Did you know I am Adopted?
I am not sure
you know this about me but I am adopted. I have thought that I should write the story from my perspective (throughout the years) before but never sat down to do it. I know that we all
struggle with something in life and maybe my story could help someone else...
so here we go. I also want to note that my story is just that, it’s mine.
There are lots of people that have been touched by adoption and have a
wide range of experiences from it. I will tell you now that my story is
one of the great ones... a blessing from start to finish but also honest about
the hurts and struggles I went through because of my adoption. Oh, and
this will be longggg, like 6 full printed pages long, so maybe get a cup of tea
or a glass of water and settle in=).
The story
starts before I was born. It starts with a teenage girl and her
boyfriend. She got pregnant and was faced with making a decision to abort
the baby that was in the way of her life. Through counseling with a
pastor at their church she made the decision to not have an abortion but
instead to give the baby up for adoption. During this time there was
another couple that had tried to have a baby but they could not conceive.
Having a child was their dream so they began the long and expensive
process of adoption. Enter me. My birthmother (we will call her
Sue) gave birth to me on March 23, 1980 and named me Samantha. I was born
with pneumonia and my precious birthmother and her family did not want me
to be alone in the hospital while I was recovering so they stayed with me for a
week. Could you imagine trying to hold your baby enough to make up for a
lifetime in 7 days? Once I was well
enough to be released my birthmother signed the adoption papers and walked out
of my life.
What a fabulous
gift she gave me and my adopted family. She made a courageous decision
and gave me life. I will forever be grateful. I am especially grateful
that she chose my adoptive family. My parents are amazing people.
They knew from the moment that they saw me that I was meant to be
theirs. God knit our family together
supernaturally and chose them for me and me for them before the foundation of
the world. I was theirs and they loved me as wholeheartedly as if I had
been born from them physically. I couldn't imagine life without a love as
strong as theirs. I would have never made it. They made sure I knew and understood that I was adopted but they also always always always told me that I was loved. So, although my story is
the best I have to say that I bear scars from my adoption. Probably a lot like any other child
that has been through it. (Readers Note: I will refer to my adoptive parents as
mom and dad throughout this story because that is what they are... just so you
know who I am talking about=)
Growing up I
always knew I was different. I was adopted into a family with a strong Hispanic heritage.
Although my Aunts and Uncles loved me, I never felt like I fit. I
felt like I stood out in the crowd. If you haven't been adopted then it
is hard to imagine what it feels like to not look like anyone. Even now,
as I look at my beautiful Bug she has very distinct face and body
characteristics that easily place her with my husband and me. She will be
able to look at me and my hubs and say "that is where I got my nose, lips,
ears, etc". Not being able to do that can make you feel lost in a
sea of people at times. It was funny because I was tall and my dad was
tall. There are times that people would make a comment about me being “tall
like my dad” and sometimes I would feel pride that I was being associated with
him and my family and other days it would sting and remind me that I didn't
belong. I also had some cousins that decided that because I was adopted
that I wasn't truly a part of the family. That hurt more than I can
explain. It felt like I walked around with open sores on my body and at
the strangest of times and with the most innocent of comments people would walk
up and rub salt in them. I remember having a fight with a friend in the
2nd or 3rd grade. In an effort to hurt me she wrote a note about how she could
see why my birthmother gave me up and that I was thrown away and that I was
ugly. It was amazing the hurt that stuck with me even after I received
her parent required apology. I believe that the wounds of adoption are so
deep it feels like you are being cut deep inside your heart with every painful
situation.
If you are
wondering what adoption wounds I could be dealing with since my adopted parents
weren't hurtful or abusive in any way but instead gave me more love than some
natural children receive from their parents, I understand. Somehow being
adopted (in my case) gave me a foundation that said "you were not wanted
and someone gave you away". The fact that my foundation was
rejection (not just of 1 part of me but of me as a whole) created a terrible
place to build anything else. Just like any house if the foundation of
the house is rotten and termite infested than no matter how excellent the builder’s
craftsmanship of the home, the beautiful decorations, and color choices, if
there is a faulty foundation and it will fall in.
Oh, it may be
helpful to also know that during Elementary School and Middle School I had a
few other issues too. My allergies would get to be so bad in the spring
that I couldn't do outdoor activities with the other kids. So I could
watch them play from the windows of the library and then I would settle in with
a pile of books (ps. as terrible as it felt at the time, my insatiable love of
books now is something I wouldn't trade for all of the outside play time in the
world!) Also I had teeth that had a giant gap in them and they stuck
straight out. I had 2 rounds of braces and even headgear the first time.
I had glasses and allergies/asthma. I couldn't run a mile to save
my life. (It really is a miracle I made it through elementary and middle
school with any confidence at all.) I became really good at keeping
people laughing so I didn't feel like they were laughing at me. I tried
to be a funny, over the top, person to deflect pain, and I was good at it.
I could put on a show and hide all of the hurt I felt. In a way it felt like I became two
people. The inside me (wounded) the
outside me (large and in charge). Let me
tell you, it is exhausting to constantly try to prove to everyone in your life
you are worth liking/loving and then living with constant fear that they are
going to leave anyway.
So, when did my
foundation start to fall in? During the middle school to high school time
period of my life. I could go into lots of ugly details here but the
point of the story is not to show you how ugly things got so I will give you
the reader’s digest version. In short, I became a cutter, I hurt and
abused my body because that self inflicted pain was more bearable/controllable
than pain I felt from the stranger that "gave me up". I turned
to boys and began serial dating. Not that I dated a lot of people but I always had
a boyfriend and their opinion meant the world to me. Somehow I was trying
to find my worth in it. I even began dabbling in alcohol (side note:
don't be the "cool mom" that lets kids drink at your house... it is
just plain wrong). At this point I became an expert at being two-faced. I could smile and go to church and spout all
the right words, but my heart was dying and I literally hated myself. My precious parents did everything they could
think of to help me through (at least what they knew about - sorry if you guys
are reading this!) They took me to counseling which helped some. It gave me someone to talk to about my
thoughts but I never opened up fully because I felt bad for my parents. Then in a last ditch effort they gave me
letters that my birthfamily had written me and given to me the day they signed
the papers. They were supposed to give them to me when I was 16 and 18
but they knew I was desperate for them so they gave them to me early. It is amazing how much that meant.
Because I had NO details until that point my mind would make up all kinds
of different personas for my birthmother. One day she would be
superwoman. Her job was to save the world and regrettably having me would
keep her from doing that so she gave me up but was always close by watching me.
The next day she was a crack addict and had a baby every 9-10 months that
she sold for drug money. The next day she was an exiled queen and she
gave me away to keep me safe so that one day I would be brought back and
placed as princess of the kingdom (thanks a lot disney). And lots
of times she died giving birth to me, making me feel guilty all over again.
In all my imaginings I never considered that she could just be a scared,
unsure teenage girl that was a baby herself. I read letters from my
birthmother saying she loved me and thought she was doing the best thing by
giving me up. I read letters from her mother saying how much she loved
me. I even read letters from her grandparents telling stories about how
they would come to the hospital early and hold me and that I was their first
great grandchild. Getting these letters was like someone filling the
cracks and holes in my foundation with foam. It took up the spaces and
did help secure it a little. However the
cracks and issues were too deep for this to be a permanent fix.
Once I received
the letters my curiosity about my birthmother could not be satisfied.
After gaining permission from my parents I made contact with my adoption
agency and asked to find out what was in my file. There was just 1 item
in it. A picture of my birthmother the year she gave me up for adoption.
It was crazy to look at the woman that gave birth to me and what really
struck me was that she was my age. After that I decided that I wanted to
know her. I had always told my parents that I wanted to know her one day
and they always said they would help me and they stuck by their word. I
wrote a letter to her and sent it to my adoption agency. After sending
the letter I waited to hear if they received a response from the 1 contact left
in my file. All of my insecurities came FLOODING back to me. Would
she like me, would she even want to know me, will she
be embarrassed of me in her current life? Finally the day
arrived, I received a letter back. She wanted to know me! I cannot tell
you how long I sat and cried just holding the response. That began a
letter writing campaign. I learned that I had 1/2 siblings; 2 brothers
and a sister. I had ALWAYS wanted siblings and now I have them. I
was blown away. After letters we began emailing, after emails, we talked
on the phone and then just a year after I had received my first letter my
parents and I flew out to Az and setup a meeting with my birthfamily. On
that day I brought a scrapbook I had made of my life and a precious moments
figurine (at the time that was the most thoughtful thing I could think to do,
ha!) My birthmother and her mother and stepmother came to the meeting.
They met my parents first and hugged and spoke for a few minutes. I
was a nervous wreck sitting in a room by myself, 17 years old, second guessing
what I was wearing, what I would say, etc. Then there was a knock on the
door. I opened it and my dad (adopted) stood there and as I began to
argue with him about how he was supposed to be in the room he said "Amy, I
want to introduce you to your birthmother" and stepped to the side.
Here was this beautiful woman who I had wanted to know all of my life.
She stepped forward and hugged me. I will never forget that hug
because she cradled my head like a baby and it made me think that she was
hugging me like she did the last time she saw me. We talked and cried and
talked and cried. We tried to go to lunch. I say tried because the poor waiter finally
gave up trying to take our order and just waited until we called him over.
The whole lunch took about 4 hours. Then I realized I was going to
get to meet my siblings. They didn't come to the meeting because they
were very young. In fact, only Older brother (about 6 years younger than
me) knew who I was. Younger brother and sister were 5 and 4 years old and
Sue was worried that telling them about me could cause fears for them (like
that she would leave them too). I was so excited to meet them all that I
didn't care that 2 of the 3 didn't know me because I would still get to know
them. In fact, it gave Older Brother and me a special bond for those
first few years. I still remember him coming around the car with his arms
open and shyly giving me a hug. It was the best feeling in the entire
world. What was even crazier is that I looked like them! ALL OF
THEM. Then the strangest of things started to happen, I would do
something that mimicked my birthmother and we would all be shocked because I
didn't grow up learning from her. I tell you that the Nature vs Nurture
argument became much more interesting to me after meeting my DNA/birth family.
There is SO MUCH programmed into a person. More than I ever thought
was possible. Yes, I have a lot of characteristics and gestures
of my mom (adopted) but I also have a lot of my birthfamily. It is
remarkable.
From that point
our relationship grew. My loving and giving parents would fly me out to
see them 2 times a year. Giving of their time and money to help me feel
and grow the bond that I had with my birthfamily. My birthfamily came to
my highschool graduation and we all went on a cruise to celebrate. It was
an amazing time in my life.
However, even
though I knew I was loved and wanted and not thrown away I didn't realize how
badly my foundation still needed to be addressed.
College came
and with it more difficulty. I stuck to my serial dating and ended up in
a few very serious relationships. I also started drinking more and making
bigger and bigger mistakes. I remember when I was a junior I decided that
I would just marry the guy I was dating because at that point in my life I felt
so worthless and I knew no one else would want me. I remember visiting
Sue and she got into my face about it. She told me that she didn't see
God anywhere in my life and that I needed go find Him. See, even though I
grew up in church and had heard all about God and Jesus, I had decided that God
wasn't doing anything for me and that since I had prayed a prayer when I was 7
asking "God into my heart" I thought I was going to heaven so what
did it matter anyway. I could not have been more wrong and if I had died
at that point in my life I would have gone straight to hell. After
telling Sue that I didn't need her advice and being angry with her for the
first I went to the airport to get on a plane back to GA. I walked to my
seat and sat down next to an eccentric beautiful black woman named Althea.
She looked right at me and said "before you even think about
marrying that man you better get right with God". I am not kidding.
Those. Were. Her. First. Words. To. Me. All of a sudden it was as
if all of those places deep inside, the cracks, the open wounds broke apart.
Everything that I had built myself upon was damaged and here God loved me
so much that, since I wasn’t listening to a family member who was trying to
reach me, He put a complete stranger in my path. I look back now and can
see little places along the way that God tried to reach out to me but I was so
busy being wounded and the life of the party that I didn't listen. I
spent the rest of that flight literally praying, crying, and praising God.
On that day, when I truly found out who Jesus was and I decided with
every fiber of my being that I wanted to belong to Him, did my life and my
eternal destination changed.
Then, with the quiet
strength of my Lord, my painful places began to heal. Some wounds were
deeper than others and took years of God cauterizing the spot to stop
the bleeding and then applying a healing salve.
It was painful. I would love to
tell you that I stepped off of that plane in 2001 and never struggled with my
adoption or feelings of rejection again. But I cannot. It isn't true. What I had received on that plane was the
knowledge that I was loved so much that God and not only did He send His Son to
die for me, but He also put people in my path to bring me to Him. The
more I learned about His love for me, that He didn't leave me but gave all for
me, I began to realize my real worth in Jesus.
I am here to
tell you that without Christ I would still be living life struggling daily with
feelings of hurt and rejection. I would be viewing my whole life, things
that people said and did to me, through the lens of a wounded, dying soul.
If you know or have someone in your life that is adopted or if you are
adopted it is very important for them to know how much you love and value them
but the most important and impactful thing you can do for them is introduce
them to their Maker who loves them more than you do and who can rebuild them in
a way that lasts.
Yes, there are
still days where I will start to struggle with who I am but I am quick to call
those thoughts lies and instead remember what God says about me.
I am not unwanted/unloved/deserted because "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life." John 3:16
I was not a mistake because "you formed my inward parts; you knit me together in my mother's womb." Psalm 139:13
I am not alone... He is with me (there are so many verses... but a favorite is) "He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name's sake." Psalm 23:2-3
I am adopted into God’s family… my adoption gives me an ability to understand this that many may not have. I am my parents’ child, period. “For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” Galatians 3:26
If
you made it to the end of this I believe that means that it connected with you
somewhere deep inside. If you need/want
to know more about my Jesus and how His love is fully available to you and that
He wants to heal your hurting places please message me. You can comment and say “keep this private”
at the beginning and I will not post it.
Leave me your name, number, email, anything and I will be in touch with
you.
Please
know JESUS LOVES YOU. HE DIED FOR
YOU. If He can reach someone like me,
He can reach you. HE. LOVES. YOU.
With
a Thankful Heart,
Amy
Comments