S2E87 INTERVIEW WITH ADOPTEE JACK ROCCO, AUTHOR OF "RECYCLED" - podcast episode cover

S2E87 INTERVIEW WITH ADOPTEE JACK ROCCO, AUTHOR OF "RECYCLED"

Oct 31, 202359 minSeason 2Ep. 87
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Episode description

Jack Rocco, M.D. has more than 30 years as a practicing orthopedic and cosmetic surgeon. His work has taken him to many countries and cultures, including to Japan, where he served in the U.S. Air Force, and to Madagascar, where, through a nonprofit organization he established, he helped treat hundreds of children with devastating orthopedic deformities, predominantly including club foot.


Recycled, his first book, chronicles the behind-the-scenes, reluctant, and subconscious journey exploring the impact of being relinquished and adopted during the baby-scoop era of the mid-sixties. As he eventually finds his birth families, he also finds himself. He maintains homes outside of Charlotte, North Carolina and Hartford, Connecticut.


LINK to Jack's book, Recycled:

https://a.co/d/35xLMv0


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!!


To support this podcast for as little as $.99 a month, go to ⁠https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/melissa-ann-brunetti/support⁠

Check out the MYOK website for resources, ALL episodes of the podcast, and more about me! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.mindyourownkarma.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

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Transcript

Hey there, it's me, Melissa Brunetti, the host of Mind Your Own Karma, The Adoption Chronicles. And if you have been listening to this podcast for any amount of time, you know part of my purpose is to educate the world on the complexities of adoption. And if you didn't know yesterday, October 30th, was Adoptee Remembrance Day. This is the day that we remember those adoptees that have completed suicide over the trauma they have felt from being adopted. The statistics are pretty

staggering. There was a 20 year old study that showed that adolescent adoptees are four times more likely to attempt suicide than non adoptees. Males were 3.2 times increased risk and females were 4.8 times increased risk for attempting suicide, and adult adoptees who searched for biological family are at even higher risk for psychological distress. If you feel you need immediate help, please call the suicide and Crisis hotline at 988.

These are staggering and true statistics that need to be addressed. November is Adoptee Awareness Month, and if you have an adoptee or know an adoptee in your life, I ask you that you join us, the adoptee community, by educating yourselves on the complexities of adoption. You can do that by listening to one of many of the adoptee podcasts that are available. There are many books that are autobiographies that you could read or even just Google

adoption trauma. It's time to educate the world about these statistics. If you are struggling, it's never too late to reach out for help. Please again dial the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline AT988. Hey there, it's Melissa Brunetti. And welcome to the Mind Your Own Karma Podcast. Hey there, Karma crew. Thanks for joining me on another episode of Mind Your Own, Karma, The Adoption Chronicles. Today I have an adoptee and author, Doctor Jack Rocco, on

the show today. His book is called Recycled. And let me tell you, it's different than a lot of the other adoptee books that I have read. It has laughter, it has you crying all the emotions in between. It is an absolutely fantastic book and it doesn't just talk about adoption. There's so much more packed into this book and I highly recommend it. But before we dive in, let me tell you a little bit more about Doctor Jack Rocco. He has had more than 30 years practicing as an orthopaedic and

cosmetic surgeon. His work has taken him to many countries and cultures, including to Japan, where he served in the US Air Force into Madagascar, where he established and helped treat hundreds of children with devastating orthopaedic deformities, predominantly including clubfoot Recycled. His first book chronicles the behind the scenes reluctant and subconscious journey exploring the impact of being relinquished and adopted during the Baby

Scoop era of the mid 60s. As he eventually finds his birth families, he also finds himself he maintains homes outside of Charlotte, NC and Hartford, CT Jack is a pretty busy man being a surgeon and he had to do this interview in the airport, so you may hear some background noise as he was generously squeezing in this interview into his busy schedule. Here is my interview with Jack Rocco. So we are welcoming Jack Rocco to the show. Hello there. Hey, Melissa. How are you? I'm great.

So you wrote a book called Recycled and it explains the complexities of adoption so well. I laughed, I cried and every emotion in between reading the book and I just loved it. And I'm just wondering why the name Recycled. Well, that was that came from my grandfather. You know, I had the the.

Immigrant first generation, you know, immigrant grandfather who, you know came to this country and you know, he didn't talk so good as they would say in Erie, PA So you know, he that was his word and he used it more in terms of, you know, any kid in the family that wasn't tradition, you know, like. If it was a stepchild or girlfriend's previous relationship. So it was these kids that were, you know, not your traditional husband, wife, family situation.

And I'd never heard the word. You know, we were very close growing up and you know, it's probably in my late 20s when I first heard him use the word. And I describe it in the book. You know we were. Fixing a grandfather clock. He would make cabinets for grandfather clocks in his basement. And I helped him and we were always together and we were fixing a clock one day. And he's like, you know, Jack, I think we got more recycled kids in the family now than we got our own.

And I was like, yeah, I know Papa, you know, and and I kind of. I think I kind of did the typical, you know, like society's going to pots. It's not your usual. I think my reaction to it was, you know, a little bit derogatory perhaps just, you know, I know the world's changing. It's not traditional. I'm like, I know, Papa, what are you gonna do, you know? And and that was it. But, you know, then I was familiar with the word. And I I talk about in the book when he passed away, they.

Put me in charge of writing his eulogy, which was a huge emotional thing for me. And you know when when he we were so close, I can't even tell you And you know, So I spent the day after he died just driving around my hometown of Erie and just going through all the memories of. You know I'd go went into his workshop and just looked around and found little things that he had worked on and went to the

lake where we would fish. I went to the 84 lumber place where we go and get supplies and just all these memories came flushing by. And then at some point you know, the idea of the recycled child came into my thoughts, you know and the and the kid, you know, I had everybody include in their their comments in the in the eulogy. That was the first time, you know, I was probably 323132 and I thought and I'm like, you know what, I was recycled as well.

And like I was the original recycled kid, the OG of recycled. And you know, so it's it kind of shocked me that you know, I had assimilated. I think I had a great childhood growing up and. You know, really loved them and and loved the experience. So when, you know, when that struck me, I was just like, wow, you know, it's like I kind of gave a little bit of a

derogatory feeling or sense. I wasn't sure what he wanted me to say about that, you know, because, you know, the word could be taken as, you know, somewhat derogatory. And then I thought about it and I'm like, you know what? I was recycled. And I never felt that way. And I don't think any, you know, all the kids. I had everybody write it down on a piece of paper, things that he had told them or taught them, and it was hysterical and it was hysterical and it was consistent.

You know, the thing my, my, my father and uncle told about him and my generation and the generation after me and the little kids, you know, he was just universally, you know, loved and appreciated. And no one took the term as as derogatory. It was just, you know, his getting it across. Right. The Italian vocabulary no filter. I absolutely would. Give it So what do you know about your adoption, the circumstances around why you were put up for adoption? Yeah, my, my parents were.

It ended up being pretty much the classic story that a lot of people heard. That they were, you know, young college kids, was a a brief relationship. Whether that was one date, two dates, I don't know. I didn't. I didn't really dig. You know, some things are my business, some things weren't. But you know, my mother pretty much commented that, you know,

it's a brief relationship. And you know, she found out she was pregnant and walked down Main Street of Mansfield, PA and he was practicing football on the field. And we walked this walk with her once I reunited with her. So it's kind of neat to be able to envision it happening, you know 40 years year. You know, she told him of of the pregnancy. And I don't think getting married was an option. So, you know, she did the typical went away to a, you know, home for wayward women.

And you know, which was in Erie, PA, she probably lived about four hours away. So, you know, she went away to visit an aunt, had me, gave me away, relinquished me, and then went back home. And it was her senior year, so her. Her career was a little sidetracked and she ended up going to grad school afterwards and just eventually got married but never had any other children. OK, so you're her only child. Yeah. Wow. So why did your adoptive parents want to adopt?

Do you know? Why did they choose to adopt? Mother had endometriosis, so she was unable to conceive, which you know in an Italian family with kids crawling all over the floor everywhere that was, you know, I'm sure a huge disappointment for them and you know, I don't, I know there's a range of of feelings on. You know, adoptive parents and I never had the sense that there was any anything wrong with what they did. It was common for the day and

it's what they did. And you know, me and my sister were integrated in the family very well. You know, I think we both, quote UN quote, looked Italian. You know, we had a little darker eyes, darker hair, a little darker complexion. But in retrospect, I mean, of course I did have. You know, feelings of adoption and feelings of curiosity. But you know, we were told right along you were loved. And I remember my mother sitting me, you know, sitting on the bed next to me, putting me to sleep

as a child. And you know, it's just telling me how much she loved me and how much they went through to get me and how they appreciate, you know, all those things. So you know, I was, I was on board with it and and I think it was, it was true. Did you ever remember being told you were adopted, or did you always know? I don't, Yeah. I kind of always knew. And I remember, if anything, I remember being the one who told

my other cousins. You know, we had, we had 11 cousins in my generation, including me. And I remember sitting underneath dining room tables or you know, in in the backyard and telling people I was adopted and I was the oldest, the oldest boy. And we all got along and and I also had an uncle who was adopted maybe you know, two decades before or more. And I was very close with him as well. So there was no stigma, there was no teasing that I recall.

I mean I assimilated. I was, you know, in retrospect I call probably a hyper assimilator. You know I was, I was more quote, UN quote more Italian than. Than most Italians, I guess. You know, I mean, I had the the Italian horn and the red, white and green flag T-shirts and you know, kiss me, I'm Italian. And you know, but we were, we were completely surrounded by it. And in Erie that was common. So I I loved it. I really did.

Yeah, I had the same. And I don't know about you, but in my Italian adoptive family, it's almost like it never crosses their mind. Like it's like you're part of the family and that's it. Like. Yeah, it doesn't. I don't know. I've never felt different. Did you ever feel different? I, you know, like I said subconsciously I recall you know, looking at other kids, you know, I had really poofy hair, you know, Brillo pad head, you know, was teased about that a

little bit and. You know, I also, you know, like in retrospect I, you know, especially during my teen years, I had bad dandruff. You know, my head, my scalp was always itchy and I would just, you know, I had the selts in blue and the head and shoulders and trying to get rid of my dandruff and it just, you know, it was really irritated scalp. And then in retrospect, you know, it was I had a different type of hair that needed more moisturizer and versus you know,

I could wash it all day long. I was just making it worse. So some of those things that. You know, 'cause it turns out that I was, I was mixed race. You know that I'm not Italian. And, you know, wasn't until coming out of the fog when you know, I, I, I say in the book, you know, it's like when the dam burst, when I found my birth mother and and when she relinquished me in court, I had the court transcripts. And the judge asked her, you know, Are you Joyce?

Yes, Sir. Are you the mother of this Negro child? You know the transcript. And I was like. Who's the neat? You know, it's like it was shocking this. You're looking around. Yeah, this is the neat. Who's he talking about? Did she have another baby? Like what? You know. So you know, Then I was like, no wonder I had the hair. No wonder I had the dandruff. You know, I just kept washing.

No wonder I had, you know, like. You know, my friends would say I had a bubble butt or you know, I had some, you know, like all the stereotypes. And and my school was, was a diverse school, high school, middle school. I had close friends. I played sports, I ran track and played football and I got along great with them. I didn't have any points of contention. And you know, this is soon after a lot of the civil rights movement and race riots and whatnot, but.

You know, it was, it was just, you know, the the African American culture was just as much of my upbringing through my friends. In retrospect, I probably got along with them better than some of my other friends, which I found interesting. I was like there was a natural flow and rhythm and vibe and something that, you know, seemed to be able to understand better. So even though you had a self-proclaimed great adoptive family, you still had some

struggles. And you said in the book, I can't ignore the fact that there were significant negative effects on my life as a result of my abandonment. What were those negative effects? Yeah, I think, you know, I mean I the way I kind of try to describe it in the book, you know is by. You know, I I wrote the book for me. Like, I just, I I was journaling. I was going through a separation.

And you know, I mean I had a girlfriend from high school that she would always say, you know what, no matter where you are or who you're with, you'll always blend with them, Like you'll change your personality, blend with them. And I was like, you're crazy. I don't do that, you know? And then she's like, yeah, you do. I'm like, well, everybody does that a little bit. I mean, I'm not gonna. You know, just gonna listen to someone's opinion. I'm not gonna.

She's like, not like you. You're different. You, you know. So she sensed that, you know, you're a simulator, if you will. And I thought she was crazy. And we still are good friends today. And she's helped me through the, you know, through the book and through some of the discoveries. And it's interesting that, you know, she saw more of it than I did, even at the time.

But you know, I I think. In my mind, you know it's awful hard to you know self psychoanalyze, but you know I always did, you know quote UN quote the good thing I did, I was a people pleaser. You know I think I, you know I associated with people that my family would have associated with. I dated girls that my family would approve of. You know that I I kind of self

selected. Their preferences, you know, and and I mentioned in the book, you know, that there were, you know, there were African American women that I I dated in in residency and it felt completely normal. It felt completely, you know, we got along great. But then when push came to shove and you know, there was a orthopedic department dinner at some fancy place or whatever. You know, I'd find a date that wasn't necessary.

You know that to bring it just I felt the awkwardness of it and I couldn't explain it. You know that that division between my preferences and other people's preferences, and I do think it was palpable once again in retrospect. I mean, I do think there is inner subconscious workings that identify your kind, your tribe to. You. And you know, you, you, you sense the things that are similar. You sense the things that are different.

And then there's those social pressures, You know, there's your, your natural, you know, your natural preferences and then your social preferences. And I mean, I was heavily dominated by my social pressures. Yeah, I complied. I I You know. Was a quote, UN quote, good kid. I did everything I was told. I went to, you know, you got to find yourself a nice Italian girl, a nice girl, you know. And I'm sure we all have that to

a certain extent. But I mean, to me that was, you know, a really huge regret, if you will, that, you know, there were plenty of people that I got along with, had good relationships with, but the social pressures kept me from ever kicking it up a notch. Went back to, you know, all my parents like her, my she gets along with my grandparents, she just those kinds of things. But it it was always a push pull for me. Yeah, definitely.

Even though, like culturally and academically and socially, you know, like what I put into the nurture category, you know, from the standpoint of nurture, that's all I had was my nurture. You know I didn't have natural Jack, if you will. That I was off balance in the nature nurture department, heavily in favor of nurture and what I was taught and what I was expected to do under these constraints.

I felt this pull, this whatever, even me going to college, me doing the travelling and you know, I left home and always loved my home. We would always go home, but I was always looking for more during the service. I went to Japan. I was. You know, everything was was, you know, it was an exciting life in a lot of ways, but it was an unfulfilling life, I would say in a lot of respects, not completely, but you know, to an extent. Right.

And it seemed like you excelled in everything you, you know, you try to do like school and you know, like you were good at sports and everything that that kind of they were expecting. You excelled in all those areas. So in a way you kind of feel like, oh, well, I must be going in the right direction because these things are all kind of working for me. But at the same time, internally you're like something's off.

Yeah. And like I said, relationships were always a struggle for me. You know, it's like I would start dating someone and I'm like, she's nice. I like, you know, it was I I really had a commitment issue. I had a. You know, I think it was somewhat of a cognitive dissonance between what I was looking for and what I thought I was looking for and what I was

finding. And, you know, so I I think, you know, even with my marriage and subsequent divorce, and, you know, I mean, I look back at that as a huge failure on my part. I look back at that as a huge embarrassment, a huge, you know, I mean, in a lot of ways I had the perfect life. And I I mean, I guess if anything, you know, some of the comments on the book or you know, someone wrote and and they defended me.

They said some might look at this and say he's he's, you know, into himself, he's whatever. Narcissist. I'm bragging about my accomplishments, if you will. But I think it was more I picked the stories that I wanted to talk about and I wanted to portray it as despite the fact that everything was so great. That the family was great, you know, and I think it's, you know, one of like the bigger you are, the harder the bigger they are, the harder they fall, you know, all these successes and

all this wonderful stuff. And then when, you know, my, my wife actually initiated the, the search for my birth mother, I wasn't interested. I had a, you know, I had an event when I was in when I was 31. I was in residency. And I had a blind date. And she was also adopted. And she was the one who first started blowing away the fog. And she's like, you need to read Betty Jean Lifton. Jordan adopted himself.

And I freaking hate that book. I That book just knocked me into a funk that I'd never experienced. And then I buried it again. I went voluntarily, went back in the fog. And during that time I tried to find my mother. And then there was a false alarm so that when my wife, you know, when my ex-wife wanted to initiate it, you know, we were recently married and she was pregnant soon after the marriage. You know, she did the right thing as a mom.

And she's like, don't you wanna find your birth mother? And I'm like, no, 'cause it was horrible for me the first time. I just was. I said I I'm too busy to do this stuff. I don't have time for all this emotion. Right. And so she didn't. She's like, well, don't you wanna find your medical history? I'm like, no, I'm healthy. I'm 32 years old. I don't know, I was probably 40 at the time, 40 years old. I I'm, I'm healthy. I don't have anything. I, you know.

And what about the kids? Like, no, no, no, no, no no. And then eventually she was like, what if I get the paperwork, You know, this went over. Get the paperwork and fill it out where you sign it. So I'm like, sure, whatever, you know, And I didn't think it was going to work. I didn't think that they would find her. I didn't, you know, I just was. I was just trying to keep the peace. But, you know, when it did happen, once again, I stayed in the fog. I stayed in the, oh, this is

great. This is wonderful. Just, you know, couldn't have been, but it just started the process. So what happened? How did you find her? Yeah, she filled out the paperwork. Yeah, I filled out the paperwork. My daughter was born. My daughter was a little over 2 years old. And then the state called me and they said, you know, we got your paperwork, we're going to look into it. And I'm like, oh, jeez, it took you almost three years. You're not working too hard over there at the, you know.

And I said I was not. I was not. Aware of, you know, the difficulties that many people have and getting your original birth certificate, I was content, you know, you know, So when they called, same thing. I was like, really? You know, she called me and then I was like, OK, she's like, we're going to look into it, you know? And literally three days later she said, OK, we found your mother. Here's her name or address or e-mail or phone number.

She says call her. She doesn't have a problem. She sounds nice. And then the woman was like. You know, woman on the phone, she's like, oh, and it seems like at least one of your parents was African American. And you know, I mean, that was a huge thing to find out on the phone, you know, right. Drop that bomb. But you know, but at the time, like I said, despite not knowing, it was like, I knew it was like, I knew this was coming. I didn't surprise you.

It No shit. You know, I knew this was going to happen. I knew that's what they were going to say. Totally believable, you know, I didn't doubt it or anything, you know. So you know, once again that put me in the you know, my nature knew, even though my nurture had was layers of concrete and whatever rebar like this thick nurtured shell. Over top of my natural self that was sometimes a light veil and sometimes a heavy, you know, armor around it. But it was there. It was in me.

I knew, quote UN quote, knew the truth that you know Nancy Verrier's book, you know the primal wound. So many adoptees when they read that are like, Oh yes, yes, yeah. You know, it totally makes sense. And I think we totally carried that with us as well. And once again, it's buried. It's, it's, it's laid under a facade so that even though you feel it, you know it, you sense it. There's a, there's a mourning, there's a a sadness, there's a loss. But you can't describe it.

You're like, what is that? You know, when you hear, you know, you hear of this kind of wound, you're like, absolutely. You know, and you talk to other people and they're like, come on, you're a baby. How do you know that? I don't know how I know it. But, you know, similar animals have very impressive skills and you know, Monarch butterfly, they leave El Capistrano and start going north and it's four or five or six butterflies later that know to go back to El

Capistrano, yeah. How do they know they're freaking butterflies? And if a butterfly with its small brain and and, you know, primordial instincts can figure that out, come on, don't tell me that we don't have those as well. Well, that's the whole social narrative that's been put out, you know, by the adoption industry and, you know, everybody's bought into it. So that's why we have to start educating the world on what we're talking about right now. Absolutely, yeah.

So your family joked about finding under a rock, and I had to laugh because that's just so Italian, something that an Italian would say. But you talk about your feelings and you said that you felt like you didn't have a birthday. Right. What did you mean about that? Well, it it's, you know, everyone had a birthday.

Everyone has a birthday. But it wasn't until I had my kids and I, you know, Chapter 6 is, you know, the start of Part 2, entitled Nature. So Chapter 6, I get married, start my family, have my child, meet my mother, all those things. And, you know, and I go into, I try to be funny and I don't know if I succeed or not, but I talk about the the whole trip to the hospital, you know, and it's all this little quirkiness is and I mean that's our, that's our

little thing. You know, it's like daddy didn't want to go to the hospital. He didn't think I was ready to deliver. And and I was, I don't know if it was subconscious or whatever, but, you know, I didn't want to

be in the hospital too long. I spent enough time in the hospital and I could deliver a baby if I had to, you know, So maybe I was a little slower or just, you know, But then, you know, when my daughter was born, suddenly all that hesitation, all that build up, all those funny things that I did, that my

wife did that. You know, all the things that happened on the birthday before she was born, you know, me stopping at a convenience store to get a coffee and, you know, just those are all a part of her birthday, my daughter's birthday and back. And when we say that, you know, I have a friend, his last, you know, he's he's an orthopaedic surgeon. His last name is Wong and my daughter was conceived at the Wong wedding. You know, got married. And so we always joke about

that. It's like you were you were conceived at the Wong wedding, Hun and she's like, daddy, I'm sick of that story, you know. But it's those things that you know, we know approximately when she was conceived. We know, you know, there's the build up we know when we met. We know, you know, she knows, you know, stories about me dating back to my childhood and stories of her mother dating back to her childhood, which connects my daughter to us. You know, not just the birthday, but.

All those things before and when you think about it, all those thousands of years before through evolution, you know, through this family, that family, your family tree, you have a connection to your past. Whereas adoptees, you know, for me and I, I describe it as my got day, you know, and it's like my mother would say, I remember the day we got you. And I loved hearing that story and it was great. And tell it again, Mommy, you know.

But then I think about it. It's just like, but I didn't have a birthday. I don't know what happened on my birthday. And I don't know how Larry. I don't know how Larry enjoys Matt. I don't know what kind of relationship they had. I didn't know about her family. I didn't know about his family. You know all those roots that that tie you to something that intimately lead you to something good or bad?

Quote UN quote good or. Not only that, but it's like the day that you were born is probably. It wasn't a happy, celebrated day. It was a sad day for your birth mother and for every, you know, there wasn't relatives waiting there to hold you and nurture you and, you know, give you all the things that you needed it. That's not what happened on that day, most likely, you know, so it's all that wrapped up into one.

And I always feel like I got dropped off by the stork or something, you know, like I I never had a birth. You don't hear that story. And then when I finally met my birth mother and she told me the story, I remember asking her, but I can't remember the story. And it it meant so much to me to know, but I don't remember it. It was almost like too much to remember. Yeah, but. But then the story of the rock, you know, it's funny to me that I can envision that rock. Like I could draw.

I mean, if I was a good artist, I could draw a picture of that rock. Where my parents found me, like in my memory, it's a false memory. But they told me the story that they found me under a rock and I can picture the rock and like I said in the book, it's the rock is in a desert. And I don't know if that's symbolic or whatever, but it's the wide open desert with nothing around it and an isolated rock that I was sitting

under, you know? And I also think that I have memories of being in a crib in the orphanage once again. Are these false memories? Are they real memories? Are they? But that became a part of my history, you know, these false memories, you know, like in my brain, like my brain doesn't know. You know, I was a neuroscience major and you know, I try to think at that level. You know, what is this primordial new infant brain doing?

It's just been in you know it's been bonding with the mother inside the womb and hearing her voice and. Seeing visions through the abdominal wall, feeling the heartbeat, the electric, you know, the vibe, the chemistry, the I mean, just so the smells, the tastes that are you that your dirt, that your soil, you know. And suddenly you're born and it's like, boom, under the heat lamp, into the nursery, into the orphanage, this nurse, that nurse, this caretaker, that caretaker.

You're just like, What the heck is going on? You know and the point at that point is is extremely malleable and extremely like the learning that takes place in the first two years. We can't compare to that nowadays, you know, as a as a as an adult. So that's a very influential period and you know, all those inner, you know, initial learning things and I could picture myself, you know, being a kiss ass to the nurses and trying to you know. Smile or I don't know what

cuddle. Just trying to get some attention like all the other kids were trying to do in the orphanage. And that becomes your first, you know, compensatory reaction to your environment. You know that? OK, all right. This is getting me food. This is getting me held a little longer. This is the trial and error situation. Did you think about any of that when you had your daughter? Oh, absolutely.

Absolutely. And then we also did a number of trips to, we went to Madagascar on a mission trip where we were in orphanages with 300 orphans. And I mean, it was just painful for me to see this and to realize that, you know what's separating me from them, really. You know, I'm here to help them and fix their feet and, you know, their hips and, you know, just. That they're looking at me and I'm looking at them like I want to know more about you guys,

what's going on with you. It was just too close for comfort to really to see that. And then, you know, and I think we did the first or we did the trips after I'd found my birth mother. So it was. I was creeping out of the fog. And, you know, trying to come to terms. And I I put Betty Jean Lifton's book down and never wanted to look at it again after I read it the first time, you know. But of course, I always kept it with me. I always knew where it was.

I did. I still have it now but refused to look at it because it just it just disrupted me so much from this this ideal. So when you met your birth mother, is that when that shell started cracking and you started coming out of the fog at that point or? I would say probably not. I think I still tried to bury it in there. We reunited and it was fine. It was perfect, you know, not a lot of pressure.

We found it out and we were writing back and forth, these long emails and long conversations and it was just like, you know, my compatriot, I, I felt the the bond. And then it was Mother's Day where she sent me an e-mail. And she's like, you know, you know, hey, from your, your, your other mother. And I was like, you know, the heels, the heels dug in, It just got too real. I'm like, no, I have a mother. I love my mother. I can't be. We can't see each other anymore.

Kind of thing. It was me that really put the brakes on and, you know, turned tail and ran, Yeah, wow. And I said I went back into the fog for another 10 years. And, you know, during that period, it was constantly on my mind. It was constantly. You know, the marriage wasn't going well. It just was communication was horrible. And I'm like, this isn't my life. This isn't my life. It's a great life.

It's a fantastic life. I don't know what is wrong with me, what is wrong with me. And it was always in my head, and I was. You know we lived on a in a old farm we had 100 plus acres and I'm a brush hog in the field and being Farmer Jack and thinking just like who am I and all these things. So then eventually the marriage we separated and she went N to Rhode Island back home and I went S to a job in North Carolina. So it was a complete dramatic, you know, and it's like, I

didn't hate her. I didn't have, it just wasn't whatever. Wasn't what you wanted you. Yeah. You know, so then I ended up down in North Carolina and thinking, thinking, thinking. And then I decided that I need to find my father's side of the story. And I think that was the real, you know, I met the family, found out about him, recognize the similarities between me and that family, between me and my mother. And it's like, I think that's

when the fog finally cleared. And it was during that period where I was journaling and writing the book and really trying to figure it out, you know, So a lot of the chapters are just me trying to relive my life as I lived it, you know? And then I didn't know how the book was going to end. I didn't know how it was, what my feelings were going to be. I didn't know if I was going to be angry.

I didn't know. You know, a lot of it was written after Chapter 10, which is the climax of the book where? All the stuff hits the fan and you know, and we admit what they knew, what they didn't know. And and yeah, let's talk about that. So you there was a part where you go to tell your adoptive parents that you found your biological family. And the way you describe it in the book is every adoptee's nightmare. I think you know how it all went down.

But they had been keeping a secret from you as well. So tell us what happened. Yeah, you know, I mean, like, I've been going through this and I did confide with my sister about it. And we were on the same page. Like, we don't want to hurt mom and dad's feelings, You know, we don't want to. But I'm feeling like, like least. And like the nuns have been lying to them all along, you know? And I found out this stuff. And, you know, my blind date said that the nuns lied to her parents.

So I was going under that assumption. So, you know, I'm like, Lise, this is kind of funny. I mean, it's like, it's just, no kidding. The nuns lied. Of course they did. You know, They want everything to be rosy, you know. So I'm telling my sister and she's like, I don't think you should tell him, Jack. And I'm like, I'll be fine. Lise, you know, I try to be creative, I guess in my writing.

And I I talked about early in the book about a wasp nest, where I'm going into the nest and Lisa's my sister's like, don't do it, don't do it. And the wasp nest is really an analogy for me going into the birth history, you know? So we're sitting outside and, you know, I go inside to get another bottle of wine because I needed my liquid courage to have this conversation. And she comes in, she's like, you're not doing this, are you? And I'm like, yeah, at least

it's going to be fine. We need this. It's fine. We're grown-ups. It's no big deal, blah, blah, blah. So I go out and I tell it comes out and I'm like, you know, I carry. Anne filled out the forms and I found my birth mother. And my my mother's like, oh, Jack. You know, just complete disappointment. And I'm like, no, no, really, it's good. It's like, wait, I'm not done, you know? So I try to tell the story and everyone's bawling, Everyone's crying, my father's sobbing, red

faced. Just ridiculous, you know? And I'm like, what is the problem? I just, I didn't say anything. I just said that I found them and they were college kids, this and that. And then, you know, through his sobs, he's like Jack. We already knew that. And five people went to their graves with that secret. And I'm like, what secret? I didn't tell you a secret. There's no secrets that I revealed yet. And, you know, then I'm like, and then he's like, well, we had to tell everyone in the family

before we even brought you home. I'm like, what? And then I'm like, that my father was black. And he's like, yeah. And I was just like, you're kidding me. Like, I've been like 50 years with these feelings, with these thoughts, you know, 15 years of searching and after hearing the Negro child comments and all these realizations that I'm like, no kidding. I mean, I should have known. I should have guessed.

I should have figured it out, you know, putting all the blame on me, you know, and it's like and and the nuns, like these poor nuns or my poor parents with these nuns lying. To them. And they knew. Yeah, we knew. Everyone knew. Everyone in the family knew. And I'm like, it's like the Truman Show. It was painful. Yeah. So how did that play out between the relationship with you and your adoptive parents?

After that, we did the usual Italian thing, put our heads back in the sand, and just, you know, my mother called me two days after that event and said, your father wants everything to go back to the way it was. So that's what we did. And, you know, so then I wrote the book. I put the book on my laptop. I showed it to my sister, my kids, some cousin, and I was fine with it there on the on my

laptop. But then when Roe V Wade was overturned and you know, all these talking heads about adoption and just after having gone through this, like I said, despite the perfect quote, UN quote, perfect upbringing, despite the social successes and the academic and the military and all these things that were so good, I was still pretty messed up over it. And I was the lucky one.

You know, you also hear these stories of foster homes and abuse and drug abuse and and I'm like, no, this is no joke. Adoption is heavy. It is long term damaging. You know, I mean, there are good things that come out of the trauma, You know, like in war, times of war, you'll hear these great stories of people bonding together, but it's still freaking war. And yeah, there were good things. But and I'm not saying that it would have been better with my, you know, it's like we all know

that it's not better. It's different, but it would have been hugely different. You know, who would I have been? And I I refer to that, that infant that was initially born, I refer to that as my vanishing twin. You're like, what would that guy have ended up as? Yeah. It's a great analogy. Yeah. Who would he have been and where would he have gone? And you know, like this me that I have now, it's just an actor. It's a, it's a response. It's a, it's a. Survival response, Yeah.

A reflex to the trauma. It's a survival, you know. And you know, he ran his ass off and and he, you know, always worked hard and always, but he never felt comfortable just sitting still and just being him. Yeah, you know and I, and it's better if I think of it as someone else rather than me. Yeah, definitely. Now you split the book up into parts, the nature, nurture and free will. What was the purpose of doing that? I guess a lot of it was just my

some of my interests. And why was I interested? And I don't know, but I've really gravitated to a lot of behavioral neuroscientists, if you will. Robert Wright was one of the first books that I read. And there's a whole field of, you know, that genetics doesn't just give you your eye color, your, you know, your cheekbones. It gives you your personality and your cultural tendencies, your stereotypes, whatever they are. You know, those are just as genetically passed on as

anything else. You know, a Chihuahua acts like a Chihuahua. A German Shepherd acts like a German Shepherd. You don't see any Chihuahuas walking around with German Shepherd Swagger. You know they have a personality and an appearance, and they go hand in hand with their needs. Nature and nurture are not enemies. Everyone says nature versus nurture. I did a lecture recently or presentation, and I talked about that. They're they're more like frenemies or you know each

other's nemesis. You know nature and nurture need each other. They work together, simpatico. They need each other. You know your appearance and your personality complement each other. And that, to me is authentic. Yeah, like this. This Chihuahua looks like a Chihuahua. Acts like a Chihuahua. He's a Chihuahua. He's an authentic Chihuahua. You see some Chihuahua walking around like a German Shepherd. You're like that dude's faking it. He's trying to compensate.

You know he's got Napoleon syndrome. True. Now, where does free will come into this? I eventually talk about free will as that control system, if you will. You know you need your nature. You need your nurture, and it's always a meandering path. And I liken free will to the Ying and Yang symbol, that invisible line that is between the light and the dark, the good and the bad, the nurture and the

nature. You know and I try to define What I see is nature and what I see is nurture and it can be interpreted different ways. You know some are some are blends but you know I try to give examples of what I think is nature, what I think is nurture and I think the free will, you know, knowing your nature, knowing your nurture, the free will decides. And early in the book, I some of the stories like, may not make sense as to why I included them

in an adoption story. But I did think that they were all related. Like, early in the book, I talk about night. I was on call and I was dead tired. I was beat. I just wanted to sleep, I wanted to poop, I wanted to eat. I don't know what I wanted to do, but I was tired physically. My nature was screaming, you need sleep, you need whatever. And then I walk in the emergency room and I see this trauma patient with both of his legs broken, bone sticking out of the

skin. And I'm like, Oh my God, I can't deal with this now. I'm too tired. I'm just, I'm stressed. I smell. I got to sleep. But then I start going into my my nurturing. I start thinking about, OK, what do we need to do? My nature wants to go to sleep and say screw this, I'm leaving, I'm running away to home. But then my nurture kicks in. OK, what do I got to do? I got to check his pulses. I got to get the equipment in the ORI, got to call X-ray. I got to, you know, I'm going

into my training. And to me that's the point where you know my nature and my nurture and highly conflicting situations. I had to do it. I had to fix the guy. But then as I'm walking and I see him and I'm like, I'm, I'm evaluating everything. And I get to his head and they have the breathing tube pulled out and I'm like, what's going on? And it's like, oh, he's dead. And I'm like, yes, you know, my nature jumped out and says, yes, I'm going to sleep.

And then I'm like, wait a minute, I just celebrated the death of someone. But I got to sleep. It's like in those moments. And I call that my my, my superhuman moment, my Superman moment. Not that I did anything tremendous. I I looked horrible. You know the the optics of it

were horrible. But it's when that nature and nurture were absolutely butting against each other whether that be in time of war and you do something that is that is harmful, something that is selfish, something that is embarrassing in a time of war. And I think a lot of war veterans come home and they battle with those moments when your nature and your nurture, you're like you had to survive.

You just had to survive. You have to sleep, you have to poop, You have to do the basic things that you need to do. And sometimes your nurture doesn't allow you and you don't look so good in those moments. So, you know, I put that, that free will as those choices you make sometimes make you look good on the nurture side. Some make you look bad because you choose yourself and you're selfish things. And I think, you know, everyone in the triad goes through those

moments. You know, our parents are like, yeah, we got pregnant. What are we going to do? Let's give it away and run away, you know? And then the adoptive parents are like, well, we can't have our own kids. What do we do? Well, we take a kid and we pretend that he's ours. And you know what I mean? It's those moments that you don't always look so good being super.

It's not the Superman thing. Like, you know, the the superhuman means that you were placed in a situation that had so much force, so much stress in opposing directions, and you kind of chose you because you had to survive. You had to get back to school. You had to give the baby away because it was, you know, just I, I I try to make that that connection between those powerful forces.

And I try to do it in a creative way by telling stories as opposed to lecturing to people because I'm not an expert on any of it other than I've lived it. I'm not a psychologist, I'm not a neuroscientist. I'm not an adoption counsellor. But I think within all of our stories we have those.

If you look for them, you got those moments that are just heart wrenching and I think just being able to subdivide them into your natural self that needs to survive and your nurtured self which needs to get along. And sometimes you make good decisions, sometimes you make bad decisions. But each had a purpose and a pull that you have to forgive yourself over. I mean it's it's just it it you can't second guess, you can't play Monday morning quarterback. You got to take it as I did what

I had to do at the time. I had to do it to just get through the next day. Yeah, I know. For me, like when you were explaining the yin and the Yang with the nature nurture and that line in the middle is free will, I was thinking. I didn't have that line in the middle. I didn't feel like I had that line in the middle separating those two. And so how messy does that get when there's no separation? But that separation of free will is actually my authentic self.

So I'm taking a little bit from each, you know, each side, and and then there's me. The actual me is that line in the middle. You know, right? You're the one making the decisions, but it needs to be an informed decision. In order to achieve this perfect utopian human existence, this, this balanced Nirvana in your life, you need ultimate and infinite knowledge of of both yourself and no one has that. You go with what you have and unfortunately we don't have half of that.

So our meandering line is do I have ricotta cheese in my or do I make them with, you know, dump? You know, it's all in the nurture side of things. Right. And you also said in your book that writing it was your therapy. Your 55 year old struggled to figure yourself out. What did you learn about yourself from writing the book? A ton? I've learned that, you know, I

was. I was inauthentic, A good part of it. And that's that's a little painful, You know, I made decisions for other people instead of me. I benefited from it. So maybe it was good for me to live for others and to be, you know, a successful contributing member of society. You know, I put F16 pilots back into the cockpit. I took people who couldn't walk and I allowed them to walk.

You know what I mean? Like, I'm very proud of my career and the things I've done, but I'm horribly embarrassed by, you know, the the falling part of my marriage and that family life that I grew up with. So close. But now I don't have it. I'm here by myself, traveling in the airport talking to you about who I am. And I'm 57 and I want to go back to 201532. I want to go back somewhere with the knowledge I have now. Yeah, because now it's it's a little late.

Well, now there's that compassion that you were just talking about. You gotta have some compassion for yourself. I know. But I'm just saying like those are the battling and you're right. That and like I said I had it good. I I am in a good situation but it still is not easy and I'm not complaining about it. You know, I I, I accept the challenge. I'm I'm eager to to improve and to move forward. But come on man. Just take the take the ball and chain off a little earlier for me.

Give me a, give me a come on man. Give me a chance you know give me give a brother a chance you know. And I mean I think like I said when I talk to my, I'm like I get why you did it but do you understand the effect that it had And I think they do. You know, I mean I'm. I'm actually contemplating the sequel. I think, you know, just, you know, me coming out to my parents and telling them that I wrote the book, Oh my God, you know, the ulcer.

I'm going to go over that like I wrote the book. And I'm not going to tell you how it works because I want to. I want to work that a little better. I'm going to work that in my brain a little bit because it was powerful in so many ways and it has been a good thing. It's been a nest thing. Like I I told my sister, you know, we'll be fine. We need to do this and at the time it did it, it didn't work out fine.

It wasn't good. But I think with a couple more years and some more tears and and hardships it has become better. That's good so. Good. So I was like to close and ask what advice do you have for struggling adoptees? Yeah, I would say, you know, and I'm and I'm not, I'm not the best at this. You know, it's like take it easy on yourself. You know the sins you've committed, quote UN quote, sins, you know, the the bad decisions you've made in your life, the struggles you've had in your

life are not uncommon. And anyone in the same situation, given the same circumstances, being adopted by the same family, you know, with the same personality, would have done the same thing that you did, even if there's things that are embarrassing to you, even if there's things that are hurtful to you, and then also just listen to that inner voice, like the, like I said, that instinct voice that brings those butterflies back. You have that. But just listen to it. Be you.

Be you as best you can. And you're gonna fall and you're gonna fail and you're gonna make mistakes. But it's not a mistake. It's a correction. You're like, oh, that was. That's not the person I need to hang out with. You know that's not the job I need. And unfortunately, we do this back and forth much more than most. Our trial and error has no road map. But listen to it. When you find success, go with it. Don't punish yourself more by

not going with your feelings. If there's someone that makes you feel good, if there's someone that makes you feel whole, if there's someone you you vibe with, you communicate with, go with it. Yeah, it's for you. And you know you're the only one who's gonna wake up with you tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow. You know, you're the only one who's with you through every chapter, every page, every word of the book. You're with you, so take care of you.

Yeah, I think that's what you need to do. Right. So where can we find your book? Tell us, Anton or Barnes and Nobles? Unfortunately, I don't. I should have a website and I should have a lot of things, but I have a website on Ingenium Books was I was very blessed to have them. They were a great publisher and they promoted the book and we got listed on the Wall Street Journal #1 Best seller for a week. So it was, you know, the book was on their website Ingenium ingeniumbooks.com.

You know, I have a page there and he said you can buy the book on Barnes and Nobles or Amazon and it's not a a fact based book. It's trying to be a a parable in a way, you know, using certain stories to kind of exemplify the experience so that hopefully people can live it. Maybe it's better for someone who isn't adopted so they can just live it. And I try to set it up and then surprise them with things, you know, it's like, oh so great, oh shit, what happened there, you know?

And then just, I didn't see that one coming, you know, because that's how it happened to me, you know, it was just like, whoa. Yeah, what I liked about it was, like I said, I had all the emotions in it. But you'd find so many adoptee books that are just so serious, you know? And it's like, it was nice to laugh at some of the things, you know.

I mean, it might piss some people off that I'm laughing about it, but it's pretty funny a lot of the spots and it's just like you got to laugh at some of those, you know, stuff that doesn't feel so good. So it helps. Oh, I know. And yeah, that does help, you know, whistling through the graveyard and whatever. Well, thanks so much for coming on today, Jack. I appreciate it. I, you know, great to meet you and and feel your personality and your intelligence. I love it. So thank you.

Another amazing adoption story told today and I just can't help but think of all of the parallel things that he said that I could relate to so easily. Especially where he talks about I have everything, why am I not happy? I think so many adoptees can relate to that sentiment. And most of the time we don't know why because of the narrative that is out there that doesn't allow us to have our feelings surrounding being adopted.

And I'm just so glad that the community is opening up now and that we're telling our stories and that we're educating the world. Make sure you get Jack's book. The link is in the show notes. Even if you are not an adoptee. It is such a great read. And if you are thinking of telling your story on the podcast, do not be shy. Send me an e-mail at Mind your own karma@gmail.com. Find me on my website mindyourownkarma.com Socials Facebook Instagram. You can DM me there.

Let's get your story on the podcast. It's time for you to do your part in educating the world about adoption. 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.

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