S2E66 INTERVIEW WITH AMY HANSEN, ADOPTEE - podcast episode cover

S2E66 INTERVIEW WITH AMY HANSEN, ADOPTEE

Jun 13, 202351 minSeason 2Ep. 66
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Episode description

Amy is a domestic adoptee, born in 1969. She was placed for adoption at birth. She grew up in a loving family and was well cared for. She was the "happy" adoptee, so grateful to her birth parents, her adopted parents and always trying to make everyone happy.


She has reunited with some of her birth family over the past 5 years and recently came out of the FOG.


She’s beginning to realize she was living behind the disguise of a happy, positive person who didn’t know the loss and grief she was carrying. Today Amy feels sad, confused, and angry about her adoption and feels that sharing her story is being honest for the first time in her life.


Amy has been married to a wonderfully supportive husband for 30 years. They have 3 amazing adult children and 2 golden retrievers.  She enjoys the outdoors and spending time with family and friends.

 

Amy's Socials:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/amy.hansen.315080

Instagram: @aamyhans

Twitter: @mrs_ahansen

TikTok: @amyhansen27


If you or someone you know would like to tell their adoption story on the podcast (anyone in the adoptee constellation), please send an email to mindyourownkarma@gmail.com, and your story will be considered for the podcast.


_________


Due to the LONG-LASTING EMOTIONAL FALLOUT that can be part of adoption, I highly support the GENTLE HEALING SUPPORT of SMGI: Somatic Mindful Guided Imagery. For more information on this groundbreaking and highly successful method, go to ⁠https://www.somatichealingjourneys.com⁠


Please seek professional help if you find yourself struggling with some of the realizations that you may experience during this episode.


This podcast's mission is on adoption education. If you have an expertise that you think would be beneficial to anyone touched by adoption and would like to be on the podcast, get in touch with me. I love to help fellow adoptees by helping to promote your latest project or expertise. It's time WE educate the world!!


Check out my website for other resources, all episodes of the podcast, and more about me!

⁠https://www.mindyourownkarma.com⁠


Follow me on Socials!

MYOK on Instagram:

⁠https://www.instagram.com/mind_your_own_karma⁠

MYOK on Facebook:

⁠https://www.facebook.com/mindyourownkarma⁠



Transcript

Hey there. It's Melissa. Brunetti and welcome to the mind your own Karma podcast. He's our camera crew, thanks for joining me, on another episode of mind, your own Karma. The adoption Chronicles. Today, I have an adoptee story, in fact, a very personal adoptee story. Amy Hansen is on the show today. Let me tell you a little bit more about Amy. Amy is a domestic adoptee born in 1969.

She was placed for adoption at Birth, she grew up in a loving family and Was well cared for she was the happiest adoptee so grateful to her birth parents for her adopted parents, and always trying to make everyone else happy. She was reunited with some of her birth family over the past

five years. And recently came out of the fog, she's beginning to realize she was living behind the disguise of a happy positive person who didn't know the loss and grief, she was carrying today, Amy feels sad, confused and angry. Her adoption and feels that sharing her story. Is being honest. For the first time in her life Amy has been married to a wonderfully supportive husband for 30 years and they have three Amazing adult children and two golden retrievers here is Amy

Hansen's adoption story. So we are welcoming 80 Hanson to mind your own Karma today. Hi Amy. Hi Melissa. Thanks for having me. Yeah. How are you doing today? Doing good. Nice and sunny day, so I'll take the sunshine, right? Yeah. So let's just jump in. I just want to hear talk about your adoption story. What happened? What do you know about why you were adopted? Sure. So, I was placed for adoption at

Birth, pretty much with. I think the understanding that I was always going to be placed for adoption my My birth mom was in college, so was my birth father, they had dated and we're not ready to settle down and get married. So I think once the cat got out of the bag, you know, there was no other choice for her. Her parents pretty much said you're going to place this baby and your move on and forget about it. So, you're born in baby. Scoop are all right. Yeah, 1969.

Yeah. So, you know, in my whole life thinking about that and understanding what these women went through. Out support. And she was an only child too, so she really didn't have siblings that she could have leaned on. And she hid her pregnancy from her parents until I think she said about six months. Wow, so she really kind of just took that on all herself and then was like, okay, you're going to yeah, have this baby and move on.

She had already kind of made up her mind though, before that. But that was what she was going to do. Or I think she knew that was probably her only choice my birth. Father is Also an adoptee. So I haven't had deep conversations about this, you know, I don't know if maybe he said yeah. That's just what we're going to have to do. Yeah, I know. She said she enjoyed being pregnant with me but she just didn't have a choice. Yeah. So, did you go to foster care at

all in between? So it's funny. I know I was at the hospital for about eight days after I was born and I never knew, I went to foster care until I was able to get my adoption file. And when I got my adoption, I found out I was in foster care for another eight days so that was something that I had never known before. That kind of hits, you hard, you know, when you think about it, I don't know where I was. I don't know who took care of me, so that's something I deal with now.

And I think other adoptees understand that the people who aren't adopted, like, even My adoptive mom. I said to her. I was like, I was in foster care. She's like, no, you weren't. Wow. Like, but I was, I mean, and maybe she didn't know, like, I don't know what was told to To her or not. But that was in my file. The day I was dropped off at this address and then the day I was given to my adopted family so they gave you the address of your Foster. Yeah, there's an address in

there and a name and everything. Really, I've tried to because I think it would be kind of neat to just reach out and buying, but I haven't had any success with it. So love to know who had. I mean, because that's just a big especially, I don't know for me. It's a big deal because I was there were probably two and a half. Months. Yeah, my birth mother didn't sign papers till I was like two

months old. Okay. And so, I just wonder like, because, you know, I had my original name, which was Jennifer, okay. And so did they call me Jennifer, they call me something else. Do they make up a name for me? Who took care of me? Like, that's a big deal. I was a little baby. You know, helpless baby. Who had me? I've no clue. No idea. Have you tried to look into that Know What state were? Were you born in Indiana? So they just open their records about five years ago.

Yeah, see, California. They're still okay closed. So there's yeah, still not given us any information. So how was your experience growing up in your adoptive family. So I consider myself a loved adoptee, I feel like my parents gave me the best that they could given the circumstances. I have an older brother who's also adopted. Okay. We're not Directly related, he struggled more, keep us, I guess, you know, as we put these out there, right? He was the one who kind of rebelled and yeah.

Cause the havoc in my household and I was the one who was like, oh, I've got to be like, what do you need? Look at me, I'm so good. I'm going to make everyone happy and not cause any problems. All right, so, but, you know, typical childhood, I felt like my parents did go on to have a child of their own. So I have a younger sister eight and a half years, Younger than me, and we have a really good relationship. Did they need? They couldn't have any kids that, you know, it's so funny.

Because as these things have come up, that I've been thinking about. I've asked my mom and I've said, well, why did you adopt me or whatever? And she's like, well, it didn't matter how our family came together, you know? So she really isn't giving me much answers. So, yeah. And I haven't pressed the issue just because it's frustrating to me. So, Your adoptive brother, did he search for his family or ET did after I did?

So it was very interesting. He never really thought he was that interested in it and I guess he had struggled with some alcoholism and drug abuse and my parents thought that somewhere in his adoption records. I don't know what they had that his birth mom had also had some issues with that. So I think they had tried to reach and find her just to kind

of know, family history. But they were never successful, so he never pursued it. Then when I did he thought it was really cool because I did find out and meet biological family and so I bought him a DNA kit because I said, you know what for your birthday? Let me get you one if you're interested. Fine. Yeah and so he wound up doing it and he did also find his birth family, it was amazing for him to to get that done. So yeah, so did you guys always know growing up that you were

adopted? Do you remember being told or not? Know, I always knew we always knew and I even had this conversation with him recently.

We don't talk a lot, we're not really that close, but when these things have come up, and I've had questions, like, he has a memory that I feel like he can remember back to when he was like, four years old side, like, Hey, do you remember when we were told, or you were told and he said, he never remembers a sit-down either, but we always just Just knew we were adopted. Yeah, that's how I was to my mom made a book little shit.

Make it up. It was a story about how they, you know, got me and she said, I'd just be changing your diaper and I just tell the story, you know. And so I always knew like I don't ever remember being told. I think that's the way it should be and I think that's great. Even at six years old, if you're sat down and told I, you know, I done a lot of interviews and people are just like that sticks with you, right? And your mind it's like wait, what? You're not my mom.

Didn't you know, right? Yeah. I don't, I don't agree with that now, either do I. So do you have any feelings? Surrounded being adopted when you were little? And then, you know, even now. So when I was younger, I really did. I mean, just like a think, a lot of us are told were special, we're lucky and I believed all that, right? And so the story to of my parents were young and they didn't have jobs, they were in college, they couldn't take care

of me, I believed all that. That and, you know, kind of understood, I guess as much as I could. So, I have very close friends, family members. My husband, who, when I did decide to kind of search and look, they were like, really you're doing that. We thought you never cared, but looking back. I feel like, I probably always, I mean, I always wondered I always wondered my birthday Mother's Day. You know, who do I look like, is my mom thinking about me that kind of stuff? I did not mirror.

Parents, blond hair, blue eyes. They were dark hair, dark or hazel eyes. Pretty dark complexion. So, I didn't fit in with the mirroring of my family. So I did always feel out of, I won't say how to place, but, you know, one, family gatherings when they would be like, oh, look, your cousin has that of her aunt, you know, and I would always look at their faces and just any parts of them and be like, oh my gosh, you have a freckle here. I have a freckle here. Like, she's just trying to buy

like that. Yeah. Yeah, just to kind of feel like I belonged more so I don't feel like I had a problem. If anyone would have asked me and I do have close family members, who did adopt and had asked me prior to adopting, just how I felt about it. And this is many years ago because their children are adults now. Young adults and I said it was great, like, oh my gosh, they're going to be so lucky to be with us, you know? I was saying those things.

Yeah and things have Changed since I have, you know I don't know what what it is if it's because of the age. We are that you can start putting words to maybe thoughts and feelings, you've had. I don't know you know, I'm still trying to work through that like why does this all come out now? Yeah, so when I did start struggling this family member was like but you told us so many years ago and I was like, well things change. Yeah, I think you're not given

permission. And to, you know, have the feelings because of what we are told and what they were told to tell us, you know. And then when you're older you kind of get to that point where you're like you're starting to stand on your own two feet and not conform as much and then all these things start coming out and then you can look at them differently growing up. We just have like these blinders on. You don't want to think that you're not a part, right? But you don't belong and all

that stuff. So No. But yeah, as you get older, you definitely start kind of coming into your own and being like, oh, wait a minute here. Exactly. And I think two, more of a came, I've been in reunions with my birth mom and three sisters that I have through her half sisters, and I met my biological father once, and we really don't communicate because of him now.

But I think, once I started building a relationship with biological family and getting to know, Them is when I kind of came out of the fog, because I could see similarities, you know, in our features, and some just commonalities that I had with them, that I didn't have with my adopted family and then it became like almost in the middle. Like I was in this place by myself. Where, here's my adopted family that I was like, I grew up with them. I know they loved me, but I

don't connect. I don't see any genetic mirroring with them. Right. And then you have your bio Chuckle family, that you've now, mad that you want a deep connection with that, you want a bond and they can accept you, and they can be delightful and lovely and carrying and open, but you never have what you would have had if you grew up with them.

So that I think is, when I really noticed what I miss out on, and it's not so much but you missed out, but it's also like not being able to express yourself as an adoptee as a younger person. And I think that's where We're failing right now. Yes. Is these secrets when I was told my parents were poor and young and they were in college. You're like, oh my gosh, if I don't have money, is that going to be a bad thing? It's so like, there's so many things that were told to this

child to make sense of it all. But as you get older and you think, oh gosh, they were in college and they didn't have money and so my dad loses his job. We have to move, like it's going to definitely stressful thing and it was never talked about and I never talked about it because you were I don't want to be sent somewhere else if you

know, this is going bad. Well, back when, you know, we were born, it was like the adoptive parents were told, you know, integrate them into your family and so you just don't talk about it. You don't talk about that. You were adopted at all in any way, but it's the elephant in the room especially for the adoptee all the time because we want to talk about it. We do have questions and the more you try and force the issue.

Shoe. That were a part of you, the more we feel different because we already feel it and they're not talking about it isn't going to help. So, you know, I'm hoping the narrative is changing with that because we're coming out and talking about our stories and

things. And I really want to draw in all the constellation together, because even hearing like you were saying earlier, the birth mothers perspective, I have so much more compassion after doing a couple of birth mother interviews, but I'm so glad I did and I'm so glad I'm bringing that. You to the table because it is a part of the story. It's a big part of the story,

right? And like you said when that separation happens between the mother and child even meeting later on and having that reunions that Bond was severed. It doesn't, you can't reconnect it, it just doesn't work, it just doesn't work. So with your half-sisters, how do you feel about them compared to the siblings that you grew up with? Do you still have that? Bonds, or is it different? So I would say with like, with my brother, I don't feel like we ever really bonded, like a

strong brother sister. I mean, we got along, we did our thing but I don't feel a strong connection to him and I think he feels the same way. You know, we see each other maybe a couple times a year. You know. Happy birthday on the birthday stuff like that and occasionally we get together. My younger sister, we talk all the time so we have a good connection.

And I think maybe because we're girls and we're sisters, and I went through all the experiences, you know, getting married having children wait before her. And then when she had that, you know, I was one of her sounding boards. So we still have a good relationship my half-sisters you know, we're trying to establish more of a relationship. One does live about 45 minutes away and we see each other more regularly. I mean, I've see her more than I see my brother so I guess that's

that they're very open. And Accepting. But again, if you're not with them constantly, you're not going to build that. Yeah, relationship of like what you consider a sister. I mean, I have a high school friend that I would consider I'm closer to than, you know, my half-sisters yeah, for sure. Yeah. I think that's pretty much common. So, how is it growing up with your sister? Since she was biological. Did you feel any difference and with your adoptive parents between you and her?

Really didn't, but then again she was the baby, right? So, and being so much younger than I was, it wasn't like we were competing against the same type of attention or things like that. So I don't really feel that she got anything more. I know with my mom's parents and my grandparents, they really took her under their wig.

She had such a great relationship with my grandfather that I didn't have, but then we also didn't live near them when I was younger, we moved back toward to where my parents Family were later so she was probably younger and just got more time with yeah I'm guessing yeah my adopted father has passed but my adopted mom is still alive and my sister and I struggle with kind of similar things with her, you know. Mmm. The adoption aspect of it.

I'm struggling more with her, my adopted mom now and I think my sister and my adopted mom have conversations about me, you know, just like oh what she's going through right now, you know, my sister kind of Stands up for me. So my sister gets a lot of the brunt of it if I make my mom upset with what I'm going through. Yeah. But you know, my whole life growing up, both my parents always said, if you want to search we would help you. Hmm.

And so I never reached out and asked them for help, but when I was doing DNA and I was matching and figuring out all the puzzle pieces, it became really exciting for a moment with my mom and then When I did meet my biological mother, she didn't come obviously, I met with my husband and her husband, and my sister, and her husband, but I called her so excited after we had met and she got angry with me saying she wanted to go and

yeah, I got that. You know, when you get that kind of a comment and you're like, this was my whole world, the adoptee who was there to do what she wanted. And now I didn't do what she wanted and now, she can't deal with it. Yeah, you know. No. So there I really struggle right now. Like our relationship is such a

struggle. Hmm. So ever since then, or ever since then yeah you know, and it has to be hard like I understand it has to be hard but I think I mean, I have friends my husband's not adopted that I talked to about this and they can be understanding. They can listen to the podcast and have questions for me, but my mom just is like, oh, you still go to therapy. Oh, you're not better yet, you know. Like like I'm just going to be fixed.

And so I said, you know what? This has been going on for over 50 years. I think I'm going to be in therapy for a while, you know, and she doesn't reach out and say, like, she'll say, oh how are you not really a genuine like how are things really with you? How are you feeling? Like I don't get any of that. So it's so hard because you just want that for my mom, right? I know a lot of times. It feels like the adoptive

parents. Like when you going to stop talking about this when is this going to stop being an ass? Issue. I think they feel like they did everything right. What could they have done different and they did they did everything right? Most of them, I can't say everybody, but for my experience, they did everything right. But there's nothing that they could do to fix that broken relinquishment bonds. There's nothing now.

So that's going to be there but they take that on themselves and have guilt about, maybe it's something they didn't do and that's just not even the issue, right? Right. I tried to say that I'm like, you gave me a good life. I'm not, I'm not replacing you but you have to be understanding about me, learning about my origin. Yeah, and my connections with birth relatives like that is such an important thing and she had such great relationships with her aunts and cousins, and

her brother, you know? And I'm just like, don't you see that? Those are things that you got by being kept in, your family and raised by your biological family. Well, one of the examples I always say, A is what if, you know you were Switched at Birth and you took home somebody else's baby and you thought that was your blood relative and then you found out later that your baby is out there somewhere, but you still not want to know that

other baby your flesh and blood. Like I think you would even though, you know, I could say well you have a baby so it's a big deal. Why do you have to know that? You know, why do you have to find your biological?

It's the same thing. Like you just have to you know something from inside that you just have to know for most of us I say So looking back growing up even like into your teen years and stuff, did you see ways that adoption played out and maybe relationships or anxieties, or any kind of tendencies that you can look back and see? I think and my husband, we were just talking about this the other day that I was such an independent young person, you know.

I got a job as soon as I could get a job, I work hard at school. I took care of things on my own. I didn't go to my parents and say I need help with this. And it's funny because I have older kids now who are older than I was when I did a lot of these things on my own and they come to me and they ask and I'm like, and I have to remember, this is normal, they don't need to know how to do all these

things. Themselves because there are in the secure family knowing that we're here for them and we're not going anywhere where I think I felt like I got to do this myself so I know what's going on. Yeah. You know I'm not going to rely on. Anybody can do it all. Yeah. Do you still do that? You think I'm better. I'm better I used to be so competitive and I always had to be bright.

Things always had to be perfect and I think because I'm going to therapy, and because I think I've just had this revelation of, you know, how would I Student may be affected me growing up that some of these reactions. Some of these Tendencies just tend to be that survival mechanism that I don't need anymore. I'm a grown adults. I'm in a loving relationship with my family and I can calm down a little bit. Yeah. And like go, but it's just been

a little bit of time last year. My girls even said, gosh, mom, you're doing so much better. You're so much calmer because I used to go off. So at the drop of a hat. Some Things would just set me over the edge. That was there was no reason for it. Yeah, just wasn't a reason. Yeah. So I'm noticing that more so I can control that a bit.

A lot of times it just becomes a habit you know, that you keep doing it over and over again and you don't realize that it's just a habit until it's brought to your attention and you're like, you know what, this isn't working for me anymore. I write like I used to never might change them. Yeah, he's been ever like when people would almost question me like you would do for your kids, right? Did you grab your lunch before going out the door?

Like If someone asked me, if I grab my lunch, as I was leaving it, be like, what do you think? Of course, I brought my lunch. Why are you questioning? Why wouldn't I have dry? But like, and that's so silly because they're just doing that to help me. But I wanted to be independent in like could do those things on my own always, but I didn't want someone questioning me if I had it. And if I didn't have it, you know, that I would never admit I didn't have it, right? Right.

I don't purpose. Yeah. So what do you struggle with the most about your adoption? I struggled the most of I think not having openness as a child just in the fact of empathy of acknowledgement that there was a separation and that I was just expected to move on and just live my life with these adopted family and never Question it and never be told it was okay to feel sad.

I mean I know I had moments as a child, I remember like not running away but like hiding under a bed in the guest room, I just remember this one time and I could hear everyone yelling for me and trying to find me. I never said where I was, and I fell asleep and when I finally woke up and came out, I got in so much trouble but it was like I just wanted to be alone. I didn't want all these people with me when it might have just been a moment that I just needed.

Into myself and not have you know a reminder that I wasn't with my birth family or whatever. Yeah, so I struggle mostly with that. And and right now it's the relationship with my mom and she always wants to talk, always wants to talk and then we try to talk and I try to explain and I just get frustrated and upset.

So it's just more of me learning to be understanding that she's maybe not gonna be the supportive person that I would hope for I in all this This but it's really like the information that was kept and you know finding out that I was in foster care for some reason that just gets me it hits me so hard in the heart and like, you know, around my birthday and I'm like for the next, you know, 16 days who took care of me, you know.

Yeah. And so I think that's where I'm at and I struggle now with like you being in California that you can't get your records and it just makes me so mad for you and every other adoptee That is treated like that. How is that? Not your right right to have the documents in your hands? Yeah. Every like other people can read your information. Yeah. But you can't live on when Isaac was an adult. I mean, I was 18, but still 18

is an adult. The adoption agency was corresponding between My adoptive parents, and my biological mother, she was having medical issues, and that should have gone to me. I was 18 years old. Wait, nope, don't tell anybody, you know, like this is just between us, you know? And when I found that out, I was just like, well, what happened to her, is she still alive? Is it something genetic now? I'm in my 20s getting ready to have a baby and I was like hey what happened?

Do I not have a right to know what happened? You know right? Oh yeah. Oh thank goodness. I did have reunions and found out all those things but otherwise I wouldn't have right. Still wouldn't have known, you know? Exactly crazy. It's crazy. So let's talk about reunions for a second. So, how did you find your biological mother? And father, I did ancestry DNA. And I matched with my birth father, believed that one or not.

It was a username. So I didn't know his name, but then I matched with a couple other cousins. Like, first second cousins, that were actually maternal cousins. And I reached out to them because I match with my father, I knew who was I. Could separate the batches, which was good. Yeah and so one of my cousins had a extensive family tree and I reached out to her and she was like, I'll help you, I don't know what you're looking for.

So I kind of did the math. I had non-identifying information, so I knew that my mom was an only child that her, dad was one of seven, the oldest of seven. Wow. So it's a good Clues on this cousins tree. Yeah, on this tree, she knew it. So She pretty much told me who she thought my birth mom was,

and then just through ancestry. I found my grandfather's death certificate, so I was able to find her married name cuz she signed it and then we go to Facebook if after on Facebook this was fairly recent so so it was in 2018. Okay, yeah. So pretty recent still.

So how did that go? So I reached out through Messenger, she didn't see it right away and then I was like, okay, I did you say I just first off, I said, just something basic like hi. I'm not sure how we're connected, you know, blah, blah, blah, and then I didn't get a message back and I was like, okay I'm getting tired of waiting so I pretty much laid it out there. Like this is my name. I was born on this day.

I believe I have a common match with your father and I listed his name and then I said, I think you're my birth mom when she finally opened it. And I guess that portal. I don't understand how direct messaging works if you're not. Friends. Yeah. Goes into some weird. Yeah, bucket. But sometimes you don't see for years, right? So she did see it and then she did reply, right back to me, that she was so happy. I reached out to her, and that she was glad. So that all went great.

And she gave me her phone number and she's, like, call me anytime. So, of course, I called that night, right? When it happened. Yeah, we just talked briefly and it was really cool. And then we just kind of built a relationship through text messages. And email phone calls.

So things are pretty good. I'm getting to know her and that's great and so obviously she told me who my birth father was and I then reached out to him through the mail because ancestry portal, they weren't responding, I guess it was his wife, who was the manager of his account. So she never answered. I sent him a letter, he called me the day. He got the letter and was kind of Of, I don't know how to put it. He I mean, in a way he was kind of rude. He was like, okay, so I got your letter.

I can't believe that you were able to find me this easily and I was like but you did ancestry. Okay? Okay. Wow. So I was like nice to meet ya and then he like just because I think my letter was just very like hi. This is my birthday blah blah blah. I would love to, you know here's my kids. I just gave a like a little rundown of who I am, what I was looking for you know, Medical Asian. So he this rattled off a couple things like I had a shoulder

surgery. I had this, I had that and then he warmed up a bit after that, which was nice. I have a half brother that doesn't want to meet me from him. So we met one time and his, his wife came with and she said, I said, could I get a picture? And she was like, I don't want to see this on Facebook and I was like, hmm. So you're not really so keen on the whole thing. I'm so, wow, you're not even a part of this little lady. Stay out of it. Exactly. So I was like, wow, that hurt.

So when I left there, I was pretty much in tears and just so emotional because that's the last thing I wanted to do was interrupt someone's life and disrupt them and blah blah. You know, like I mean it's true. I think a lot of people think adoptees maybe want something I don't want anything. Exactly, I know and that's I mean I'm sure there are adoptees that wanted something. From their families when they found him. But I mean I haven't heard of

anyone that has been like that. It's like I just want to know you. I just want to know my history, I want to know my medical history. I don't want anything from you, but that's kind of when you were describing that. That's what it sounded like. What does she want from us? And same thing with your half brother. He's like, I'm like, I'm not really they're afraid. I'm like, people usually like me. So I think that was like, upsetting to me to is that, you know, feeling that rejection

again. So we could have Kept in touch, we made some phone calls we texted here and there and then he kind of went cold on me and I was like, oh okay, I don't know what I did. So I just wrote him another. Let like I would send Christmas cards and let not. And I wrote another letter. That said something like I'm here, I don't know what's going on. The door's always open. And you know how to get in touch with me. I don't want to disrupt your

life. Sorry if it was an intrusion but whatever and then I didn't send him a text. His birthday the following year and he sent me a text. Like, I can't believe you dissed me like that and didn't send me a text and I was like, wait, but did you stocks like did you you're acting like a two-year-old? And then I was like, no. Okay. I said, didn't you get my letter and his response was yes. Oh he did okay and then that was it.

I think that is the last time that he has responded to a text message of mine and I haven't gotten medic. All information from him at all, which, you know, I mean, he rattled stuff off the first time we ever talked on the phone. Can I remember any of it? Absolutely not. Yeah, right. So recently, it's been bothering me. So I recently did send him an

email with some questions. I had texted him said, I sent you an email, I would love if you could answer some of these questions that you feel comfortable answering didn't hear from him. So I printed out the email, I put it in an envelope with a stamped pre-addressed envelope back to me and asked him to please fill out if you felt comfortable with whatever and if he wasn't going to do it, if you could give me the courtesy of just telling me he wasn't going to do it nothing. Wow, yeah.

So I'm to the point where I need to pick up the phone but that's another, you know, deep breath hurdle that. Yeah. But I'm just like you have three grandchildren here. Do I think he had mentioned, he had like some skin cancer removed at one point and both of my daughters have had like precancerous things. So I'd really like to know the details. Yeah. You know, for my family, for my kids, right. How can you be this person?

That's so, I don't know. But Stephen the word to say, yeah, selfish selfish selfish that you aren't willing to give information When that could be beneficial to human beings whether or not you want a relationship. I'm not. Yeah, just because you tell me your medical history. Doesn't mean we have to, you know, go out and see each other and talk on the phone every minute, right. And it's so frustrating because he was adopted, like, I don't even know where he was born.

I don't even know anything, even crazier? Yeah I'm sure that's woven into his reactions somehow right to right. You know I'm sure that I got and then the Fluids from his wife and his son right to. Yeah, that's another thing. So who knows what he's really feeling about any of it, right? You know or if he's even he's probably still in the fog and doesn't even right just reacting. He's just reacting exactly F. Exactly. Yeah. Wow. But still, yeah.

But to do that is that's another level right? And I or you just want to give medical information and it was just basically like I'm just like you know, over a Day tactic number of non hurt. They text and his birthday is in May so it's open. He was right around Mother's Day. So I think he sent me like, oh, happy Mother's Day. You must have missed that. It was my birthday yesterday and I was like, who's sending that? Like, this sounded like in seventh or eighth grader, you

know, I just like what? It's so immature of a response to someone who really wasn't putting that initiative out there. And so here, now I am right? And I get nothing. So I don't know if he's just a stubborn man. And wants to just get the last word or no word but it's pretty sad that he could be like that. And I just think then died really even want to know him if this is the kind of person he is and can treat other people like

this. Like, this is not someone I would surround myself with, in my circle. Yeah, yeah, I know I'm kind of in that same boat right now, my biological mom and like, I have this something telling me that reach out again, right? Because she's 75 now, And should I try one more time? And I sent a couple of emails and they've not, she hasn't responded. And I refuse to call. That's too personal for me right now. I don't want to have that on the phone thing. So I'm I feel OK with emails

right now? And she hasn't responded and if she doesn't look at her emails that much, but right? Yeah, I don't know. I send her one on her birthday this year since she was 75, super generic. But who knows. She could be listening to this podcast and she could be pissed at me.

Well, and that's the thing too is like First came out to like, go on podcast and share my story and just became more comfortable with it after finding such great adoption, support groups and just feeling like, wow, this is not a crazy Moment In My Head, this is a real thing when you hear other people say the words and you're like, that is what I've been trying to say. But I haven't had those birds mmm.

I'm like, if someone's going to be upset with me because they hear how I'm feeling and what I'm Saying I'm sorry but that is you know these are my feelings. Yeah. And it can only help other adoptees I think to feel and even like adoptive parents and birth family. If they could just listen to the words that we say, as lived experience, right? We have the lived experience. Yeah. And not put us down and say, you know, now or this or that like I'm sorry.

We deserve it and we need to be heard so right? Yeah, the adoptive parents and The birth mothers that I've interviewed have both said when I've asked, you know, what would you tell another birth mother something? They're like, listen to adopt these on podcasts. Listen to them because this is what's happening like you need to know and I feel like every leg of the Triad has their own fog that they need to come out of.

And so we need to be compassionate to everyone as to where they're at but at the same time not let it keep us from speaking our trip as well. Well, that's not that's not fair. So do you have any advice for people seeking to reunite with their biological families? So it's so crazy. I think the biggest thing I look back at is maybe I think I would have done it regardless, right.

But I think now that I have sought out therapy and have been going to seek help and just understanding the trauma of adoption that it would be good to have a really strong support. And who kind of knows what may or may not happen? Because even with my birth mom, and our relationship, I feel like when we first connected, we talked a lot. We texted a lot. We were getting information back and forth and sending pictures and it was just so amazing.

And so here, now we're five years, down the road and some of the times, she'll send, you know, a text message or whatever is like, oh what are you doing? Take the weather's, really nice here. I'm like so that's all we've got. About right.

We're just going to talk about the weather and that really hurts to, you know, and you know, when we were supposed to originally schedule, the interview I had found out that she was in town and I didn't know and it hurt me so much to know that she was 45 minutes away and then I get a text from her like on the Monday that she got back and she was like so sad we were so close. It was like yeah, but you knew you were close. I did. No, I was close. Why didn't you mash out, you know? Right.

So you say anything back door, I did. I kind of said, gosh, I wish I would have known you were in town. She's like, well, we thought about giving you a call, but, you know, and I'm like, it hurts that hurts so much, you know, from someone who was, she seen one of your sisters or yeah? Yeah, yeah. Wow. And that's the sister that I've got. I mean, we go like she's come to my kids sporting events. I've gone to her kids sporting

events. So it's not like we haven't It wouldn't have been like, oh, Amy has to come, like, yeah, it would have been. Okay, have, you know, weird. So, I know and then I think sometimes it gets to be. And I think that this way too sometimes is, I don't want to ask to put someone out, like, I don't want them to feel obligated. We have to get together, right? And I don't know if that's how she felt like. Well, I don't want to, you know, it's last minute.

I don't want to make them feel like they have to come see us, but I would have yeah. Eddie's at least say that if you say, hey, I'm just letting you know, I'm here. So obligated to come, but I'd love to see you whatever whatever but exactly. Yeah. So did she understand that you were upset? I think she was, but she kind of blew it off, you know, by saying oh we thought about it. But yeah, you know the day got away from us or something. How far away does she live?

She's four hours away. Okay. Hmm. So you guys have met. We have mad and we've done vacations together and yeah we do a lot of things together. Sir, when we can for sure, which is great. Have you done anything with her and your sisters? Yes, I mean they've been at parties at my house in March. I have a sister who lives in Colorado. We went out there for a ski trip with her and my sister family. So, yeah, we're trying to like get to know each other better. Yeah, mechanically effort.

So but it's still, my advice would be. It's the roller coaster. It's a roller coaster. It's as much as you think things are like, Fantastic. There will be a moment that hits you so hard that will just, you know, bring you down in the dumps for a bit because it whether it's, that feeling rejection again, but it's ongoing. Yeah, I know. Yeah, I've had that a few times been blindsided. I'm like, I thought everything is good. Bye. What is this?

Yeah, it's so crazy. Yeah, you know, you feel like you can't have these heavy conversations or supposed to get along. Everything's supposed to be great. And it supposed to be like you see, on TV. Evie where rights all better now but yeah, it just put it throws a whole nother monkey wrench into the yeah, whole thing. Yeah. So the fog are you in or are you out or do you even use the term

the fog? I like the term the fog because I yeah, I'm definitely out of the fog, you know, and was there something that jerky out of the fog? Or I slowly came out, jerked me out and I think it Is after reunions a few years after reunions. When I, like I said, when I felt like I didn't belong on either families, adopt a family and biological that. I was really this own entity on my own and it just opened my eyes to, you know what, I was masking.

But I was like suppressing in my body and not know that there was trauma as an infant, you know, separated at Birth. So yeah, I'm out. I would like to go back to sometimes. I look at pictures and I think I could go back and look. I've heard a lot of fun. No I wouldn't. Yeah I know. We do say that though. So you mentioned therapy. Is there any other things that you've found that have helped you deal with a trauma? Yeah I have a good therapist. She's really good. She's adopting competent.

I would say she's not an adoptee but she really knows her stuff. That's great, the adoptee community on Facebook. I think is amazing. I did just recently meet up with an adoptees connect group in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It's not in my state but I'm close enough. And so going monthly to just be with other adoptees is awesome. I have done a writers, you know, adoptee writer group with an Peck. Yes and then I did a retreat with an Heffron. Well yeah and it was on Zoom.

I would love. Of to do an in-person Retreat? Yeah, it's going to be a goal for maybe next year to just try to get that slated because it was amazing. Even on Zoom, just having the connection and, and talking to adoptees. And that just brings a lot of comfort to me to know you're not alone.

Yeah, it does. So, if you could give any advice to other struggling, adoptees, anything else that you would tell them, I would tell them to really not ignore it, you know, not think that That you're crazy or it's unnatural to have these feelings. I have a nephew who kind of had some struggling a few years ago and he called me and you know, I said, I totally understand and then he got so concerned because he goes, I'm only 19. What am I going to be?

Like, when I'm 50 and I said, oh my gosh, you're going to be amazing when you're 50 because you're dealing with it at 19. All right, you know? So I think you need to deal with it. You need to get a good group of Port around you. My best friend from high school? She is amazing. She listens to all the podcasts that I send her way and she always has questions and she Belize, you know, it's just have someone. You can lean on, to say, do you need to talk?

Are you doing okay? Because I feel like adoptees a lot of times. Keep it all to themselves. Yeah. And you can from the outside look like you are 100% put together but on the inside, you're crying yourself to sleep at night because of just the emotions that you're dealing. With and there's just such I guess they seem like they come from nowhere and it's hard for people to understand that you could be happy in your life with

your family. You could be happy that you've met your biological family, your adopted family could be great to but yet you're struggling and sad and that's okay. But get help, get support, don't do it on your own. Yeah. When you said your best friend, would you know, give you questions?

That's big because when you bring it up, you know, you might be distracting up a conversation somewhere with somebody and then You get into a conversation and you're like well I was adopted, you know, some situation where you kind of have to go, I was adopted so you know and it's so funny how the conversation the whole vibe of it turns like right, you know, it's like oh we're not supposed to talk about this.

Yeah, you know, and so recently, I was at a family event and my cousin's wife, I was talking to her and I said you know I was adopted right her eyes got all big and she was like she was shook her head. Yeah but I was thinking no, you did. You didn't know and then I got all awkward for a second and then she was like, then she started asking me questions and she was like, I'm so she kept apologizing. I'm like no it's fine. Like we want to talk about it's everybody else.

It doesn't want to talk about it. We're fine. You know because you kept like I'm so sorry, I'm being nosy. What about this? What about that and I was like no it's fine. Yeah. But yeah it's funny how the whole tone will just turn like when you say you're adopted like right, I'm sorry and people even apologize. It's like for what are you Exactly. But yeah, it is it's so great to have someone who was there like cuz she was like, how have you been doing?

I'm like, you know, I've been struggling a little bit lately and she was, you happened. Why did you tell me? You know, I just didn't. She was, do you want to get together and talk? And I said, yeah, I would like that. So, you know, we're planning a time where we can go and sit down and have coffee and talk, but she'll be the one to like sit and listen, which is just and sometimes you need that outside the adoptee community

because we feel so great. In the adoptee community we have a Commonality and share so many experiences that are similar but to bring that sometimes to the outside where people aren't adapted to someone to sit there and genuinely care is also a really great feeling. Yeah. And to have somebody that I think they feel like they need to help or fix or like give you some advice or something and it's like, that's not what we need. We just need to be validated, right?

I just need to be validated and heard, that's it. You don't have to do anything else. Glee. Exactly. That's the biggest validation is so important. So I agree. I have to say, I have been meeting the most amazing people lately on my interviews. Unfortunately, we don't live close so I can't meet any of these people in person. Dang, I would love to meet some

of you guys. But Amy's story is the perfect example of some of the hurtful things that can happen when you are in adopt D, disappointment from your adoptive family, And rejections from your biological family in different ways. I mean, even her birth mother, not telling her, that she was 45 minutes away. That is hurtful and makes you feel like what happens, what did I do wrong? Why didn't you tell me? Why was I not invited many

times? The adoptee feels like the one in the middle that has to balance. Everyone else's feelings and emotions and at some Point you just get so tired. And you just have to be true to yourself. Relinquishment was not our fault and whatever traumas came with, it was not our fault. But what is our responsibility is healing from these traumas? And I asked this question a lot on the podcast and I ask people, do you think that you can heal Adoption trauma.

And I get a variety of answers, but I would say 80% of the time, the answer is, no, I do not believe that you can heal from relinquishment trauma. And to be honest, for a long time, I have not known what side of the fence that I felt I was on when confronted with that same question. But something happened to me yesterday that we are going to talk about on the next. The sewed of mind. Your own Karma that has made me decide which side of the fence

that I am on, on this subject. So, if you are all curious about what happened to me to make me decide tune in next week. Thanks again. Amy for coming on the show today and helping me educate the world as always, take what you need and leave what you don't and always remember to mind your own Karma. I'll see you next time. I'll see you next time.

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