Anonymous wrote:You don’t shop in a catalogue for your child!
Most adoptive parents are praying for a healthy child.
You are way off base if you think it is like shopping for clothes or home accessories!!
I cannot relate for wanting your child to “pass” as biological. Adopted is not second best.
Anonymous wrote:I have an old HS friend I stay in casual contact with on FB who has adopted three children at birth, all from different parents. The thing is, all three look like bio siblings (they are not), and they each look like the parents. If you didn’t know better, they could all pass as biological family. I’m sure she gets told all the time that her kids look so much like her (they DO!)
I don’t think it’s appropriate for me to ask her, but I’m so curious if adoptive parents “choose” their unborn children based on what the parents look like? I have a friend who used donor sperm from two different men who looked very similar (same hair and eye color, ethnicity, height, etc.) There was a whole vetting process, so I’m wondering if it’s something similar to that, or if they just somehow ended up with three separate kids who look like bio siblings, and who also look like the parents.
*I truly hope this doesn’t come across as insensitive! I’m asking here because it’s anonymous, so please don’t take this the wrong way!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume you’re talking really only about domestic adoption where birth parents would have any say, so my own experience as an international adoptive parent isn’t relevant, BUT I will say that I’m also an international, transracial adult adoptee and it is nice, for once, to not be a conspicuous family (some of my kids were adopted from the same country I was).
Do you still feel conspicuous? After 20+ years, it is a non-issue that my child and I are different races. People may notice, but we are so used to it. Don’t feel “conspicuous“ at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume you’re talking really only about domestic adoption where birth parents would have any say, so my own experience as an international adoptive parent isn’t relevant, BUT I will say that I’m also an international, transracial adult adoptee and it is nice, for once, to not be a conspicuous family (some of my kids were adopted from the same country I was).
Do you still feel conspicuous? After 20+ years, it is a non-issue that my child and I are different races. People may notice, but we are so used to it. Don’t feel “conspicuous“ at all.
PP here. It’s funny because I didn’t feel conspicuous growing up at all- it wasn’t until I became an adult and the realization really hit me that we stand out as unusual. I’m almost 50 and there are still times I feel it.
I’m not saying every transracial adoptee feels the same or will feel the same with any degree of certainty…but I do think it’s a different perspective as the parent (presumably white) vs a child of a different race.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I assume you’re talking really only about domestic adoption where birth parents would have any say, so my own experience as an international adoptive parent isn’t relevant, BUT I will say that I’m also an international, transracial adult adoptee and it is nice, for once, to not be a conspicuous family (some of my kids were adopted from the same country I was).
Do you still feel conspicuous? After 20+ years, it is a non-issue that my child and I are different races. People may notice, but we are so used to it. Don’t feel “conspicuous“ at all.
Anonymous wrote:I assume you’re talking really only about domestic adoption where birth parents would have any say, so my own experience as an international adoptive parent isn’t relevant, BUT I will say that I’m also an international, transracial adult adoptee and it is nice, for once, to not be a conspicuous family (some of my kids were adopted from the same country I was).
Anonymous wrote:I assume you’re talking really only about domestic adoption where birth parents would have any say, so my own experience as an international adoptive parent isn’t relevant, BUT I will say that I’m also an international, transracial adult adoptee and it is nice, for once, to not be a conspicuous family (some of my kids were adopted from the same country I was).