More Adoption Issues and Articles
"Choose
Life" License Plates
"Choose Life" License Plates are Misleading
Pro-choice advocates are taking exception to "Choose Life"
license plates because the opposing political viewpoint "Pro-Choice"
is being disallowed. But even from the pro-life standpoint, the proceeds
from these tags are being misspent.
Marion, IA (PRWEB) May 25, 2004 -- In Manatee County, Florida county
commissioners argued whether the funds raised from the sale of "Choose
Life" license plates could be used by agencies that did not provide
adoption services exclusively. The issue was not that the agencies
provided abortion services of any kind but only that these agencies
included services to help mothers and families who want to keep their
babies. The end result of the discussions was that no funding was
allocated to help keep families together. The message to women who
fear they may not receive moral or other support as a mother is this:
Get an abortion or you may have to watch your own son or daughter
being raised by someone else.
The lifelong effects on adoptees and on mothers who have lost their
sons and daughters to adoption are known, but not well advertised.
Perhaps the most telling evidence of the suffering a family that loses
a child to adoption is that these families tend to keep any subsequent
children. According to statistics compiled on the National Adoption
Information Clearinghouse website, most of the mothers whose children
are adopted-out "… come from intact families…which have not experienced
teenage pregnancies by other family members." (Stolley, 1993)
In her paper "Adoption and Loss: The Hidden Grief" available
on line, social worker Evelyn Burns Robinson compares adoption grief
to Kenneth Doka's concept of disenfranchised grief which occurs when
a loss is not recognized or socially supported: "Doka says that
people who have experienced any type of loss often feel anger, guilt,
sadness, depression, hopelessness and numbness and that in cases of
disenfranchised grief, these feelings can persist for a very long
time… mourners whose grief is disenfranchised are by virtue of this
cut off from social supports and so have few opportunities to express
and resolve their grief and the result can be that they feel alienated
from their community."
Robinson states: "Mothers who have lost children through adoption
… tend, in the main, to report that their sadness and anger have increased
with time."
Many people may not know that in adoption, loss is experienced by
the natural parents, the adopters and by the adoptee. In an address
for Catholic Charities USA's 1996 National Maternity and Adoption
Conference in San Antonio, Texas, Catholic Priest and adoptee Rev.
Thomas F. Brosnan discussed these losses and stated: "In my biased
opinion the greatest Loss is suffered by the adopted person."
Don't children deserve a chance to remain with their mothers and
their natural families? Using the "child needs two married parents"
argument is a bit weak in this era. Couples divorce and that certainly
includes those who adopt, who frequently have issues in their relationship
related to their infertility problems. At the same time unmarried
mothers often marry within a few years after their child is born,
sometimes to their child's real father. That's true whether the child
is kept or adopted-out. Even if they never marry, a child's mother
and father are still his/her mother and father. The kept child will
have not only his/her own mother, but will most likely have his/her
father, grandparents and plenty of other family to love him/her.
With people who are past retirement age and single people adopting,
who can blindly assert that children will be "better off"
with strangers than with their own family?
Some of the funds from the license plate sales are going towards
maternity homes, which the supporters call a "safe haven"
for women. Evidently a "safe haven" for women is a lot like
a cage for a chicken where the eggs all roll to the front where they
can be easily collected and neither the chicken nor the egg gets a
choice. Yes, there are maternity homes that promote choices: The choices
they provide are the selection of prospective adopters from a listing
of advertisements provided to a frightened mother and possibly also
to her child's father. Like most ads, there's lots of sales pitch
and very little reality involved. Most other parents get more real
information in advance about a baby-sitter than these naïve parents
are allowed to have about someone who may become a permanent caregiver
for their child.
A temporary situation can be overcome and should never become an
excuse for an agency or anyone else to jump in and take someone's
child. There is ample evidence that indicates a very high emotional
risk for mothers and their children separated by adoption.
I hope those who contribute to these "Choose Life" license
plates will discontinue their support unless the money starts going
towards something other than separating family members to obtain babies.
No one owes his or her child to anyone.
Laurie Frisch
Read More:"Birthmother's
Day" Celebrations - Celebrating "birthmotherhood"
is celebrating the oppression of single moms.
Next: Single Mothers, Single
Fathers Rights - Why Don't Natural Parents Get Treated Like Adopters?
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