- Joined
- Jan 26, 2003
- Messages
- 22,178
"Moses' mother knew she could not care for him and protect him from the dangers around them. So she placed her baby in the care of one who could. She trusted that God would watch over him and guide him along the way."
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"Adoption is one of the greatest success stories in human experience. Just as spouses who are unrelated can become family, so too can children and parents who are not bioliogically linked."
Children at school who have learned Whitney was adopted have said things that one might construe as "unkind", things like, "why did your real mother give you away?" or "don't you ever get to see your real mother"?
I see these sentiments not as unkind, but as coming from their own experience. The other children my daughter knows get their sense of being safe, loved, and protected from living with their parents. These people are important because they are the people who cared for and bonded with the baby. The baby trusted they would always be there. In most cases they were *also* the biological parents.
When the other children hear that Whitney "lost" her "parents" the other children they think of losing *their* parents-who are the people who raised them *and* their biological parents. The idea is, of course, terrifying.
They need to know that the people who raise children will never ever give them away, they have to know that they are safe.
I tell Whitney in private, however, that when someone asks about her real mother she can ask *HIM* if he remembers the moment of his birth and who was there with him. I know he does not. I know that the people a child remembers are the people who raised him. I also know that that the reality is that a lovely 17 year old girl...unmarried and impregnated by a man in his 40s who was probably married and a father to people her age somewhere else...gave this miracle of mine her life
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View attachment Moses.jpeg
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"Adoption is one of the greatest success stories in human experience. Just as spouses who are unrelated can become family, so too can children and parents who are not bioliogically linked."
Children at school who have learned Whitney was adopted have said things that one might construe as "unkind", things like, "why did your real mother give you away?" or "don't you ever get to see your real mother"?
I see these sentiments not as unkind, but as coming from their own experience. The other children my daughter knows get their sense of being safe, loved, and protected from living with their parents. These people are important because they are the people who cared for and bonded with the baby. The baby trusted they would always be there. In most cases they were *also* the biological parents.
When the other children hear that Whitney "lost" her "parents" the other children they think of losing *their* parents-who are the people who raised them *and* their biological parents. The idea is, of course, terrifying.
They need to know that the people who raise children will never ever give them away, they have to know that they are safe.
I tell Whitney in private, however, that when someone asks about her real mother she can ask *HIM* if he remembers the moment of his birth and who was there with him. I know he does not. I know that the people a child remembers are the people who raised him. I also know that that the reality is that a lovely 17 year old girl...unmarried and impregnated by a man in his 40s who was probably married and a father to people her age somewhere else...gave this miracle of mine her life
View attachment Moses.jpeg