Emotional Vulnerabilities of an Adoptee
Copyright 2009, Sherrie Eldridge, sherrieeldridge.com
Emotional Vulnerabilities:
• I need help in recognizing my adoption loss and help with grieving it.
• I need to be assured that my birth parent’s decision not to parent me had nothing to do with anything defective in me.
•
I need help in learning how to deal with my fears of rejection—to learn
that absence doesn’t mean abandonment or a closed door to an
opportunity that I have done something wrong.
• I need permission to express ALL my adoption feelings and fantasies.
Educational Needs:
• I need to be taught that adoption is both wonderful and painful, presenting life-long challenges for everyone involved.
• I need to know my adoption story first, then my birth story and birth history.
• I need to be taught healthy ways for getting needs met.
• I need to be taught that others may make hurtful comments about adoption and about me as adoptee.
• I need to be taught that the hurtful words are usually well-intentioned and borne out of ignorance.
•
I need to be taught specific ways to respond, in order to take my power
back and not feel victimized. (Suggestion: The Wise-Up Workbook, by
Marilyn Schoettle, M.Ed.)
Parental Needs:
• I need parents that are skillful in meeting their own emotional
needs so that I can grow up with healthy role models and be free to
focus on my development, rather taking care of them (by Connie Dawson,
LPC).
• I need parents that are willing to put aside pre-conceived ideas about adoption and be
educated about the realities and special challenges adoptive families encounter.
• I need to hear my parents openly express feelings about infertility and adoption, thus
producing a bond of intimacy between us.
•
I need parents who have grieved their own losses, such as infertility,
miscarriage, death of a child, etc., so that they can be emotionally
available for me. This is one of the greatest gifts they could give me.
• I need a non-competitive attitude between adoptive and birth parents. Without this, I will struggle with loyalty issues.
Relationship Needs:
• I need friendships with fellow adoptees.
• I need to be taught that there is a time to consider searching for my birth family and a time to give up searching.
• I need to be assured often that if I am rejected by my birth relatives, it is symptomatic of their dysfunction, not mine.
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