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After Only Two Weeks, An Adoptive Mother Gives A Child Back
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After Only Two Weeks, An Adoptive Mother Gives A Child Back |
11/17/08
11/17/08
Okay, this is bizarre...I found her (her name is Jen and her blog is under the name Chew) and she's changed her website to "Elmo Live." ?!?!?
11/17/08
First, she has not resolved her own issues of infertility. We went thru the process with a therapist and social worker to make sure we had worked out our grief and loss so that we could move on and adopt. Clearly, she has not and that is unfortunate for her and whatever bond she could have had with this child.
Second, a child of two is very different from a newborn when it comes to adoption. Whatever history that brought him to this point comes along to his new home and that requires special attention and understanding that is not a factor with a newborn. Doesn't sound like that happened here.
I wish her luck in resolving all those issues and I'm very glad to hear the little boy is in a loving home.
Wish us luck, Jezzies!!!
11/16/08
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11/16/08
Now, he's the light of my life, first and last thing on my mind always. I never thought I'd feel this way at all and I was afraid and ashamed to admit it for the very reasons people are skewering this woman - a mother is SUPPOSED to love her child, right? Especially after a long, protracted term of trying to conceive, right? For some of us - for whatever reason - it takes awhile and you probably don't hear much about it because it's a shameful thing.
I feel bad for Ben, but he'll be okay - age is on his side with another possible adoption, lots of people would love a little 2-3 year old boy in their lives. I feel really bad for Yvette - she maybe should have given it more time and the bond would have come to them eventually, but she's being judged pretty harshly for doing what she thought was best for Ben. Maybe her last motherly act was the most motherly.
11/17/08
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11/16/08
I got my hair cut two weeks ago and am still dithering about going back for a trim.
My ex-boyfriend admitted he didn't bond at all with his son for months. Until that point, the kid screamed and screamed with colic, and he was exhausted, overwhelmed, and unsure.
In my opinion, two weeks is not long enough to be convinced you won't ever bond.
11/16/08
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11/16/08
I beg to differ. Welcoming a child into your home and then sending him back like he's the bad apple you found at the bottom of the barrel is very damaging. I agree with those saying that little Ben is better off now that he's with a new foster family and that Yvette was right to recognize (belatedly) that she wasn't ready for this commitment. But, for fuck's sake, work out your shit before you make your issues another person's problem. Especially when that other person is a small child without the emotional resources to deal with rejection. I just can't muster the compassion for Yvette that other posters have. She fucked up. And the system fucked up by not recognizing something was amiss much sooner.
11/16/08
And yeah, where's the dad in all this? What about his feelings/priorities? Maybe he's more of an asshole than we're being told.
And forgive me, but it creeps me a little that this woman looks like Heidi Klum.
11/16/08
11/16/08
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11/16/08
Her rationale that the problem was him not coming from her is where she has a screw loose...I'd say she lacks a maternal instinct. Nothing wrong with that at all - it's so individual...but I know I have held other people's children and felt the beginnings of that urge to nurture and love them as much as my own...it's just stronger in some of us perhaps.
It seems likely that she mindlessly sought the status of motherhood above anything (it happens - it would have been worse had she given birth and not been able to change her mind after the fact), and the reality was a brutal wakeup call. (I sometimes feel this way when I realize my precious little daughter will someday be a teenager.)
Mostly sad that the process went that far.