Posts Tagged ‘adoptee’
First Love & Family: The Ties That Bind
“In family life, love is the oil that eases friction, the cement that binds closer together, and the music that brings harmony.”
Eva Burrows
Last night I was sitting in the amber light of my bedroom, waiting for pain medication to kick in and belly ache to subside, becoming hypnotized by the rhythm of bullfrog snores from the adjacent room where three dogs and a man slept on the couch and a memory returned to me. Lately my mind has been swimming with ideas of infants, children, and an imagined life resembling ”family” as defined by the traditional history of the western world–including husband, dogs, and kids. I never considered myself a traditionalist perse but I always felt warmed by the thought of family.
The idea of starting some variety of lineage of my own lead me back to my own infancy. An international adoptee I have been pondering my own early childhood the last week as I prepare for speaking this weekend (nothing like flight and speaking engagements to hasten surgery recovery) at the Let’s Talk Adoption Conference at Rutgers University in New Jersey.
I am speaking on issues of adoptee trauma, trauma and the body, and yoga for adoptees, foster children, and caregivers. I have been revisiting many thoughts of my own infancy, childhood, and memories of family growing up–what is that definition of filial love that makes us a part of a cohesive unit under one name and one roof with one another? For me it wasn’t a matter of blood, biological or racial heritage, or anything so literal it was only a matter of love, unconditional love. To this day I feel that, that is the best defining point of family and the essence of what we should share with those we love most in this world.
In this way, as an adoptee, I was given some liberation from the idea that this status and conception must be limited to those we share blood with or a name or even a roof. I was, in some respects, given a freedom to define and find family where it organically grew from bonds of unconditional love and support and not because of sharing genetics. I know many people, both as a therapist and in my personal life, who were bound to unhealthy love and unhealthy bonds with people they did share genetics with, but little more in abusive family relationships and neglectful or cruel childhood histories. I always found myself reflecting on the fact that birth giving does not make a mother, a lifetime of nurturing, loving, and mothering earns that title–birthing is just that, a physical act.
The relationships we have in our life that have forged their way through hardship and trials and come out with love intact are the ties that bind us. And love that makes a family can come from every place–it is the same love that brings life partners together and keeps them together whatever comes and what brings friends back to each other after years and miles and life lived at distances, but hearts that remain faithful to the relationship.
We are, in some ways, the makers of our own lives and the molders of our own family units. What love and which relationships make up our world is ours to embrace or reject at every turn. We must work to create love and must work one hundred times harder to maintain and care for that precious gift.
So, as I thought of all these things again, preparing for speaking, and thinking of my future and what my future family might look like it also brought me backwards–to an early moment of mine, a maternal flicker in time, and the moment I first fell in love with a baby girl named Seuhedi.
I was fifteen at most and she was only a few months old. It had been the year following my mother’s most recent miscarriage (actually the stillbirth of a son named Christopher) and via family meeting we had made a decision to work with an organization called Healing the Children who paired families in the USA with children from third world countries in need of housing during major operations or medical care only available in the States. It was sort of an international short-term foster care program. Seuhedi was the third child we had sponsored who had come from the Dominican Republic and she suffered from spina bifida.
She had the most beautiful face, with soft olive skin and deep brown eyes filled with a quiet intensity far to powerful for her age. She was gentle and never cried except at bedtime. I think it was the only time, in the darkness and silence of night that she realized she was alone–foreign smells, strange sounds, and no face she knew.
My parents urged me to go in, speak to her, hold her hand hoping maybe I could placate her. I walked into the room with her soft sobs the only noise echoing through darkness and silence. The hallway outside brought in the only brightness and her crib sat covered half in shadows and half in light. I stood over her and she reached out her tiny fingers for some comfort. I held her hand and spoke whispers of spanish into her crib and looked at her looking at me with deep brown eyes that were so familiar–as if I were looking into a picture of my past, hovering over myself in some orphanage from years before.
In those moment something linked us together, outside of words, outside of time, locked in a familiarity of loneliness where we both understood being in an in-between world. Night after night I would go by her crib and speak softly in my limited spanish and look into the deep eyes that knew me as I knew them. She would not sob and my heart would fill with light and tears: in those moments with her I fell deeply in love with her tiny soul, her open beautiful heart, and the honesty that resided in her never-ending brown eyes. She trusted me completely for no reason besides a vague sense of familiarity and understanding. I loved her completely for allowing me into share in that space in the in-between–to connect with a part of myself I had forgotten and to give something to her that I never had.
That first love of a child in that kind of unconditional way was something I never felt before, never could explain, and never fully understood except that it was pure and real and based on nothing but shared moments and unconditional love.
So, in thinking could I ever love a child that much–the answer is yes. Could I love so much it expands and breaks your heart all in the same second–the answer is yes. Am I ready for the responsibility of that kind of a love sustained for a lifetime–that is the question. But in remembering myself, my infancy, and that first love of a child with unconditional proportions I know that it is something I am capable of. ”Am I ready?” is the only real question.
I share this story with you for a multitude of reasons, but I send it out there because I know that nearly everyone in their life has someone they love so much it both breaks and expands their heart in equal measure. That kind of love is a gift and a blessing–the gift of family. However we define it or create it, whether it be in a traditional context or one of our own making, love is love, and it is the essence of what binds us together. I am glad that my journey through mind and memory brought me back to the blessing of knowing and loving Seuhedi–even for the brief time I knew her.
“What greater thing is there for human souls than to feel that they are joined for life – to be with each other in silent unspeakable memories.”
George Eliot
Fear & Loathing: Chronic Illness, Surgery, And Decisions
Expect the unexpected.
I had an entirely different post planned for today and then I found myself in my new doctor’s office this afternoon and all that changed. I guess I should have learned this far into the living process that we can never assume, never predict, always just be prepared (like a good boy scout).
It is always difficult to find a specialist for a chronic illness that does not have its own day or pin or charity of note. So I held my breath as I waited to meet my new endometriosis specialist especially as I was at a particularly frustrated point, having spent the last week in fairly severe pain (or, medically speaking, about a 6 on a pain scale). I had a constellation of thoughts sparking and shooting through my brain. I was not sure what my next step was but I was fairly certain decisions would have to be made.
I had my exam, lets pass over the details, and then I met with the doctor in his office to discuss things in a fully clothed state. I found this doctor to be a refreshing anomaly already. When dealing with a male doctor dealing with female issues I tend to walk with trepidation, assessing for a complete lack of empathy or bedside manner, but he had a jovial quality and a softness with a side of humor. I already liked him. Then I walked into the office for the “serious business” and sat down in the typical dark wood office chair. He began talking to me seriously, frankly, and in a way that was both frighteningly and refreshingly honest.
“Endometriosis is worse than cancer, really. It would be preferable to have cancer. You treat it and it’s gone. With endometriosis there is no cure it just continues to grow and all we can do is manage it long enough so that you have the time you need to have children, if you want them.”
The follow-up inference of that statement is, “Before it all disintegrates in a painful sequence of internal explosions till, like a building with detinators in the foundation, the entire structure collapses into dust”. (My paraphrasing of the inference later discussed at length with the doctor)
I sighed, maybe even audibly. Finally, someone just said it how it was, and understood what it meant to have and live with this condition. I needed a qualified person to validate my own hypotheses I had been mulling over this week. After not even a year following my first laparoscopy procedure my pain was returning to the same pinnacle point and I knew it was not a sign of internal wellness.
After finding out in my first surgical procedure that the past 15 years of being told “it’s just your normal cycle, you get bad cramps is all,” was completely lazy diagnostics, I got the official stamp of “Endometriosis, Stage IV“. There are four stages of the illness and four is the most severe and pervasive. I knew even a year ago that, that was not a prediction of good to come but I had hoped for at least a couple of years between surgeries. Now, sitting in that office, hearing the realities I knew I needed to know what was going on in there and there might be more decisions beyond just surgical maneuvers that would follow the “knowing”.
So, here I sit at home with a bit of medicine meant to mollify the pain beginning to make its way into my system system, along with the bread I use so that I don’t vomit from said medication. I am preparing for my second laparoscopic surgery on Friday and pondering the information confirmed by my new doctor/surgeon. I knew it would come to this but having the internal conversation that follows “knowing” is really frightening.
How badly do I want to physically have children? How soon am I willing to do that to keep it a possibility? And how do I discern both these things with a clear head and not rash sentimentality?
The first question is: How long do I have before my internals liquify to use my inner pieces to procreate? The follow-up question is: How soon am I willing to begin trying to have children to prevent losing the chance altogether?
People sometimes ask the theoretical question, if you could know the day you might die would you want to know? Is it better to know a fate or not. If you can predict your potential for life, or to create life, would you really want to know? I find the knowing that I have limited time is like a huge weight pressing on my airway, making it impossible to breathe let alone think clearly on the matter. At least tonight it feels that way, full of bread, medication, and pulsing pain surging through my abdomen, back, and legs.
Babies. What are my thoughts on babies? I am definitely of two minds. They are messy, and poopy, and needy, and wake you up all the time, and need, and want, and must be constantly watched, and even if you do all the best for them there is no guarantee they will be ok. They are so much responsibility, but conversely, they are so much love. They smile, and laugh, and play, and love life in a way that could, potentially, remind you of how much there is to love in life.
Why must I decide now though? Part of this decision process makes me uncomfortable as an adoptee in a family that is mostly not genetically related. There is no reason why my decisions, or my body, needs to prohibit babies just because it inhibits procreation. And is making a decision with such importance about procreation diminishing to all the other ways to have and love a baby? I never wanted to be a pained and yearning woman amid fertility treatment where it was biological or nothing, but conversely I feel a pang at the idea that I may never have the option for the biological even if I were to choose the non-genetic version of a family regardless.
So, I have surgery the day after tomorrow and my husband is rushing his return to Florida to be here Saturday morning. I have to get through one night of post-surgery pain alone. That I can do. The rest of it, perhaps, I will also leave up to my post-operative brain to coordinate. After I find out what the present state of carnage is in my potentially womb-less womb.
“True stability results when presumed order and presumed disorder are balanced. A truly stable system expects the unexpected, is prepared to be disrupted, waits to be transformed.”
Tom Robbins
Friday List: Things I'm Looking Forward To…
1 …My husband’s move to Florida.
Dog care and maintainance issues aside, I miss him. I miss shared dinners after a long day of work, I miss taking the dogs out or exploring something new. I miss watching a movie side-by-side either inside in the warmth and on a couch or shivering amid chilly theatre air. I am excited to explore Florida together and create new memories under palms and sun. I am hoping to find time to take a short trip to Marco Island which sounds like a lovely place and I have been hearing great things about it as a place to take a quick reprieve–from what I’m not sure, we do live in Florida, but I would love to explore.
I am beginning an amazing new adventure involving complimentary therapies and horses and I am so excited. One of the fantastic new avenues that has opened up due to postponing the yoga teacher training by two months is giving me the time to go to a three-day conference for specialized training in the area of Equine Facilitated Psychotherapy. I will be beginning my first pilot program in late November and am so excited for where this new path will lead and how I can cross and blend multiple holistic approaches. I may be incorporating some seated yoga on horseback during programming! I am very excited about all these prospects. If only I had a charitable financier to help afford all this here learnin’. For now I will try to make it work any way I can because I know, somehow and in some deep place, that this new equine arena of study and practice is meant to be part of a more cohesive therapeutic whole.
3 …My upcoming speaking engagement at the “Let’s Talk” Adoption Conference at Rutgers University in New Jersey on November 7th.
I will be speaking on Trauma and Yoga for adoptees, their caregivers, and for social service agencies working with adoptees and foster children. I am so honored and happy to bring this information on mind/body healing to a large audience of people involved in the care of children who may find such great benefit from yoga. I have purchased, via my good ol’ pal Amazon both of the following books to put out for attendees to flip through: Babar’s Yoga For Elephants and My Daddy Is A Pretzel: Yoga for Parents and Kids.

4 …Christmas in Florida.
My lovely sister will be coming to visit and so I cannot wait to show her my new home state and enjoy the Holiday Season sans dirty soot colored snow. New memories, new visual delights, and a reason to decorate my home thematically and “hang stockings with care”–just for a moment though because I have a feeling in a three dog household they will be dismantled and removed with very little care and much expediency.
5 …My first wedding anniversary this New Year’s Eve.
6 …Beginning my yoga teacher training program.
Hopefully, I will have cultivated some added manner and method of contemplative practice, meditative mind, and calmed spirit before I even walk through the door on the ever-nerve-wracking First Day of School. I have, in the spirit of that effort, gone my first week without any television whatsoever. Now this used to be, once upon a twenty-year-old, a very easy endeavor but I fear I have gotten into the “plopper” practices I discussed earlier this week and have to work my way back to enjoying the silence with nothing surrounding me but the tapping rhythm of puppy nails on wood and crisp pages turning in a good book.
7 …Learning how to let go.
Let go of the illusion of controls. Let go of the illusion of “knowing”. And letting go the self that expects so much but explores so little of the internal space of my own inner spaces–a funny irony for a person who, as a therapist, spends my days delving into the psyches of others and encouraging their self exploration. No more holding on and holding in–I am giving over to letting go. Tiny step by tiny step.
8 …I am looking forward to seeing where this writing exploration will lead.
I feel that all my internal archeology both starts and ends with this writing I am doing. I have always felt like I explored myself most honestly when I wrote. This is first time I share that journey in an outward way. This is the first time I take this inner archeological dig into a public forum. I am hoping it brings a new ripened and raw dimension to the journey that both enriches my own path of discovery and helps another on their internal and external quests.
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”
Mark Twain










