S2E73 INTERVIEW WITH ADOPTEE & AUTHOR PAIGE STRICKLAND - podcast episode cover

S2E73 INTERVIEW WITH ADOPTEE & AUTHOR PAIGE STRICKLAND

Jul 25, 20231 hrSeason 2Ep. 73
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Episode description

Paige Adams Strickland is a teacher and writer from Cincinnati, Ohio. She is an adoptee in reunion from the Baby-Scoop-Era who searched and found her biological family in the 1980s.

Paige has written books and also film and play reviews, found on her WordPress blog, as a way to elevate the voices and talents of members of the adoption constellation.

Her two memoirs about being adopted are AKIN TO THE TRUTH and AFTER THE TRUTH. She has a work in progress with a working title of BORN ADOPTED & FINDING MY TRUTH. Born Adopted is geared toward teen and young adult readers.

She is married with two daughters, three grandchildren and four spoiled-rotten cats.

Paige’s Links: https://wordpress.com/view/stricklandp.wordpress.com

naapunited.org 

Amazon links to books:

Akin to the Truth: https://a.co/d/4Tu1JCC

After the Truth: https://a.co/d/5uIJSGi


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. Hey there Karma crew. Thanks for joining me on the 100th episode of Mind Your Own Karma. As of the date of this recording, Mind Your Own Karma has been listened to in 46 countries from all. Over the world. My mission when starting Season 2 was to bring the adoption subject to the world and educate the world about adoption.

And we are doing it. So thank you for your support, thank you for listening, and thank you for continuing to support me and this podcast. Now I'm going to jump right in and tell you a little bit about my guest today, Paige. Adam Strickland is a teacher and writer from Cincinnati, OH. She is an adoptee in Reunion from the Baby Scoop era who searched and found her biological family in the 1980s.

Paige has written books and film and play reviews on her WordPress blog as a way to elevate the voices and talents of members of the adoption constellation. Her two memoirs about being adopted are akin to The Truth and After the Truth. She has a work in progress with the working title of Born, Adopted and Finding My Truth. Born Adopted is geared toward teen and young adult readers. She is married with two daughters, 3 grandchildren and

four spoiled rotten cats. Here is my interview with Paige Strickland. We are welcoming Paige Strickland to the show today. Hi, Paige. Hi. I'm always super excited when someone reaches out to me and wants to tell their story and say me too, I want to tell my story. So I just want to thank you for reaching out to me on Facebook, and it's just so important for us to tell our stories. Why do you want to tell your story? I'm hoping it would be helpful to other people.

Other adopted people you never know about. First parents, Birth parents, You know what they maybe would want to know about what an adopted person might be thinking? Anybody really. I'm really hoping that like you said, that we are not only educating and helping adoptees, but we're educating people who are looking to adopt and even birth parents, right and helping in their trauma and things like that too. And if it dates somebody's feelings that they've always

questioned, are they normal? Or am I the only person that thinks like this if it helps somebody to feel not so crazy after all? Yes. Or if we're all just the same, crazy. Right. And it's funny because I didn't really know that until, you know, a year and a half ago when I really jumped into, you know, the Facebook groups and stuff and, oh, that's kind of fun. I'll join an adoptee group. And then I was just like, whoa. You know what is happening?

Like I was just so blown away. I didn't really know a lot of adoptees growing up and we didn't talk about it, you know, so. We were hiding out in the open. Like, yeah, I mean, as far as I was aware growing up, I was the only one in my world and circle of people and people my parents knew and anybody in my school and. Yeah, you just didn't talk about it. You didn't talk about it. No. Yeah, you don't talk about it cuz you'll get bullied.

Somebody will find a way to make fun of you about it. So. Yeah. Or you'll get in trouble or something. Yeah. So tell us what the circumstances were with your adoption. What do you know? I pretty much know everything. Oh, this is Lily, by the way. So good. For watching on YouTube. So I was in foster care after birth. Somewhere between when I left the hospital and before my parents got me. I was 13 months old when I was adopted.

I was born premature, somewhere around seven months ish, healthy but underweight. So they had to keep me in the hospital for a time. And then I got sent to foster care. And then my parents, in the meantime, were starting to family plan. Just thinking about what to do. They were healthy but just things weren't happening for them and so they decided to adopt and they they knew somebody who'd adopted and so that's they decided they would do that too.

And the people they knew moved out of town. So it's not somebody where we could hang out and go, hey, I'm adopted too, so again, nobody around me that, so that's pretty much. They went to a foster care home. I was there among a bunch of other kids and they weren't really needing to adopt A newborn infant, so they were okay with like a one year old baby. You still look like a baby. Yeah. So you were in the hospital till you were seven months?

I was in the hospital possibly one month a day OK for long it would take a £5 or so ish baby to. Gain a couple pounds. Not be considered premature by weight. Maybe I was 4 point something. And they don't have a weight. I don't have a weight. There's nothing on any of my birth certificates about weight or time of day, which I hate that I really hate. It's like 2 little details. I would like to know a lot of things about a lot of people because I learned everything I

could. But those are two things that, poof, I guess I'll never know. So yeah, my parents were just verbally told that I was underweight and had come early. So. So why did it take so long for them to adopt you out, do you know? Well, here's what I found out after I found the family was that we're just putting pieces together based on what we know. I don't know if it's a spoiler to say or not, but my birth

mother was passed away. I couldn't go to a direct source for any information but talking to her aunts. Talking to I had a sister that she's 18 months older than I am and basically she couldn't be single mom to two kids. She was making it with one barely, but making it with one. And she had health problems. So because of the health issues still being single, my birth father just wasn't going to marry her. And there's a story behind that. He married someone else but. He was married.

No, he was the single guy, but he was seeing more than one woman. Yeah. And so she was left with no support. Everybody was helping her out with the first kid. And then it happened again, and it was Sorry about your luck. Yeah, you know. So I don't believe she was probably coerced the way a lot of birth mothers at that time were. She had some legit reasons why it wasn't going to work out for her, and even though I came early, she already had the adoption plan.

It wasn't like after I was born and somebody said, now what are you going to do because? She did not bring me home from the hospital and she had to have heart surgery after I was born. She had rheumatic fever as a kid that wasn't treated properly, you know, living in the pills and hollers of Virginia, no doctoring or not good doctoring, you know, things like that. So she had heart valve problems and had to have some surgery

after I was born. So there was another reason she couldn't take care of me. And an 18 month old and just. Yeah, no backup. So is your sister the one that's older than you? Are you full sisters or half? We're halves. We're half. And she found out about me because, you know, kids do these things. She just sort of had this feeling and one day when nobody was home, she got into a lock box in the closet and snooped. And she was the only kid in the

house at the time. She was raised as an only for a long time and got into this lock box and found papers and it was the adoption papers or hospital record or something that my birth mother had had copies of and she was 10 years old. I. Was going to ask how she was. Yeah. Wow. And she said when she confronted her mother about it. Well, I was going to tell you, I was just waiting for the right time and. Okay, you know, is a 10 year old the right time to tell? I don't know.

I think it would really kind of depend on the kid, but she got told them when she was 10, so she, my sister, knew I existed. Yeah, I feel like the younger you're told and you don't like because I don't remember being told I was adopted because I was new. Yeah. So I always think that's better, you know, than waiting for a certain time when you think they're going to be able to comprehend it. Just tell them from the beginning. Right, right.

Then it's kind of no big deal and you already know. Yeah, but you know, didn't know what to do back then about the. Yeah, I know. So did you have siblings growing up? I did in the adopted family. Yeah, I was raised with one brother. He is biological. They did manage to conceive. So he's six years younger than I am. Yeah. How was that relationship? Did you feel different since he was biological?

Yes. And I was old enough to know it because I was six when he was born, so I knew where babies came from. And so it's like, well, this doesn't add up now. I don't remember. I knew I was adopted. I don't remember when I was told exactly or having some moment of or anything like that, but. I knew, you know, when he was born, oh, this is how it was supposed to go. This was what was supposed to happen, kind of thing. This is what happens to everybody else. But it didn't happen to me.

And so that was kind of disturbing. But you know, when you're six, you don't know how to deal with that and you don't know. Who to blame? Or if there's somebody to blame or anything like that, you just you're 6 and it's like, it's not fair, is what it feels like. And being that he was a boy, I was a girl. We were six years apart. It took a long time before we had a lot of things in common. Finally, around the time he hit junior high, we realized we like the same music.

At least there was that. And some of the same TV shows, you know? But really before that he was into his Speed Racer and his dirt bike and his guy things. And yeah, it was, we just didn't have that much in common, you know, We didn't have the same teachers in school. I mean, we went through the same school district, but we just. Was big enough, We just didn't have all the same.

Yeah, I feel like it's hard enough being the only kid for a while, even in the biological family, and then having another kid come along and, you know, kind of take some of that of your attention away. But I think, you know, being an adoptee, that just totally compounds it by 10. Not having the birth story and not having the biology and the mirror and, oh, you look like that and I don't. And just so many things. Yeah, so many things.

So it sounds like you guys kind of made a relationship as you got older, do you still have a relationship with your brother? We kind of do. We still live in our own worlds and our own stuff. He doesn't get that. I'm into all the the adoption stuff. He just doesn't understand. I don't expect him to understand because it didn't happen to him, you know? But we have different careers, Different again. Music's about the only thing we can agree on, and we're both

kind of in a situation now. My our mom that raised us, birthed him and raised both of us. She's 93. She fell and broke her leg back at Easter time. We're having to deal a lot closer than we've had to for years because we have to start making decisions on her behalf. And care decisions because she can't live independently. So, you know, we're right coming back around a little bit. Yeah, so he's still including you and not making you feel like you're the outsider.

You're included in your mom's decisions and. Right. So you said you always knew you were adopted. How did they do that? I mean, my parents kind of told me a story from when I was a baby, you know, so I I knew. But do you know? I have no idea. I have no idea how they told me or if there was a story. We did not have that book that a lot of people had, that chosen baby book or whatever. Yeah, they just said it and that was it.

And you know, as I got a little bit older, they'd add on a little bit, you know, whatever was age appropriate, of course, really the factual information they had. Was like next to 0 regardless. So there really wasn't anything age inappropriate to tell me they were even told by the agency and it was just Hamilton County Welfare. This is not through Catholic Charities or any private place. They were told that my birth parents were married. Oh wow. It's a total lie. Yeah. Yeah, I think.

That would make it even more confusing than why they give you up if they were married. Yeah, it would marry people. Yeah. And that he had a college degree. Why would married people do that, be in a situation where they had to do that? Kind of didn't make sense. But I think maybe at the time, you know, given that it was 1962, you know, and it made me. It made them. I don't think they were lying to you because they said it so many times.

I mean it's and agencies did falsify, you know it didn't have to be religious ones that were doing it. You know that the idea that oh then I'm not illegitimate. Right, Yeah. You know that maybe that was like a thing that encouraged adoption, You know, they thought they aren't adopting a bastard child or? Something who knows, knows what they've made-up, why they make stuff up. I mean, yeah, yeah, who knows?

So growing up, did you consider yourself, or did you see yourself as the compliant adoptee or the one that acted out? I think I swung between both ways, kind of depending on what the situation was. If I really thought something was unfair or not right, or I didn't understand it, I would act out and be mad about it. But, you know, then there were other things. Sure, fine, OK. Or I don't care. Whatever. You know, it. It just, I think it depended on the situation.

But yeah, I know, you know, if I felt like just something wasn't right or something wasn't fair, even if I couldn't articulate it or I couldn't do any better than go, you know, which nobody's going to listen to a kid that does that. But still, you know that's. Yeah. So it sounds like you're pretty balanced. You were one or the other because you were an adoptee. I wasn't a kid that got in trouble. I was terrified to get in trouble.

So I was very that way. Like, I am not going to smoke and I'm not going to drink before I'm 21 or 18 when I was 18 when I was growing up. I'm not going to speed. I am not going to. Yeah, yeah, all the. Things. Yeah. So many adoptees say they have trouble attaching in relationships. Did you ever notice any difficulties attaching growing up or even later in life? Growing up, I didn't know any other way, so I couldn't compare

anyway. But I think I was more attached to my grandmother's than I was to my parents. I would say there is absolutely no trouble at all attaching to my grandma's. My grandfathers were already passed away. I never knew them but my 2 grandmas. My mom's mom, my dad's mom, I was very attached to them and they were pretty much substitute parents. And I think that was one of the other reasons why I didn't get into trouble was because I knew

that would please them. I mean, who wouldn't it please really. But you know that that was. To be compliant, it would be for their sake, nothing else. Right. So what about, you know, when your teenage years or in relationship growing up, did you see any problems there? Yeah, I mean, I had. It took a lot to make friends and feel like I had a close friend, like a bestie that took some doing and I kind of address

it a little bit in the books. That, you know, as soon as you start making friends with somebody, that somebody's parents up and get transferred and they move away or something like that would happen or we'd make a life change, you know, So it was hard and that way, you know. What about romantic relationships? I think, and especially by the time I knew better and I was old enough. But growing up thinking she was 17 now again who's married to a college degree guy and you're 17. See.

None of that. Adding up. Right. So yeah. But he listening to this point. What? Wait, what? Yeah, Thinking okay. If this happens when you're 17 guys, that's scary business. You know, it's Yeah, trying to trust a guy. It was trust. It's not like I didn't want to do things or hear about things, but. I can see that. It was like. It can't be me. Can't apply to me, right? Yeah. So that was a very scary thing.

I mean, I met my husband. We actually grew up in the same school system together, but we started dating in high school. And it's like it's the only person I've ever trusted. So one marriage then, for you. One marriage, one guy. We're still together. And so yeah. And you have two kids, right? I have two daughters. Yeah, yeah. So what was it like having kids? I know some adoptees have trouble connecting with their babies because of adoption. Did you have any problems?

You connected right away. I think I was the opposite. I was just like a nobody, taking you away from me there. And no way I'm losing you there. You are not going out of my sight. I don't know that I was a true helicopter, but I was. I was a Mama bear. Protective. Yeah. And. Still can be, you know, Yeah, I think somebody would do them wrong. Yeah, I'm, I'm coming at you. Yeah. So what was it like seeing someone biological, maybe for the first time? I'm not.

We haven't gotten into your reunion story yet. But what was that like, seeing your child? It was just amazing and I hadn't seen my birth father, but yeah, and I looked at my first daughter when she was born. And I could see him in her face. Even in a newborn baby face, I could see it was something in the mouth and something in the upper left here, a little bit. The skin coloring it. It's just I could see it. I could see it in her. I knew where it came from. And that was so, so cool.

That was my other daughter. She came out looking like my husband's people so. But it wasn't my birth people, you know? And I could see myself. And that was the other thing too, because we all have the same eyes. And I see that now I've got 3 grandkids and all three grandkids. I can see things both in myself. Yeah. And my husband and my soninlaws, too. But I can see things in my birth family and them. Wow. Really cool.

Yeah. So did you ever think about your biological family when you were growing up? more than I admitted to at the time. Growing up. I've decided I'm not going to be adopted. I'm going to forget about this whole thing. If we don't discuss it. This is going to be a secret. I'm not sharing it with anybody except the guy end up marrying, and I'm just going to unadapt myself. Not going to happen And lie through my teeth to just about everybody about it.

And yeah, and I I looked enough like the family I was raised in that I could fake it. Nobody, nobody know, you know. So yeah, just never said anything to anybody. You know, you get in these discussions with people about family history or traits or whatever, I could just sort of BS alone, you know? And that's the way I did it.

So yes, I thought about him. I'd have moments popping up here and there, but then I just sort of like like shoving stuff down in a box on there and then putting a padlock. On it, Yeah. Yeah. So tell us about the search. Did you do DNA? It was probably too early to do DNA. I was old school. It was back in the 80s, okay. So in Ohio. Let's back it up a little bit. In Ohio, Ohio's records are basically open now, unless there's a letter of rescission in your file.

But in the time I was born, if you were born before 1964, which I fell into that category, my record was open. Did not know that growing up. Wow. My parents, I think, and this is one of those where people's you. You hear what you want to hear, you think what you want to think. If somebody doesn't tell you otherwise, you make the assumption. I don't believe they lied at all. I believe they were just uneducated about the law.

They they didn't want to know, you know, and they believed if it was a closed adoption that meant closed forever and not closed but or closed until they didn't think about that part. So all they ever said was it was a closed adoption. So I grew up leaving that it was impossible to find them anyway. There's another reason to kind of unadopt and just forget about

everything and happen. Because if it's impossible, you know, I can either frustrate myself and be really pissed and be that angry adoptee person or just we ain't dealing with it and it didn't happen. So how did you find them? We were watching ATV talk show one night, and it was about adoption. It was a local talk show. Nobody, anybody here would ever have heard of people here in Cincinnati. And they had a panel and it was all done very civilly. So it wasn't like watching Maury

or any of those guys. They weren't screaming and crying. And it was sort of a point counterpoint with the pros and cons of finding people and so forth. And that's where they disclose that. If you already don't know about this House Bill 84 in Ohio says your records are open if you were born before January 1st, 1964. Wow. Husband and I looked at each other and went what? That's not what my parents were told, you know. And so that kind of was the trigger spark that got the ball rolling.

So it was 1987 at the time, and we didn't have kids yet. And I took down all the information. Oh, the birth mother who was on there was a member of Cub, Concerned United Birth Parents. And I didn't know. They had a local chapter here in town at the time. And it was open to everybody. It was not just for birth parents because there was nothing for adopted people at the time. Oh, but they were like they were saying on this talk show, you know, anybody.

And at the time, the Triad, now the Constellation. But, you know, anybody could go. So I decided I'm going to go to the meetings, check it out. You walk into these meetings with people and you're looking around like, could you be my cousin? Could you be right? Yeah. You know, you just that's how it is. And I met two friends there. One we're we're all friends to this day.

And so that's kind of cool. And first time I'd really been in a room with a bunch of other adopted people and an adoptive parent besides my own parents and with birth parents. And yeah, I mean, it really got me thinking. It really educated me and it was the best thing to do before

taking any other steps. So they told me, though, okay, here's how you do it. You write to Columbus or your state capital, send them the $20 certified check because they're raised to their money and you know, they send you a packet back. Whatever's in your file, it might be a Xerox copy. It might not be the actual documents because they still have to keep a file. Yeah, I've often thought, Gee, I should do it again and see if they send me the exact same papers, Right.

I may do that. Would that be something blow 20 bucks and yeah, yeah. So do they keep moving the date now or is it still 1964? It's, yeah. In 2015, I believe they opened it to everybody. I went to the opening of that. It was very cool, very historical, very. Yeah, it was nice just to go as a support person for other people, right? Because I'd already found my people. And by that point I was getting involved with people online with adoption. And that's how I found out about that. Yeah.

Oh, cool. But that's only 90 minutes from here, so. So I get my paperwork back. That was in April. We had watched that show. Maybe in March Got the paperwork back. As fast? Wow. Yeah. And then I teach and I've just that point in the school year, it was like I can't do anything about this till summer anyway. I don't have the time, but we'll get the papers and see what the papers just say.

I've always kind of equated it to like when you open up a bag of chips and you think you're going to eat one, the Pringle chips, right. You just a couple out of there and you think you're going to be good. And then now you got to go back and get some more. And he does. And then now you want more. And so you go back again. And that's kind of what it was like. It was like this addiction building up. All of a sudden, the more I knew, the more I wanted to know, wasn't more of a, oh, I hate

adoption. I'm going to make adoption go away. That's never going to be a part of my life. But then all of a sudden it was like now I have some power that I didn't have. So you got names and. And I got names, yeah. So my birth mother's name, of course, was on there. And what her profession was at the time, she was a waitress at the time and where she was living at the time here in town, all about 20 minutes away from where we live. And I got lucky. I got extremely lucky and it's

extremely rare. My birth father's name was on there also. And usually that never happens because either it's sort of like a one night stand thing or they don't even know who the guy is or that was a bad situation and they didn't want to name a name or something. But she and my birth father's name on there and she knew his occupation. So it's like this was not a stranger. Yeah, she knew to put on there that. Yeah, it wasn't like something

was unknown. She knew what how to fill out or provide the information to whoever filled it out and everything was correct on there. So what was that like, seeing something different than what you were told? Right. And the other thing that was on there was my birth name, but I would have been named had she been able to keep me or even had he kept me. So that was really revealing to me that would that was like.

Yeah, How does that feel? Because I I grew up hating my name because it was, it would make fun of you for it. Just people tease you. People spell it wrong. People act stupid about your name. And I just made me hate my name. And that's one thing I did know growing up is that my parents that raised me picked my name. So somehow, what did anybody call me before my parents who raised me? Was I just, hey, you in the crib or what? You know and. I wonder that, too. Yeah, I was when I got old

enough to start processing. Enough to wonder, Gee, did I have a different name before? What would it have been if I did, you know? Yeah, I was wondering if the foster parents named me something totally different, you know, and called me something totally different. Yeah, I have no idea about any of the foster part is a total blank. Yeah, I saw that.

It was just mind blowing. But it was kind of good that I didn't jump into it immediately to searching because it was so much to take in just on this piece of paper. And there was a decree of adoption with my dad who raised me signature on it, you know, and the judge stamped of, you know, of approval on it. There was a name change document that changed my name from what it would have been to what it

became. Yeah. And then the original birth certificate copy and a current functional whatever you want to call it, legalized birth certificate copy. Like, they obviously got the right person there, didn't have the numbers mixed up or anything like that. So that was just like. And so when school let out, I pretty much hit the pavement and just went downtown because everybody, everything on my paperwork was totally local to here in Cincinnati.

That's where I start. So go down to downtown, go to the courthouse, go to the Public Library, main branch, back and forth between the two. And I spent June and July, just nobody tracked steps then. But I can only imagine, well from one end, then back to the other end and back here, then back here. And that's what I did. So did you find out from just doing that that your mother had passed through not yet. Public records?

Okay I went through old between any public records that I could find and then they used to have these things called Williams Crisscross directories that would list a person's name, a current address, a profession or at least field that a person worked in if not the specific business. Kind of built a timeline for each parent to track where they had been and where they were going and just and she dropped off the timeline around 19691970 and I couldn't find anything

more about her. I was able to find out that she married but a different guy and it was my sister's dad and he married a different lady and all of a sudden she dropped off the timeline. So I kept continuing with him and I periodically check and go, well you know, maybe they just for some reason they just weren't listed one year. So I keep checking Her husband reappeared in the directories later on, but not with her. So that made me think.

But it's funny, growing up to that was another way I was shutting out adoption going well, she's probably dead anyway. Yeah, I just. Kind of had that knowing maybe. Well, there's no point in dealing with this because she's probably dead, so you know. And I had that hunch all along, but I couldn't find a death certificate so you should be able to find those too. Is not able to locate one. And my parents that raised me were actually married over in Northern Kentucky on the other

side of the river. So I I even went up across the river to Kent County and went through their courthouse and their library looking for things. Could not find anything on my birth family. So it's like well nothing happened there. They were all in Cincinnati and I even Claremont County which is 1 county over to the east of Hamilton where I live. Nothing over there. So they must have just stayed right there in town. But I couldn't find anything on her, but I found her the the guy, right?

So I wrote a letter to him, her husband or her. Yeah, the address was there. There was no phone number, but the address was there. And I had an address on my birth father too. I actually had done a drive by at his house, so I seen his car and knew that he worked for General Motors because that's what the directory said. And I also found out on the news that same summer General Motors here in town was closing down. He was losing the job.

Not the time to contact this guy because he's losing his job and though he was at an age, he could have taken early retirement. But maybe he would do that. You call it a day or maybe it'd be a I can't afford to early retire. I got to keep working now or. Maybe I'm going to move and then you'd lose the address, you know? Right. Right. But I thought, I cannot contact him here in the middle of July because he's losing his job and that's devastating. That's another kind of loss.

After 20 years working somewhere to have that happen to you, that's that's a loss, another kind of grief. So because obviously he worked in the same place for so long, he was dedicated and he stuck with things, right. He was in the same home address all that time. Not a guy does a bunch of changes tell that about him. So okay, let's leave him alone for a little while. I had the other guy's address and who my would be stepfather.

I had things work differently and wrote to him just saying and the cub people said at the meeting just tell them you're trying to find some family history information or you have urgent family business with so and so and see what what the guy tells you. So he wrote me back even though I left a phone number. He wrote me back, but okay and he said she passed away in Long Beach, CA in 1976. So my gut was right and it explained why I couldn't find anything about her because she left.

In fact, he'd left too. But he came back. He moved back. They had found out the story later from my sister. They had divorced here in town, but we're kind of together and they all decided she and my sister and her dad and the dad's brother and his wife and kids, They all decided to pack up all their belongings, leave town here and go to California. Start life over. Reboot your life. So is your sister in California? She had moved up to Portland OR by that, but she lived there for

a while. She went to high school there. So the letter that he wrote you, was it? He said. Was he gentle about telling you or was he? Yeah, I mean, you know, and I mean some of it, Yeah, it's just. Did he know about you? He did. He did. But I didn't tell him who I was, just that I was doing family research trying to find my birth mother. Well, I didn't say I'm finding my birth after I'm finding this person. And so he said she died in Long Beach, CA.

He said sorry, signed his name and put his phone number on there. Then I called him, figured out what he ain't going to put his phone number on there if he doesn't mind. So I talked to the the new wife picked up the phone and then she passed it on to him. He knew all about me, She had told him. He invited me and my husband to come over and he had some picture albums. So that Saturday we went over there. Yeah, he gave me a picture and did not know where to find his daughter.

I don't know who loses track of your kid, but didn't know where she was. He didn't know if she was still in California or she gone somewhere else. But that's the last time he'd seen her. That's where she was down in Long Beach, CA. Oh, I had her maiden name. And then he told me that after they'd gotten to California and remember they were divorced.

So she went off and met another guy and got married and had a baby That there was a another sister out there and he knew the name of the next husband who was the father of my other sister, my younger sister. So he didn't have an address. He didn't have a phone number. She got his real foggy on memory, but he knew just enough to tell me just enough and it meant I had to go back to hit directory assistance.

This was back in the day where if you made calls to directory assistance over a certain number of calls within a month, they started billing you. Yep, and we're talking 1980 Seven's money. I ran up a $300.00 phone bill. Oh my God. Which I don't know what that would have been today's money, but you know, that's what it was. Probably at least 1000. At least that's what I'm thinking. Yeah, I figured it's still less than a detective, you know,

right? I wrote to the state of California, got my birth mother's death certificate from them, which had a home address on it. Had her spouse at the time listed as the informant. And so I had a little bit more information on her, knew where to write to, hoping the guy hadn't moved and he hadn't. He was there, so that letter came and what he did. Then when he got that letter, my older sister, he he knew where

she was and how to contact her. He called my older sister, who was living in the Portland, OR area and told her he got this letter. What do you want me to do with it? I know exactly who that is. And so he gave her all the contact information that I'd provided in the letter. And then one night in January of 1988, she called me. Wow. And so you. Got it. You got both sisters at the same time then?

Pretty much, yeah. Did they let you see your 13 year old sister or we did that following summer again, once I was off work and could travel, we thought to it was sort of a bucket list. Living here. I've never been past Chicago. Let's let's take this really cool trip. This is like better than a honeymoon. Let's do this, you know? And I flew out a week ahead of time, so I had about a week with my older sister in Portland. We sightsaw, we hung out at the

house and just did house. Normal people every day, not things you know, got pizza, you know that just you know hung out with her kids and stuff like that. So just had real lifetime which was great. And then my husband came out on like a Friday or something because he didn't have all that time off work like I had. And then few more days together went picnicking and just hanging out again. And then we got on a plane, went to San Francisco for two nights just to hang out.

And just like, when are we going to get back here? Yeah, just I'd see this be tourists. Then we rented a car in San Francisco and drove down the California coastline on Hwy. 1. Like, this is like something out of the movies. See this on TV. And like, it's real. Wow. You know, I mean it was like from compared to being here, it was like being on another planet. Neither of us had seen that part of the country or the world

before. And we drove all the way down into LA and then got it had a motel lined up in like South LA. Then saw the other sister for the next like 6 days that we were still there. So how did the reunions go with your sisters then? Everything was beautiful, just completely amazing. I mean, it was, and it was very helpful that they knew about me all along. So wasn't like some secret barging in on their lives they were kind of prepared for and hoping for someday.

But being that they were in a position of being many thousands of miles away and not really knowing what to do or how to do it, and not nobody having the means to hire detectives, they didn't know how to find me. Did you have any resemblances to them or do you guys look alike at all? Or my younger sister and I look a lot alike.

It's amazing. In fact, I've seen some pictures ever on Facebook this morning looking at them and I I still kind of go, Oh my God, yeah, yeah, this doesn't get old. So you must must resemble your mom a little bit then? Well, people say I do, I don't know, I can't tell. And all the photos we have are either they're a little bit blurry or they're just aged and you or black and white and from so long ago. I can't tell, but maybe you

know. Did you see any physical resemblances or like you know how you your personality or how you move physically or anything like that? Weird little quirky things that you saw again. My younger sister and I a lot, Yeah. I've got some pictures of us. When we first met, we were both in khaki shorts and tan shirts, which that wasn't planned.

And we're sitting there on the couch looking at each other, but we're kind of like sitting a little like this, like, don't get too close here, but, you know, you know, because again, I'm 20 something. She's the age of the kids I teach, you know. So it's like, how do I approach this? You know, I'm teacher, I'm her sister. I've never, you know, I'm going through. I had sisters before, you know. How'd it go with your dad's side? Did you meet your dad? I did.

I did In between all these things that went on. So back it up to that July where his business, his work, closed down and he lost his job. I waited until about September and then I sent him a letter again. He lived in town, but I didn't have a phone number because it was unlisted. So I sent him a letter, sent him copies of my papers. And so he would know I wasn't like some con artists and just said, you know, here I am and here's where I live and here's what I do for a living and hope

you're well. And I'd love to hear from you. And. And I I think I did say in the letter and by the way, you know, I tried to contact my birth mother, but she's passed away because sometimes it's like if the ones partner isn't there, then the other partner feels freer maybe or less. I don't want to get involved with that person again, you know? Yeah. So it's like, yeah, you don't have to deal with an X here. Right.

So I wanted him to know those things, that it's safe to approach me because you're not going to have to deal with an exgirlfriend or anything like that without saying it in those exact words. He did. It took him a week and then he contacted me back and we got together in October, got together for dinner at a Denny's restaurant. Then my husband went with me and I could see the resemblance with him a lot more than I expected. But of course he's sitting there going, you look just like her.

But yeah, I looked like you, but. Okay. Everybody sees different things. He saw what he was seeing. I saw what I was seeing and and that's kind of that. And he said at the time his family knew nothing about me. Was he still married to the, the lady that he was married to? He hadn't told anybody. So I'm OK. I was kind of. The Yeah, they were. In fact, they were married 52 years and they picked the wrong life, I mean. He said he said that I'm thinking that he did marry the

right person for him. Oh, he did? Yeah, Yeah, So. And he said something that night about I knew it wouldn't have worked out. And when you get married, you marry not just person, but the whole family, which is not, like, great advice. Really. Yeah, like this first piece of dad advice. Although I already do those things but. Is he still around? He passed away in 2015. Yeah, we had in a long time anyway, he said. We'll get together again.

We agreed to meet like a week, week and a half later. We were going to go to another restaurant and we got to the restaurant. My husband and I got to the restaurant and waited and waited and waited and didn't know if we should order food or not because he wasn't coming. And then he called the restaurant and said, you know, and this is before cell phone, so they couldn't message us.

He called the restaurant and they brought me to the phone and he said one of his kids had been in a car accident. It wasn't serious, but he had to go pick his kid up and sorry, couldn't come And he said I'll call you back, I'll call you later. And the ball got dropped because I felt like I shouldn't really pester him. I didn't know how true you know, that's a stupid to lie about, but still. Right now I knew that if they didn't know about me that that's a risk.

I thought he'll call, he'll call and you know, and just time went by and he never called and. I want to intrude. I figured it just wasn't right to intrude. He's got all the information. We're listed in the phone book. We are the most findable people in the world, and especially now with social media. But you know, we I always kind of made myself findable for that reason, because you just never know who might turn up. So did you guys never, never meet? We did.

We did in 2002. I'd taken my mother and my daughters and we went to see the Mama Mia play downtown. And I don't know if you've seen it or seen the movie, but it's a birth father story. Who knew right in there thinking it's just going to be a bunch of fun ABBA music and we're all going to go in dancing Queen, you know, and everything. And we, I don't think the movie had come out yet. Just the play was going around. So, you know, we just went to that. It was Mother's Day weekend and

it was the Mother's Day present. And so we made a girls night, went out to dinner with the play. I'm sitting there in the play going, Oh my God, it's birth father story. The bride is getting married and she's not sure which of three guys is her biological father. Oh my gosh. Right with her. And that's, yeah, that's sort of the premise and then you find out, but I won't spoil that, but.

Now I have to watch it. So I come home that night and there's a message on the answering machine and the last name, and it's his daughter who I knew about because I had researched and found public records. You had four kids, so I knew I had four more siblings on that side of the. But I couldn't approach them being a secret. I just felt that wasn't the right way to do it. People will do that, especially today. You see them on social media.

It's so it's so tempting, you know, you see and things like that. But I felt like I couldn't approach them because that would ruin everything. It would just ruin all my chances, you know, their people off and it was probably the right thing to do, although it was a hell of a wait. I bet. So how many years had gone by at that point? So yeah, like what, 15 years or something had gone by? I'll call you. And then 15, yeah.

And we had always speculated, well, we'll get a phone call when he dies because he kept the papers I sent or something, stuffed him in a software or whatever. You know, somebody will find him when they have to clean out his stuff. What did she call for? He came clean. She had. She and her husband had gone to a family funeral on her husband's side of the family. They left their son with my birth father and his wife's, the grandparents to be babysat while

they went to this thing. They come back. She was like mom and dad. You're not going to guess what happens. It's the craziest funeral I've ever been to. His cousin came out of the woodwork and nobody knows who he is, and he's claiming he's related and people were just freaking out. And that's when, apparently, over time, he had told his wife, but he told his wife. Don't tell the kids, though. She then knew about me, but she turned to him and kind of went

you. I've kept your secret long enough, you need to fess up. Yeah, and then he did. Oh wow. So how'd the sister feel about him not saying anything all that time? She was like, well, that sucks, but you know, we got now. And that's, that's what you have to. That's the way you have to look at it. You know, can't get back that lost time. It's no fault. After a certain point of time, you can't blame anybody. It's just is what it is.

But you know, we got now and it's not like we're 80 years old and can't do anything. So, you know, let's just live life going forward. So she had no problem at all. And she was like, hey, dad, didn't know you were so cool back in the day. Everybody's doing it, you know, Mom was on television and all these things, you know, So it was more normalized and more expected. And my siblings thought nothing of it.

It's just like everybody knows somebody from school that had a baby, or everybody knows somebody now, but not back in the 50s and early 60s. That was still like a sin. Yeah, so did you meet all your siblings, then your relationship with them again? We waited till school was out because it was May and Mother's Day. My kid was in a soccer tournament and we had we had all this stuff going on and it's just like we can't get together and do anything without high distractibility.

We can't have conversations yet. We're just, we got to get to the end of the school year and then once all that settles down, yeah, at first week out of school, man. Yeah, let's do this. So we did. I went over to their house and again, 20 minutes from my house, that's all. And we growing up in the same town, doing the same things and a lot of the same places all this time, you know, you could talk about where a certain restaurant was or where the mall was, and we all knew what we

were talking about. So that was kind of cool. Did you ever growing up? Because you're adopted. Because I always thought, what if I'm related to this person that I'm dating? I mean, that's totally could have happened to you. I think that, yeah, it literally could have, you know, I think that was one of the things that that scared me off of guys some because, yeah, I'm related. You know, what are the odds? Cincinnati's not small and it's

even bigger than it ever was. But if you live in the same places and you do the same things and you go to the same places all the time and it's a possibility, yeah, it's possible. You know, it could have been summer camp. It could have been one girl from their neighborhood who went to the same summer camp as me, and that was as close as it got in that way.

But yeah, the first things my birth father said that first night when we met at the Denny's, he looked at me and said, I've seen you somewhere before. And I said, well, it could have been a restaurant, It could have been Kings Island. It could have been a movie theater. It could have been a mall. It could have been anywhere, anywhere. Grocery store. Yeah, yeah. Or he was seeing resemblance one or the other. Yeah, so you've written a couple books.

You want to tell us about those? And then you have one in the works too. So yeah, OK, the the first one I wrote was akin to the truth. And I have to credit my husband with the title. He thought that up. That's cool and everything. So yeah, so this is about growing up adopted and what that felt like. It's kind of like being the only adopted kid in the world as far as I know, you know, and what it was like at the time growing up in the Sixties, 70s and 80s. And I have to kind of semi

credit my mom. She took the photo and then we took it to a cover designer and they of course enhanced it. And they actually reversed it and flipped it this way just because it worked better. And but that's where that came from. And so, yeah, this one's about growing up, adopted and into adulthood. It kind of cuts off with a small cliffhanger, but kind of had to call time and end the the story at some point. You know, I'm not writing War and Peace or anything like that.

And then this is the sequel to it, and it explains more about adult life as an adopted person, how it affects my job, how it's affected home life, parenting my kids, the reunion. What life and reunion is like, what Even friendships, you know, how it how it's affected everything people have told,

people have not told. Now I tell those are the two books, The Two Siblings here, and then My Work in Progress, which at this point the working title is Born, Adopted and Finding My Truth. It's a more reader friendly, young adult friendly book aimed more at like say 12 year olds on up that they just aren't going to be up for reading. You know, big long pros that looks like that they're going to read something a little lighter but still gets the message out.

And I'm a big believer in we do a lot of talking amongst ourselves and educating ourselves, which we need to keep doing because just when you think you know everything, there's something you don't learn because there is. That's the way it is, way there, every subject and but adoptions.

Part of that. It is a real challenge and very frustrating to try to educate, say the generation ahead of us, whoever's left and even people just slightly older than we are that still grew up with different values or just have a different thinking about the narratives of things and educating the kids, bringing them into the situation. And it's a little different today because adoptions are more open, it's more normalized or mainstream than it used to be.

Many blended families and so many kids that they don't live with the mom and the dad, they live with grandparents or they. It's kinship that I had a kid for a while. That he was adopted by his grandparents because the mom couldn't take care of her kid. And. But he was not estranged from his mother. Yeah. And they actually stayed together. And, you know, now everybody's adults and it doesn't matter anymore. But yeah, things like that that go on, that used to never go on

at all. This is where it's come from and here's where we are now. So that's why I thought, OK, yeah, this I'm in education. Let's educate. Great, I love it. And you also have a blog too, So tell us how we find you and all your books and stuff. We'll have the links in the show notes, yeah. But I have a WordPress blog. It's called Akin to the Truth. And I do a lot of book play, movie reviews that are adoption

themed that are there. Currently I'm reading one that is, in theory not about adoption, but I'm waiting. I'm waiting for the missing relative to turn up because. They always do, yeah. Well, I really enjoyed the conversation today. Page, thanks for just being open and telling your story and helping educate the world about adoption. And we'll have all your links in the show, notes how to find you and the links to your books and all those things. So thanks for coming on today.

Thanks, Melissa. It just amazes me how each adoptee story is different, but in every story I can find similarities as well. And I have to say, on this 100th episode of Mind Your Own Karma, the adoption chronicles how honored I feel for every person that has come on this podcast and told their story. I am just so honored to hear their stories, to be the one interviewing them and being the 1:00 to bring their story to the world to help educate and validate. Other adoptees and others in the

constellation. So if you are one of those that have been brave enough to come on and tell your story on this podcast, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I consider each and every one of you a friend. I have poured my heart and soul and countless hours into making this podcast a reality. But if I have helped. One adoptee not feel so alone. It was all worth it.

And if this podcast has touched you in any way, I would ask that you go on your listening platform and rate and review the podcast. That could be your gift to me and this podcast on our 100th episode celebration. It's free. It takes one minute of your time, and it really does help get the word out about this podcast. Thanks for listening today. And as always, take what you need and leave what you don't and cheers to 100 episodes. Oh yes, and always remember to

mind your own karma. I'll see you next time.

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