The
fact of international adoption is that it is a completely uncertain territory
for adoptive families. We in the adoption community saw the closing of
Guatemalan adoptions several years ago, leaving many families frozen in time,
unable to move forward with their adoption plans, yet unable to regain their
adoption funds to move forward into an adoption elsewhere. Many of these
families were already engaged in specific adoption plans of a specific child,
only waiting for approval to travel and bring their child or children home.
Families were devastated at the news of the Guatemalan government no longer
allowing adoptions to leave its borders.
In
recent months and years, we have seen many Asian, Eastern European, and even
African countries also close their doors to American adoptive families. We have
seen severe restriction of the families they will allow to adopt, changing
their requirements mid-adoption, again, leaving families in the lurch, unable
to regain their adoption funds.
Most
families moving forward into adoption are at a time in their lives where they
are truly ready and prepared for parenting. They’ve waited and planned, and now
many families have seen precious time wasted, and have suffered severe
disappointment with the news from their agency that they will no longer be able
to adopt from their country of choice, or that there will be a 4-5 year wait
for a child. This is devastating to adoptive families, especially when they
have already been matched with a specific child.
International
adoption has always been risky and not for the faint of heart, as no adoption
is. It takes the strong heart of a mother and a father to forge ahead into the
unknown, with nothing but faith and a plan to bring their son or daughter home.
There
are other options many families have never allowed themselves the opportunity
to consider. Right here in the United States, we see thousands of women in
crisis pregnancies calling out for help, hoping someone out there will be
willing to bring their baby home and raise him or her as their own.
Adoptive
families have much to consider when choosing their adoption path. Many are
hesitant about domestic adoption, because most birthmothers in the US seek
families willing to at least share letters and photos after the adoption. Many
birthmothers seek a family willing to have an in-person visit with the family,
maybe once a year for just a few hours at a time in a neutral location. Because
of fear, adoptive families miss out on these great situations, where the fact
is that it is possible for the birthmother to care about the child, and yet
want to choose a stable loving family with the desire to parent. If a family is
open to contact with a birthmother after the adoption, they significantly
lessen their wait time, sometimes bringing their babies home in less than a
year.
Adoptive
families wonder: Why does a birthmother wish to remain in contact, if she
doesn’t even want to parent the child? The answer is multi-faceted.
Overwhelmingly, many birthmothers desire contact simply because they would like
that peace of mind in knowing they made the right choice. If a birthmother has
received quality support and care in her adoption process, she understands that
an adoption is permanent, and has no desire to take part in the parenting.
Birthmothers who seek an open or semi-open adoption want to ensure that their
birthchild never has to search for their biological family, or search for
answers. Birthmothers can ensure they are always available for medical needs
and information, and should the adoptive parents need to contact her, they have
kept the lines of communication open.
Many
times with open and semi-open adoption, the family and the birthmother have
exchanged some form of information before the baby is born. They usually are
able to meet in the hospital for the first time at the birth of the child. By
this time, in most cases, the birthmother and adoptive family have formed a
bond. They are both there for the same exciting event, to bring this new little
life out into the world. They are both there for the same reasons, to make sure
this little boy or girl is raised with all the goodness in life that a child
could ever hope for. After an amazing event like this, where a birthmother
places her child directly into the waiting arms of the family – most adoptive
parents can not imagine walking away and not keeping in touch with the
birthmother. If they were hesitant about birthmothers before, they are now
completely in awe of the blessing this birthmother has given them. They are
amazed at the courage and beauty in the birthmother’s choice to willingly
entrust them with their new child. They are overjoyed that they now have their
baby in their arms, and the last thing they want is for their birthmother to be
forgotten.
There
is so much to consider with a domestic adoption. Touching the life of a
birthmother is one of the major blessings that come with no other type of
adoption available. There is also far less travel and expense involved. Most
domestic adoptions can take far less time than international adoptions, and the
process is streamlined because you are working only with American entities and
laws. With domestic adoption, when a birthmother voluntarily seeks an adoption
plan, overwhelmingly infants are born completely healthy and with few medical
complications. In some domestic adoption programs, adoptive families even have
access to the medical records of the birthmother and the baby.
Yes,
there are still unknowns with domestic adoption – but they are far fewer the
unknowns and uncertainty of international adoption. Adoptive families who have
been closed out of their international adoption plans, or who have been told
the wait will be several years, can have renewed hope in exploring a domestic
adoption.
For
more information, please visit www.LifetimeAdoption.com. To seek answers to
your specific questions about domestic adoption, and to see if a domestic
adoption is right for you, please call 530-432-7373.
May
you be blessed as you endeavor to seek the baby or child that God has meant for
your family!



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