Adoption and finding your roots

Finding your roots is a difficult topic for those who have been adopted. In an earlier post, “Is knowing your roots important,” I said it depends on the person. Some people don’t even care that much about their current families, much less their ancestors. Some focus on present relatives and the ones that influenced their lives when alive. For others, finding their ancestors and roots is a matter of simple curiosity, but can lead to addiction to the search because, as I’ve recently discovered, it is a lot of fun trying to solve this kind of mystery. For the adoptees I know, though, finding out their roots seems to be a most pressing issue, and not just for health history reasons.

Even if they dearly love their adoption parents, many of the adult adopted people I know of have an intrinsic need to find out who their birth mothers and fathers are (or were), and also to know the story behind why they chose not to raise their child. “Chose” is not particularly a good word to use as these stories tend to be sad tales of desperation and anguish or of people not endowed with good nurturing feelings or good parenting skills. Some searches result in great joy all around, some in interest and then indifference, some result in deep hurt. There’s risk involved, but the adoptees I know of think the knowing, even if it turns out bad, is better than not knowing.

I’m not sure those of us raised knowing our birth parents can fully understand this intense need adoptees have to know their biological parents. For those who are curious, I recommend reading memoirs about this as they are very illuminating. Read an interview I did with Jan Fishler who wrote Searching for Jane:  Finding Myself. In that blog post I mention being dumfounded by a young lady who wistfully told me she didn’t have any family stories because she was adopted. We all have family stories. The stories of parents, adoption or birth, have affected them and in turn affect their children, adopted or birth. But for adopted children, half their stories are missing. And that half can turn into a big hole.

A couple I know is searching for the husband’s parents. If you know anything about a baby found in a phone booth, June 1972, Kansas City, Kansas, Bill and Angie Atkinson want to talk to you. Read the comments left below the article to better understand an adoptee perspective and to find out more about DNA testing. I’ll have a blog post tomorrow specifically about DNA testing.

Searching for Jane

 

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Have you ever been embarrassed by your roots?

I have. In the old days of the 1960s I just wanted to blend in. I lived in a very white area and my sister and I were the only darker-skinned kids in school for many years. Finally in high school we had a handful of rotating migrant worker kids, a couple black boys, and a Vietnamese boy. The area was so white it was rumored there was a Klan group in the “dogpatch” part of town. If there was, I never heard of them causing trouble.

My sister and I were very shy and found it difficult to blend in as summer-tanned acorns going into the fall school semester. Reminds me how we used to sing that ditty, “I’m a little acorn brown.” Yes, I guess I’m a little cracked, you see. Fortunately, while there were bullies galore in those days, they left us two little brown girls alone, maybe because we were quiet as mice and tried to disappear into the woodwork. We did get called names a time or two, but our dad was good at boosting our self-esteem and psychoanalyzing problem people for us. “I’m OK, You’re OK” was a book I read as a teen.

Mom never taught us Japanese while we were young enough to soak that difficult language up. I’m sad about that now, but at the time I didn’t care. That would have really made us feel different. When Mom was invited to our middle school to present about Japan to a gymnasium full of kids, I was mortified! But, I lived.

As a college student running around on my own, I began to embrace my heritage because every darker-skinned kid on campus thought I was one of them. It was nice to attend the play “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf” and fit in with the very dark audience. My first roommate was a ferocious, older black girl from East St. Louis who looked me up and down with “evil eyes” and said, “I guess you’re okay, cuz you’re not a regular white person.” Whew.

Now I love my heritage. Now it’s cool to be multicultural. I don’t get asked, “What are you?” anymore, probably because I am “old” now and paler since I stay out of the sun. My heritage comes out, though, when I don a yukata and join the obon dancing at the Japanese Festival.

kimono

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Pulling out roots

I’ll be making up my own prompts about roots for the rest of the month since the remaining BlogHer June Roots prompts seem redundant or about offshoots from a family roots theme. And I’m skipping today! Have a good weekend. Me, I plan on digging for more roots – pulling out the remaining zoysia from our new fescue lawn.  

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