Encouraging moms to savor the beauty of home & life in Christ

Adoption Carries Uncertainty and Tragedy

Christin Slade Avatar

Adoption Carries Hope.jpg

How Adoption Begins

Adopting isn’t like being pregnant with a healthy baby and a healthy mama.

Adoption begins with the brokenness of loss and trauma, no matter what age the child is separated from their birth parents. It is always a felt loss, even if it doesn’t come out until later in life.

Waiting

The process of waiting for our girls to come home cannot compare with what they have had to endure thus far. And while their story isn’t as tragic as some, there is still tragedy involved. Any time a child is separated from their birth mother, it is a tragedy.

As we continue to wait, my heart swells with anticipation and longing to have them home. The uncertainty of when they will be here mixed with, will they actually make it here?, is enough to drive my mama stress up a notch. I wish sometimes I could switch it off and ease the pain, but God is molding this heart of flesh.

Motives for Adopting

As a mother with 5 biological children, our heart to adopt was not for ourselves. It isn’t used as a way to expand our family and grow our numbers. It isn’t some fad we’re following, though it seems to be a popular trend among the churches right now.

I am not aiming to shoot down adoption, because there are plenty of instances when adoption is necessary, absolutely. But I fully believe that the heart behind why one wants to adopt is crucial as to how they will allow it to shape them and their adoptive children.

I cannot speak as a mother who has dealt with infertility, so I won’t. And I won’t particularly address women who are dealing with infertility.

But for families with biological children who are looking to adopt, I beg you to consider your motives for adopting.

Adoption is not meant to be self serving, and society has made the mistake of believing that the only people who adopt are those who struggle with infertility. That is absolutely not the case.

Especially in the international adoption world, that is hardly the case. Oh there are still parents who battle infertility who adopt internationally. But they are not the majority.

Aside from the issue of trafficking (which I will address in another post), adoption must be carefully considered because, even if you adopt a baby, that child has suffered tragedy and loss and the effects cannot be ignored or glazed over.

The Reality of Trauma and Loss

Children who have reactions to these traumatic effects will not fully understand or be able to communicate why they are acting a certain way–a way that may not be typical for a well-secured, fully adjusted, attached child.

A child who suffers from attachment disorder is literally missing neuronal pathways in their brain in order to function the same as a child who has successfully attached to their mother. It’s nearly out of their control how they react to certain situations.

But a loving, willing parent can help a child cope, work to build attachment, and create those neuronal pathways. A parent must help them learn to gain control.

So many parents bring their children home, and after weeks or months of being home, their child is not what they expected. They share their frustrations and disappointment wondering how this could have happened. They were simply unprepared for the realities of tragedy involved in adoption.

Don’t get me wrong, nothing can fully prepare a parent to handle very difficult and unusual behaviors in children. But the key is to know to expect it in the first place. It’s vital we educate and equip ourselves so we have some idea of what to do. Often, parents cannot discipline a child who has suffered trauma and loss the same way they do their biological children.

Adoption is Hard

Adoption is far from unicorns and rainbows. It is a beautiful, but broken piece of a child’s life. Beauty doesn’t lie within the perfect looking family; it lies within the redemption provided by a gracious God. The story of our adoptive children is the story of us. We couldn’t be adopted into the family of God without a tragedy happening first—which is the death of Christ.

To adopt is to embrace the tragedy and use it to help our children grow, not brush it under the carpet and believe that because they are in a loving home, it will just change them. It’s just not that simple.

What God has imparted to us, may we impart to our adoptive children.

Resources

I will share our own journey, as our girls make their way home in the coming months. So much has been learned by reading other adoptive family’s stories and reading extremely helpful books, such as The Connected Child and Thriving as an Adoptive Family.

Thriving as an Adoptive Family is more of an overall look of adoption. It covers many topics, but it doesn’t offer a whole lot of depth. Still, it’s an excellent resource to introduce families to how adoption can look.

The Connected Child is a much more in-depth look at specific behaviors of a child, what could be causing them, and how to practically handle the behavior.

But the stories. The stories speak more then any information in a book could.

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Christin Slade Avatar
  1. Donna Banks Avatar

    Beautifully written and educational as well. I hope you don’t mind. I reposted this post on my blog. We have open adoption with both of our daughters which I naively thought would lessen their grief. Perhaps it has but they have certainly mourned.

  2. Rosann Avatar

    Christin, even though I’m not in a season of life where I feel God has called my husband and I to adopt, I have greatly appreciated following your journey alongside you. What is most exciting to me is wondering what beautiful, glorious miracles God will blow our minds with as you bring these girls home. Keep persevering and praying in expectation. God is good! Lifting you up, friend. 🙂

    1. Christin Avatar
      Christin

      Thank you so much sweet friend!! Your support and prayers mean SO much to me!

  3. Katie Phillips Avatar

    I love that you talk about adoption in the most true sense–God adopted us first. He brought us into Himself to be His daughters and sons. It is beautiful. But it’s so important going into it knowing that it will be difficult. Praying for you as you continue along your beautiful (and broken) journey to your girls.

    1. Christin Avatar
      Christin

      Thanks Katie. Praying for you as well! 🙂

  4. Melanie Young Avatar

    So glad to hear folks talking about this. Adoption is a tremendous ministry, but you need to go into it with your eyes open. There’s a fantastic book about that called _This Means War: Preparing Christian Families for Fostercare and Adoption_ by Cheryl Ellicott. Here’s our review of it: http://www.raisingrealmen.com/2010/07/review-this-means-war-equipping-christian-families-for-fostercare-or-adoption/

  5. Jen Harris Avatar

    In my pre-mom days, my career was in the field of foster care/state adoptions. You have shared beautifully here such important information about the reality of adoption. Continuing to pray for you all and your girls as you wait and work through the process.

  6. Jan @ Another Hatchett Job Avatar

    As an adoptive mother (through infertility) who eventually also had a biological child, it concerns me deeply how people can wake up one day and say, “this isn’t what I expected.” Having seen both sides of the parenthood spectrum, I can honestly say that NO child is ever what we expect. They all surprise us differently. But, BOTH of my boys are part of me and why would I not love a part of me? How could I cast it away or say it isn’t what I expected? Trust me, the size of my butt is rather unexpected, but I manage just fine.
    I think that the horrid truth is that when parents express that kind of dissatisfaction, they really mean to say, “this truth (the child’s reality) is not what I WANTED.” And that is the root of the selfishness that is so pervasive in our world! Now, I don’t mean a frustrated, sleep deprived Mama crying out for help. But, I have known parents who gave children back. Who, through their lack of follow through only added to the trauma that a child has suffered in his or her lifetime. It is tragic.

    No, adoption isn’t rainbows and unicorns, but neither is biological parenthood. The kids can’t help the life they are dealt, but we can do a lot to make it better for all of us!

    1. Christin Avatar
      Christin

      Jan,You are absolutely right that even biological parenthood isn’t all unicorns and rainbows! And it grieves me too, when I hear about an adoption being disrupted because the parent doesn’t want to handle the child’s reality. I can absolutely see parents getting help beyond what they are able, but most of the time it’s not that they desire to seek further help.

      And adoption is a very deep commitment. I think it often asks of us more then we’re prepared for. Just like biological parenting does, just at different levels with different things. Thanks so much for stopping in and sharing here. And I am still learning, too–and still have a lot of learning ahead of me!

  7. Laurie Avatar
    Laurie

    Thanks so much for sharing this important information. Children need families, but parents need to be equipped and prepared for issues they may encounter. Sometimes children are like vessels with only a few cracks, which can be easily mended; other times they are vessels that are shattered, and there is nothing you as a parent can do to replace all the missing pieces. I still believe God can and will bring restoration and healing, but the process is long. Loving someone who is broken breaks your own heart. But how much more must Gods heart break for the lost and broken in this world. Those whom he calls, he equips- I can’t imagine adopting for any other reason.

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