Unraveling the emotional depths of my adoption narrative

Unraveling the emotional depths of my adoption narrative

I don’t think I’ve ever said the sentences “I’m adopted” and “no family history” as much as I have since having a child.

Going to the doctors or even play dates seemingly always leads to a mention of it.

There tends to be 1000 medical forms that need anything and everything about your past or someone will mention a trait their child inherited and ask if something similar runs in your family.

These instances are innocent and seemingly simple- but it follows with a quick trip down “ouch” lane for a split second.

As a kid, the “A” word aka “Adopted” was seen as a sad thing. For me, it was simply my normal.  

But all too often, a pity response of “oh, well at least you were adopted!” or “you’re lucky your family found you” or, sometimes worse like “I’m sorry” were the responses. 

I never understood the “I’m sorry” sentiment. It was what I’d known, it wasn’t sad.  It was just how my life unfolded. 

As I grew older, I started redefining it – picking and choosing how I’d connect with it. I loved pandas – did reports on a few different types, I dressed in Chinese dresses, I leaned into the beauty side and squeezed myself into the accepted stereotypes.

I did everything to associate myself with where I was adopted from, except the very question of “why?”. 

Why was I adopted? What happened? What were my birth parents like? Do I have siblings? Does someone else look like me?

I shielded myself from the very real answers that could be “they couldn’t afford me”, “I was an accident”, or worse “ they just didn’t want me.”

I grew to accept that I may never know. Not for real. Not the answers I wanted. The ones that only my bio parents knew. 

And guess what? It’s worked out fine. 

Now as an adult, I actually wear it as a badge of honor.

I’m living in a world built on stacked generations and the luxury of knowing every bit of history.

Yet, I’ve created mine on my own.

I’ve created a new bloodline – I’ve started a story, something only my child can keep writing long after I’m gone.

I’ve created armor against the criticism, the pity, and the fetishes.

I’ve built a life without a history report and a whole lot of future pages to fill.

If you’re ever feeling lost, without information you once thought was crucial to living your life to the fullest- it’s possible you’ve already got the answer, but you haven’t hit the milestone yet. 

You will hit it. 

You’ll chuckle and think “that was it? That’s all I needed to figure out to settle this dialogue I’ve lived with for years?”

And then- you’ll just keep writing your story and living your big beautiful life.

Being adopted is strong, resilient, and it’s not shameful one bit.

You were meant to be where you are. Just look around at the people you love and the people who love you.

Your self created circle is gold.

Remember to take moments to love it, and keep building it for years to come.

P.S.

If you’re ever looking to dive into a book that will lift you up and inspire you – check out the newest book I was lucky enough to be a co-author in: I’m So Glad You Left Me.

Immerse yourself into 88 stories of courage, self-love and personal growth from 88 women around the world.

Here’s where you can grab your digital copy of the book (hard copies will be available soon!) :

US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DJ9RLMJN

The Padawans have surpassed the masters… and other things that happen when you become a parent.

The Padawans have surpassed the masters… and other things that happen when you become a parent.

Let me start this off by saying that it is fitting that my husband’s love for Star Wars ties into our parenting journey.

I still remember the early days of our relationship, and sitting down for the 1st movie, which, fun fact, is actually the 4th chapter (my husband would be proud I’ve included this). And I remember thinking… 9 movies?…and in so many words, I thought – how will this impact our relationship?

I guess this is my answer…

To be honest… parenting feels like bouncing around chapters, book reprints, movie remakes, and any other analogy you can think of that can explain how impermanent things can be while navigating parenthood.

It’s a constant learning process.

It’s rewriting, editing, and publishing what you learn along the way. And deleting what doesn’t really fit into your life.

My husband and I are so grateful to have learned so much from our parents and people who have become parents before us. But when it comes to raising our child… we’ve come to realize the process is ultimately up to our little one and us as a unit.

Our childhoods, whether we want to admit it or not, play a huge role in our decisions as parents who are on the other side of the delicate dance of growing up.

Our parents’ advice, our siblings’ advice, parenting books, and documentaries might change bits and pieces of the trajectory of our parenting. But at the end of the day, we create it and follow through with what we believe in and what our hearts tell us to.

So much of learning how to do something you’ve never done before, is learning from someone you trust, respect, and love.

And we have been extremely fortunate to have copious amounts of wonderful people who have raised wonderful people…

Yet in the same way, we have also learned the things we won’t do, the things we won’t let be generational or repeated for our child’s upbringing.

Like anything in the world, parenting advice changes, it reverses, and it gets overturned…

The thing is, it often stays the same for the people who lived it & practiced certain parenting styles during their time. And it can be difficult to share aspects of parenting with people who don’t and won’t share your updated outlook.

Being parents in today’s world, where there are 1000 and 1 options and opinions in the palm of our hands, as well as our own parents’ advice, can be overwhelming to say the least…

My husband and I have found that the one thing we know to be true & constant in this parenting journey, is our undying team work. We luckily share similar mindsets for learning in real time alongside one another, and we absolutely love sharing all the parenting ups and downs.

We have also found that what our parents did, does not necessarily mean it’s the rule or the best/worst option for us.

What I’m trying to say is this…

Growing up is wild.

Finding who you want to spend your life with is wild.

Building a family with someone is wild.

And redefining what your child’s upbringing will look like is wild.

When I say the padawans have surpassed the master, I mean it in the most loving way….

Like in Star Wars… when this happens, it’s celebrated.

The next generation is taking the reins, and they are creating the next generation of padawans.

It’s a good thing, and it should be the goal… don’t you think?