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#1
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Were you ever curious when you were at college?
It's the summer before your sophomore year in college. You're home, working and having fun with friends. Did you ever get curious about your birthmom?
What if you knew you and your birthmom lived within 20 miles of each other. Did you ever wonder? What would you do if you accidentally (not accidentally on purpose) run into each other in a public place? I know 18 (almoost 19) is still young...but I was just wondering.
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Every now and then I like to lean out my window, look up and smile for a satellite picture. - Steven Wright ~Todays mighty Oak is just yesterdays nut that held it’s ground~ Birth Mom Adult Step-Parent Adoptee |
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#2
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I am with you Roni - how do you NOT want to know at least who your birthmom is - what her story is - what happened that led to you being adopted. But as I am learning, life is unfair - it sucks and adoption sucks worse. Keep your chin up!!!! We'll get ours some day!
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#3
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Amom here so obviously not speaking from a personal experience...
![]() I have asked my dh who is an adoptee what he thought of that time in his life and whether or not he was curious etc., when we've had discussions about our own kids seeking answers. He felt that curiousity doesn't always lead to action, meaning that he's had various thoughts of questions, curiousity etc., but during certain times of life, it wouldn't necessarily be the right time for him to seek answers to those thoughts. College and young adulthood can be a really "internal" time, because it's for a lot of people the first chance they get to explore who they really are just as themselves, being independent exploring new challenges and life in general. (((HUGS))) Don't give up hope and I hope too, that adoptees can chime in with their thoughts of all the questions you asked.
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Adoption.Com Forums Administrator - any admin situations or questions, please pm me or email me at admin@adoptionmedia.com Mom to 4 fun loving kids (adopted from foster care) 6 years into our forever family! ![]() KRUSTY FOR PREZ |
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#4
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half adoptee point of view here.....
honestly in college i don't think that i was one bit curious about my biodad. i do know that i had a lot of respect for my mother at that time because she had me at 17 and i was around that age and couldn't imagine having a baby to take care of. i thought more about my biodad when i was an adolescent (started wondering around age 12) and in high school (at that stage i was angry about it)...college was too busy with frat parties, dorm room drama, classes and boyfriends. once i graduated college and established a career (same career as my mother i might add) i had tried to put those questions to the back of my mind, but they did pop in occasionally. it really wasn't until i moved 3000 miles away from my family and went back to school and started a second career that i was constantly thinking about my adoption and my biodad and his family. i think the physical seperation from my mother and my family forced me to look inside myself and find out who i really was. i don't think i had the capacity or understanding for myself to do that while in college.
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Happiness lies for those who cry, those who hurt, those who have searched, and those who have tried, for only they can appreciate the importance of people who have touched their lives. "Only eyes washed by tears can see clearly" - Louis Mann love ya girls you all make me laugh, smile and cry and I am so lucky to have you all in my life.
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#5
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I'm not expecting DD to reach out right now. I want her to be in a good place when (if) we ever meet. Which means she needs to do what every 18 (almost 19) year old needs to do.
If there was a possiblity that she thinks or wonders...even for a split second then I can still try my best to remain patient. I know at that age I thought about her constantly...but then again, I was 18 when I had her.
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Every now and then I like to lean out my window, look up and smile for a satellite picture. - Steven Wright ~Todays mighty Oak is just yesterdays nut that held it’s ground~ Birth Mom Adult Step-Parent Adoptee |
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#6
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Hi, I'm a firstmom, but I thought I could offer a little insight from my own experience.
My son was definitely thinking about me and wanting to know me as a teenager and while in college. My son searched for and found me at 19 (at the prompting of his amom, who saw how he was struggling). I am conflicted about whether that was a good time FOR HIM to do that, and I wish he would have waited until he was ready. He had been really struggling and wondering about me, and I know I had been really wanting to find him. I think he needed to find me because he was really struggling to figure out who he was - and he needed to know his first family in order to do that. However, he wasn't strong enough and detached enough from the adoptive family yet to be able to make decisions that were about what HE NEEDED from reunion. Instead he bowed to pressure from friends and family regarding what they thought our reunion should be, and so our reunion went south for a few years. I have since found out that during that time he had a really difficult time, and I regret letting the afamily push me out of the picture. He needed me then and he needs me now. He is now 27 and his own man, so we DO have a relationship now on our own terms. So, I agree that 18/19 is VERY young. Depending on the individual, reunion can be just what is needed, or it can be the right thing at the wrong time. I am sure that your daughter is definitely thinking about you. However, she isn't her own person yet, and she has a lot of pressures and distractions on her right now. I know that we all look forward to the magical age of 18, but I think 22 to 25 is a lot more realistic age. I will tell you that the LAST thing I wanted to hear is that I should wait a few more years for my son to grow up!!!! Good luck and hugs,
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Isabo |
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#7
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Personally for me, I tried searching when I was 18. Back then the internet was not widely available, so I kept hitting dead end after dead end. Which now in retrospect it was the best thing for me. I do not think I could of handle the rejection well at that age, heck I am not even sure I can handle it well now.
Anyway, it took me until after I had my second child to actually get the major urge to sit down and search for her. By then I was well established in my life. I do agree with the other posters, she is thinking about you. ![]()
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Undeniably Loyal Un Angry Adoptee
Cyber Aunt and Godmother to HF's baby boy Quote - "The past is the same, but the present has no boundary." I Love you Daddy and I will miss you! ![]() |
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#8
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I started my search my sophomore year of college, when I turned 18. Back then, searching was difficult (no internet), so I stopped and started. I didn't get the real urge to finish up until after I had my son at 27. So my initial search efforts were more about curiosity, I think...later in my life it became a NEED.
I'm sure your daughter thinks about you, Roni...she may have just enough information to satisfy her curiosity for the time being. You've made yourself easy to find/contact, and that's the best you can do, right? But I don't doubt that the waiting is beyond frustrating for you. |
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#9
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I was very interested in my bmom throughout college. I had the ability to contact and did a few times... we had the on again off again relationship from the time I graduated from high school until well after college. I very much wanted her in my life but was not at all emotionally mature enough to handle the ups and downs. My situation was alot like the one described by Isabo...
College is a time for establishing independance and for stablizing one's personal identity. In my experience, both of these things lead to thoughts of one's firstmom. I thought about mine almost obssessively but just couldn't handle the rollarcoaster- YET. As I grew through my 20's I matured and am loving every second of my reunion. |
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#10
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I just came across this thread, and find it very interesting. I was very, very interested in knowing who my bmom was at a young age. I remember in high school calling Jobs and Family Services trying to find out general information as to "where they got the babies they placed with adoptive parents". That was my first "attempt" to reach out to find MY information. Because I was sooo afraid of hurting my parents, I did nothing though. Then when I was in college, I realized that there were other ways to search. That is when I found this place....well it was actually just adoption.com back then. I would search registries, and even went to Columbus to look up the birth index. I kept hitting roadblocks and couldn't find any good information. But it was actually in chat one night while I was at school that I found a MAJOR piece of information about me. Another user had a copy of the Ohio Birth Index and was able to narrow down my original name to one of four. I remember sitting there shaking as I looked at the names, I realized that the one girl couldn't be me, as her mom was married. The other choice was either a single birth, or I would have been a twin. Well, this really really freaked me out, because there was this girl in my extended community that EVERYONE would confuse for me!! We even drove the same exact car model and color! My own grandma once asked why I drove past her and didn't wave or stop. It wasn't me!! Well, after some careful research I figured out I was not the twin, but the single birth. Searching then consumed me!!!! It was really difficult because I was a senior in college...and I had a lot going on. I would find myself thinking about it during class, when I was studying, when I was doing projects....it literally was ALWAYS in the back of my mind, if not in the FRONT..shouting WHERE IS MY BMOM!!!! It was actually in college that I had "come out of the closet as an adoptee." I had previously only told about four people in my life that I was adopted. However, I decided to do my informative speech on Adoption! I told my whole class that I was an Adoptee!! This was MAJOR!! My knees were literally knocking, and I felt light-headed. I was suprised that their faces did not change...it was a very, very big moment for me to realize that other's wouldn't think of me differently because I was adopted. So, for me College was a time where I explored both what it meant to be adopted to me, and spent agonizing over where my bmom might be, if she wanted to know me, what she was doing, what she was like, what it would be like meeting her, wondering when that day would happen....ect, ect, ect.
(wow...sorry I got off on a rabbit trail...lol) Anyway, as much as I wanted all that information while I was in college, I am not sure what I would have done with it if I got the "goods". I know that was a time of me figuring out who I was in this world as well. And college is a very busy time. Perhaps your DD is afraid of hurting her aparents, or afraid that you will be disappointed in her, or not like her. That had always been a HUGE fear of mine, regardless of all the times people told me that my bmom probably loved me very much. I guess the fear of the unknown can keep many adoptees from reaching out. However, I think that you have done a great job of making it easy for her to find you, and that you are willing to be patient is wonderful!! She will be very blessed the day she meets you!!!
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"Lip gloss, cute shoes, to the 80's, and saying Good Bye to ... TG & Brock Rock Campaign 2008!"I am Brock, and I approve of this message! "Have no fear for givin' in. Have no fear for giving over. You better know in the end it's better to say too much, then never to say what you need to say again.Even if your hands are shaking, and your faith is broken. Even as the eyes are closin', Do it with a heart wide open! Say what you need to say. Say what you need to say. Say what you need to say......" __________________________ Nobody puts Baby in a corner! |
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#11
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Oh...just as a side note of my rabbit trail... That girl that everyone confused for me....IS MY HALF SISTER FROM MY BDAD!!!! how strange is that!?!?!?!?
__________________
"Lip gloss, cute shoes, to the 80's, and saying Good Bye to ... TG & Brock Rock Campaign 2008!"I am Brock, and I approve of this message! "Have no fear for givin' in. Have no fear for giving over. You better know in the end it's better to say too much, then never to say what you need to say again.Even if your hands are shaking, and your faith is broken. Even as the eyes are closin', Do it with a heart wide open! Say what you need to say. Say what you need to say. Say what you need to say......" __________________________ Nobody puts Baby in a corner! |
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#12
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Being patient is really tough especially when I have absolutely no idea what she is thinking. I do try very hard to respect the boundaries that were never set. It does make it tough when we live close to one another and my office is even closer to her parents!!
Yesterday I had a training class I had to attend, it was less than 5 minutes from her house!! When we broke for lunch I left to get something to eat, I found myself starting to panic. What if she saw me? Would she understand I was there because of a training class? (I had my name tag on still) I really am concerned about an accidental run in...I don't want her thinking it's really on purpose. I have no idea if she knows that she went to the same school district I grew up in (and her grandmother too!), she is driving down the same streets I use to drive down and she is walking into the same places I have walked in to. In High School I even had friends in her neighborhood! We have probably crossed paths and never realized it!! I guess I'm concerned that she will think the worse if we accidentally run into each other.
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Every now and then I like to lean out my window, look up and smile for a satellite picture. - Steven Wright ~Todays mighty Oak is just yesterdays nut that held it’s ground~ Birth Mom Adult Step-Parent Adoptee |






















































to the 80's, and saying Good Bye to
... TG & Brock Rock Campaign 2008!"
Nobody puts Baby in a corner!