Anonymous wrote:No.
When you are in the waiting period pretty adoption you are in a vulnerable state of mind -- I know from experience The agencies will subtly encourage you at this time Saying a final no to adoption of the SN children they offered us was surprisingly difficult but it is a decision we have never regretted
Anonymous wrote:OP---I think it is selfish to consider adopting a SN child without seriously thinking through the impact of that adoption on the child that you have. You are saddling your biological child with lifelong responsibility: when you are dead and gone---it is your bio child that will have to shoulder the responsibility for the SN child's care. As an over-50 adult, I have several friends whose parents have passed, leaving them responsible for their siblings with Down's. That is a significant responsibility and you are constraining your bio child's options in adulthood by setting them up with a substantial care burden once you are gone.
Anonymous wrote:Again, no. And I would think it extremely selfish of someone in your circumstances- with an older, only, healthy, neurotypical child, to do adopt an infant with DS.
You will be turning your child life upside down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say no bc there is no way to know how severe the mental retardation will be and if there will be any co-existing disabilities. Children with Down syndrome are not all fun and cute and loving and cheerful. What you don’t see are the 70 yr old parents changing diapers and worrying about what will happen to their child once they die. There are many cases of abuse towards the disabled elderly.
The great majority of people with Ds use the toilet like everyone else.
"Children with *or without* Down syndrome are not all fun and cute and loving and cheerful"
I'm thankful for my child with Ds everyday. To me, having a kid with Ds isn't hard itself. The hard part is dealing with ignorance about Ds, usually coming from people who think they know much more about Ds than they actually do.
I agree with everything you've said!
It doesn't bother me that individuals decide that adopting a child with Down syndrome isn't for them, or that carrying a pregnancy with a child with Down syndrome isn't for them. It does bother me when people justify those choices by making statements that are based on fear and not on actual experiences or knowledge about Down syndrome.
This fear is what hurts people with Down syndrome, the constant underestimation of their potential is what allows people to justify segregation, and the lack of employment options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say no bc there is no way to know how severe the mental retardation will be and if there will be any co-existing disabilities. Children with Down syndrome are not all fun and cute and loving and cheerful. What you don’t see are the 70 yr old parents changing diapers and worrying about what will happen to their child once they die. There are many cases of abuse towards the disabled elderly.
The great majority of people with Ds use the toilet like everyone else.
"Children with *or without* Down syndrome are not all fun and cute and loving and cheerful"
I'm thankful for my child with Ds everyday. To me, having a kid with Ds isn't hard itself. The hard part is dealing with ignorance about Ds, usually coming from people who think they know much more about Ds than they actually do.
Anonymous wrote:I would say no bc there is no way to know how severe the mental retardation will be and if there will be any co-existing disabilities. Children with Down syndrome are not all fun and cute and loving and cheerful. What you don’t see are the 70 yr old parents changing diapers and worrying about what will happen to their child once they die. There are many cases of abuse towards the disabled elderly.