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Old 05-03-2008, 02:28 PM
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Sumerce Sumerce is offline
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I actually made 2 lifebooks. One for while he is younger, and one for when he gets a little older.

The one for when he is older includes a lot of info -- siblings, grandparents, exact details, etc. The one that I have for now is much more general and just introduces basic concepts like: you were born, you have a birthmother and father who couldn't take care of you, you were in a foster home while ICBF tried to find you a forever family, you liked to eat condensed milk, you learned to walk at 12 months --very basic. I used a lot of pictures, not much written content. I used Blurb.com to print it.

I have an older adopted child (now 7). I have based my beginner book based on what my older son has been interested in -- which honestly is very little. He has asked about 2 questions which were easily addressed.

I spoke with our SW at the post-placement visits and she read what I wrote and made suggestions. I really recommend that you get a group of people to read your book. I was surprised by the suggestions made by a Kindergarten teacher I am friends with. It really helped me use words that were easier to understand.

As I was writing the beginner book, I also worked on the older more mature version. I wanted to get the More Detailed Book written while everything was still fresh. I have had a SW, a Teacher, a fellow adoptive parent, a teenaged adoptee, and a Pediatrician read it an give me suggestions. I have not made the Blurb.com version of this one yet as I hope to include more about his first years in our family to make it more complete.

Last edited by Sumerce : 05-03-2008 at 02:32 PM.
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