Sharing My Story

From pretty much entering this world, I have always known that that I was adopted.

From pretty much entering this world, I have always known that that I was adopted. Now I am not saying as a little baby I understood this, but what I mean is that my parents have never kept my adoption a secret and nor have they turned it into this major drama. Unlike the way it is portrayed in the movies or in the media when the newest celebrity has adopted from a third world country, I have what technically could be classed as an average “normal” life. Like the features I hold and the physical appearance of my body, being adopted is simply a part of who I am and I for one am very proud to be able to say that. My birth mum was a young Irish Catholic woman who fell pregnant out of wed-lock (which was highly frowned upon) and so faced complete shunning from her family. If she had kept me within those circumstances, then it would have meant that she most certainly could never have given me the life which I have now.

What if?

For me, I have not lived my life with many questions or ever felt a sense of “not belonging” or questioning “who I am” and nor do I have any desire to find my birth parents. The way that adoption can often be perceived, is that all adoptive people must go on a journey of finding out who they are and where they have come from. I for one would just call this a fact of life anyway right? We are all trying to find our way in this world. Don’t get me wrong, I have often thought about what could have been if I hadn’t been adopted. Who would have been my friends? Would I have gotten an education? Would I have been able to see any of the world? What would my family have looked like? But all of these questions simply make me even more grateful for having the family, friends and overall life that I do have and only further secures my identity.

Now don’t get me wrong, although I have this amazing life with an extraordinary family, there are some aspects of adoption which I have found a little difficult and they have occurred at different stages of my life. As a child I was very lucky to be surrounded by friends and children who accepted me for who I was and they were often just inquisitive about what adoption actually was. I never used to shy away and answered all the questions that I could or at least understood at that age.

Difficulties

What did become a little more difficult is when children used to ask and compare what member of their family they looked like, where did they get their height from, their hair colour, who looked more like their siblings etc. I of course could never answer this and as a young child in the playground, when all you want to do is join and fit in, could be a little more difficult. But what I did come to understand is that just because you do not necessarily look like someone physically, there are so many other traits which you will have personality and values wise which accounts for a lot more.  Heading into teenage and adolescent years were perhaps some of the more difficult years as it became evident that the subject of adoption was often a lot more taboo. Telling an adult about being adopted was very different to telling a child; where a child was merely curious, often adults acted embarrassed and awkward, unsure of how to answer and in my experience many people apologising. This led me to feel that I couldn’t be as open with sharing this kind of information with just anyone I met, not to protect me, but to more spare the feelings of others. It was only until I felt I could fully trust someone that I would share my story.

Adoption is Amazing!

As I have become older though and now that I am in my late 20s, I realise that this shouldn’t be the case and in part is the reason why I am writing my story. I want people to know exactly how amazing adoption can be, not only are the parents getting the child that they have always wanted, they are giving a child the gift of life. I have often heard people say the reason why they would be put off adoption is because they worry they may not love the child as much as it isn’t “a part of them”, but I actually believe that they would love them so much more. For anyone who can have a child biologically means that anyone can be a mother or a father, but it takes someone extra special to be a mum and dad. I count my blessings every day that I was adopted, I feel so privileged and blessed for the family that I have.

From my experience, the one piece of advice that I would share with any prospective adoptive parent is always be open and honest.

From my experience, the one piece of advice that I would share with any prospective adoptive parent is always be open and honest. Do not shy away from telling you son or daughter where they have come from and instead celebrate in the fact that they are even more special to you. Adoption should not be a taboo subject and in order to make sure that it is not, it must first come from within.

Adopted Young Adult

Sometimes I wonder if many other people have gone through what I have gone through, have felt the same emotions and feelings I have felt…

Belonging

Sometimes I wonder if many other people have gone through what I have gone through, have felt the same emotions and feelings I have felt, shed the tears that I have shed and experienced the joys and happiness that I have experienced, asked the many questions I have asked, had the arguments that I have had, thought about the future like I have thought, and had to endure the daunting thought that your life could have turned out to be something completely different, with different people, different faces, different holidays, different home. That is the adventure of being adopted.

From the moment that I was born, “a little bundle of joy”, I was destined to lead a life different from others. My birth mother was young, un-married, had no career prospects or a supportive family; circumstance’s really, she could never have been able to offer me a life as I have now

Adoption, it’s not like you see in the movies, nothing like it at all, in fact, being adopted is something really special and in my case was not confusing or hectic, I don’t have this whole past life story full of traumatic events, and so far I have led a completely “normal” life. However being adopted has most definitely had an impact on my life in more ways than one. Despairing times and amazing times. I feel blessed that I was adopted. There is no knowing where I could have ended up, Paris living on the Champs Elysees, daughter of an artist, or even living a superstar lifestyle in California who knows I could have ended up with celebrity parents such as Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise, older sister to their adopted bi-racial son, Connor. I feel fortunate I wasn’t as they are now divorced and I would have been a child of a broken marriage!

Holiday Confusion

However there was a time in my life, when on what should have been an amazing holiday in Australia, sailing around the Great Barrier Reef on a beautiful yacht with friends, at the age of ten, the questions started to rush around my brain, all the, Why’s, the When’s and the How’s. I was bombarded with them. I felt heart heavy, heartbroken, heartsick to think that, this wasn’t my “real” family. These emotions of rage, sadness and confusion led to me taking it out on my mum. The black beast of hate in my breast filled me with a resentment and loathing for my adopted mother. I felt like Jekyll and Hyde, two different people, two split emotions fighting within me. I know I loved my mum but still there was a nagging feeling of guilt that my love should only lie with my birth mum. Grief, pain and melancholy over came me, was my life a living lie?

Assaulted by the Why’s, the When’s and the How’s, I had to have answers. I could not bring myself to ask my mum, she had told me why I was adopted, but I needed a thorough and deeper understanding and although she had provided me with all the essentials I needed, she could not provide me with this and I didn’t want her to.

Mum Knows Best

Fortunately for me, my Mum saw how troubled and lost I was feeling at this time, she looked for help and found it by getting in touch with the Scottish Adoption Services, that’s when I met Kathryn. I felt that I could say things to Kathryn that I couldn’t express to my Mum without the fear of hurting her feelings, through talking and asking questions with Kathryn slowly over time I began to feel happier and gained a greater understanding about my adoption that allowed me to feel at peace. On the up side of this process I met four other girls that had been adopted. I had never met another adopted person before apart from my brother! This experience showed me that there were others out there who had been in my shoes; I found that these girls I befriended each had a completely different adoption story.

I am now glowing inside to know that I have such a caring and loving family. I have resolved my questions and fears and look to the future with an optimistic heart and being adopted is not going to stop me or change anything. From a young girl who felt displaced and confused, I look now at all the amazing people I have met and the wonderful friendships I hold so deeply in my heart. My cousin  always tells me “how weird it would be without [me]”.

I am adopted. I belong. I am a part of my family.

Single Adopter

I approached Scottish Adoption after having researched various agencies and the local authority.

I approached Scottish Adoption after having researched various agencies and the local authority. I had an initial meeting before being warmly invited onto a Prospective Adopters Preperation Group which was followed by the 6 month Home Study process. The approval panel followed the home study and it was an unanimous YES! I was now approved and the family finding porcess started. Not long after my approval panel I was linked and then matched with a lovely little boy.

I have received great support from Scottish Adoption throughout the process whom I found to be very friendly, professional and approachable.

“Adoption has been both rewarding and challenging in equal measure and I’m very grateful to Scottish Adoption for its ongoing help and assistance”

I have also enjoyed various networking opportunities to meet with other adoptive parents and children. Just today, I was able to help contribute to refining the agency processes and procedures for future parents by taking part in a focus group – I would certainly have no hesitation in recommending Scottish Adoption for those looking to build their families through adoption.

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.

Same Sex Couple

It was with slight trepidation that we made the first call to Scottish Adoption.

Our Experience with Scottish Adoption

It was with slight trepidation that we made the first call to Scottish Adoption and we really shouldn’t have felt like that as we were greeted with a lovely helpful voice talking us through the enquiry stages. We set up our first appointment to find out more and this was so informative and all our questions that we had at this time were answered. Not once were we made to feel awkward or unwanted for being a same sex couple.

Preparation, Preparation, Preparation

The preparation groups gave us deeper insight in to adoption from more than one angle. We went in with a basic knowledge about the process as the only information we had about them was from research we did on line and through the case studies we read. The understanding gained from the groups was invaluable. The amount of details we were given in 5 weeks would be too much to put down on paper but the main things it helped with was to clarify and understand the circumstances the children come from and the variety of backgrounds of the children. We also gained more valuable information and understanding of attachment and the importance of funnelling.

Our worker was on the ball from the word go. She kept us up to date with all potential matches until we found the one. After all the relevant information was exchanged we moved onto the matching panel. We have never been so nervous! Walking into the room with all those faces looking at you, we couldn’t have prepared enough for that.

They explained how the panel would work and then started with the questions, why would we be a good match with this fantastic boy? We were asked to leave the room and our worker stayed behind to be questioned further. After 15-20 minutes the result was in…. perfect match! We were both overjoyed and couldn’t help but shed a tear or two.

Our worker supported us all the way through all the meets with foster carers, child social worker and panel members. Any questions we had were answered with full explanations. This certainly helped us feel secure. Even now that we have been placed with our little boy; the Scottish adoption team are on hand and regularly visit to ensure we are okay. We never once felt any different going through the full process.

We now see that adoption is not always black and white. During the whole process Scottish Adoption were supportive and made you feel like part of a large family. You can’t help but feel nervous during the whole process especially panel day, but with Scottish adoption you don’t feel alone. We have to admit that we were apprehensive about being a same sex couple and of thinking about adoption but at no point were we treated in any way different to anyone else.

Being gay adoptive parents has been the best thing we have ever done!

Our Sibling Adoption Story

We took it for granted that we would have a family easily, so my first miscarriage was such a shock

We took it for granted that we would have a family easily, so my first miscarriage was such a shock – as if someone had knocked me flat with a baseball bat. We were devastated. Over the next five years there were two more, and after the third came the medical investigations. IVF was recommended as our best option. Of course by this time, I had read up on it, on what the process was, on the chances of my being successful. I had my doubts.

At this point my husband and I were already considering adoption somewhere in our heads. I guess we were considering all our options. We wanted to share our lives with little ones, to be a family. In due course, IVF was unsuccessful, and I decided I didn’t want to carry on with further treatment, with the full support of my husband. So we gave ourselves some time to lick our (rather deep) wounds, spent some time taking care of ourselves and only then did we look at adoption properly.

The decision to adopt wasn’t easy. My childhood wasn’t brilliant, and I had worked with kids from backgrounds that may be similar to the child or children we might adopt. These experiences made me more interested, yet more cautious, somehow.

Making the Call

“This was a big moment – it signified that we really were making a commitment to ourselves and to an unknown child or children”

But after a lot of soul searching, we made the phone call to Scottish Adoption. This was a big moment – it signified that we really were making a commitment to ourselves and to an unknown child or children; committing to what we knew would be a long process before one or two strangers come to be part of our family. It was so exciting and very scary. On the phone, I had a short chat with a worker and we made an appointment to visit Scottish Adoption and talk to someone properly. She was great – we chatted through why we wanted to adopt, and told her a wee bit about our background, and came away having signed up for a “ Preparation group”.

Preparation Group

A few months later (there was a bit of a waiting list at this point), and the first day of prep group was upon us – how daunting it was! Even though we knew the other five couples there were in the same boat, I somehow felt very vulnerable. But that changed quickly and as we got to know each other the group began to feel very supportive. We covered such a lot of ground, including looking at the losses that everyone involved in the adoption process may go through – ourselves, the child and their birth parents; exploring some early child development which was significant to children that need adopted; we looked at attachment, and how it is affected by poor parenting and also at some of the experiences that children may have had before they came to be in need of adoption. Oh, and we drank lots of tea and coffee and ate lots of biscuits. None of the prep group work was intrusive, none of us had to give out any information that we might be uncomfortable with.  It was often emotional, sometimes surprising, sometimes funny. Every session ended on a positive note. At the end there was a piece of paper to fill in to indicate whether you wanted to go on to home study. As if we needed to be asked!

Home Study

I know that there is a preconception that home study is tough going – long and supposedly intrusive. It wasn’t like that at all to us. We enjoyed getting to talk about ourselves once a fortnight for a couple of hours – it’s not often that you get that opportunity!  Home study with our social worker gave us a chance to reflect on what we could offer to a child, and importantly, who we could turn to in our own circle of family and friends if we needed support. We talked about what my husband and I brought to our relationship and how our backgrounds and experiences (the happy and the not so happy) could contribute to our ability to be parents. I began to think that every parent-to-be should talk to someone about these things!  At this point we asked friends and family to be referees for us and they were happy to do so.

Only towards the end of home study did we begin to look at what kind of child we might like to adopt. We knew we wanted two (and our social worker thought we could cope with two at once), and we knew we wanted children that we could really ‘bond’ with. We thought that would be children under primary school age, but we thought we might consider kids in early primary. We knew what issues we might cope with, and what we might not deal so well with. Our social worker compiled a report based on what we talked about and decided we were ready for ‘Approval Panel’.

Nerve-racking Approval Panel

Approval Panel was the next really nerve-racking point in the process, but thankfully it went well. It’s funny – although we knew that we would not be at the panel unless our social worker thought we were good enough, those doubts were there anyway – ‘What if they say no?’ Perhaps that was because of our own previous losses. As I write this, I’m suddenly equating our ‘What if’ thoughts, to the difficulties some adoptive children have in believing they will always be part of their new family. Even though everything points to the contrary, they often think,‘what if I have to move again?’

The panel (social workers, a medical adviser and an adoptive parent) asked us questions based on the report our social worker had compiled – there were no ‘surprise’ questions. Finding we were approved was a very emotional moment, for now we really could move on to the life changing part!

Matching and Running!

It took us a while to be matched with our kids. The wait is really tough. We had come through a long process that had taken a year from our initial phone call, and now we were just waiting – waiting for all of the talking to turn into real children, for us to become a family. I took up running at this point – I needed to do something to deal with all the emotions I was feeling; anticipation, nerves, a wee bit of fear, excitement – and running gave me a chance to mull over all of the practicalities of getting ready to be a parent (I still run now, over two years later!). During this time there were potential matches that turned out not to be for us, and although we were quite emotional about these at the time, it was for the best. ‘Matching’ is a two way process. Our social worker told us that we had to make these decisions with our heads and our hearts, and she was right.

Finally, she presented us with the details of two siblings, with some reservations, because one was older than we’d anticipated. But their details (and those of the older child in particular) really spoke to us, in a way I hadn’t expected. We were discovering that the details of older children convey more of their personalities and interests, obviously because they have had time develop these, but it made us think more and more positively about adopting an older child. So we asked to find out more about these two kids – an almost nine-year old girl and a four-year old boy (two from a family of four siblings, who sadly couldn’t find a family together and who were fostered separately). The more we read, the more we wanted to know even more.

The kids’ social worker and her line manager came to visit us at home (our house has never, ever been so tidy!). Our social worker, who had been our assessor before we were approved as adopters, was to became our strongest ally from here on and was there to make sure we got all the information we needed. After all the social workers left, we went for a walk, and went over everything that was said over and over again, knowing that we had already made a commitment to these two kids in our heads and our hearts. A few days later the news came back that the childrens’ social worker wanted to proceed with the match. Hooray!!!

Matching Panel

We went to ‘Matching Panel’ not long after that, the set up of which was pretty similar to Approval Panel, except it was within the placing local authority with social and other workers there on behalf of the children. The panel were keen that our children keep in touch with their two siblings (and so were we) and the match was unanimously approved. We had lunch with the children’s foster carers, and shed tears over pictures and stories of our children. A week later we were back to make plans for meeting our kids and working up to taking them home.

“The moment when we knocked on the door of our daughter’s foster home and this little girl opened it will forever be etched into our minds”

This part was so surreal. We cleared the decks and took ourselves off to meet the kids. The moment when we knocked on the door of our daughter’s foster home and this little girl opened it will forever be etched into our minds. She looked so different from photographs, and yet it was her – and so lovely. Our son-to-be was so over-excited, he barely sat still and his foster carer kept apologising for him. Our daughter-to-be was very quiet, just watching and taking it all in.

We took them out and asked them to ‘practise’ calling us mum and dad straight away – starting as we meant to go on, and we chatted about what food we all liked and didn’t like. One of the first questions our daughter asked us was “Do you two fighted?” (sic), which was a poignant moment – she obviously had some fears about her new life, but we were quick to reassure her that we sometimes disagreed about things, but would never ever hit or hurt each other. Our wee boy was a little out of control – but of course he was out of control – nothing was in his control at all!

As the days went by, we all became more comfortable with each other. We had a fun week of visits to different places – and took lots and lots of photos. These have become so precious to us. They came for an overnight stay in their new rooms and then finally, the day came when we were to pick them up and take them home forever.

Taking the Children Home!

It was a shock to the system for all of us when they finally came home. Life changed forever, as we got on with the practicalities of being a parent to two children that we had written information about but very little practical experience of. In any spare time I found I made lists and lists – what to feed them, what activities we could do, what we needed to buy for them. Everything I found out, I wrote down. We enrolled our daughter in a local school (but were lucky enough to have an extended Easter break with her before she had to start), and we tried very hard to stay at home and in the garden so that it was just the four of us. We fended off a couple of well meaning friends (our closest friends knew to give us space). Our social worker popped in every so often, but although I felt tired and slightly frazzled, everything was going well. We had a honeymoon period, as expected, where the kids were as good as they could possibly be (and so, I suppose, were we). We read lots of books on adoption and attachment in bed at night, even though I’d read them all before, and generally we tried very hard to be great parents! We were exhausted, all of us. ‘Family film nights’ gave us a chance to relax together.

Things settle down – but they take time. Both children had night terrors or nightmares for a long time, and still do if there’s any sense of unsettledness. I learned that I could sleep when the kids were in bed and that they would still be there in the morning! A sense of humour is essential to parenting our kids – for example, their responses to any event was way over the top at first (whether that was excitement at a present or denial of a wrongdoing), but they have become calmer and we talk through appropriate responses to them, or laugh about it!

There is a definite sense of ‘reparenting’ our wee boy, now six. He has gone through the emotional stages of a much younger child with us, from tantrums (he’d never had them before he came to us, but they’re an essential part of development) to ‘playing’ at being a baby. It really helps to know that he’s just revisiting the baby stages he never got to have. He was quite angry for a while. He couldn’t remember his birth parents and didn’t want to be taken from his foster carers. But although he likes to try and be in control, he’s becoming such a happy, contended and clever wee boy who loves us to bits and he pushes boundaries in much the same way as all his friends. We’re discovering that as well as love, consistency, empathy and all those other therapeutic parenting essentials, strong (but generally kind) boundaries are also necessary. Holly van Gulden said in a workshop that I attended at Scottish Adoption that children who push boundaries are actually trying to find them and needing to find them.

Our daughter, now almost eleven (wow, I can’t believe that), had learned to cope with life in her birth home remarkably well. But she came to us very over-compliant and absolutely terrified of any hint of trouble. She had no opinion of her own and her get-up-and-go had got up and gone. She also had some eating issues – although not as bad as some I’ve read about. She was incredibly behind at school. All of these have improved hugely, although they’ve not disappeared and we’re still finding things out about her that are legacies of life with her birth family. She desperately wanted a new family and a new life and we hope that she has what she dreamed of (although sadly, we can’t provide the dog, horses, or skiing holidays!). It has been so rewarding to adopt an older child and to begin to see her real personality shine through now she’s in a loving and stable home.

We got our adoption order nine months after they came to live with us. It was a special day, especially for our daughter – I think she began to feel that everything would be all right after that day. Mind you, they were our children long before a piece of paper said that they were!

Such Joy and Happiness!

I can’t express the joy that our two kids give us. Some days it’s a quiet glow inside that I’m barely aware of (while I’m repeating ‘wash your hands when you’ve been to the toilet’, for the fifth time that day) and some days I feel so happy for myself , my husband and for them that it has me in tears. I cry at every achievement. I admire how much they’ve come on, how much they’ve achieved for themselves, how much they’re thriving. I love them to bits. We’d do anything for them, because they’re our kids.