By Anne Lamott
A dying woman calls her community together to thank it, to say goodbye -- and to dance
(12/23/98)

Forever young
By Joan Walsh
In defense of My Twinn: Why the doll that horrifies parents appeals to children
(12/22/98)

BROWSE THE MOTHERS WHO THINK FEATURE ARCHIVES

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Mamafesto
By Camille Peri
Why it's time
for Mothers Who Think

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ONE MOTHER'S GAIN | PAGE 1, 2
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We balanced our sense of losing Jimmy with our desire to adopt another child, and our social worker supported placing another child in our home. I remember coming home from work on the last day of school with the phone ringing as I came in the door. The social worker on the line said that a 6-week-old baby girl was ready and waiting. When could we be ready? Two days later, our daughter's room was prepared. On Friday I had been a teacher. By Monday morning, I was a mother again.

But we found our fitness as parents still being scrutinized. The previous spring, Frank and I had decided to move back to Colorado to be closer to our families. The Los Angeles County Adoption Agency was supportive of my need to work during Kathy's first year -- provided we made arrangements for good child care -- and of our interest in adopting a second child as well. So we did not anticipate the reaction we encountered when a part-time Colorado social worker paid us a visit. We had looked forward to her calling and had lemonade and cookies ready when she came. But from the moment we answered the door, we could sense something was wrong. She refused our lemonade and had to be coaxed into looking at Kathy, who was sleeping in her room. All her questions were focused on my working. As she prepared to leave, after the briefest of stays, she announced that the fact that a mother who professed to want a child so badly could return to work indicated to her that this would not be a desirable home for a child. She said she would do all she could to see that Kathy was taken away from us.

We had just lost a son to a sudden death; we couldn't lose our daughter. Frank was on the phone to the agency in California as soon as the front door closed. The worker there reassured us that all decisions concerning Kathy's adoption would come from her office. Although the Colorado agency managed to drag out finalizing the adoption for more than a year, we finally became Kathy's legal parents. Two years later, when we were ready to adopt again, we learned that the social worker who had made the case against us was a teacher who had been hired for a summer. When she left, she also left a note in our file stating that no more children should ever be placed in our home. Fortunately, the next social worker assigned to us was supportive, and our efforts to adopt our second daughter, whom we named Kristina, went quickly and smoothly.

Having waited so long for children, we now relished being a mom and dad. Our sense of invulnerability, however, had long since vanished. We were fanatical about germs and overly worried whenever either child had a fever. We were horrified when Kathy, at age 5, slipped into a coma and was diagnosed with meningitis -- I brought to her illness the blind fear I would have had for Jimmy had I known his fate. We refused to leave the hospital; numbly, we went through the motions of sleeping and waking up, but never fully doing either. We spent our days in the waiting room outside the ICU, wanting to see Kathy but chilled by what we saw during the short moments we were allowed to be with her.

Finally, after three weeks, we were able to take her home. Fortunately, I was no longer working during the months of recovery when Kathy was unable to return to school or be with other groups of people-- she had double peripheral vision and an overwhelming sensitivity to sound. Kris, Kathy and I spent many hours playing games, reading books, enjoying the little kittens that each of the girls had picked out. At first, Kathy's sensory overload made her fearful about venturing outside; later she would explore in the company of one of us, and gradually, as her body healed, she regained her confidence. Frank and I were guarded and watchful during these months, but I also believe that that time bound our family together in an unusually intimate way.

Even during our daughters' teen years, we were a close-knit family. I remember that Frank and I had fixed up the house to accommodate lots of kids and looked forward to the many hours our children and their friends would spend afterschool at our house. This, of course, turned out to be a parent's fantasy. We got to know their friends better by driving with them to sports events, music lessons, trips to the malls or an occasional rock concert. Even when relations were strained, one thing we were blessed in never hearing from either of our girls was, "You can't tell us what to do. You're not our real mom and dad." We may have been hopelessly square or too strict, but we were still their parents.

Kristina and Kathy were teenagers when their dad died suddenly while playing tennis with friends. Frank had been a very protective father; now both girls felt that much of what they had depended upon had been taken from them and they could not know when someone else they loved and counted on would be gone. Kris became highly independent, often cold and distant, not wanting or allowing anyone to do anything for her. Kathy became rebellious. Since life couldn't be counted on, she felt, what difference did it make what she did?

The issue of being abandoned at birth could have exacerbated my daughters' sense of losing their father, but I have to admit that this thought never occurred to me, or any of us, at the time. Now, however, I think back to the time shortly after Kathy's illness, when our pediatrician encouraged us to go as a family to a child psychiatrist. Kathy had become something of a tyrant and neither we nor her doctor were certain whether her behavior was related to the assault on the brain caused by meningitis or was simply clever manipulations. It didn't take the psychiatrist long to determine that Kathy was manipulating all of us. I remember the shock and disbelief I felt when he told us that adopted children know they were rejected at birth and would generally act in one of two ways: They would either be so good that no one would ever want to reject them again or they would be so difficult that if ever rejected again, they would be able to feel it was because of how they chose to behave, something over which they had control. I denied this vehemently. No little girls ever could have been more wanted, I explained. Besides, they were too young to grasp the concept of being adopted. He leaned over and patted me on the arm. "You believe what you want to, Mother, but I'm telling you that you have classic examples of both behaviors."

Was I again being naive? If so, I confess to cherishing that kind of naiveté because it demanded that our family give full attention to our lives, rather than dwelling on other people's concepts of our lives. I also believe that our family's frequent reminders of how quickly we can lose those we love have left me with little patience for probing subtler forms of loss.

However, I often wondered what might happen if the girls decided to search for their biological families. I could understand their curiosity and desire to fill this missing part of their lives, but I hoped that if they found their birth parents, they would be welcomed, not once again rejected. I also wondered if the girls' sudden reappearance would bring up painful memories for those involved and complicate their lives and the lives of their families. While I worried about what my daughters might feel if they found their birth parents, I didn't realize that my daughters worried about what I might feel.

When Kathy was 26 and training for a marathon, she decided that it was important to know more about her medical background and the health of her biological parents. We had been given only the briefest of information about the birth parents' health. Kathy wrote to an agency that could help her get more information and discovered that her birth mother had indicated she would like to be in touch with Kathy if the interest were ever mutual. This was certainly a part of Kathy's life about which she had very little information and a good amount of curiosity, but she held back from telling me about her contact with her birth mother for more than a year.

One weekend, as we headed out to a cabin in the mountains, I noticed that Kathy seemed quiet and withdrawn. She said we needed to talk and suggested we pull over to a diner for a cup of coffee. After we slid into a bright red vinyl booth and gave our order to a waitress on roller skates, Kathy began her somber remarks. She said she had something to tell me that she was afraid would hurt me. "What's the worst thing you can imagine happening?" she asked. Now this is a question that will strike terror in any mother's heart. When she finally said, "I've found my birth mom," I felt nothing but relief. If I was hurt at all, it was that she had waited so long to tell me because she had thought I might be hurt. Later, over coffee, I asked her if she thought Kris might have done the same. She hemmed and hawed a bit before saying she didn't think so. But the next night when Kris called and said, "Mom, I've got something to tell you," I was not surprised.

I finally met Kris' birth mother, Ceil, at a big family picnic in Colorado. I liked her immediately -- she is a warm, caring woman. Sitting across from me at the table, she asked question after question about Kris' life -- her first ballet lesson, her first day of school, all the moments she had been forced to relinquish when she gave up her child. And yet, neither she nor Kathy's biological mother had been able to completely give up those moments; both women told me that not a day had gone by that they didn't think about the babies they had given away. I wasn't uncomfortable but happy to share with them all they had missed -- I knew that in their situation, I would have felt the same way. Meeting Ceil made me realize that finding each other was as important to her as it was to Kris.

Am I being naive when I say that meeting my children's other parents has been my gain as well as theirs? And now, when I ponder the new form of parental love that is being offered to Kris and Kathy by their biological parents and newfound siblings, do I qualify myself as an adoptive mom? No, I'm still just "mom."
SALON | Jan. 6, 1999

Maurine Zarlengo Christ is a retired first-gradeteacher now living in Santa Rosa, Calif., with her husband. She has two adopted daughters as well as a stepdaughter and a stepson.

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T A B L E _.T A L K

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