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How maternity homes and adoption
'counseling' have been utilized to punish 'unwed' mothers and
deny single parents rights.
Adoption - Not By Choice
First published in
Eclectica Jul/Aug01
by Karen Wilson Buterbaugh
For some time,
I have wondered how in the world I got to this place. I have
always tried to do the right thing in life, yet the results
from making wrong choices were constantly staring me in the
face. An example, and granted it is a huge one, was getting
pregnant at the age of seventeen, which caused the loss of
my child to adoption.
Sitting at my desk one day, pondering
this question, I was struck with an idea. Since I knew virtually
nothing about what had happened to me and why, I decided to
search for answers. After logging onto the Internet, I searched
for out-of-print books. My thinking was that reading books
written by social workers, historians, and sociologists at
that time might shed some light on the subject of the surrender
of babies to adoption. So, not only have I spent the past
five years doing some serious soul searching, I've also done
some very important reading.
Let me share with you a small
part of what I've learned since then.
When an adoption takes place,
there are three parties involved: the couple who adopts, the
child and the child's natural parents. This is called the
adoption triad. Society as a whole prefers to forget the third
side of the triangle, the natural parents--especially the
natural mother of the child. Sadly, even today, the triad
is represented by only two sides of that triangle.
Thirty or forty years ago, before
readily available contraception, many unmarried, pregnant
girls were forced into hiding. We spent months in "wage
homes" as unpaid servants, unwed maternity institutions
or both. In 1966, I spent three months in two different wage
homes prior to being admitted as a resident of the Florence
Crittenton maternity facility in Washington, D.C.
Unlike the fathers of our babies,
most of whom quietly walked away, we couldn't hide the visible
evidence of our participation in socially unsanctioned sexuality.
For decades mothers of the closed
adoption era have been shrouded in secrecy and misunderstanding.
Negative fantasies have marginalized us from the rest of society.
The general perception is that we are deviant women who callously
discarded our babies. This is one of many myths that surrounds
and intensifies the pain of my personal experience and that
of hundreds of thousands of other mothers who surrendered.
Coercion, Thought Reform, and
Maternity Homes
We hear about mothers who "made
the decision to give up" their babies to adoption. Is
it true that we made informed decisions without pressure from
social workers (often referred to as "caseworkers")
who worked in maternity homes and adoption agencies?
Felix Biestek, in The Casework
Relationship (1957), Loyola University School of Social Work,
states that:
Caseworkers have differed in
their evaluation of the capacity of unmarried mothers...
to make sound decisions. Some feel that unmarried mothers
are so damaged emotionally that they are incapable of arriving
at a good decision themselves. These caseworkers have
expressed the conviction that they must guide, "steer,"
and "take sides in" the final decision. (Emphasis
added)
Like me, many other young mothers
didn't know what a "home for unwed mothers" was
until we suddenly found ourselves deposited at its front door
with our suitcase in hand. These institutions were thought
to offer safety and shelter from society's scorn. In reality,
they were punishing in nature and have been referred to as
"baby factories."
What effect did the environment
of a maternity "home" have on us? Could brainwashing,
more commonly known today as thought reform, have played a
part in the surrender of our babies to adoption?
According to Margaret Thayler
Singer and Richard Ofshe, respected psychologists and leading
experts on thought reform:
...the effectiveness of thought
reform programs did not depend on prison settings, physical
abuse or death threats. Programs used... the application
of intense guilt/shame/anxiety manipulation... with the
production of strong emotional arousal in settings where
people did not leave because of social and psychological
pressures or because of enforced confinement.
Drs. Singer and Ofshe provide
six conditions that are required to put a system of thought
reform into place. Below follows a comparison of thought reform
conditions to the maternity "home" experience.
Thought Reform vs. the Maternity
"Home" Experience
Keep person unaware.
Girls were not instructed about
pregnancy, labor, delivery; were left totally alone during
labor and delivery; were not allowed contact with new mothers;
not provided information about welfare and Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC), child support and other
government programs.
Control their environment and
time.
Girls forced to live in maternity
"homes"; made to use fictitious names or first
names and last initials only; allowed no contact with friends
and boy-friends by letter, phone or in person; kept away
from everything familiar; made to follow strict daily routines.
Create a sense of powerlessness.
Took away our money (pay phones
only); no personal (familiar) clothing; not allowed freedom
to come and go; removed everything that would remind us
of who we were.
Rewards and punishments to inhibit
behavior reflecting former identity.
Called "neurotic"
if we said no to "relinquishing"; told we were
"out of touch with reality" and "selfish"
if we kept our babies; told our pregnancy was "proof
of unfitness."
Rewards and punishments promoting
group's beliefs or behaviors.
Allowed no television, phone,
visitation or radio privileges if not following rules; scolding
and de-meaning lectures for disagreeing; harangued when
speaking up against "counseling" (reasons why
we should "choose" adoption); praised for agreeing
to surrender.
Use logic and authority which
permits no feedback.
Director, caseworkers and housemothers
enforced strict rules and rigid schedule: wakeup, bedtime,
meals, chores and approved visitation; censored mail (both
incoming and outgoing); no legal counsel; no support system.
It seems clear that all of the
thought reform conditions were present during the many months
we were forced to hide away in maternity homes.
Rickie Solinger, in Wake Up
Little Susie: Single Pregnancy and Race Before Roe v. Wade
(1992), gives us a sense of the maternity home environment:
The world of maternity homes
in postwar America was a gothic attic obscured from the
community by the closed curtains of gentility and high spiked
fences. The girls and women sent inside were dreamwalkers
serving time, pregnant dreamwalkers taking the cure. Part
criminal, part patient, the unwed mother arrived on the
doorstep with her valise and, moving inside, found herself
enclosed within an idea...
Maternity homes... served to
further stigmatize pregnant young women by removing them
from their families, friends and neighbors... these "homes"
could create an austere and frightening atmosphere for the
birth mother, whose freedom of movement was strictly curtailed
by these instant chaperones and guardians. Typically, birth
mothers were expected to help out in these homes with chores
such as cleaning, dishwashing, and so on... while the birth
mother's physical needs were met, seldom were her emotional
needs addressed...
Parental Pressures
What occurred between the time
we revealed our pregnancy to our parents and the surrender
of our child? What role did our parents play in our confinement?
In many cases, our parents sought
advice from local churches that directed them to church-affiliated
or county adoption agencies. Those agencies usually referred
our parents to maternity homes. Wake Up Little Susie
spells out the enormous social pressure parents felt:
Parents embraced the idea of
maternity homes partly because in the postwar decades, parents
themselves needed protection as much as their erring daughters...
If the girl disappeared, the problem disappeared with her.
And what was the role of adoption
agencies? How much influence did they exert in decision-making?
Did they allow us free choice or did they have a bias toward
adoption?
Social worker Barbara Hansen
Costigan, in her dissertation, "The Unmarried Mother--Her
Decision Regarding Adoption" (1964), claims:
The fact that social work professional
attitudes tend to favor the relinquishment of the baby,
as the literature shows, should be faced more clearly. Perhaps
if it were recognized, workers would be in less conflict
and would therefore feel less guilty about their "failures"
(the kept cases).
Marcel Heiman, M.D. in "Out-Of-Wedlock
Pregnancy In Adolescence," Casework Papers 1960, provides
evidence of social workers' bias towards adoption:
The caseworker must then be
decisive, firm and unswerving in her pursuit of a healthy
solution for the girl's problem. The "I'm going to
help you by standing by while you work it through"
approach will not do. What is expected from the worker is
precisely what the child expected but did not get from
her parents--a decisive "No!" It is essential
that the parent most involved, psychologically, in the daughter's
pregnancy also be dealt with in a manner identical with
the one suggested in dealing with the girl. Time is of the
essence; the maturation of the fetus proceeds at an inexorable
pace. An ambivalent mother, interfering with her daughter's
ability to arrive at the decision to surrender her child,
must be dealt with as though she (the girl's mother)
were a child herself. (Emphasis added)
Economic Coercion
Those of us who wanted to keep
our babies were warned severely by social workers that, if
we did so, we would be responsible for paying the entire hospital
bill, doctor fees, lawyer fees and the costs of foster care.
Yvonne, who lost her child to
adoption in 1968, shares her experience with an adoption agency
social worker:
My son was taken from me at
birth, against my will. I was allowed no contact with him
in spite of my pleas because the people in charge were sure
that I was going to eventually be forced to give him up
for adoption even though I had not given them any definite
promise to do so.
I finally was taken back to
my parent's house when my son was 12 days old. I went to
work almost immediately with the plan to make some money
and raise my son. My mother eventually agreed to baby sit
while I worked. I called the social worker to tell her the
great news and find out where and when we could pick up
my baby. She icily informed me that she would call me the
next day to give me the details. I remember being thrilled
that this was finally going to be over, that life was going
to go on at last, that there would be no more badgering
by this woman about my decision.
The following day the social
worker called and informed me that if I thought I was going
to pick up my son I would have to show up with money to
pay my hospital bill, his hospital bill, [our] doctor bills,
the maternity home bill, the charges for the "counseling"
she had given me and all costs for my son to be in foster
care. The meter would continue to run until everything was
paid in full, at which time I could finally bail out my
poor little baby. She said this knowing full well that on
her advice my father had taken me to the county welfare
office to apply for welfare to pay these expenses and the
application was approved.
I cannot remember the exact
amount she demanded but remember it being more money than
I could ever imagine making.
The Aftermath
In the aftermath of surrender,
when we returned home, we strongly felt the absence of our
baby. Alone, our arms empty, we grieved deeply for our lost
child. No one ever spoke of our baby again, no one acknowledged
our painful and lonely experience and no one offered comfort.
We knew we were never to speak of what occurred. We were so
shamed and blamed that we obeyed this dictate for many decades.
In an American Adoption Congress
newsletter article, "Disenfranchised Grief and the Birth
Mother," Nathalie Troland describes our experience; she
says, "The birth mother was not recognized as a legitimate
mourner; the loss of her child was not considered real."
Troland continues:
She lives in a world in which
mothers are rewarded and others punished for their fertility;
that most people failed her, that she failed herself; that
she did the right thing; that she did the wrong thing; that
she grieves, that grief is not appropriate; that she is
un-natural in her ability to take such a course; that she
is natural in thinking of her baby before herself or conversely
of thinking of herself before the baby; that she was, and
still is, isolated in her experience; that her grief cannot
be resolved and must somehow be lived with alone.
In the years following surrender,
how did the we fare without our babies? Was our grief a short-term
problem or did the adoption have lasting ramifications? According
to Birthmothers, Women Who Have Relinquished Babies for
Adoption Tell Their Stories by Merry Bloch Jones:
... most birthmothers lost
their innocence, self-esteem, and prospects... many relinquished
their trust in others and their sense of identity within
society... many felt that their most important relationships...
were damaged beyond repair. More than one in five became
involved in abusive relationships... Under the influence
of anger and depression, some set out on paths of self-punishment
and self-destruction... Many became emotionally estranged
from everyone who had been involved... About one fifth developed
eating disorders... More than one in five developed secondary
infertility. Most... remained permanently incapable of trust
and intimacy.
The Injustice Continues
I am incredulous as I reflect
on what happened. How could we have allowed the horrific act
that separated us from our children? It is difficult for us
to convey to people, who now live in a society that values
and enforces an individual's civil and human rights, how it
was when our babies were born and taken from us simply because
we were young, vulnerable and without resources.
I believe we have a right to
copies of everything relating to the loss of our babies. This
includes original birth certificates and other agency records
that confirm the births of our babies. Adoption agencies across
the country are withholding these documents, even though we
were still the legal guardians of our children at the time
those documents were drafted. This withholding of documentation
occurs even though it appears to be at odds with the official
policy of some agencies. For example, Patricia Martinez Dorner,
in "Adoption Search: An Ethical Guide For Practitioners,"
a 1997 Catholic Charities USA searching manual, states:
Birthparents also seek information
about their children and their adoptive families through
the years. Being able to obtain file information pertaining
to the time of the pregnancy, is reality basing and healing...
Among the documents found in
agency files is the original birth certificate, which in
most states is sealed at the vital statistics level when
adoptions are finalized. It is appropriate to provide a
copy of this document to a birthparent, (as long as it is
a named birthparent), at any time. The information pertains
to her and her child and in no way violates confidentiality.
(Emphasis added)
In light of this statement, we
wonder why we are repeatedly refused copies of the original
birth certificate and other agency records, especially after
reunions with our grown children.
Mothers, Not Birthmothers
Many of us reject inappropriate
terms, such as "birthmother," that have been forced
upon us by the adoption industry. We view "birth"
prefixes as offensive and demeaning. We feel they diminish
and devalue our relationship to our children. We are not breeders
nor live incubators whose only function was to give birth.
Many of us are taking back our
rightful title--we are the mother of all of the children we
have given birth to, whether lost to adoption or not. Although
we were not allowed to parent our lost children, we have always
loved them and have the same concerns for them that any other
mother would. We surrendered our children to adoption--we
did not surrender our motherhood.
Society should eliminate stigmatizing
labels and misleading terminology. Mothers who have lost children
to adoption are deeply wounded and have walked long and lonely
roads. We are searching for answers and seek understanding.
We are asking society to acknowledge the truth of our experience
and honor our motherhood.
Copyright © 2002 Karen Wilson
The author, Karen Wilson, is co-founder of
Mothers
for Open Records Everywhere (M.O.R.E.)
and
The Baby Scoop Era Research Initiative, and is a mother who lost
her daughter to adoption in 1966.
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