Anonymous wrote:OP, I hear you and empathize for you, I can't imagine, but....you haven't really answered, or perhaps thought about, the actual day to day reality of what it would have been like for a 15 year old with a newborn.
Who would pay for food, clothing diapers?
Who would watch the baby while you were at school?
College?
Who would watch the baby if you wanted to go out with your friends?
How would you pay for someone to watch the baby?
These are just off the top of my head, but trying to see the logical, hard truth of a 15 year old having a baby without parents who agree to shoulder the responsiblity. I think you did a wonderful thing and hate that you are so filled with regret.
As a parent myself, I am raising as many children as I can afford, balancing their needs with retirement, college savings, future and current health needs of my husband and I.
It is not that easy to agree to take another another child essentially what your parents would have had to do, let alone the physical demands.
If your parents were already poor and struggling?
Anonymous wrote:OP, what religion were you growing up? I'm Mormon and what you describe is still the cultural norm.
Anonymous wrote:So what would happen if a 15 year old mother refuses and is not welcome back home to her parents house? Would the baby end in foster care and be adopted against her wishes?
Or could she as a homeless teen qualify for some housing assistance? I am assuming welfare is difficult to qualify for and wait lists mean she would be homeless with social workers taking the baby
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was the father an older man, or a peer? Did he support the adoption?
An older peer. There is nothing he did that could be called supportive.
Anonymous wrote:Why did your parents pressure you to give the baby up? You hardly have any contact with them, so what difference would it have made to them if you had kept your baby?
Anonymous wrote:Please say "placed" and not "gave up" my child. Language is very powerful, and the notion of "giving up" a child implies that the child is less than worthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm also an adult adoptee. I was born in 85 and, from what I understand, my birth mom was as young as you were. It was a closed adoption and I have no idea who this woman is, although she knows who my adoptive parents are.
I grew up knowing I was adopted and I have wondered every single day of my life why my birth mom hasn't looked for me. I have wondered if she thinks about me at all, if she wonders whether or not I had a good life and if she would like to know that I have now a beautiful family of my own and am expecting my second child.
It hurts a lot. Not that I was adopted, but how I was adopted and how, instead of having a loving birth mother to add to my adoptive family, I have always a feeling of grieving for the parent I never had.
Why haven't you tried to contact your child?
NP and adult adoptee. These are my feelings and questions as well.
First pp here. I guess since OP has been back to answer others, but haven't answered my question, she is ignoring it. Which is probably more telling than answering it at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm also an adult adoptee. I was born in 85 and, from what I understand, my birth mom was as young as you were. It was a closed adoption and I have no idea who this woman is, although she knows who my adoptive parents are.
I grew up knowing I was adopted and I have wondered every single day of my life why my birth mom hasn't looked for me. I have wondered if she thinks about me at all, if she wonders whether or not I had a good life and if she would like to know that I have now a beautiful family of my own and am expecting my second child.
It hurts a lot. Not that I was adopted, but how I was adopted and how, instead of having a loving birth mother to add to my adoptive family, I have always a feeling of grieving for the parent I never had.
Why haven't you tried to contact your child?
NP and adult adoptee. These are my feelings and questions as well.
First pp here. I guess since OP has been back to answer others, but haven't answered my question, she is ignoring it. Which is probably more telling than answering it at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm also an adult adoptee. I was born in 85 and, from what I understand, my birth mom was as young as you were. It was a closed adoption and I have no idea who this woman is, although she knows who my adoptive parents are.
I grew up knowing I was adopted and I have wondered every single day of my life why my birth mom hasn't looked for me. I have wondered if she thinks about me at all, if she wonders whether or not I had a good life and if she would like to know that I have now a beautiful family of my own and am expecting my second child.
It hurts a lot. Not that I was adopted, but how I was adopted and how, instead of having a loving birth mother to add to my adoptive family, I have always a feeling of grieving for the parent I never had.
Why haven't you tried to contact your child?
NP and adult adoptee. These are my feelings and questions as well.
First pp here. I guess since OP has been back to answer others, but haven't answered my question, she is ignoring it. Which is probably more telling than answering it at all.