Adoptive Dad

Adoptive Dad

Our journey to starting a family was definitely not straight forward and we certainly took the scenic route.

Cake Off 2019

Our journey to starting a family was definitely not straight forward and we certainly took the scenic route. Our rather different route to a family makes us appreciate everything and take nothing for granted and this is how it went.

Application

We called our local authority to enquire how we applied to be adoptive parents and they arranged to come and meet with us both in our home. The local authority social worker was very helpful and painted a more realistic picture than the one we imagined. She advised us that there were several different routes and agencies involved and we should spend time investigating the options and consider which would be best for us.

This was sound advice as it moved our decision to adopt away from what we could do for another child towards what we could manage and deal with as a couple. It made us talk to each other about ages of children, their backgrounds and how we would talk about adoption with family and friends.

From what we had read and heard in the media we thought we knew about the adoption process. We had read and heard about the changes in legislation and the much hoped for shortening of waiting times for children waiting for adoption and their prospective adopters. In hindsight we did not have a clue until we discovered Scottish Adoption.

“Scottish Adoption has provided space, balance, support and listening and this has been absolutely critical to manage the different stages of the process”

We had one initial meeting with a Scottish Adoption social worker and he was very helpful. He asked us a lot of questions and we asked a lot in return. This enabled an open and honest discussion about how serious we really were about adoption and if we had considered the whole picture. Scottish Adoption provided space, balance, support and listening and this has been absolutely critical to manage the different stages of the process.

Preparation

We attended a preparation group through November and into December. Along with five other couples we spent quality, dedicated time exploring adoption, attachment, grief, loss, identity, ourselves and our relationships. I found this extremely testing and after the first session felt like I had been hit by a train. This was when I fully realised that I was unable to have a family of my own. It took time, but through the preparation groups, we were able to understand what adoption meant for our relationship and for our future family. It also allowed us to start talking about it to our parents and they could not have been more supportive and I can say from first hand experience, talking helps.

Application

By the end of the preparation groups we were desperate to move on to the next stage. This involved meeting our social worker who got to know us, our histories, strengths and vulnerabilities with a view to becoming parents. She completed a home study which is a full and detailed report about us. We had been anxious about this part of the process but ended up feeling very positive about it, a feeling we had not initially considered. This was largely down to our Scottish Adoption social worker, we would not be a family without her and her supportive style and approach throughout the process. Thank you to her, from all the family.

We asked our family, closest friends and work colleagues whether they would consider writing a reference to support our application to adopt. The process took about six months and the regular interviews, conversations which covered more than just the weather, were all worth it. The final result was a report which we were able to half read as there are parts of this report that we do not get access to. Having been through this part of the process, we found reading about our life story and reflections a very positive experience.

The first approval panel we attended was the Scottish Adoption panel and this was unknown territory; we were petrified, but the phone call made to each of our families after we were accepted for adoption was one of the greatest emotional memories we have had so far!

We did not have had to wait too long before our social worker phoned about a wee girl! A family was becoming a potential reality at last. This was everything we had focused our efforts on since deciding to adopt.

Getting to know us

The next stage to the adoption was getting to know the local authority social worker. This was so she could consider whether we would be appropriate parents for the child for whom she was responsible. We then met the foster carer, saw a photo for the first time, met with her doctor and finally were formally matched by the local authority.

The process of waiting and going into adoption: from being approved, receiving the relevant forms, living with a report, the meetings with the social worker, the local authority legal representative, foster carers and medical professional brings everything alive. It is so important that this part is well managed even though it takes time. It is difficult to understand how it feels when you are waiting for a child and then matched. There are so many questions about being matched and waiting for a child. Some can be answered and some cannot but we definitely began falling in love with our wee girl at this stage of the process.

Our new life begins

The sheriff ruled in favour of adoption. A huge and momentous day. A year later and we celebrated our first anniversary in McDonalds – our daughter’s choice!

We had a long wait before it all became official and it was not until we had been to court and the adoption became official that we felt safe and secure as a family. The process has made us learn to deal with uncertainty and now I think we are pretty resilient as a family and we are a family and that is all that matters.  All the waiting, all the meetings, all the uncertainty, are now a distant memory. Our family has started and we have support from Scottish Adoption for whatever lies ahead.

“Our family has started and we have support from Scottish Adoption for whatever lies ahead”

I’m a father now and I could spend lots of time thinking about what is different between being a birth father or an adoptive father but right now what programme we are going to watch on Cbeebies is actually far more important.

Do I look at my daughter when she is playing outside or at a party and worry if she is doing ok or knows the rules of the game? Of course I do, but is that not what any parent does – birth or adoptive? We consider ourselves the luckiest people in the world to have such a beautiful girl in our lives.

People often congratulate us for what we are doing but that is the wrong way to look at it. The rewards far out weigh the decisions and the process which can all too often take up too much focus in the adoption process.  We thought we could not have a family – we were wrong.