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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Adoption Tuesday - International vs Domestic

I had posted this on my other blog some time ago, and thought I would repost now for Adoption Tuesday. Enjoy....




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International vs Domestic, and I'm Not Talking Wine or Cheese.


I've heard much debate as to whether, if you're going to adopt, you should go domestic or international. Or even if folks should be adopting at all.



When I first looked into adopting,

what's it been now, 8+ years?

I decided on international.



There were a few reasons. I was, quite frankly, scared of some of the horror stories I had heard about adopting a kid "from the system". I wanted a process that would be a clean cut so that once it was done, it was done. No continued visitations with birth relations, etc, etc.



And I was extremely happy about how it all went. All except for the debt it left us with.



Next adoption? International again, but of course. Not because of any informed decision-making, but because we were adopting a specific child that we had met at our first adoption (and his sister). He lived in Kazakhstan, ergo we went to Kazakhstan.



So three adoptions under my belt, and international every one of them. One would think I am a dyed-in-the-wool international advocate, yes?



Not neccessarily.



I think I'm done growing my family, but I'm not certain. This book is not closed. Well, it's closed, but the pages are marked with a bookmark.



If I ever decide to add more children to my family, perhaps it would be a good idea for me to compare international and domestic adoptions in a pros and cons format to see which comes out on top.



Let's see what we got......



International

Kids are in orphanages.

They don't do well in orphanages.

There are institutional delays and attachment difficulties and poor supervision.

Sometimes kids don't get the medical treatment they need.

Sometimes kids die.



Domestic

Kids are in foster homes.

They don't do well in foster homes.

There are delays and attachment difficulties and poor supervision.

Sometimes kids don't get the medical treatment they need.

Sometimes kids die.





International

The kids usually have histories that include abuse, abandonment, neglect, trauma.



Domestic

The kids usually have histories that include abuse, abandonment, neglect, trauma.





International

When you bring your child home from overseas, the ties are cut. The only relatives the parents need concern themselves with are Aunt Becky and Grampa Joe.

This is both a pro and a con. For no matter how much we embrace our child's birth culture, his biological family is generally gone forever, leaving the child with a pit in his heart that all the culture camps in the world could never hope to fill.



Domestic

When you adopt domestically, you may or may not have obligations to allow the child visitations with biological relatives.

This is both a pro and a con. While it's great in theory for the child to keep ties with relatives and keep connected to her former life, it can be a an emotional rollercoaster for her to visit back and forth with the father that just got out of jail, the maternal grandmother who whispers in her ear that she will come to get her and bring her back.





International

Sometimes? The child is placed for adoption for the wrong reasons.

Sometimes? The child ends up in a situation less desirable than his birth family. Less desirable than the orphanage.



Domestic

Sometimes? The child is placed for adoption for the wrong reasons.

Sometimes? The child ends up in a situation less desirable than her birth family. Less desirable than the foster home.







International

There are many costs associated with adopting a child from overseas.





Domestic

There are many costs associated with adopting an infant from the US. There are few costs associated with adopting a child from the foster care system.



Any and all adoption costs are but a drop in the bucket when compared with the costs of raising a child.





International

The child's culture, ethnicity, and possibly race may be different than that of the adoptive parents. Could the parents ever truly love such a child?



Domestic

The child's culture, ethnicity, and possibly race may be different than that of the adoptive parents. Could the parents ever truly love such a child?



Having experienced parenting children both born to me and adopted, I can say without reservation that parents can and do love children equally, whether blood related or not, whether the child has almond-shaped eyes or brown skin or speaks a different language. The only people who even suggest that parents could not love an adopted child "as their own" are people who have never adopted. The thought, to me, to any adoptive parent, is preposterous.





International

If adopted, the child could...

Be raised in a family.

Love.

Be loved.

Stop wondering what's wrong with them, stop questioning why no one wants them.

Reach their potential.

Have hope.

Feel comfort.

Feel the tenderness of a parent's embrace warm their soul.



Domestic

If adopted, the child could...

Be raised in a family.

Love.

Be loved.

Stop wondering what's wrong with them, stop questioning why no one wants them.

Reach their potential.

Have hope.

Feel comfort.

Feel the tenderness of a parent's embrace warm their soul.





So as to the questions:

International?

Domestic?

Adopt?

Foster?






















I don't know. I don't have all the answers. Or even most of them.



The only answer I have is that if I end up adopting another child, be he from China or Kazakhstan or the good ol' U S of A, whether her skin is black or brown or white, whether she have 10 fingers and 10 toes or 8 fingers and 9 toes or an elbow coming out of her ear, I will love her. I will cherish her. I will make her feel like she matters.



And isn't THAT... all that matters?





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Thanks for stopping by! Come back tomorrow, I'm here everyday, rain or shine...

Anne ~





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Image courtesy: ramsey.k12.nj.us

1 comment:

  1. I think people who suggest that parents could not love an adopted child "as their own" have never loved.

    ReplyDelete

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