Lol. DNA will decide this for you in short time, dear. |
They really should be more considerate when expressing their identity, amirite? |
Bingo. Exactly. |
And yet any consideration of the child's beliefs or feelings....still about you, isn't it? |
This is all correct. What it's called is child trafficking. |
Mine was domestic and closed |
+ 1 Miracle sums up my adopted daughter. Stars were aligned! |
Shut up |
I truly hope you are never my child's teacher. Did it occur to you some kids are proud of being adopted and knowing biological family takes away a lot of adoption issues if the biological family is supportive. My child doesn't have to wonder where they came from or who their relatives are. I don't have to worry about them taking my child away from me. My child has no issue saying they are adopted and as a teacher you probably couldn't easily figure out which grandparent or aunt/uncle was from which family as they all have equal status. My child is very interested in his culture and heritage. We fully support it. Adoption is how they joined the family. It is not their identity. |
The adoptee community will never shut up. It's only in recent years that we've achieved community, access to information and legal protection. We are not commodities for childless people. We have a genetic history, identity, and rights that your paperwork is meaningless against. |
adoptive mom here. I’ve literally never heard my kid or any other kid say this. We are in a super group for interracial adoptive families so I’m around other adoptive kids not just my own. Never heard s kid say this or a parent say their kid says it. So it doesn’t mean it never happened. But it’s not common. |
Said by someone who obviously has no idea what open adoption is. Even if the DNA test can identify a birth parent, that isn't the same thing at all. |
Kids may be telling you this because there are lots of events/projects throughout school that are still predicated on the traditional mom/dad/biologically born children nuclear family. Making "Mother's Day" cards in art class. Family tree projects. "Culture" projects. discussions regarding genetics in science class (brown eyes/blue eyes). All of these are topics where teachers subconsciously go to the nuclear/bio family norm and kids can feel uncomfortable. |
| If you're providing a home for a unwanted abandoned child you've done a great thing. What else is there to say???? |
With all due respect, as someone who adopted an older child, and has been told this numerous times, I think it oversimplifies a very complex situation. That attitude sends an implicit message to adopted kids that they should be grateful that someone "saved" them. It can be be really stifling to the children---especially in situations where the child may have been an adopted at an older age and spent years hoping and being on best behavior in order to get "picked" by a family. I'm nowhere near a perfect mom. No mom is. And my child---regardless of how they joined our family---has a right to the same exasperations and frustrations with me as any biological child has with their mother. |