I have asked a few questions on this forum over the last 3 years while taking care of my parent's issues. It has been very helpful reading all the answers to mine and other's questions.
As of last week my last remaining parent passed away. I am sad they are both gone but also relieved that the toll it took on me is now over.
Now the catch. While cleaning out my mom's room at AL I came across some hidden papers in her dresser. They were rolled up and doubled bagged in her sock drawer. I almost just threw them out with all the other items I was getting rid of but decided at the last second to open the bag. It turned out they are adoption papers for me and my brother. I am 57 years old and never once had any idea that I was adopted.
I'm not mad, not sad, not happy, not anything. I'm just numb. I don't really expect many answers on this forum for this particular subject since it's not really care giving related but I just had to get that out.
I did want to say thanks for all the help over the years.
I guess they felt that once they had gone you might chose to look and maybe find your birth parent(s) or maybe they even forgot about the papers.
I’m not surprised you are feeling numb - you are my age - and to only just find out - with no chance of asking your known parents any questions is hard to come to terms with.
To have loved, cared for and lost your parents only to discover they weren’t your birth ones is a lot in such a short time.
All I can say is be kind to yourself at this time - caring is stressful as is losing someone - plus you’ve yet to stop being numb and feel hurt/ angry to a point - whatever their reasons- it would have left me wondering if I ever truly knew them.
If and when you feel ready to, speaking to professional counsellors may help you. Have you informed your brother?
My heart goes out to you - you’ve been through so much and didn’t need this life changing shock whilst sorting out your mums room.
As others have said, give yourself time to digest this new information. I'd recommend you try short-term therapy - to try it out to sort out your feelings. It could open the door to inner and outer explorations. It is quite a lot to carry solely on your shoulders. Glad you reached out to us here.
We told our daughter from very young that we adopted her. I had a biological child seven years later. So, I am in the unique position of adoptive mom and birth mom. My love is absolutely identical for each.
I would have loved an open adoption for all of us. It was illegal then. The agency we used did allow personal letters. I received a beautiful letter from my daughter’s birth mom. I wrote her a letter also.
She wrote a letter to our child too. I cried because it meant so much to me. Ironically, we had a lot in common and I suppose that is why she chose our profile. It was non identifiable because adoptions were closed then but she was allowed to select a couple from profiles.
Amazingly, our daughter looks like us. That didn’t really matter to us though. We didn’t care about the sex either. We just wanted a child to add to our family. A family starts off with a husband and wife.
The letter she wrote explained that she wasn’t ready to be a mom, wanted two parents, mom and dad, wanted to finish school, etc. She explained that she wanted her to have a life that she deserved and she was unable to provide that for her.
I sent photos of my daughter all through her life to the agency to forward to her.
At the agency we went through there is a registry when the child reaches 18 they can sign up to meet each other. Both parties have to sign, child and birth parent or a match isn’t made. My daughter did sign up at 18. Her birth mom did not. Her birth dad did not.
Naturally, I was disappointed for my daughter. She had questions as all children do. She also just wanted to look into her eyes, see if they looked alike, etc.
My sweet daughter told us that she knew we were her parents who raised her and would always think of us as mom and dad. I told her that we did not feel betrayed or threatened at all and we completely understood her wanting to meet her biological family.
My daughter has health issues and it would be great to have additional health information. The agency gave us limited information and it would be wonderful if she had more details.
My daughter has accepted that her birth mom has chosen not to meet at this point. My daughter is disappointed but respects her privacy. Some birth moms move on and do not tell others that they had a child.
My daughter is now 30 years old. Her birth mom was 19 when she placed her for adoption. Her birth father was also a teenager, they were students at a university.
Maybe one day she will choose to meet her child that she selflessly placed to be loved by us. It is a gift that could never be repaid for which we are eternally grateful. I hope she went on to live a wonderful life.
I served on the board of our local auxiliary with the agency. I did outreach work at high schools. It was truly rewarding to be able to inform others about building families through adoption. If my life didn’t take the turn that it did with having to care for mom I would have continued to volunteer. It is a well respected agency.
The agency we used is over 100 years old and the founder is remarkable. She went to court in Washington D.C. to have the term ‘illegitimate’ removed from a child’s birth certificate. She argued that babies are innocent and should not be stigmatized with a label.
Parents who adopt look at children as ‘their children’, period! The feeling is no different than a child that is biological. As I said, I have both (one I adopted and one I gave birth to) so I can speak first hand to this issue. Both of my girls are miracles! I am a miracle.
I always wanted to adopt so going through hell of infertility beforehand was all worth it. Adopting our child was the icing on the cake!
Years later we get pregnant out of the blue!
I almost died during complications from infertility treatments, emergency surgeries and pregnancy. I was high risk and barely lived. Just about lost the baby too. I don’t ever take our family for granted.
was that you’re mom was never ever mad enough to let you
know you were adopted because you might feel less, and you were like flesh and blood to her, and she loved you that much.
She also left you those papers out of respect for you. I have an adopted daughter, and a grandson that I have helped raise, who I love more than anything, whom are exactly the same to me. My unrelated but sad news, is that she is now divorced, and my ex son in law and new wife basically don’t see my husband and I as that important, like kids think. We’ll all power through though. God Bless
Best of luck to you. I wish you all the happiness in the world with meeting your birth family. You deserved to know the truth growing up. For some reason that didn’t happen. Things were done differently a long time ago. I am glad that you were loved by the parents who raised you. That is what is most important.
I have two friends who were forced to give up their children for adoption and have had incredible reunions with their children.
I wish you good luck and Godspeed, my friend. Do check back and let us know how everything turns out.
Example: I have a friend 🐣whose birth-mother 🐥psychologically collapsed into death, 17 years after she🐥 was coerced to give-up her child🐣. . I watched the process, and know that the birth mother 🐥didn't want to give up her kiddo, yet her parents, coerced her to do so. The result was a 🐣kiddo who blamed himself for the biological mother's demise/death. The kiddo had no idea that he was forcefully placed up for adoption, kiddo knows now, and has a better understanding of what happened.
Conversely the circumstances between your birth mother and your bio-father 🐎could have been something unpleasant, and within a few seconds... your meeting could go south incredibly fast.
Or...perhaps your adoption involved a stork delivering you in a basket to your mother's doorstep.
Although it's impossible to know every element that was involved in the adoption process. Be open to remembering that nothing was or is your fault.
Your mother knew someone would tell you...so she placed the documents in an area to be found. Those documents ensured that you could have the option to contact the agency, to learn what was in that agency's records. Who knows why nobody told you, but your mom knew you might eventually learn about stuff, after she died. The reason for withholding that information could range from simple pride to....much more...
Hopefully your birth mother 🐥will be open to doing whatever you both decide is best, about keeping in contact...or not... the next step could move forward or stop; in either case you've been allowed to meet the person who carried you for 9.5 months.🐥. It'll be weird, you might experience an automatic umbilical cord based connection.
I hope the meeting is everything that both of you need or want it to be.🌸🌸
Sometimes we have to float up pretty high to catch a glimpse of what has transpired in our lifetimes and the lives of our loved ones.
Thank you for taking us on your journey.
Will you have anybody with you for support when you meet your mother? Not to do anything, just to stand by in case you need your hand held; but anyway I hope this will be wonderful for both of you.
So, you are blessed that you were raised believing that you were theirs, all the good, all the bad and everything in between they accepted and owned as their very own sons.
I know finding out the way you did was a shock and the revelation that you two were the only ones that didn't know is difficult, but not as difficult as what could have been. I just felt really led to share this with you.
I pray you are doing well and finding your new normal after everything.
I'm so sorry for your loss. I'm new to the forum and I hope that you don't mind me putting in my two cents worth. Both of my parents are deceased but my father in law and mother and law are still alive. They're divorced so we spend our time going to separate parts of the country to care for them when we're needed.
I think that when a parent passes we go into almost shock. There's a numbness and the temptation is to put steady ground under your feet by taking the next step. In your case, it's been shock on top of shock. May I suggest that you sit with this information for a while and give yourself time to process all the stages of grief before making any huge decisions?
You could take a DNA test to find your biological parents but what if they don't want contact? What if they're deceased? We're the same age so I know that's a double edged sword. Waiting or not waiting is a tricky proposition. That doesn't even touch the problem with the fact that some family members knew but didn't know why you weren't told.
Letting it out is good. That's how you start healing. Please remember to be kind to yourself while you're going through this process. You sound like such a good and kind person and it's stressful taking care of elderly parents. I remember all the adrenaline of worrying all the time then suddenly when it stopped, I didn't know what to do. My answer was simply to be. My deepest condolences.
I just don't know where that leaves you.
It wouldn't be fair to blame the cousin or take her specifically to task, just because she's the last one within reach, of course. But if it'd been me I think her reply would have put me into full Sarcasm Overdrive. Any other little snippets they didn't think it was their place to mention..?
Most of the family? MOST? How many people exactly were in on this and keeping shtum?
But, of course, what you do need is information. Have you been able to find out anything at all about the adoption process?