Anonymous wrote:I am an adoptee. Your sister needs to stop this nonsense. Everything needs to be on the table, some people are related by blood, some by family. Stop the mixed messaging. Only the truth, no denial, no revisionist family history, no crazy stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really odd your sister is making the adoption status an issue. Why in the world wouldn't she share that info? This never plays out well, and is the biggest issue here. Sister can't control how other people speak on social media.
I don't think there's anything wrong with telling a child they're adopted at a later age - maybe 10 or 12. When they can understand and ask appropriate questions.
As far as OPs actual question - I think even a toddler can understand and wonder why 'Grammie loves brother's curly hair and not my straight hair'.
They internalize that. And the fact that the whole family is doing this seems a bit suspect. I'd just make sure they don't do it in person and ignore them on social media.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are really inappropriate to talk about resemblances online but she should also raise her child to know that she joined the family through adoption. BUT, a toddler isn't going to understand any of that. We get dumb comments all the time and it makes our child uncomfortable as they know they are adopted and how clueless people are.
OP here. I didn’t have any discussion about resemblance in front of my niece. My sisters issue is with our family and extended family doing it in person and online.
She is right and you calling the kid adopted child speaks volumes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really odd your sister is making the adoption status an issue. Why in the world wouldn't she share that info? This never plays out well, and is the biggest issue here. Sister can't control how other people speak on social media.
I don't think there's anything wrong with telling a child they're adopted at a later age - maybe 10 or 12. When they can understand and ask appropriate questions.
As far as OPs actual question - I think even a toddler can understand and wonder why 'Grammie loves brother's curly hair and not my straight hair'.
They internalize that. And the fact that the whole family is doing this seems a bit suspect. I'd just make sure they don't do it in person and ignore them on social media.
Dear lord, no. Dropping that bomb on a tween? You'll wreck them. It should be part of their birth story from the time they are little, so they grow up knowing the truth, in a child-appropriate way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of you are wrong.
All the research says that kids need to know, from the very beginning, that they are adopted. It shouldn't be a Big Deal Secret revealed when they're older -- it should just be part of the conversation.
But it's also othering and isolating to talk about how one child inherited looks from parent or grandparent, and other child is left to believe that they aren't "really" part of the family.
+1
Speaking as an adoptee, it has been best practice for years to tell kids from an early age that they are adopted, in age-appropriate terms. But constant references to how one looks like other family members, or has so-and-so's features, can be alienating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really odd your sister is making the adoption status an issue. Why in the world wouldn't she share that info? This never plays out well, and is the biggest issue here. Sister can't control how other people speak on social media.
OP here. She’s never told me her exact reasons but also doesn’t want her daughter to have any contact with the bio parents as well because she’s concerned they would want to her back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are really inappropriate to talk about resemblances online but she should also raise her child to know that she joined the family through adoption. BUT, a toddler isn't going to understand any of that. We get dumb comments all the time and it makes our child uncomfortable as they know they are adopted and how clueless people are.
OP here. I didn’t have any discussion about resemblance in front of my niece. My sisters issue is with our family and extended family doing it in person and online.
Anonymous wrote:It's really odd your sister is making the adoption status an issue. Why in the world wouldn't she share that info? This never plays out well, and is the biggest issue here. Sister can't control how other people speak on social media.
Anonymous wrote:Both of you are wrong.
All the research says that kids need to know, from the very beginning, that they are adopted. It shouldn't be a Big Deal Secret revealed when they're older -- it should just be part of the conversation.
But it's also othering and isolating to talk about how one child inherited looks from parent or grandparent, and other child is left to believe that they aren't "really" part of the family.
Anonymous wrote:I think you are really inappropriate to talk about resemblances online but she should also raise her child to know that she joined the family through adoption. BUT, a toddler isn't going to understand any of that. We get dumb comments all the time and it makes our child uncomfortable as they know they are adopted and how clueless people are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really odd your sister is making the adoption status an issue. Why in the world wouldn't she share that info? This never plays out well, and is the biggest issue here. Sister can't control how other people speak on social media.
I don't think there's anything wrong with telling a child they're adopted at a later age - maybe 10 or 12. When they can understand and ask appropriate questions.
As far as OPs actual question - I think even a toddler can understand and wonder why 'Grammie loves brother's curly hair and not my straight hair'.
They internalize that. And the fact that the whole family is doing this seems a bit suspect. I'd just make sure they don't do it in person and ignore them on social media.