Anonymous wrote:OP wanting to clarify a few points-
1. Our motivation to adopt is that we want to add more children to our family. The “wanting a sibling for our child” thing is regarding timing, not our underlying motivation.
2. We realize all kids avaialable for adoption have already have suffered the trauma of the loss of their birth family. But from what I’ve seen through the numerous adoptions I’m familiar with firsthand (these were all 5-10+ years ago, which is why I want to hear more recent experiences), there is a huge spectrum of health and emotional concerns and I want to know where we can realistically draw the line but still have a good chance of a fairly reasonable timeline. Almost all of the adoptive families we know adopted healthy infants domestically or from China or Vietnam. Two adopted children who were classified as “special needs” (one had a large birthmark, one has scars from a fire) and are happy, healthy, and living “normal” lives now as teens. One family adopted supposedly healthy children from Russia who had severe attachment disorder and FASD. They children will never be able to live independently and they dealt with scary, violent behavior toward their biological children. I’m trying to be realistic about what our family can take on upfront.
3. Of course we know there are no guarantees with any child, biological or adopted.
International and domestic are different and it will really vary depending on the child's background. Understand many of those kids may have identity issues as teens or older. Everything may look good early on but it may not be later on.
If you want to be realistic you need to prepare for the worst and hope for the best. We adopted a "healthy" infant. She turned out to have a lot of SN and early on required a lot of therapies. She's doing great now but I had to quit my job to take her and thank goodness we had good insurance to help pay and my husband was able to increase his income to replace mine. I have no regrets and would do it again in a heartbeat but often you just don't know. There is no reason to believe my kid will not do well in life but it took a lot of work to get there and we were fortunate she is progressing as she has. It is similar to giving birth but you know your medical history so you have an idea of what runs in your family. Often birthparents don't know or to make themselves or their kids more desirable.
The main difference now vs. 10 years ago is the push for open adoption. It can be great or really bad. My daughter's birthmom and family are wonderful and they are family to us. Birthfather and family - hope never to see them again. If you do a closed adoption, with technology and genetic testing its easy to find someone. I'd rather know than not know. I think part of our success is the maternal relative support as there is never any question as to what happen, is she wanted and we just treat each other as family. I consider her parents equal grandparents and they are basically my in-laws. Are you prepared for that?