"Il più matto dipinge la pioggia con le mani, diginge i colori del suo inferno. Il più allegro fischietta in giardino, fischietta mentre gli sorride un cane. Il più violento non dimentica mai nulla"
martedì, aprile 20, 2010
Useless.
In a recent conversation with an Italian friend, a novel concept was brought to light. He knew I was adopted, but we had never really discussed the subject at length. It’s just something that doesn’t exist in the same capacity in Italy, so unless we are discussing my particular situation, it’s unlikely to ever come up. Due to the impending visit from my birth family, however, I felt like talking. Andrea, as always, was willing to listen. Our relationship is mostly academic- we compare and analyze various linguistic concepts- never tiring of marveling over the ways our two different languages break down and compare. I always want to better my Italian, and he is just as eager to better his English. But in that moment, we decided to discuss something far less concrete. Why was I nervous about having my birthparents visit? And perhaps more crucially: why on earth were they visiting in the first place, after they had placed me for adoption?
I couldn’t explain it. Not immediately, not in the way I wanted too. My gut response was “but…they are my biological parents. They made me. How can that not be important?” Andrea didn’t see it. Sure, they created me. But that’s “ALL” they did. People have sex all the time. People have babies all the time. The act of reproduction, in and of itself, is not all that special or significant, at least not on any larger scale. It’s all so common. What’s NOT common, however, is the next step. Having a baby and then giving it away. The act of “giving” is very skewed in an adoption context. It’s not common, and it’s not what is generally considered “natural”. The purposeful separation of mother and child goes against all our primal instincts, all of our hearts desires and innate reactions. What mother or father wants to leave their baby, and what baby wants to be left?
And so it is not the creating or the having or the producing that is complex. It is the leaving. It is the separation. It is not what my birthparents DID, that confuses everyone. It’s what they DIDN’T do. I was conceived and born, just as every other child in the world. But that is where I separate from the rest. That is where we, as adoptees and birthparents, separate. There are some days when I feel like this loss, the fact that the people who created me and whose blood I share did not want to raise me, is so deep that I can never escape it. And on some level I know that it can never go away. Nothing can ever make me their child again. Not even the best, longest, most well planned out reunion in the world. I will forever be that baby- conceived but not wanted, born but not welcomed, with a mother and father but no parent to be found.
And so as the visit with my birth family approaches, and I grapple to understand what it will mean for out relationship, I am filled with a sense of rage, of sadness, of compassion, and confusion. What have they done? What have I done? What could they have done, what could have been different, what quality could I have possessed that would have changed the outcome?
I know that it is not my fault. I know that I was not given away for other people to raise because I was bad, ugly, stupid, or worthless. But its hard, some days, to feel worthy. I know that the life I have created for myself, the life that my adoptive family and I share, has worth. I know that it is special, irreplaceable, and I know that I am loved. But on a primal level, on the level of my being, I feel that I am lacking. And why is that surprising? Was it not for my very existence that I was cast-off into the world and out of the family who brought me into it?
How do we reunite, the leaving and the left? Why do we reunite? Sometimes I feel like reunification gave me the opportunity to catch a glimpse of the piece of myself that I lost. Other times I feel like it is just a superficial bandage on a wound too profound to ever heal completely. Or possibly, as my friend pointed out, I'm trying to heal a wound that isn't really there to begin with.
Iscriviti a:
Commenti sul post (Atom)
9 commenti:
Whoa Amanda. Really, just so profound.
Your friend's words resonate with me and my perception of my adoption.
superficial bandage on a wound too profound to ever heal completely
This is my personal take on my own situation.
I could have gone on without having found my daughter and in many ways have been better off. But I didnt do it just for me. I did it for her (even if she doesnt want to know the info now..she is entitled to it).
Yet the wound would have always been there. I personally dont feel it can ever heal..and I focus on going forward with it as opposed to trying to fix it or dispose of it, etc. Its part of me.
Glad to hear you are letting the bio fam visit.
Sounds like your birthparents have successfully convinced you that you can't be a real person without them. It's hard to face the choices you make.
"Sounds like your birthparents have successfully convinced you that you can't be a real person without them. It's hard to face the choices you make."
Oh, this is harsh, and I think inaccurate. I don't think the OP thinks she can't be a real person without her biological people! This is not the impression I've gotten here.
Sounds like your birthparents have successfully convinced you that you can't be a real person without them.
Agree with Campbell. Harsh.
how am i being harsh or inaccurate? read again what the op wrote read what this whole post is about! of course the biological parents want to fluff up their relationship to the op, thats all they have. in every other human sphere they are lacking. all they did was make a baby. our society says thats a big deal. why- because those people who make babies also raise them. except for a few. dna and biology are important, but not important enough that this girl who is writing should have to stress over letting her biological parents visit her. who are they to request such a visit?? biology matters, but only to a point. thats what nearly ever1 outside the adoption world thinks. the only people who have a prob with it are those who dont gret to do both the creating and the parenting.
op- do whatever feels right to you!!!!! dont let other people tell you what should be important in your heart. i agree with your friend. youre creating a problem where there isnt one, and your biological parents are making it worse. dont let them convince you that you need them, they certinly didnt need you when you were born.
There's much of what you say Heidi that I agree with, but, I just don't think that this OP is in jeopardy of not being a real person. In fact, all of the soul searching or reflection contained in this blog would, in my opinion, indicate something entirely different.
A real person does think, debate, consider, analyze and examine their feelings and reactions. In the situation of adoption the person relinquished has much to reconcile with. There are intellectual and emotional thoughts on obligation, guilt, rejection, selfishness, compassion, disappointment, regret and fear all of which can be ever changing, depending on where the person is at in their life.
Although I think yes, some adopted people feel they can't be a real person without their biological people, I am of the opinion that this particular OP HAS her shit together and won't be allowing anyone to convince her of anything.
"op- do whatever feels right to you!!!!! dont let other people tell you what should be important in your heart." <--yeah, that.
No offence intended to the OP! It was a criticism of the biological family. I get the feeling that from her writing she has some mixed emotions about visiting her biiological family.
i know she can feel like she is a real person, but i want her to know that she *is* a real person. i think shes right when she says that those poeple just made her, they didnt raise her or do anything except but choose *not* to raise her. Now its her time to choose, and I dont think she should feel obligated to make a decision that makes her uncomfortable because all of a sudden they decide they want to be a part of her life. you know? i know a lot of adopted people, and none of them have any interest in meeting their biological parents. and they live easier. why these particular bioligcal parents think they can just change their mind and want her confuses and annoys me.
but i agree cambell, the op has her shit together. but i think she is being too sensitive of the needs of her bio parents and ignoring her own.
well said! But you know that rationally there was nothing wrong with you, right?
Posta un commento