December 28, 2010
Photo Collages
Family and friends, please do not be offended if you do not see yourself in our collages. These collages represent LONG hours and LATE nights of adding in pictures, taking them out, reformatting, receiving suggestion of what should stay and what should go. It is very possible that at some point you were in the collage and then possibly out again. If you do not appear in our collage, it doesn't mean that we don't love you....it means that due to the limited space, it was physically impossible to include everyone.
This is the order they would appear in our dossier. Please enjoy (click on the collage to enlarge if desired).....
Family Introduction Letter
So, just as a quick recap....the Family Introduction Letter is the ONLY thing that will set Jon and I apart from the other 60-70 candidates in the pool. Normally what happens is that the birth parents will read through the Family Introduction Letters and pick out 3 that they like the best. They will then be given a dossier of basically our entire life which includes pictures (see next post).
It is from these dossiers that they will make their final decision. As you can see, the Family Introduction Letter is the single most important thing Jon and I have done in this process.
Here is our Family Introduction Letter.
I'm Not Slacking....Just No Good Updates!!
Well, we received our final home study from our MN agency and are just waiting on the final version of our West Coast home study. We were told by our West Coast adoption agency to be prepared to be in the pool around mid-January which feels way more real than the timeline Jon and I "thought up" when we began the process so many months ago.
So, roughly three weeks and our lives are going to change in a way I cannot even describe in words. Just being constantly aware that at any minute the phone could ring and it could be THE call. I am also terribly afraid this is going to put Jon and I in a state of constant emotional panic every time the phone rings. We will have to think of ways to overcome this or it might put us in the loony bin.
November 4, 2010
Cutting to the Chase
We have to undergo additional adoption counseling in order to be "cleared" to be considered as parents for a baby of another race. Or to use adoption speak, a "trans-racial" baby. Actually, I had to take a 100 plus question quiz if you will about my racial viewpoints on the world. The test was very eye opening until I got to the Knowledge section which asked me to list 3 African American scientists or the first Asian Nobel Peace Prize Winner, or the first Eskimo to fly to the moon. Okay, I made up the 3rd one, but all the others were true and there were 20 or so questions like that.
My results told me what I already knew that I am fit to have a trans-racial baby, but those Knowledge questions certainly brought my score down from where I wanted it to be. I guess it is time to dust up on my race knowledge. Jon hasn't undergone the test yet, but I know he will easily cleared as well.
Though trans-racial parenting might not be for eveyrone, we just want to be parents in the worst way. We don't care what package our baby comes in, just as long as the package actually arrives.
Alcohol, Drugs, and Disease......Oh My!!
This is an extremely difficult task considering all infants/children react differently to different substances. Secondly, it is amazingly hard to purposely exclude a child who needs a good home based on something they had no control over from the beginning. However, like everyone else in the world, we don't care the sex or race of our baby, but we ultimately would like it to be healthy.
We were asked to take a scale of drug/alcohol use and tell how far up that scale we would be willing to go (by accepting a child) before we said no. The scale was:
None - No exposure to drugs or alcohol.
Mild - Used up to 4 or 5 times throughout their pregnancy.
Moderate - Used consistently up to 4 or 5 months of pregnancy.
Severe - Used consistently more than 5 months of pregnancy.
The categories were:
- Alcohol
- Marijuana
- Cocaine
- Methamphetamines
- Prescription Drugs
- Heroin
- Tobacco
- Parents with mental health illness
- Children with "known" physical or mental abnormalities.
This was just another hurdle in a process full of twists and turns we weren't expecting. Though we know from the bottom of our hearts that the outcome will make it ALL worthwhile.
October 24, 2010
Seattle Seminar
During our 2-day seminar, we heard real life stories from adoptive parents, birth parents who've given their children up for adoption, and a lawyer who specializes in adoption law. We got all of our questions answered in that regard. Additionally, we talked about having trans-racial babies, drug and alcohol exposure of birth parents and their children, and our own emotional health while we are captive "waiting" for the call. In the room with us were the following 4 couples:
- The same-sex hippie male couple
- The Indian couple who already have a child but feel it is there moral obligation to adopt their second child.
- Susie Cries-a-Lot and her husband Mr. Distracted who seemed very disconnected from the whole adoption process. She literally cried the whole time.
- The young couple (our age) who had trouble conceiving and were just content listening to the rest of us interact.
- What we thought our parents did right
- What we thought our parents did wrong
- Disciplining our child
- Our daily schedule (from the moment we wake up till the moment we go to bed)
- Our relationships with our friends (are they short-term, long-term, surface relationships, etc)
- Our values and morals
- Our religious practices for our whole life
- How we met, where we met, and when we met
- What our wedding was like
- And on, and on, and on.....
We also received the news that based on the few "little things" we need to do and that "big things" that they need to do (type out her 500 pages of notes from our interviews), our estimated time into the pool of candidates will be 4-6 weeks from now.
October 19, 2010
Adoption Agency or Bust!!
Then on Friday, we have an all day interview with our adoption counselor who will begin formatting our “Parent Profile” which is essentially a 20 – 30 page dossier (their word, not mine) of our life stories, reasons for wanting to adopt, social worker’s perception of us and our home, pictures, etc. Jon and I will also have to construct a “Dear Birthmother Letter” which is essentially the first thing the birthparents see in the dossier which is our chance to “sell” ourselves to the birthparents and why we think we are the right couple to be chosen. The “Parent Profile” is what the adoption agency will then start distributing to birth parents that are looking for an adoptive couple to take their baby. We should also find out roughly how long it will take them to put this dossier together which will tell us an approximate date of when we will be entering the pool of approved candidates ready to take a baby. All along, Jon and I have been telling ourselves roughly November 1, but we should get a much more accurate timeline on our trip. This means any day from the date we are approved, we could receive the call………or not receive the call of course if that is the way the cookie crumbles.
October 8, 2010
Witty Retorts
Our Social Worker told us to be prepared for incredibly invasive questions from strangers such as:
- Whose kid is that?
- Where did you get that kid from?
- Is that kid adopted?
- Do you know where his/her real parents are? (This one infuriates me!)
Woman in Checkout Line: Where did you get those kids from?
Mom: I found them in aisle 7 in the frozen food section.
Hahahahahahaha!!!!!!! We need to remember that one!
I really don't understand what motivates human beings to be so ugly or to think it is their right to ask such questions. Don't get me wrong.....it isn't that such questions can't be asked. However, there is a tactful and far less intrusive way of asking. And mostly, those questions should be reserved for people who are not complete strangers. Just because my child is adopted, what makes some stranger think they are privy to my child's back story?
Home Study Visits - One & Two
Day One- Tuesday, October 5th
She came over to our house, we showed her around, and she gave us literally zero feedback as to whether she found our house suitable or not for a child. We know our house is suitable, but there are some dangers mainly including a set of stairs on every level of our house. I mean we know how we will circumvent this, but we still expected her to ask us how it would be done.
We then sat down at the table and she asked us zero questions about ourselves and proceeded to talk and talk and talk for the next two hours. Don't get me wrong, almost everything she said was valuable and aimed at exposing us to all of the possibilities we might face based on the age and race of our child to dealing with the age, race, mental and physical condition of the birth mother. She also talked about the perceptions of the rest of the world on adoption.
She told us very detailed stories about her three children - all who are adopted. She then told a few pro-gay antidotes which let Jon and I know she was most definitely on our side and then as fast as she came into our house, she was gone. She said the appointment would be two hours and I literally believe she walked out the door at the 1 hour, 59 minute, 59 second mark.
Oh yea and I have to mention that our dogs behaved like little angels!
Day Two - Thursday, October 7th
This was supposed to be our interview portion and last for two hours. She asked us some general questions regarding our intentions for discipline, religion, decision-making processes, etc. Jon and I answered those questions thoughtfully and purposefully. And after about 20 minutes or so, the questions ended and the talking began......again. For the next hour and forty minutes, Jon and I just listened to her talk. And again, this was not a bad thing. She has such valuable information to give and this time was aimed at being honest about adoption with our child and not hiding anything about the process from them (I think we have a good head start with this blog). She talked about the emotional process that almost all adopted children will go through in their life. And then, she asked if we had any questions. We asked one or two questions and then she said "oh, in case I forgot to tell you, you are approved!!" She told us our home study write-up would be done in about 2-3 weeks (right in time for our visit to the adoption agency).
This is a HUGE milestone for Jon and I and puts us literally within a month or two of being in the pool of candidates to receive a baby!! It suddenly made this process feel all the more real.
October 4, 2010
What's In a Name?
If I was a woman (no comments from the peanut gallery) and I married your father, my name would be Keith Adam McMaken. Simple enough right? Well, minus my occasional PMS related-meltdowns (I have had women tell me that so it isn't meant offensively), I can assure you I am not a woman. Therefore, I kept my name and your father kept his name when we married. So what should your last name be?
From what we have read, we couldn't simply name you just one of our last names because then in the event the other parent is traveling with you (or we are in another situation where identification is required), we will constantly look like we are trying to abduct you and be subject to a barrage of questioning. Additionally, doesn't giving you just one of our last names imply a different level of commitment or lay claim to you as one person's child over the other? Though we will know this isn't the case, do we really need to make ourselves stand out more?
However, hyphenating our name seems to add a level of complexity to your life that we don't know is too great either:
- I am annoyed with the length of my own last name and mine is only 7 letters long! Burgess-McMaken is 15 letters long....that is over half of the length of the Alphabet. With the amount of times you have to sign your name in life, this just seems like cruel and unusual punishment!! (Unless you sign your name like your father, Aunt Kelly, or Grandpa Burgess who both just sign a squiggly line for their last names).
- How the hell are they going to get Burgess-McMaken written on the back of a football jersey or the back of a letter jacket or any other thing like that?
- When people ask you why your last name is hyphenated (which they inevitably will), we don't want you to have to constantly "out" yourself as having two dads. Life can be cruel enough without that added pressure.
Anybody have any suggestions/preferences they could offer? We wold be glad to hear from anybody!!
Home Study Time
We wouldn't normally be scared but Jon and I tend to feed off one another when it comes to these type of things. And we did what anybody in the world with any common sense would tell you not to do....we consulted the Internet. It is like when you have a big, hairy wart in a peculiar place on your body (I am not talking about me, I am talking about this friend of mine of course) and while it is just that.....a big, hairy wart in a peculiar place on your body, the Internet has a way to tell you that wart is incurable cancer. Well, according to the Internet, our home is cancerous.
Jon and I can field any questions about our desire to adopt, relationship, our pasts, our family, friends, etc., but we can't control the things we can't control. And one of the things we can't control is our dogs. And while 99% of the time our dogs act like normally, happy dogs.....1% of the time they act possessive and aggressive with strangers. Let me clarify that our dogs have NEVER bitten or attacked anyone. I can say with the utmost confidence that we know they would never bite anyone and have seen them both be extraordinarily gentle with children (our nephew Cody rides Rossi around like a horse). However, if you get one person who misjudges a bark or a growl for something more than it really is, it could spell big trouble for us.
We have been fastidiously working with our dogs on jumping, barking, etc., but mainly on remaining calm. They are actually doing quite well, but that is because it has only been Jon and I. Add a stranger into the mix and Lord only knows what will happen.
Pray for us if you will.....we only need to get past 2, two-hour sessions with the Social Worker without incident and we are heading towards the finish line.......err.....the finish line of this part of the process.
September 16, 2010
It's All About Small Victories!
Jon and I did just that and were both very curious exactly how many pieces of paper we had accumulated during this process. Well, thankfully after an hour at a Kinko's copy machine, we were given the grand total. 128 pages. That's right, I said it.....128 pages. I think we both estimated on the low side. Now we understand why they say it takes most couples six months to gather all of that paperwork. But, what they didn't know is that Jon and I aren't a typical couple. We are both "Project Terminators" who thrive on finishing things as fast as humanly process. We estimate it took us just over a month and a half.
What comes next? The social worker will be coming to our house soon (as of yet unscheduled) and doing our home study. And our trip to our adoption agency is fast approaching (third week of Oct) for our seminar, In-Take Interview, and home study. Yep, that's right! Being out of state folks gives us the distinct privilege of going through TWO home study interviews and paying for them both.
August 31, 2010
Turn to the Left and Cough.....
I had a 10:00 am physical and was told I needed to fast for 12 hours prior to the physical. Considering I wake up at 4:15 am every weekday morning, I knew waiting until after my 10:00 am physical was done would be a make me one cranky bastard! And boy was I right!! I was in a state of dizzy delirium by the time the appointment was over at 10:45. And in addition to fasting, I couldn't even eat gum. I was rocking some serious hungry/bad breath in that tiny doctor's office. Both the nurse and doctor wanted to have in-depth conversations face-to-face with me and I wonder if they could smell it. I wanted to die!
I got a tetnus shot, had my cholesterol checked, and then was tested for a wheat allergy. I have been given a clean bill of health and according to my doctor, fit to be a parent. Let's hope some birth mother feels the same. Jon was given a clean bill of health too. One part of the application down.....598 to go!
August 25, 2010
Here a Form, There a Form, Everywhere a Form, Form!!
Jon and I have been deluged in forms from both our adoption agency and our home study agency. Our kitchen table, which comfortably seats 6, now uncomfortably seats stacks and stacks of folders, forms, and miscellaneous papers. If I think about it long enough, I feel completely and utterly overwhelmed and unprepared. But then I let "Organizational Keith" step in and come to the rescue. Even though Jon rarely enjoys seeing "Organizational Keith" because it usually indicates he will be asked to help reorganize a closet, help alphabetize our spices, or help clean our cleaning supplies, I think even he was happy to see "Organizational Keith." We needed someone to make order out of all of the paperwork chaos! Thank God for sticky notes and paperclips. And thank God that while I can organize like a son of a gun, Jon is better at translating what some of the questions actually mean versus what I think they mean. We make a great team in that regard!
I would roughly estimate we have 75 pages of forms and paperwork to fill out and gather. Some self-explanatory, but also some things I never imagined we would need:
- Autobiographies
- Doctor's Physical & Clearance
- Police Clearance
- Fingerprint Samples
- Family Disaster Plan (in case our house catches fire, gets picked up in a tornado, etc.)
- In-Depth House/Neighborhood/Family Description Forms
- Criminal and Credit Background Checks
- 8 Reference letters (5 for one agency, 3 for the other)
- A Budget (on each agency's individual forms)
- Applications/Intake Forms
- Policies/Practices/Procedure Documents
- On and on and on and on and on.........
We continue to plug away and hope to be finished with our forms packets for both agencies by the end of August.
It is always good to have a goal I guess.....
August 16, 2010
Autobiographies
• Your year of birth
• Your childhood and upbringing, including family dynamics
• Your education and career path
• Your special skills, interests, or passions
• Any chronic or serious health issues
• Your faith, religion, and/or values
• Your greatest satisfactions and disappointments
• Marriages, significant relationships, children
• The people, events, or ideas that have had the biggest impact on your life (good and bad)
Here is the summarized versions (click on the links and they take a few second to open) of our lives up to the point that we are moving forward with an adoption:
August 15, 2010
Home Study or "How Jon, Keith, and Their House Will Not Purposely Harm a Child"
What does this mean for Jon and I? That a social worker will come into our home between one and three times to make sure our house is not a giant death trap. Additionally, in many cases they will come back for subsequent visits to interview Jon and I together and separately regarding our lives, our ambitions, our desires for having a child, and our plan for the child's immediate and long term future.
Here is where the complicated part comes in. Since there is no law the explicitly states that adoption for same-sex couples is legal or illegal in MN, we have to be very careful how we approach the home study. Ultimately, the home study company in MN will write up our home study report and send it to our adoption agency on the west coast which is what will be used to make sure our home is not a portal into the fiery pits of Hell and "clear" us for entering the pool of candidates to be chosen by a birth parent. From our understanding up till now, we have two options (which I am abbreviating in an extreme fashion below):
- Find a home study agency in MN that will write the home study report listing us both as "Prospective Adoptive Fathers." This way, when we work with our west coast adoption agency, the laws of those states (which are far more liberal than MN) will allow Jon and I both to be listed on the birth certificate as the father and we will not have to do any legal tightrope walking in MN. Seems easy enough, right? Well, the problem is that most adoption agencies or home study agencies have an emphasis on religion. Most come with awesome names like ABC Christian Services, Catholic Charities of MN, Lutheran Social Services, etc. Out of about 48 agencies we found in MN, only three responded yes, they may perform a service like this.
- If #1 doesn't pan out and a home study agency is only willing to write one of us up as the prospective adoptive father, then only one of us can legally adopt the child. We would then have to come back to MN, wait a certain amount of time and then go before a circuit court judge who would make the decision as to whether the second parent should be legally added on or not. What if the judge is Conservative? What is the judge is anti-gay? What if the judge has a Long Island Ice Tea hangover? What if the judge has diarrhea and wants to make a quick decision to get to the nearest bathroom? Ugh, we do not want to go this route.
August 5, 2010
Bummer Dude!
August 3, 2010
Agency Number Two - The Call
AMAZING. AWESOME. PERFECTLY
Agency Two made our decision VERY easy. There were so many advantages to this agency, but the main positive point was that our guts told us this agency was right. The Client Manager was a wonderful woman who answered so many of our questions and went above and beyond the call of duty in regards to the information she gave us. Unlike the Agency One, she looked up if any birth mothers from their agency had selected a same-sex couple in the state of MN before. And guess what, there had been two!! And the people lived only a few miles from us. She passed on our contact information to them and we are hoping they contact us so we can hear about their journey and take any pointers from them.
The ONLY unfortunate thing about this agency is that they only take birth mothers from two west coast states, whereas Agency One took birth mothers from any U.S. state. This significantly reduces our exposure as Agency One places about 200 children a year, whereas Agency Two only places about 40 to 60 children a year. However, Jon and I do truly believe a few things:
- Quality over quantity. You cannot replace a feeling in your gut that one Agency is a better fit for you than another.
- It is all part of a master plan. We chose the agency that we felt was right for us and if we don't get a baby as a result, we won't regret it. At least we can say we tried it the right way.
- The pool of available adoptive parents is going to be smaller with a smaller agency.
This agency is located on the West Coast and our next step is an adoption seminar that takes place over two days in September where we get all of our questions answered. They bring in lawyers, parents who have adopted children from their agency, birth mothers who have given their children up for adoption, etc. We also will have to officially interview to be accepted into the agency. Our calls to these agencies were our chance to interview them, but now the tables get turned.
Time to make some travel plans, start ramping up on our reading, and preparing ourselves to answer the most difficult questions of all.......how is that for a cliffhanger?
July 29, 2010
Agency Number One - The Call
Due to the limited appointment times, Jon and I had to take an appointment in the middle of the work day. This meant we both had to call from our jobs and couldn't even be in the same room. Thank God for our iPhones which allowed us to easily conference call the agency.
Imagine if you will, those first terrifying seconds as you load into a huge roller coaster, snap your seat belt, and then begin the slow, torturous ascent to the top of the first hill. Clink, clink, clink goes the chain below your seat as it hoists you to the top. And right when you reach the top and get ready to go over the top of the hill.....pick up the phone and try to have a conversation about adoption. That is the best way I can describe our emotion the one minute prior to the call.
Overall, the agency answered many of our questions, raised a whole slew of new questions, and left one huge dangling question unanswered: Have you ever placed a child for adoption in MN with a gay couple?
This is a HUGE issue for Jon and I. We don't want to invest our time or money into an agency that has not successfully placed a child in MN with a gay couple before. There are far too many other obstacles facing this adoption to add that into the mix.
We did learn one other thing that we did not know. Well, we knew it existed in international adoptions, but certainly not in domestic, open adoptions. ICPC (or Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children) holds you in the state where the birth mother gave birth until they have cut through all the red tape with MN. This process can be fast or we were told to be prepared to stay in the state where the birth mother gave birth for as long as two weeks. Thankfully, UT and MS are out because they won't give babies to gay couples. Please God, can we avoid a state where two men and a baby won't be the weirdest thing people have seen in 20 years.....you know, like a Montana? Well, beggars can be choosers I guess. I would be a happy to go anywhere as long as we get a baby.
Agency Number Two will be contacted on August 3rd at 5:30 pm.
July 25, 2010
Book One - The Kid
Brutally honest (brutally!), sweet, and freakin' hilarious! A must read for any gay couple pursuing an open adoption.
Just ordered books two and three, but they haven't arrived yet.
July 20, 2010
Why We Want to Be Parents and Why We'd Be Good Parents?
We were preparing for our first call to an Adoption Agency. We have been doing tons and tons of research on the web. We put our contact information on one website who immediately called and wanted to setup an hour long phone call.
Panic. Fear. Terror.
What would they ask? What should we be prepared to do or not do? We figured the phone call opener was going to be either:
- Why Do You Want to Be Parents?
- Why Would You Be a Good Parent?
So I did what I do best.....made a list......and Jon and I started thoughtfully thinking of reasons. It is with some embarrassment that I share this list with you, but we also want our baby to know how deeply we thought about these questions and what qualifications we used to determine our ability to parent:
Why Do You Want to Be Parents?
- Both have a desire to share with a child all the wonderful things the world can offer
- Both have the desire to be a part of something bigger than ourselves.
- Experience as a couple, doing one of the most important things you can do in life (have a child).
- To play an active part in guiding and nurturing another human being to their potential.
- Would love to pass on our life lessons to a future generation. Our child will see that a more peaceful, loving world starts through parents who teach their children these values.
- From early on, we both agreed that life is never measured by material things (jobs/money), but instead measured by the relationships you have and create. We believe we could create a meaningful relationship with our child.
Why Would You Be Good Parents?
- We both have lived a life where we have learned the meaning of “unconditional love” and know we could provide that for our child.
- REPEAT ALERT - From early on, we both agreed that life is never measured by material things (jobs/money), but instead measured by the relationships you have and create. We believe we could create a meaningful relationship with our child.
- Both have friends and family who are supportive of our decisions and would be actively involved in our child’s life.
- We have the means to provide a child with a stable, loving environment.
- We have first hand experience with showing a child how important it is to be who you are and allow them express themselves in the healthiest way possible.
July 16, 2010
Time - A Gay Man's Worst Enemy
Intermingled with all of our talks and question answering, Jon and I both talked about our time lines. This is another way of saying, what would our cutoff age be before we gave up trying to adopt a child? Jon's timeline was more forgiving than mine. Call it ageism, but I wanted to forgo the embarrassment of being the geriatric man who has to be wheeled to his son or daughter's college graduation.
Jon is currently 33 years, 1 month, and 26 days old. He would adopt a newborn baby until he was 42. Let's see where that puts him in the timeline of our baby if we don't adopt until he is 42:
Jon's Age When the Baby Graduates High School: 60
Jon's Age When the Baby Graduates College: 65
Jon's Age When the Baby Marries: 70
Jon's Age When the Baby Has Babies: 72
I am a young 31 years, 4 months, and 26 days old. I only want to adopt a baby up until I am 35. Let's see where that puts me in the timeline of our baby if we don't adopt until I am 35:
My Age When the Baby Graduates High School: 53
My Age When the Baby Graduates College: 58
My Age When the Baby Marries: 63
My Age When the Baby Has Babies: 65
There is a 7 year difference between my age and Jon's age. 7 years is a long time....ask a dog, that is one human year in their life. That is why we both agreed to start now, when we are still young and don't feel pressured to meet our timelines. This way feels more natural, more organic.
There is one thing we do agree on with time lines, once the adoption process starts (from our very first call to an agency), we are looking at about a 3 year window before we stop pursuing. There is only so much rejection a person can take before they have to move on.
July 6, 2010
Open Adoption - What Is It and Why Would We Choose It?
What this means is that a birth mother (and possibly birth father) will be solely responsible for deciding who their baby goes to. Meaning, as long as each couple or single passes the agency's strict requirements and make it into the pool of viable candidates, they could be selected by the birth parents. Most agencies don't let the birth mother select until she is 6 or 7 months pregnant, but it is possible that they don't decide to give the baby up for adoption until after they have given birth.
I imagine an after birth call going like this:
Agency: "Hello Keith and Jon, a birth mother selected you in TX. She just gave birth and you can come pick the baby up if you would like."
Jon: (silence)
Keith: (chokes on mouthful of Green Beans he is eating for dinner)
Jon: (Begins Heimlich Maneuver)
This isn't as uncommon as you would think. Still, the choice is up to the birth parents.
Some people might think this creates huge complications for us and the baby. But if you think about it, I mean really think about it, it is what is best for the baby for a couple of reasons:
- We get 100% custody of the baby.
- We make an agreement for the amount of visitations and contact the child and birth parents will have. Both parties have to agree. This normally involves 2-4 visits a year and pictures twice a year (or so).
- The baby never questions where they came from. There is no soul searching journey to find their birth parents who may have intentionally tried to avoid them by doing a closed, State adoption.
- If the baby questions their birth parent's love, we can explain the inevitable horror of having to remove the birth mother's baby from her arms and how her heart looked as if it had broken into 5 million pieces.
- We will know what kind of /problems/issues/diseases the baby is prone to based on the birth parents medical history which we can ask about at anytime.....to the actual source.....the birth parents.
- The birth parents have the peace of mind of knowing and seeing that they made the best decision they could be seeing how cared and loved the baby is.
July 1, 2010
Maybe Baby?
We were driving home from Jon's parent's condo in IA and my sister called and broke the news, she was pregnant. After congratulating her and hanging up......BAM!!! It was like I ran full-force into a brick wall! My sister was grown-up and made a grown-up decision to be a mother, meanwhile it seemed like Jon and I were just playing house waiting to be grown-ups. And then it hit me, it was like the Fertility Gods were working overtime and it wasn't just my sister who had grown-up.....everyone was growing up. Suddenly I realized, the past 3 months could be summarized as babies, babies, babies! When I really thought about it, EVERYONE I knew was having babies.
And amongst all of the joy and pure elation, Jon and I could both feel an incredible sense of sadness swirling around inside of us. It felt so wrong and so selfish to be jealous at such a significant crossroads of our closest friend's and family's lives. But we couldn't shake the feeling no matter where we went. I blame my inability to shake the blues on the baby at Ruby Tuesday's who kept peek-a-booing with me, or the dad wiping the ice cream off his son's chin at Dairy Queen, or the JIF peanut butter commercial that made me cry (which I thankfully was able to conceal from Jon) where the little girl surprises her dad with a sandwich.
And then we talked and talked and then talked some more. And amongst all the talking came the questions. Would Jon and I ever experience the joys of parenthood? Even if we could navigate the laws and limitations of gay adoption, could we handle the stigma of being two men with a baby? Could we handle watching our child stigmatized as the boy or girl with "the two dads?" This decision would forever impact all three of our lives. No trip to Applebee's, plane ride, or parent teacher conference would go unnoticed by somebody in our immediate vicinity ever again. When Jon and I want to "blend," for the most part we can. But if we have a baby in tow, we would need to master a tactful answer to the inevitable question asked by every stranger we would encounter as they coo and ogle our baby....."where's mommy?" These are things most people don't ever have to think about, but they are thoughts that consumed us......or maybe just consumed me.
And then we answered those questions and came to a decision, which surprised us both. At the end of the day, giving a child a great life who might of otherwise had a terrible life, experiencing the joys of parenthood, having love and support from family and friends, and proving our skeptics wrong (that two loving people, despite their situation, CAN be phenomenal parents) pointed us towards the path to becoming parents.
So, let the journey begin. The process is being documented not to see how many hits we can receive or to gain notoriety, but to give our child, may we be lucky enough to get one, a journal to show them how hard we fought to get them. So that when that moment arises where the stigma of being the kid with "the two dads" catches up to them and they question why they couldn't have gotten more "normal" parents, they know our decision to bring them into our life was not light-hearted, but the most important decision we ever made and came from a place of undying love.