Adoption Myths
What is it about adoption that attracts so many myths, misconceptions
and just plain misinformation?
A lack of facts? An overabundance of fear? A bit of both
perhaps. Whatever the case, here are some myths that attracted our
attention. Got a favourite myth of your own? E-mail it to us anytime at
info@canadaadopts.com.
Fiction: Adoption means
buying a baby.
Fact: Adoption is a legal and social
process, not a business transaction. It's a way to find a permanent, loving
home for a child whose parents may not be ready to parent. Although fees
are involved, they are generally administrative and legal in nature. And
they don't go to a prospective birth mother, but rather to your adoption
professionals who are responsible for ensuring that all the laws, rules
and regulations regarding adoption in your province are being met.
Fiction: Once you've found a baby, you've
completed the adoption process.
Fact: Regardless of which search tool
you use, finding a baby to adopt is only one part -- albeit an important
one -- of the adoption process. There's much more to it than that. Depending
on which province you live in and which province your baby is born or
lives in, you still have to go through another independent legal process
before your application can be approved. In any adoption, the child's
best interests are always the paramount concern.
Fiction: The more money
you can offer a prospective birth mother, the better your chances are
of her choosing you to raise her child.
Fact: In Canada, no money is allowed
to change hands between hopeful adoptive parents and birth mothers. In
fact, gifts, inducements and incentives of any kind are strictly illegal
and could jeopardize your adoption. In the US the laws are a little different,
but the same rules apply: a potential birth mother is not allowed to financially
benefit from the placement of her child.
Fiction: Once you turn
down the chance to adopt a child, you won't get another one.
Fact: There is no rule stipulating the
number of children you are eligible to consider. It all depends on your
particular circumstances. Nevertheless, if you don't have a good feeling
about a specific situation, you shouldn't think twice about walking away
from it. Another one will eventually come your way. Just remember that
each situation takes time and can be very draining, emotionally and financially.
Fiction: You have to be
rich to adopt.
Fact: Being wealthy is not one of the
criteria for adopting. In fact, your emotional resources often carry more
weight than your financial ones. As long as you have a decent, stable
income -- enough to cover the basic needs of your family -- you shouldn't
have any problem fulfilling the requirements. And besides, not all adoptions
are costly. In public adoptions, for instance, there is usually no fee
at all.
Fiction: You need to own
a house to adopt.
Fact: Owning a house is nice -- after
all, in time your child will need room to run around -- but it's not necessary.
Couples with apartments or rented homes adopt all the time.
Fiction: Single people
can't adopt.
Fact: Although some agencies and potential
birth mothers tend to favour traditional two-parent families, single women
and men have as much of a right to adopt as anyone else. So do gays, older
or divorced couples, and couples with children.
Fiction: Famous people
have the inside track to adopting a baby.
Fact: Adoption is not about fame or fortune.
It's about providing a child with a loving, permanent home. Whether you
live in Hollywood or Collingwood is irrelevant. At the end of the day,
what really counts is whether you can meet a child's needs.
Fiction: If you were meant
to be a parent, it would have happened already.
Fact: Not everything works out the way
we'd like it to. Many people, for instance, want to start a family, but
for medical reasons are unable to do so. Just because they suffer from
infertility, however, doesn't mean that they can't -- or shouldn't --
become parents. Which is why there's adoption.
Fiction: An adoption takes
forever to complete.
Fact: Some
adoptions do take a long time, but they don't have to. It all depends
on what kind of child you're interested in adopting, how quickly you can
find a match and how long it takes to complete all the paperwork. In some
instances, it's possible to have a child placed in your arms in a year
or even less. Our services -- including the Waiting Parent Registry, Parent Profile Writing Service and Parent Profile Design Service -- are all designed to speed up the process, saving you time, money, headache and heartache.
Fiction: In order to adopt,
you need to be perfect.
Fact: One of the first things you'll
need to do before you can adopt is complete a home
study. The goal of a study, in part, is to assess your fitness to
become an adoptive parent. And while it's important to make a good impression,
nobody is expecting you to be a saint or a "super parent." After
all, what parent is? You're entitled to have shortcomings and weaknesses
just like anyone else. And as long as they don't conflict or reflect badly
on your ability to parent, nobody will hold them against you.
Fiction: Birth mothers can't afford computers,
which means that posting an online letter to them is a waste of time.
Fact: Birth mothers come from a variety
of socio-economic backgrounds. There is no cookie-cutter profile.
Many have their own computer at home. And even if they don't, they have
access to one through friends, family, school, work or their neighborhood
library. And with access, of course, comes opportunity.
Fiction: Going online to
meet a birth mother is just asking for trouble.
Fact: Dozens of waiting parents have
successfully adopted after connecting with a prospective birth mother
through the Internet. In fact, many women in this situation prefer using
the Net. The Net is simply a communication tool -- a forum or electronic
bulletin board where people with similar interests can meet and exchange
information. As long as you're careful and aware of some the risks involved,
there's nothing particularly dangerous or evil about it. And it's certainly
no more perilous than placing an ad in the paper.
Fiction: One way to solve
infertility is to adopt a child.
Fact: Adoption is not a cure for infertility.
It's a way to build a family and share your love with a child whose parents
simply weren't ready or able to become parents. While a child can perhaps
soften the pain, disappointment and frustration stemming from infertility,
s/he can't make it disappear.
Fiction: Most birth mothers
are unwed teenagers.
Fact: Fact is, the opposite is true.
Studies show that the younger the birth mother, the greater the chance
she'll raise the child herself. This is because for some teenagers, a
child is a symbol of status. Older women, on the other hand, understand
the kinds of compromises and sacrifices motherhood requires and consequently
don't make the mistake of glamourizing it in quite the same way.
Fiction: Birth mothers
have all the rights and you don't have any.
Fact: Prior to the placement of a child,
it's very likely you'll feel this way. The good news is that after the
placement occurs and the revocation of consent period has expired, the
situation will change dramatically. Knowing how volatile the adoption
process can be, it's important to find a birth mother you can trust and
depend on. Think of your relationship with her as a kind of dance. Only
it won't always be clear who's leading whom.
Fiction: Birth mothers
change their minds all the time and end up raising their babies themselves.
Fact: Although this does happen, it doesn't
happen that often. Or at least as often as most people think. Problem
is, whenever it does happen, you tend to hear about it. Prior to placing
her baby for adoption, a prospective birth mother has the right to change
her mind at any time and have her baby returned to her. After the placement,
there is a period of time where she can revoke her consent and have the
baby returned to her. After that period expires, however, her parental
rights to her child are terminated and eventually transferred to the adoptive
parents, who will be responsible for raising him/her. The key to preventing
a potential birth mother from undergoing a change of heart is to screen
her carefully and to make sure she receives sufficient counselling so
that she clearly understands her actions and her rights and responsibilities.
Remember, too, that until she terminates her rights to her child, she's
not a birth mother. She's a pregnant woman who's considering adoption.
Fiction: Years after placing
their babies for adoption, birth mothers come back to claim them.
Fact: If this happens, it happens in
Hollywood movies, not in real life. Anecdotal evidence shows that the
opposite is true: While adoptive parents often push for increased contact
and openness, most birth mothers just want to go on with their lives and
put their adoption experience behind them. The last thing they want to
do is interfere with their child's upbringing.
Fiction: Birth mothers
give their children away because they don't care for them.
Fact: Birth
mothers don't "give" their children away, they place them with
a loving family because they want them to have a better future than the
one they can provide. Placing a child for adoption is the most heartbreaking
decision any mother can make. And no mother makes it lightly. It requires
courage, love and selflessness. Birth mothers have always had a bad rap
and have become adoption's version of the evil stepmother in fairy tales.
But they're just normal, every day people. They're not drug addicts, they're
not prostitutes and they're not homeless or penniless. They have feelings
and values, just like everyone else.
Fiction: Birth mothers
eventually get over their decision.
Fact: Birth mothers never "get over"
their decision. Nor do they forget it. They will always have a connection
to their children, even if someone else is raising them. So don't think
that just because you don't see or hear from your birth mother she's out
of your life -- or your child's -- forever. She'll always be there, like
a distant relative you never hear from but nevertheless know exists.
Fiction: It's harder to
bond with an adopted baby than with one of your own.
Fact: Ask anyone who has ever adopted
a newborn and they'll tell you that the bonding process begins the moment
you lay eyes on your child. Sometimes, if a child has spent an extended
period of time in an orphanage or a foster home, there may be attachment
problems that delay the bonding process. But in time, with the right love,
care and attention, many of those problems can be overcome. In other words,
don't underestimate the role that environment plays in the healing and
adjustment process.
Fiction: Adopted children
must have something wrong with them, otherwise their parents would never
have given them away.
Fact: When
a child is placed for adoption it usually has more to do with the parents'
circumstances than it does with the child's. Which is to say that in many
placements, especially those directly done from the hospital, a child's
physical or mental fitness isn't a factor. That said, there are children
available through public and private agencies who do have what's called
"special needs" -- a developmental, emotional or mental handicap
that requires special attention.
Fiction: Adopted children
are less successful in life than biological children.
Fact: Success isn't predicated on whether
a child is adopted or not. Just ask Steve Jobs, Gerald Ford or Sarah McLachlan.
All are adopted and all have made a huge difference to people's lives.
Fiction: Adopted children
want to be told they're special.
Fact: As an adopted parent, you'll be
walking a fine line between answering your child's questions about his/her
origins and helping him/her carve out his own identity. Telling your child
s/he's special may seem like a nice way to deal with his adoption, but
in fact most adoptive children just want to fit in and would rather be
treated like everyone else.
Fiction: There's a right
age and a wrong age to tell your child s/he's adopted.
Fact: Most adoption professionals agree
that the concept of adoption should be introduced to a child gradually,
in a positive light, long before s/he understands what it means. This
way it will be part of his/her upbringing, as natural as blowing his/her
nose. So really there's no "right" or "wrong" age.
Just make sure you tell him/her before someone else does.
Fiction: Adopted children
grow up confused or bitter about their origins.
Fact: In open adoption today, a child's
origins are never in doubt. From a very early age, s/he not only knows
that the people who are raising him/her are his/her adoptive parents,
but in many cases s/he will have a picture or letters from his/her birth
parents. All the information is out in the open, should the child be interested
in learning more about his/her origins.
Fiction: Adopted children
spend the rest of their lives searching for their "real" parents.
Fact: Searching for one's birth parents
was quite common in adoptions of the past, but not any more. In open adoption
today, children -- though curious as ever -- have less of an interest
in meeting their parents. That's because there's no burning mystery or
dark secret to uncover; they feel secure with themselves and their environment.
And in those instance where the do want speak to their birth parents,
their adoptive parents will simply pick up the phone and dial the number
for them.
Fiction:
Raising an adopted child is no different than raising a biological one.
Fact: Although
in the early stages there are no major differences between raising an
adopted child and one "of your own" -- after all, changing a
diaper is changing a diaper -- as your child grows and his identity starts
to take shape, questions about his/her origins will arise and become increasingly
more important. Some child grow up fantasizing they were adopted; in your
child's case, the fantasy will, in fact, be a reality. Among
other things, a child will want to know more about his/her birth parents
and why they weren't able to raise him/her. If your child is of
a different race, there will, of course, be other issues to deal with.
The good news is that there are support
groups that can help you handle just about any imaginable situation
you'll run into.
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