Anonymous wrote:Most adoption "professionals" are not that great. He is your brother. He joined your family through adoption. He is not your adopted brother. He is no different than any other sibling. You listen, you only offer opinion if asked and if asked to go to a in person visit, you go.
It will be hit or miss with the birth family. My son's maternal family is amazing. We are all family. His birthfathers family are a nightmare, to put it nicely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found a long-lost half sibling a decade ago. Not through DNA. We found it easier to meet one person at a time (there’s tons of us). It think it took 2 years to finish that process. He did individual therapy during it all. I’d recommend slowly meeting people rather than one big reunion. Also, professional help.
Why? Why does every life event seem to need hand holding?
Anonymous wrote:Hello I am looking for insight. My beloved adopted brother randomly uploaded his dna profile to public dna database mainly looking for health information not a burning desire to meet biological parents. We are very close and he has never been driven to fill an empty whole or anything like that. All of the sudden his large think Irish Catholic family and half siblings all want to meet him. With 24 hours he went from mild curiosity to huge group of people wanting to meet. He is informing every step of the way and overwhelmed. Has anyone gone through this? What is the outcome. What is my role? Technically he has 4 half siblings but I also feel like there siblings too because we are so close. I have told him love expands not detracts so finding more people that love you is a blessing. And of course health information is important. Any insight is appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:You have no role in this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found a long-lost half sibling a decade ago. Not through DNA. We found it easier to meet one person at a time (there’s tons of us). It think it took 2 years to finish that process. He did individual therapy during it all. I’d recommend slowly meeting people rather than one big reunion. Also, professional help.
Why? Why does every life event seem to need hand holding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found a long-lost half sibling a decade ago. Not through DNA. We found it easier to meet one person at a time (there’s tons of us). It think it took 2 years to finish that process. He did individual therapy during it all. I’d recommend slowly meeting people rather than one big reunion. Also, professional help.
Why? Why does every life event seem to need hand holding?
Anonymous wrote:I found a long-lost half sibling a decade ago. Not through DNA. We found it easier to meet one person at a time (there’s tons of us). It think it took 2 years to finish that process. He did individual therapy during it all. I’d recommend slowly meeting people rather than one big reunion. Also, professional help.