by Nasoosie » Wed Mar 31, 2010 12:03 pm
YAY, Barbie! I am so happy for you!
And Lori, that letter made me cry very hard, also. My adoptive parents were good parents, for the early years, but Mona's adoptive mother died when she was just 12 years old of cancer. I was breaking my neck trying to find out about her for all her life since I left her in OR, and here she was, orphaned by another mother----I would have taken her into my home at that point in a heartbeat! But those records were sealed up tighter than a drum, to both her and to me. Her adoptive father tried to take care of her, but he never remarried. She ended up being informally adopted by family friends who had about 10 sons, and so Mona became the only, rather spoiled, daughter!
I belong to a birthmothers' online group, and we have known each other for about 20 years now----we were all searching for our kids when we first met. Most of us have found them now, and have grandkids, and see them as often as we can. Only two of us found adoptive parents who are too terrified to share our kids. And, yes---I can understand the feelings of adoptive parents, particularly if they were not honest about their kids having been adopted. And one of us who lives here in NY where birth records are still sealed, hasn't found her first-born daughter yet. My Mona always knew she had been adopted, and, when Sandra Day O'Connor opened up Oregon's birth records, there I was!
I also discovered I had an 18-year-old granddaughter (who is now 24 and married) when I first met Mona! Now I also have two great grandkids....a boy, Joshua, and a girl, Isabella. Amazing what twists life takes us on, eh?
I see them now and then, although they live on the other coast and I don't fly. It is they who fly here, and I pay the airfare when I can. I am hoping to have my whole fam damily under this roof this summer for my retirement party!
Last edited by
Nasoosie on Wed Mar 31, 2010 3:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Life is about learning to dance in the rainHappy travels!