Question:

What are the emotional effects of adoption on adoptees and adopting parents?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

What are the emotional effects of adoption on adoptees and adopting parents?

 Tags:

   Report

7 ANSWERS


  1. identity confusion

    ethnic identity confusion

    fear of abandonment (hey it happened once what's to stop it from happening again?)

    fear or rejection

    low self esteem

    genealogical bewilderment

    anger

    sadness

    pain

    grief over loss of natural mother, father, sisters, brothers, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, etc. etc. etc.

    gratittude

    wait, just kidding with that last one....


  2. The adopted child, no matter how happy he or she is with their APs will always wonder why they weren't wanted by their birth parents.

    They can grow up feeling abandoned and unwanted.

    Internationally adopted children- if they do not learn about their culture growing up they will not feel like they fit in anywhere. Not fully with people of different ethnicity and not fully with their own ethnicity.

    There is the loss of culture and language which is something that is very regretted.

    If the child is older there is the hardness of leaving one place and trying to adapt to a new place with new people and just new everything.

  3. Experiencing the psychological deaths of my mother and father.

  4. I don't know about APs.  They usually cop that it's ALL GOOD.

    Adoptees?  Check out this stuff:

    http://www.nancyverrier.com/pos.php

    http://www.adoptioncrossroads.org

    http://www.origins-usa.org

    http://www.motherhelp.info/index.htm

    http://www.babyscoopera.com

    http://www.b******s.org/bq/babb2.html

    Adoption studies:

    http://crimemagazine.com/07/adoptionfore...

    http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~adoption/to...

    http://www.angelfire.com/or/originsnsw/w...

    Books:

    The Primal Wound by Nancy Verrier

    Lost and Found: the Adoption Experience AND

    Journey of the Adopted Self: A Quest for Wholeness both by Betty Jean Lifton

    The Adopted break Silence by Jean Paton

    The Girls Who Went Away by Ann Fessler

    Adoption: Uncharted Waters,by David Kirschner

    Being Adopted: The Lifelong Search for Self by David Brodzinsky

  5. Well, try to imagine your mother abandoning you.

    Then try to imagine being sent to live with strangers, having your entire history sealed away like some dirty secret, and be expected to be "grateful" for losing your  mother (and family) and having that information kept from you.

    If you're an international adoptee, try to imagine losing not only your mother and family, but your language, your culture, your heritage, and having to assimilate into a NEW culture where people look different and act different and even the foods and smells are different.

    What do you suppose the emotional effects would be for you?

  6. As an adoptive parent I feel I have to live up to a higher standard than biological parents.  I want my son to feel he has the best mother who has taught him about life, loved him unconditionally, who laughs and cries with him.  I do not want him to ever regret that he was adopted.  I feel adoptive parents try to be better parents because they want to feel loved just as much as the child wants to feel loved.

  7. there are so many emotions when going threw this, me and my husband are going threw an adoption and have been for several months. We are taking PATH classes which help explain everything that is going on and how to deals with it and also how to help the children adjust once you get home with them. We are adopting a 10month old little boy so he will be to young to remember but will still possibly have some effects from this.. If you are adopting i would suggest going to PATH classes they help alot.. Good luck

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 7 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.