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Listening
To Adult Adoptees: A Lesson For Adoptive Parents
by Terra Trevor
(Reprinted with Permission)
Often it takes place within a discussion on an adoption e-list. Recently it
happened again at a breakout session at an adoption conference. My friend
Jennifer sits down across from me and begins talking with an adoptive mother.
Both Jennifer and the woman's 11-year-old daughter are adopted from Korea.
"Where did you grow up, and what about the guys you date?" The mother
asks, looking over the tops of her reading glasses. She raises her eyebrows.
"Do you go out with Asians?"
Jennifer
freezes. She sighs and shrugs her shoulders, her expression so dramatically
changes across her face like a rain cloud blocking the sun. Then my friend
composes herself and begins to open up. But within minutes this mother
overrides everything Jennifer has shared and begins giving her the low down.
The carpet beneath my feet seems to press upward, and I wish I could become
part of the wall. It's unintentional; of course, this adoptive mother thinks
she is only asking appropriate questions, giving an appropriate lecture, and
that it's OK to expect an adult adoptee to open up her life for her
examination.
As the mother of a Korean-born son and daughter I've met my share of nosy
questions, but now the tables are turned. Instead of the quizzical stares and
rude comments from strangers that trailed me when my kids were young, today the
probing questions and silencing comments I hear slip from the mouths of
adoptive parents, and are directed towards adopted adults.
Adoptive parents both create and reflect adoptive parenting attitudes and
social values. We are familiar with the difficulties of fielding intrusive
comments, so why have so many begun to speak out inappropriately to adopted
adults?
We can shrug it off. After all, they mean well. They have children who are at
the center of their lives, desperately important, deeply loved, and they are
only wanting to talk with someone who has walked the adoptee path, to shed a
little light on the adult journey their child will someday embark on.
They may have good intentions, but they aren't doing their best job of
remembering. From experience we know the burden of educating others is
oppressive. When our children first joined our family the job of educating
those outside of the adoption triad fell to us, their parents. We are the
generation of adoptive parents who worked towards setting the bounds of privacy
while empowering our children to face bothersome questions. We formed an
adoption community committed to teaching our kids to insist on the right of
privacy early on, to know that what feels private can legitimately be kept
private.
All interracial adoptive families attract a certain amount of attention. When
our kids are babies there are days when we can't get through the supermarket
without being stopped by a stranger or two, being chased down the isle by
someone who wants to ask us entirely inappropriate questions. If we are wise we
take cues from our kids. At first we might enjoy the notice, but usually our
children do not. From practice we parents learn that fielding too many
questions wears on our spirit. In parenting we worry about doing our best to
help our children deal with the expectations others may have of them as they
get older. So by the time most adult adoptees begin facing rude comments and
nosy questions on their own, they've had years of watching their parents model
empowering answers, with a mind set that lets them know they have the right to
choose whether and how to respond to intrusive questioning.
"In the best interest of the child" is a concept that consistently is
embraced as a core principle of adoption. Those children whose best interest we
want to protect grow up to be adults who hold their own rights to privacy.
We're fortunate in today's paradigm we have those adopted adults who are
willing to be interpreters of the adult adoptee perspective and are willing to
share personal information. Yet it's important to remember that not all
adoptees enjoy being the object of curiosity. While being open all along with
our children is key, we do not have the right to expect that same level of
openness with adults we barely know, just because they happen to have been
adopted.
Adopted adults should not be singled out and queried unless they have
volunteered themselves as a bridge, and even then there are boundaries that
need to be respected.
Each
of us in the adoption community is part of an ongoing conversation. We are a
tapestry of voices. Adoptees, birth parents, and adoptive parents each have
indwelling wisdom to offer. There is an African proverb that serves to remind
us. A single bracelet does not jangle. When we listen, show respect, and grow
through our interactions with one another, we all become diggers in a far
richer mine.
To those adoptive parents who lean towards over powering statements made by
adopted adults, I counsel the following: Picture yourself 20 years from now.
What kind of relationship do you hope to have with your child? As your children
reach adulthood, you will need to keep some of your comments to yourself. Begin
practicing now. When adopted adults speak out, or offer to answer questions,
listen with a benevolent ear, treat them with dignity and offer them the same
respect you will want your own children to receive when they reach adulthood.
Being respectful to another adoptive parent's adult son or daughter is one of
the most important things an adoptive parent can do.
This
article was first published in the June/July 2004 issue of Adoption Today magazine and was
reprinted in the October 2007 issue of RainbowKids.com
and appears on the Tapestry Books.com website. Copyright 2004, Terra Trevor,
author of Pushing up the Sky
(Korean American Adoptee Adoptive Family Network). All rights reserved.
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