Category: adopted, foster, parenting

  • The Special Needs of Adopted Children

    The Special Needs of Adopted Children

    Adopted children have special needs that adoptive, first, and foster parents must learn  in order to become their child’s #1 cheerleader. Use this list as needed and as age-appropriate for discussing special needs with your child. You might say, “An adopted person wrote a list of her special needs. Would you be interested in seeing…

  • What Feeds Adoptee Loss and Grief

    What Feeds Adoptee Loss and Grief

    What are we to do with this, friends? Can we educate ourselves about these topics and be willing to lunge forward into forgiveness? It would be scary, like standing on the high dive platform before deciding to jump in. But, oh, if we do, we will be washed clean from bitterness and healed from loss…

  • Sandcastles In Adoptee Hearts

    Sandcastles In Adoptee Hearts

    How I identify with the message of the framed print above my bedroom table named: “My Sandcastle.” It pictures blue skies, a sandy beach, and a four-year-old girl straddling a two- foot-tall sandcastle. Busy at work, she slaps handful upon handful of wet sand upon her creation, oblivious to the seagulls flying overhead or the…

  • What Shakes Adoptive Mamas To the Core

    What Shakes Adoptive Mamas To the Core

    Just like the band’s drum major twirls a silver stick with two rubber ends, adoptive mamas must do much the same–always marching, moving forward, and directing. The two ends of her baton are adoptee self-worth and suicide, which in my adoptee mind, are untouchables. Mamas are ultra aware of this tension..in fact, hyper-vigilant. They hear…

  • 50 Adoptive Mamas Have Marine-Like Hearts!

    50 Adoptive Mamas Have Marine-Like Hearts!

    It takes something special to develop a Marine-like heart in the world of adoption. A person with a Marine-like heart has completed the hard work of getting free from his painful past or condemning self. Because he has nearly experienced death in this process, he has compassion for those that are hurting. The US Marines…

  • Why Some Adoptees See Their Mom As An Enemy

    Why Some Adoptees See Their Mom As An Enemy

    I’ve wondered for years why I saw Retha, my Mom through adoption, as my enemy. Why did I love getting under her skin? Why did I seek other Moms for advice, giving her a cold shoulder? Why did I delight in making her mad? Why did I hate her? Was it me? Was it because basically…

  • Understanding One Adoptee’s Passion

    Understanding One Adoptee’s Passion

    A fellow adoptee friend told me that many adoptees and foster kids have a ! (exclamation mark) following their name. At first, I didn’t know what she meant, but as she elaborated the meaning, Anne of Green Gables came to mind. If you’ve watched this fascinating series, you would likely agree that Anne has a…

  • Dancing With Your Adopted Child

    Dancing With Your Adopted Child

    And as a child, I would step on her toes really, really hard. I mean, I loved to step on her toes. It gave me a lot of pleasure. I know that’s really, really sad, but when you understand the reason why that was occurring, then you won’t blame me, or shame me. But, that…

  • What I Didn’t Know About Being Adopted

    What I Didn’t Know About Being Adopted

    What I’d like to share here is “what I didn’t know about being adopted.” This first post is about my beginnings.nLooking back, I see an adorable child sitting on the porch steps. With leather high tops, a pink dress and matching bonnet, I cuddled a well-worn Raggedy Ann. Dark hair cascaded from beneath my bonnet…

  • Adopted Kids May Identify with Buddy At Christmastime

    Adopted Kids May Identify with Buddy At Christmastime

    Dear all kinds of parents, fellow adoptees and foster kids… Every year, I watch the Christmas movie called ELF, mostly because my beliefs about Christmas, myself, and others in my story–adoptive mother and dad, ring familiar. We can use the movie as a springboard for discussing the challenges of Christmas that many adopted and foster…

  • My Journey Into the World of Adoption, Karen Springs

    My Journey Into the World of Adoption, Karen Springs

     My journey into the world of adoption began exactly 17 years ago with a visit to an orphanage, a world away from my middle-class American life. It was early November 2004 and I’d arrived in Kyiv, Ukraine, six weeks earlier for what was intended to be an eight-month postcollege ministry adventure. I was twenty-three years…

  • One Word Adoptive Parents Must Avoid

    One Word Adoptive Parents Must Avoid

    Whenever I teach this point during a training, many parents get upset. I wonder why. Are they offended that they’re saying the wrong word? Are they embarrassed, like someone caught with their pants down? Or, are they ticked off because they supposedly know better than anyone what the child needs…and how the child feels?” Really?…

  • The Special Needs of Many Adopted Kids

    The Special Needs of Many Adopted Kids

    Many adopted children have special needs that adoptive, first, and foster parents must learn  in order to become their child’s #1 cheerleader. Use this list as needed and as age-appropriate for discussing special needs with your child. You might say, “An adopted person wrote a list of her special needs. Would you be interested in…

  • My Take On Adoption Reform

    My Take On Adoption Reform

    Unfortunately, the subject of escalating stress between prospective and new moms isn’t discussed by the majority of adoption agencies, child protective services, or adoption professionals. Some agencies are required by State law to provide this type of education and preparation, but for others, it’s too scary to broach the topic. What adoption professional is brave…

  • A Birth Grandfather’s Goodbye Letter

    A Birth Grandfather’s Goodbye Letter

    My son and his beautiful girlfriend conceived you out of marriage. As parents we loved the two of them and hoped they might marry, but at ages sixteen and eighteen it seemed unwise. Our children wanted to make the foolish, but understandable choice to abort their unplanned pregnancy without telling us. When they revealed their…

  • What Scared My Adoptive Parents

    What Scared My Adoptive Parents

    Who can even imagine how Retha felt? Perhaps, like a bucket of ice water was thrown on her? She probably shook in shock, like anyone when something unfathomable happened. Where was Mike? Was he holding her close? Knowing him for a lifetime, he was probably running for the back bedroom. And, there Retha was. All…

  • Cheat Sheet for Talking Adoption

    Cheat Sheet for Talking Adoption

    What comes to mind when you think about initiating a conversation with your child about his birth family? Do you feel defensive, like the birth family is the enemy to be avoided at all  costs? Do you feel sad, and does your lip begin to quiver at the thought of their possible presence in your…

  • Why I’m “Pro-Adoption”

    Why I’m “Pro-Adoption”

    In order to communicate this foundational truth, I’m using two words: relinquishment and adoption. When the First Mother signs off parenting rights, the term “relinquished” is apropos. This word refers to pre-adoption pain and trauma. However, when your child is placed, this is adoption, and it is positive, for it provides a forever home for…

  • Adoptees Suffer Phantom Pain

    Adoptees Suffer Phantom Pain

    Adoptive and foster parents, would you consider the possibility of phantom pain in regard to your adopted child’s relinquishment wound? A great example of an amputee with phantom pain is Amy Purdy, the Olympian whose legs were amputated from the knees down. The location of pain for an amputee is the body, brain, and spirit.…

  • What Made Me A Kick-Ass Adoptee

    What Made Me A Kick-Ass Adoptee

    Hell yes, adoptees are angry! Excuse my French…I’m just a veteran adoptee, finally free from anger’s choking grip, and ready to hunt bear on behalf of my fellow adoptees and foster kids who believe that their anger might be a life sentence. Up until now, most adoptees have believed there’s no hope for resolving overwhelming…

  • How One Adoptee Got Triggered

    How One Adoptee Got Triggered

    Specific present-day circumstances can trigger my profound wound of losing Elizabeth, my first Mom. What I’m about to share is personal and I’m asking that you’ll read with mercy and grace. I hope this post will be helpful to both adoptive parents and fellow adoptees who struggle with abandonment and rejection issues. Perhaps, for these,…

  • Identifying With Fellow Adoptee Anne With An “E”

    Identifying With Fellow Adoptee Anne With An “E”

    Most adoptive parents will identify with the challenges of raising an adopted child. The mother and father were brother and sister and had never raised children. They made typical mistakes that almost all parents do, but the challenges were often magnified because they had no backstory, no parental training or education, and no awareness that…

  • The Unexpected Variables of Adoptive Parenting

    The Unexpected Variables of Adoptive Parenting

    Who can even imagine how Retha felt? Perhaps, like a bucket of ice water had been thrown on her? She must have shaken in shock, like we all do when something unfathomable happens. It would be easy for her to read rejection into my screams. “Maybe my baby doesn’t like me, or maybe I’m not…

  • What Adoptees & Moms Need for Healing

    What Adoptees & Moms Need for Healing

    how do adoptive Moms and kids know that they need healing? Through an MRI of their hearts. Because many adoptive Moms and adopted kids repress deep pain, they’re exhausted and lose their joy. No one tells them that this unrecognized pain is still active, creating emotions and beliefs that sometimes prompt shocking reactions to life…

  • Adoptees Can Grow Amidst Birth Family Rejection

    Adoptees Can Grow Amidst Birth Family Rejection

    Rejection. Just the sound of the word sends chills up my spine! Rejection is the dark side of the search and reunion process. The agonizing side. The side that is rarely, if ever, talked about, the side media never covers. However, rejection need not define us. Here’s why.

  • An Adoptee’s Pearls from The Oyster of Adoption

    An Adoptee’s Pearls from The Oyster of Adoption

    1. Anyone can make love, but only God can create a life. (credit: Lee Ezell) 2. Even though my birth parents didn’t plan my life, God did. My life is not a mistake. 3. Every day of my life was planned before any one of them ever came to be—no coincidences! 4. I was removed…

  • An Adoptee’s Thoughts about First Parents Are Innate

    An Adoptee’s Thoughts about First Parents Are Innate

    What messages did we get from our birth mothers? I believe it all depended on her attitude toward us. If we heard, “I love you and am so glad you’re a part of me. I will do all that I can to help you develop into the person you were created to be. I can’t…

  • One Adoptee Carries On Her Mom’s Christmas Eve Tradition

    One Adoptee Carries On Her Mom’s Christmas Eve Tradition

    Adoptive moms have no idea of the memories of love they’re creating for their kids. They can’t even fathom, nor entertain the idea that THEY are a gift to their adopted children–her persona, her everyday activities, her faithfulness in remaining a mom with a non-abandoning heart. So, when Christmas Eve comes, I think of Mom…

  • The Little Pink Flower That Bloomed in the Winter

    The Little Pink Flower That Bloomed in the Winter

    After the man planted Little Pink Flower in his white jar, he expected that it would bloom during the summer, but it didn’t. When December came, even though the plant had green leaves, there was no flower. But suddenly, a pink flower popped from the green leaves, delighting the man beyond belief. He tells the…

  • A Holiday Gift Adoptive and First Parents Can Share With Their Kids

    A Holiday Gift Adoptive and First Parents Can Share With Their Kids

    Who can even guess what the upcoming Christmas and Hanukah family celebrations will be like? If the gathering is virtual, it takes much pressure off adopted children. They can feel safe from being overstimulated. No matter whether virtual or physical. many adopted kids have a rough time. I’ve written these questions for you to share…

  • Dancing in My First Mother’s Shadow

    Dancing in My First Mother’s Shadow

    Almost every adoptee has a shadow following her. It’s the shadow of the First Mother. The shadow may be fleeting, fear-producing, fierce, or formidable. It all depends, for each adoptee and First Mother are unique, one of a kind. But, one thing is certain–adoptees who experience rejection from their First Mothers can dance again.

  • Are adoptees aware of hatred toward their moms?

    Are adoptees aware of hatred toward their moms?

    When I was interviewing adoptees for my upcoming book, I spent a lot of time asking them about their anger. I believe there is a thought that opens the gateway to open discussions with your child. The thought is…

  • Draining Shame from Adoptee Sensory Issues

    Draining Shame from Adoptee Sensory Issues

    For my whole life, I’ve believed that I’m clumsy. My.whole.life. I trip, fall, run into things, and go ballistic when I hear the sound of the vacuum cleaner. Just last week, I was working out at the gym with a friend. When we changed machines, she said with urgency, “Look out!” There was a machine…

  • I CAN SEE MY ADOPTION THROUGH HEAVEN’S EYES. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    I CAN SEE MY ADOPTION THROUGH HEAVEN’S EYES. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    Afterwards, he climbed to the highest part of the mountain where he could see a spectacular view of the Promised Land. The faithfulness and goodness of God were the last things he saw before he took his last breath.  Afterwards, the same arms that carried him throughout life became the arms that carried his body…

  • “I Can Now Take Rejection In Stride” Online Adoptee Bible Study

    “I Can Now Take Rejection In Stride” Online Adoptee Bible Study

    Ronald Nydam, Ph.D., in an article entitled “Doing Rejection” appearing in Jewel Among Jewels Adoption News said, “The task of all adoptees is to finally relinquish their relinquishment; that is, to really accept the decision of the birth parents to carry out their plan for adoption. If the original relinquishment is not relinquished, the adoptee…

  • Learning to Appreciate Tough Times

    Learning to Appreciate Tough Times

    Since the nation is cooped up inside with COVID, it may be a great time for some introspection about how this tough time is teaching us profound lessons in our faith walk with Jesus. As children of God, we are all in the process of being healed by the Great Physician, Jesus. His healing can…

  • I HAVE A UNIQUE LIFE PURPOSE. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    I HAVE A UNIQUE LIFE PURPOSE. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    The late Brian Keck, between the age of 10 and 16, was placed in 27 foster homes, three adoptive placements, two group homes and one detention center. He went on to earn a degree in social work and is now dedicating himself to become an Olympic wrestler. He said in an article for Connections, a…

  • I’M NERVOUS ABOUT FINDING BIRTH RELATIVES. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    I’M NERVOUS ABOUT FINDING BIRTH RELATIVES. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    Like many adoptees, Moses probably experienced a tremendous amount of anxiety prior to his reunion with his birth brother, Aaron. “What will I say?” “How will I act?” “Will I laugh or cry?” he may have wondered.  As with all adoption reunions, there is joy as well as pain, blessing as well as a sense…

  • I AM CONFUSED ABOUT MY IDENTITY: Online Adoptee Bible Study

    I AM CONFUSED ABOUT MY IDENTITY: Online Adoptee Bible Study

    One night at a dinner party I listened as my host mused about his children: his son looks like his grandfather, but does not have his disposition; his first daughter has his reserved and deep nature; his second daughter looks like his wife’s brother and shares his interest in science. Without being conscious of it,…

  • I SOMETIMES FANTASIZE ABOUT MY BIRTH MOTHER. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    I SOMETIMES FANTASIZE ABOUT MY BIRTH MOTHER. Online Adoptee Bible Study

    Adopted children spend an exorbitant amount of psychic time in fantasy. They may seem to be sitting quietly in their rooms, or just looking out the window, when really they are deep in the Ghost Kingdom imagining scenarios that might have been or still might be…These fantasies are not just the passing fancies with which…

  • “I BLOW UP EASILY AND HURT OTHERS” Online Adoptee Bible Study

    “I BLOW UP EASILY AND HURT OTHERS” Online Adoptee Bible Study

    The child picture in this photo could be an adopted or foster child, who feels at the mercy of her anger. She blows up, hurts others, and then feel much regret about it. In time, she will learn that her anger is God-given and that it can be regulated so that it performs what it…

  • “I DON’T FEEL LIKE I BELONG ANYWHERE”-Online Adoptee Bible Study

    “I DON’T FEEL LIKE I BELONG ANYWHERE”-Online Adoptee Bible Study

    What name did he have in his birth family’s home? Surely it must have been a Hebrew name. But now he was to be called by another name–an Egyptian name. Little Moses felt all mixed up inside. If he were able to put his feelings into words he might have said, I don’t feel like…

  • Adoptees Can Grow Amidst COVID-19-Bible Study 1

    Adoptees Can Grow Amidst COVID-19-Bible Study 1

    in order to study Moses and what we can learn from him, we must remember that his struggles were evidence of something deeper that must be dealt with. We’re going to look at the first part of his life prior to adoption and discover that his painful past doesn’t surface as memories of the past,…

  • Announcing New Online Bible Study for Adoptive, Foster Parents, and Kids

    Announcing New Online Bible Study for Adoptive, Foster Parents, and Kids

    Why do many of us see life through a lens of rejection? Why do unanswered phone calls, emails, and letters spell R-E-J-E-C-T-I-O-N to us? Will we ever get over it? Why is our self-esteem not low, but non-existent? Why do we try to be like others instead of being ourselves? Do we even know who…

  • Helping Adopted Kids With Overwhelming Feelings Amidst COVID-19

    Helping Adopted Kids With Overwhelming Feelings Amidst COVID-19

    During this COVID-19 crisis, remind your child that it is alright to express overwhelming feelings. It is not only all right, but it is crucial if she is to be healthy and whole. But as you give your child permission to express herself, also teach her that obnoxious behavior for its own sake is futile.…

  • Discovering God In the Details

    Discovering God In the Details

    And so at birth, love mingled with loss, like water and oil. This combination waged war inside me, from birth onward. Avoid abandonment at all costs and seek love no matter whom the giver. Loss sent me on a lifetime quest to find freedom from deeply-embedded fears of abandonment that warred against my ability to…

  • Daily Meditations for Quarantined Adoptive Parents and Kids

    Daily Meditations for Quarantined Adoptive Parents and Kids

    It seems the world has flipped upside down with the Corona virus. What makes this a doubly-critical time for adoptees and foster kids is that the crisis reflects our raw reality–everything familiar was lost when our first parents (or second or third) signed relinquishment papers and we were removed. More than anything right now, adopted…

  • Helping Adopted Kids Feel Safe Amidst Coronavirus

    Helping Adopted Kids Feel Safe Amidst Coronavirus

    It’s such a basic need of adopted kids to have connection, with you, friends, and other family members. But, we’re all called to social distancing, which may be incredibly difficult for adopted kids. I’m going to share three ideas here that speak to this need of adopted kids. I’m hesitant to share, for it seems…

  • Ending the Unwanted War Between Adoptees and Their Moms

    Ending the Unwanted War Between Adoptees and Their Moms

    How I wish mom and I knew about what will be shared . We would have been freed from the war between us and enjoyed an intimate parent/child relationship that only comes from tough self-examination of both child and parent. 

  • What’s With The Silly Cap, Randall?

    What’s With The Silly Cap, Randall?

    I couldn’t believe it when This Is Us’s Randall wore a ski cap to the event that Kevin took their mom to! Of course, he and Kevin were in an all-out battle about who could take better care of their aging mom, as dementia set in. The scene of Kevin taking his mom to the…

  • How Adopted Kids Want Their Parents To Handle Their Pre-Adoption Loss

    How Adopted Kids Want Their Parents To Handle Their Pre-Adoption Loss

    It’s painful to enter into your child’s suffering. It’s so much easier to assume that all is well inside your child, especially if she hasn’t manifested any obvious problems. But all adopted children have been wounded, simply because they experienced a profound loss before they were embraced by their new family. The first thing your…

  • Why Adoptive Moms Are Hard On Themselves

    Why Adoptive Moms Are Hard On Themselves

    Imagine an adoptive mom hiding behind a velvet curtain backstage in the world of adoption. She’s wrapped in that curtain, but why?   What if we went behind the curtains and led her center stage? Without a doubt, the mom would resist the spotlight. The spotlight is repugnant, for she darn well doesn’t need any more…

  • Validating The Profound Wound of Adoptive Moms

    Validating The Profound Wound of Adoptive Moms

    Without a doubt, your level of fatigue is off the charts and I don’t want you to feel like these 20 strategies are one more thing you must do. Far from it. Read a few pages, or even just one, even if you have to seclude yourself from screaming kids in the bathroom. I promise…

  • The Deadly Secret of Adoptive and Foster Moms

    The Deadly Secret of Adoptive and Foster Moms

     When a mom is suffering compassion fatigue, she can’t stop trying to help her child. It’s like banging her head against a brick wall. It hurts, but she can’t stop. This is called repetition compulsion. This mom may say, “If I try again, surely my child will respond.” And so, these moms operate out of…

  • Why Some Adopted Kids See Their Adoptive Mom As An Enemy

    Why Some Adopted Kids See Their Adoptive Mom As An Enemy

    When your child connects with you for the first time, he brings with him all the “faces” of other moms that were in your role before. So, if your child is a newborn, it is the first mom’s face. If a school-age child removed to foster care, the first mom’s face. If a teen coming…

  • This Adoptee Is Worried About Randall on THIS IS US

    This Adoptee Is Worried About Randall on THIS IS US

    Randall was the first to notice memory problems in Rebecca and you could tell before the holidays that he was deeply concerned about her. That is so typical of many adoptees–because of the trauma we’ve been through, we have an extremely tender heart for those that are hurting. As the episode unfolded, not only did…

  • How Adoptive Parents Can Foster Self-Acceptance In Their Kids

    How Adoptive Parents Can Foster Self-Acceptance In Their Kids

    Your child’s potential is there, yet invisible. I like to think of each person as made in the image of God–body, soul, and spirit.  Just like the amaryllis, those gorgeous red blooms are developing deep within, yet when he/she comes to you, likely there will be no evidence because pre-adoption trauma keeps it suppressed.   …

  • Why Adopted Kids Reject Their Mom’s Love

    Why Adopted Kids Reject Their Mom’s Love

    Your child wants you to know is that if she doesn’t grieve the adoption loss, her ability to receive love or attach emotionally to you and others in meaningful relationships may be seriously hindered.  Dr. Daniel N. Stern, professor of psychiatry at Cornell University, says in his book, The Interpersonal World of the Infant, that…

  • Who Can Identify The Five Faces of Adoptee Anger?

    Who Can Identify The Five Faces of Adoptee Anger?

    Envision a multi-dimensional circular, multi-colored feelings chart, including every emotion humans could ever experience. Such a chart reminds me of the diversity of reactions adoptees have about the emotion of anger in regard to being adopted.  Some say they have no anger while others wonder if it’s a life sentence. Some say it’s not a…

  • What Creates Hope for Discouraged Adoptive and Foster Parents

    What Creates Hope for Discouraged Adoptive and Foster Parents

    There’s a three-fold secret I discovered during the search for my first mother that may bring hope to discouraged adoptive and foster parents. Parents, I know the Marine-like challenge you’ve undertaken to parent a child through adoption. Sometimes, you’re on the verge of complete exhaustion or panicked about what is happening in your child’s life.…

  • Does The Beautiful Braid of Adoption Apply Today?

    Does The Beautiful Braid of Adoption Apply Today?

    November is Adoption Awareness Month and this is my offering, as controversial as it may be. This post contains the truths I’ve learned in seven plus decades of being an adopted person. I’ve used this art for many years, but I’d like to think that my updated version is still applicable to those touched by…

  • The Unspoken Raw Realities All Adopted Kids Experience

    The Unspoken Raw Realities All Adopted Kids Experience

    For an adopted child, the dance floor is the first mother’s womb, for there the unborn child gains a sense of belonging, a sensation of safety in the warm sack of water, and a sense of rhythm from the mother’s beating heart. These dance floor elements are what every child expects after birth–a continuation and…

  • Honoring First Parents Opens The Hearts of Adopted Children

    Honoring First Parents Opens The Hearts of Adopted Children

    Who would ever guess that the honoring of adoptive parents of the first parents would open up the child’s love to receive unconditional love. Learn how it all happens here.

  • How To Enter the World of Your Adopted Child

    How To Enter the World of Your Adopted Child

    Just having found the paternal side of my first family, I know first-hand what it means to come from a painful history. My first father was a very broken man, now deceased, but leaving six children from six marriages in the wake.  I am fairly convinced that my adoptive parents knew the back story, but…

  • Why Choose Adoption Over Abortion?

    Why Choose Adoption Over Abortion?

    You will long to hold the child for the rest of your life and will wonder what he/she may have looked like when you see another’s child at the same age yours would have been. You will have lost not only an infant, but also a preschooler, a teenager, a young adult and your grandchildren.

  • What Adoptees Must Consider Before Searching for Birth Family

    What Adoptees Must Consider Before Searching for Birth Family

    “Understanding my adoption experience,” Richard says, “has allowed me to bring authenticity to my relationships with family, friends, and others in my life. I no longer hide my thoughts and feelings—the veil of secrecy has been lifted. People now get the real Richard since I’ve uncovered my past, understand how precious the present is, and…

  • Should Adoptive Parents Share Painful Pre-Adoption History with Kids?

    Should Adoptive Parents Share Painful Pre-Adoption History with Kids?

    Your child, at the appropriate age, can actually benefit from hearing painful information about his past because he will know that finally you are telling him the honest, gut-level truth. Kids are geniuses at detecting untruths. This giving of information doesn’t have so much to do with the truth about his past as it does…

  • The Special Needs of Adopted Children

    The Special Needs of Adopted Children

    I need parents who are willing to put aside preconceived notions about adoption and be educated about the realities of adoption and the special needs adoptive families face. (Proverbs 23:12, Proverbs 3: 13-14, Proverbs 3:5-6) I need my adoptive and birth parents to have a non-competitive attitude. Without this, I will struggle with loyalty issues.…

  • What Happens When Adoptive Parents Reflect On the Miracle of Adoption

    What Happens When Adoptive Parents Reflect On the Miracle of Adoption

    Without a doubt, you know that an absolute miracle transpired in your heart when you adopted your child. Trying to describe it would be impossible, for it is like a million emotions exploding simultaneously—like fireworks! Debbie describes it well: If I had to pick just one moment of absolute, unadulterated joy it would be the…

  • Why Adoptees and Foster Kids Must Guard Their Hearts

    Why Adoptees and Foster Kids Must Guard Their Hearts

    Adoptees and foster kids must learn to guard their hearts through discernment and simultaneously learn the art of gradual self-disclosure. We need to find a healthy balance between the two, and that will occur as we learn to trust ourselves. Here are some tips that will help adoptees and foster kids find and trust safe…

  • Why One Adopted Person Is Thankful for Tough Times

    Why One Adopted Person Is Thankful for Tough Times

    As children of God, we are all in the wonderful process of being healed by our Great Physician, Jesus. His healing can be evidenced in a new-found appreciation for life, as we learn to enjoy Him. Webster’s defines appreciation like this: “To be grateful for; to value highly; to place a high estimate on; to…

  • Helping Adopted Kids Think Freely About Their Birth Parents

    Helping Adopted Kids Think Freely About Their Birth Parents

    Parents, I know you and the fact that you’re reading this shows your heart. You would do anything to help your child come to terms with his/her first family. Here’s what you can do: Bring up the birth parents in conversation. “I wonder where you got that curly black hair. Do you think it could…

  • What Not To Say to Adopted and Foster Kids

    What Not To Say to Adopted and Foster Kids

    Adoptive parents think they are giving us a great compliment with these words, but more than often, they wound. When well-meaning parents say, “We love you just like you’re our own,” their child may naturally wonder or hopefully ask, “Well, if I’m not your own, then whose am I? Where is my real family? Where…

  • What May Happen When Adoptees Practice Self-Care

    What May Happen When Adoptees Practice Self-Care

    So, I pulled the poor thing out of the pot, setting it on a nearby wagon. It seemed there was no hope, but it seemed worth a try. That evening, it rained like crazy and the next morning I went out to see the plant, thinking it was totally wiped out by the heavy rains.…

  • What the MRI of My Adoptee Heart Showed

    What the MRI of My Adoptee Heart Showed

    Sherrie couldn’t figure out why life’s circumstance felt like she was being painted into a corner. As a control freak, this was incredibly distressing. What she didn’t realize is that she was at the threshold of healing. A MRI of her adoptee heart clarified the diagnosis.

  • Celebrating the Scab Over Verrier’s  Primal Wound

    Celebrating the Scab Over Verrier’s Primal Wound

    Celebrating the Scab Over Verrier’s Primal Wound. Is it really possible for adopted, fostered, or step children to heal from such a profound wound? In order to know the answer, we must study what healing looks like here.

  • One Adoptee’s New View of Verrier’s Primal Wound

    One Adoptee’s New View of Verrier’s Primal Wound

    We Adoptees and foster kids have clung for decades to the validation of Nancy Verrier, author of The Primal Wound. But why? She is an adoptive mom and her perspective is oh so different than that of an adoptee. Are adoptees willing to move out of the :self valida

  • What I Wish My Adoptive Mom Would Have Said

    What I Wish My Adoptive Mom Would Have Said

    Sometimes, parents are ill-equipped to teach their children emotional awareness, thus increasing the child’s Emotional IQ. They may be fearful, believing that emotions like sadness or anger can be harmful. They may be controlling, seeing negative emotions as something they’re responsible to fix, or they may feel it their responsibility to help the child understand…

  • The Best News for Adopted and Foster Kids This Easter

    The Best News for Adopted and Foster Kids This Easter

    The innermost fear of many adopted humans—Is my life a mistake?This is the deepest, darkest shame possible and none of your children would admit it to you. Trust me, MOST adoptees struggle with this question.What is needed for the questioning child?

  • When You Write to Publish, Don’t Forget This!

    When You Write to Publish, Don’t Forget This!

    Yesterday, LITTLE BRANCH GETS ADOPTED became available for purchase on Amazon.com! I am celebrating with my publisher, Marcinson Press, by eating chocolate cake. I can’t tell you how thrilled I am to be able to make this available to adoptive and foster parents, plus anyone who loves an adoptee. It’s for kids, ages 5-12. The…

  • Why Some Adoptees Are Angry and Others Aren’t

    Why Some Adoptees Are Angry and Others Aren’t

    Imagine a five-year old whose parents were wiped out in a car wreck. She’s just attended their funeral and then witnessed their coffins lowered six feet into the ground. If you were to strike up a conversation with this child as her aunt takes her hand and leads her to the car, what do you…

  • What Happened To My Adoptive Mom’s Wedding Ring…and Me

    What Happened To My Adoptive Mom’s Wedding Ring…and Me

    Taking them out, something strange started happening deep inside me.I thought about my late Dad picking them for Mom.Where did he get them? And, why did he pick this design? And…what was it like for both of them when he asked her to marry him? Did they hug, kiss? Did he get down on one…

  • What Adoptees and Foster Kids Need to Know About Anger

    What Adoptees and Foster Kids Need to Know About Anger

    What I didn’t know is that for the adoptee, there are two kinds of anger—real, God-given anger for when we’re in danger. It’s the proverbial red light on the dashboard, alerting us to the fact that something needs attention.The other kind of anger is mis-placed anger, which runs rampant in adoptee and foster kid hearts.…

  • Anticipating Adoption Reunion With My Birth Sister

    Anticipating Adoption Reunion With My Birth Sister

    I still remember landing in Reno and driving at night to meet him. He was extremely ill, but he rose to the occasion and we had a blast with him, his son, and daugher in law. We talked daily and he always ended the conversation, “I love you with all my heart, sis.” He died…

  • How Adoptive and Foster Mamas Can Discover Their Legacy

    How Adoptive and Foster Mamas Can Discover Their Legacy

    For, YOU, dear one, are the gift, the heirloom to the next generation. Yes, every single inch of you that lives the daily grind is part and parcel of your legacy. Your strengths and weaknesses, your challenges and failures, your dreams and goals.

  • The Gift of My Adoptive Mama’s Perfume

    The Gift of My Adoptive Mama’s Perfume

    If you pick up an empty bottle that once contained expensive perfume, its possible to still distinguish the fine fragrance, even though the bottle is empty. Adoptive mamas, you are the perfume and you want your life and love to be a timeless fragrance of fine perfume for your adopted and foster child. That’s what…

  • One Adoptee Discovers Late Mom’s Legacy of Love

    One Adoptee Discovers Late Mom’s Legacy of Love

    I never dreamed I’d be writing a book about her…my late adoptive mom, that is. Our rocky relationship was nothing to brag about. In fact, it was a secret I carried as an adoption author and speaker. But, then something incredible occurred. Flashing into my mind were warm memories of her. How could that be?…

  • Irish Adoptive Mom Writes Groundbreaking Book!

    Irish Adoptive Mom Writes Groundbreaking Book!

    Dear friends…I am pleased to introduce you to Mari Galligher, an Irish adoptive mom. She is soooo brave. When you read about the current adoption atmosphere in Ireland, you will be amazed that she has broken silence in a country that doesn’t talk about adoption. Please welcome her, and give her a big hug. Love,…

  • Is Adoptee Anger My Life Sentence?

    Is Adoptee Anger My Life Sentence?

    Many of us adoptees wonder if anger is our life sentence. It’s been a constant companion since childhood and even though attempts like counseling have been made to quell it, it’s a strong as ever. Once a counselor told me to just scream when I feel angry. The next time I felt angry, I screamed…

  • Adoptive and Foster Mamas Are Wired for This Rare Gift

    Adoptive and Foster Mamas Are Wired for This Rare Gift

    When adoptive and foster mamas hear their child’s back story, they may experience grief for their child and doubts as to whether or not they can successfully parent that child. What they don’t know is that they’ve been wired for this calling as a mama. Hearing Sherrie’s story about her mom will help mamas to…

  • Why I Rejected My Adoptive Mom’s Gift…and Her

    Why I Rejected My Adoptive Mom’s Gift…and Her

    The pain involved in the adoptive mother/child relationship is deep and often seems impossible to normalize. The child usually acts out of anger at the mom and the mom is hurt terribly. Sherrie Eldridge encourages adoptive mamas to know the intrinsic value of their love to their children by showing her own mom’s determined love…

  • What Adopted and Foster Kids Really Want For Christmas

    What Adopted and Foster Kids Really Want For Christmas

    Adoptive and foster parents want to get their kids everything for on their kid’s Santa list. There’s one gift the kids really want but don’t share. Sherrie spills the beans here.

  • What Can Adoptive and Foster Mamas Do When Rejected?

    What Can Adoptive and Foster Mamas Do When Rejected?

    As an adopted person, I can’t imagine what it’s like to be rejected by your children. I believe foster and adoptive moms are some of the bravest people I’ve ever met because most of the time, their efforts and love are not received. What should moms do? This is one major step that will keep…

  • How Will Your Adopted or Foster Child Remember You?

    How Will Your Adopted or Foster Child Remember You?

    As her child, in the deep loss, I would have loved to have a timeless memory that she’d created for me. Something I could hold in my hands and remember the values and beliefs she held dear. I’m sure she wondered with an attachment disordered kid what I would say about her effectiveness in parenting.…

  • Is Reactive Attachment Disorder A Lifetime Sentence for Adoptees and Foster Kids?

    Is Reactive Attachment Disorder A Lifetime Sentence for Adoptees and Foster Kids?

    This young man represents all the adopted and foster kids, teens, and adults who have been diagnosed with RAD. It is not his fault that he was removed from the care of his first family and placed in the care of other parents who were insecure in their ability to nurture such a child. Sherrie…

  • Say WHAT?! An answer when you’re called “Different”

    Say WHAT?! An answer when you’re called “Different”

    So, friends, WHY do you, why do I, sink into a victim’s mindset? Why do we smile and take it? Why instead, don’t we step back and say in a loud voice, “SAY WHAT?”

  • Are Adoptive and Foster Moms Supposed to Bite the Bullet with Kid Anger?

    Are Adoptive and Foster Moms Supposed to Bite the Bullet with Kid Anger?

    As an adopted person, I wish my mom would have let me know the truth about hurting her with my anger instead of  just biting the bullet and swallowing hard until the next rage. How are we kids to learn what anger costs those who love us? In some ways, just ignoring the anger spree…

  • Parents Can Bypass Shame When Explaining Adoption Relinquishment

    Parents Can Bypass Shame When Explaining Adoption Relinquishment

    This photo of a child with a deer illustrates the world of the adopted and fostered child. Parents struggle big time to enter their child’s world when explaining relinquishment. Sherrie teaches how to communicate love vs. shame.

  • Adoptee and Foster Kid Cry Prints Speak Volumes

    Adoptee and Foster Kid Cry Prints Speak Volumes

    This baby’s cries are vital for developing connections between parent and child. You will be surprised at what the parental role is in this entire phenomena. Of course. adopted and foster babies have a cry that will reflect trauma…they may be daunting to listen to. Here’s how to begin.

  • How Can Adoptees and Foster Kids Know Who Is A Safe Person?

    How Can Adoptees and Foster Kids Know Who Is A Safe Person?

    When we adoptees and foster kids are hurting badly, we lack a lot of discernment about who to share our innermost thoughts with. This post teaches how to find safe people by looking at three characteristics that must be present to qualify a person as safe. This is also applicable to anyone who is hurting.