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"Background
Check" by Tricia Shore
(Originally
published in Urban Hiker, Durham, July 2002)
When I was four
years old, I stood watching as a car with Virginia license tags pulled in the
driveway. I knew little about my birth,
but I began reading at an early age, taught by no one. I read my falsified birth certificate, which
listed my city of birth as Richmond, Virginia.
Although I loved Beauford and Ann, the wonderful people who adopted me,
I hoped that the young couple in the car were my natural parents. I said
nothing about my desire and nothing about my disappointment when I found out
that the couple was lost and looking for directions. Over thirty years later, when I gave birth to my son, I would
understand the desire I felt that day, the bond that nature creates through
conception and childbirth. I would
learn that this bond is often broken unnecesarily.
I never stopped
looking for my mother, but there were months, even years, when I tried to
forget. On my thirteenth birthday, Ann
asked me if I’d ever thought about my natural mother. I slammed the door, refusing to talk about it. I had blue eyes, as did Ann and Beauford,
and Ann and I shared dark brown hair--I could pass for their natural
child. Pretending I was their child was
easier somehow than facing what I believed was reality, that my mother had not
wanted to keep me.
Only after my
reunion with my mother would I find out that she, like many other mothers who
have lost their children to adoption, was highly encouraged to give me to
someone else. No one encouraged my
mother to breastfeed me, although her milk would have been in my best
interest. No one allowed her to hold me
tightly and love me, as is natural for most new mothers. Social workers discouraged these actions
because they did not want my mother to express her natural feelings for her
firstborn. Doing so may have made her
want to keep me and that would have prevented the lovely couple with the house
and the yard from obtaining a child.
My teenage mother
was encouraged to think of me as a thing.
Although she was not old enough to vote, social workers allowed her to
sign away the right to raise her firstborn.
I have since learned how the adoption industry, a $1.4 billion business
with an expected growth rate of 11% per year for the next five years, thinks of
babies, especially healthy white infants.
I was a commodity. No one
respected the sacred mother-and-child bond.
Instead, my mother had produced a product for an infertile couple. I was a gift that my mother gave to someone
whom social workers deemed far more worthy to raise me than the mother that God
and nature had given me.
Sometimes it helps
to know that my mother loved me and wanted to keep me, but a deeper part of me
cannot understand why my mother turned off every maternal instinct to sign the
papers that released her right to raise me.
After talking with many other mothers who have lost their children to
adoption, I have learned that the pressure to give away their infants was
great. Many were coerced, drugged, and
forced into signing papers. I have yet
to meet a mother who does not regret her decision. I have yet to meet an adoptee who has not suffered as a result of
this separation.
My mother’s loss
was so painful that she was unable to talk about it, even with my maternal
grandmother, who later regretted that she had helped my mother give me away. Social workers told my mom that she was
acting in my best interest and that she would forget about me and go on with
her life. My mother did not forget. I have sat in a room with mothers who lost a
child more than forty years ago and still they grieve.
For all the talk
in the United States about family values, adoptees’ natural families are
hidden; we are supposed to be satisfied that we do not know our ancestors. My true birth certificate is sealed in an
office in Richmond and can only be opened by a court order. Perhaps if I had some fatal genetic disease,
a good lawyer, and a sympathetic judge, I could retrieve it. But wanting to know my ancestors for me and
for any children of mine is not reason enough.
After a private detective found my mother, through sources and means she
will not reveal, my mother called the state of Virginia and asked for my birth
certificate, the one that she had signed.
An office worker told her that she could not have access to it, that
“it’s as if you never had a child.”
A few years ago I
published an article about my search for my natural parents. I showed it to Beauford. He seemed to understand and went to the
adoption agency with me. I assured him
that I loved him, but that I needed to know my ancestors. He wore his best suit. He listened as I asked for information. The post-adoption counselor tried to steer
me away from my birth, concentrating instead on my adoption story, as if that
yarn took the place of the nine months I spent inside my mother and my transition
to life outside her.
It is illegal for
the counselor to give me any information about my mother, even if my mom had
requested such information be given to me.
Years after our meeting, I learned the stake that the agency has in
closing my adoption records. Agencies
claim that they are protecting the rights of mothers, but in reality most
mothers want records open. Successful
lobbying by that agency and other adoption businesses keep adoption records
closed.
During our session
at the adoption agency, I began my biggest leap into denial. Beauford and I had our picture taken in
front of the bassinet where I had been waiting for them to peruse me and see if
they wanted me. Only after my son’s
birth would I understand the tragedy of that bassinet, how many babies lay in
it wondering where their mothers were, how many mothers were suffering a far
worse post-partum depression than most of us will know, having been separated
from the child they held in their womb for nine months.
After we left the
agency, over biscuits at Hardee’s, I told Beauford how finding my mother would
not diminish my love for him. He
started to cry. Only later would I
learn that he, like many other people who adopted, had been told that if he
raised me properly, I would never be curious about my natural family.
I decided that day
that finding my mother was unnecessary, as the counselor had strongly
suggested. I donated money to the
adoption agency. I thanked Ann and
Beauford for rescuing me. I went to
graduate school, all the while submerging feelings about adoption and about
finding my natural family. I complied
with what society and the adoption agency wanted me to do. I tried hard to convince myself that the
adoption counselor was right: the adoption had been for my best interest and
finding my family may cause more problems than it solved. In truth, I was tired of feeling like a
criminal for trying to find the family that nature gave me. In my state of denial, I had two incidents
that, if I had listened closely, would have told me the denial wasn't
working. On the other hand, what
alternative did I have? Breaking into the Virginia Bureau of Vital Statistics?
The first incident
involved a dog that I loved very much.
After my first husband, Jeff, and I separated, Jeff asked me to keep
Cokey for a day. I realized how much I
needed and loved Cokey and asked to keep him around for a while. And so I kept
Cokey for a few months, but because I had little money, I felt I needed to move
to a less expensive place; I could not find a place that allowed dogs. I tried for three or four months to find
someone to keep Cokey for me until I graduated, but no one did. Finally, at Lake Johnson one day, I saw a
man who liked Cokey and I asked the man if he wanted to keep him. The next Sunday, I was crying as I took
Cokey to the man's house.
Beauford and my
boyfriend at the time encouraged me to give Cokey away, but in my heart I knew
it was the wrong decision. I told Cokey
over and over why I was doing it and in hindsight, I see how closely that was
related to trying to understand why and how my mother gave me away. I replayed that scene, except the dog was me
as an infant and I was my mother. This
would be different, I told myself—it was an open adoption.
When Jeff realized
what I'd done, he offered to retrieve Cokey, but, replaying the adoption tapes
in my head, I told him that I couldn't tell him where the man's house was, that
I'd given him away and he belonged to the other man now. A few weeks later, I realized what a dumb thing
I'd done and went against Beauford’s and my boyfriend's suggestions and called
the man about Cokey. He said Cokey had
run away. I taped up ads. I took long drives through the man’s
neighborhood. Jeff went looking for him
also and called me when he found what he thought was Cokey, lying dead in the
road. I guess he'd been trying to come
back to my old apartment.
Only since my
reunion do I understand how this incident is directly related to adoption. I wanted so badly to know why my mother gave
me away. I could never give away my
child, so I thought in giving away a dog, I could understand. I was, as my mother had been, "doing
the right thing." What a
joke. I dedicated my master's thesis to
my dog Cokey, but nothing will ever bring him back.
This same
boyfriend that had encouraged me to give Cokey away is the one I became
pregnant by. Oddly enough, if I'd
continued the pregnancy, the baby would have been due around my birthday. And so I was subconciously repeating, once
again, what my mother did, even down to becoming pregnant around the same time,
difficult to do in the long distance relationship with my boyfriend. When I terminated the pregnancy, I was
saying, subconciously, that adoption is such a cruel thing that an abortion is
a better alternative.
Only now is it
clear to me how closely this incident was connected to adoption. In a room filled with mothers who have lost
children to adoption, the grief was so intense that I could not stay for the
entire meeting. I have never met anyone
who had that kind of grief from an abortion.
As much as I sometimes regret my decision, I did not think it was fair
for me to bring a child into the world who would only know only the father’s
side of his or her family.
Shortly
after, I broke up with my boyfriend and married the first man I dated after
that. Three years later, I had decided
to move out of North Carolina, something I had not wanted to do until I had
found my natural family. One Sunday
afternoon, I received a call from a detective agency. The detective had searched for her daughter over 20 years ago and
now searches for other people’s relatives. “We found your mom,” she told
me. Thinking I would never find my
mother, I was shocked and surprised. I
had forgotten that I registered with the agency ten years earlier. It took me three months and a personal loan
to pay for the information, but one miraculous day in June, my mother and I met
at a rest stop half way between my home in Raleigh and hers in Wilmington.
“You’ve got a
dimple,” she said through tears. I
noticed her smell. I have since heard
that if a mother and child are together for five minutes after birth that they
will always remember each other’s smell.
My mother’s smell was sweet and attractive. I remembered how I had not felt the same about Ann’s smell,
something that had nothing to do with hygiene and everything to do with nature
and our DNA.
A
few months later I became pregnant with my son, Caleb. His middle name, Smith, is my mother’s
maiden name and was my original last name at birth. Caleb was due around my birthday and was born two weeks
later. I had been due on my mother’s
birthday and was born two weeks after that.
My mother and I are now over the honeymoon phase of
our reunion. It is hard to deal with
our separation of over 34 years and right now we deal with it by talking
sporadically, a vast difference from the early days of our reunion; we had
talked every night. No matter what
happens, I will not forget how miraculous it was when my mother flew from North
Carolina to California to be with us for a few days after my son’s birth. My husband picked her up from the airport
and brought her to the hospital. Just
before I left to go home that day my husband asked us to look at the
camera. He snapped a picture of my
mother, me, and my newborn son. “Three
generations,” he said. It was a moment
I’d only dreamed of, one I will never forget.

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