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This article clarifies past adoption practices
and establishes the truth about treatment women received at
the hands of the adoption industry during The Baby Scoop era.
"In The Best Interest of Whom?"
by Joe Soll and Karen Wilson Buterbaugh.
Open any book written about the Sixties and
you will see that a powerful sociological event is missing.
Absent in the index will be entries for "maternity homes"
and "unwed mothers," yet millions of single women were interred
in maternity homes with their soon-to-be-born "illegitimate"
babies earmarked for adoption.
Chances are good that you knew one of these
girls. One day she just disappeared from school. Maybe it
was your girlfriend. Or maybe it was you.
From approximately 1940 to 1970, estimates are
that four million mothers lost children to adoption; two million
during the 1960s alone. Four million mothers, four million
fathers and more than four million adopted children... 16
million people directly affected by adoption. Why so many
single mothers' babies were adopted during this era is not
generally understood and remains swept under the rug by the
adoption industry.
Parents went to great lengths to hide their
daughter's "mistake" from friends, relatives and neighbors.
To be absolved of her "sin," she was sent to a maternity home.
What happed to these women four decades ago
and what became of the babies that resulted from these criminal
conceptions? Were the fathers of these children involved or
did they just walk away?
The 1960s represented great social upheaval,
the Vietnam War, Women's Lib and the Sexual Revolution. But
the sexual revolution did not apply to these women. They fell
into an abyss between World War II and Roe v. Wade.
Sex oozed from radios as teenagers slow danced.
It teased and tempted through movies. It was everywhere but
contraception was not. There were no pills available and no
sex education in their classrooms.
When a girl found herself "in trouble," denial
was staggering. The mind would do anything to avoid the truth
and young women went to great lengths to hide those gestating
truths! Their dresses got tighter and sweaters covered up
the zippers that would no longer zip. If pregnancy occurred
to their parents, it was quickly dismissed. That couldn't
happen to their daughter!
Thoughts of parental confrontation were agonizing.
Some daughters were thrown out and warned, "Don't bring back
that bastard baby!" Some said, "Don't worry, we'll help you."
But the help offered was far worse than taking care of their
own babies and dealing with the social consequences.
Many girls sought the fathers of the soon-to-be-born
babies to give them the news but some never knew. Decisions
were made quickly. Girls were expelled from school or removed
by parents who scrambled with decisions of where to hide them.
Hideaways
Most maternity homes were filled to capacity
so some girls had to be placed in "wage homes" until they
were admitted to the maternity home. In wage homes, they cooked,
cleaned and baby-sat for strangers.
Once a maternity home resident, girls had to
use false names or first name and last initial. They were
assigned chores and some finished high school in makeshift
classrooms. They were not given information about pregnancy
and childbirth, nor did anyone try to alleviate their emotional
pain.
A social worker would meet with them weekly
but not ask how they felt about "the baby." They told mothers,
"A married couple will be chosen who can give the baby everything
it needs," "You will forget and go on with your life as if
this never happened," "No man will marry a woman with a child,"
and "The baby will be called a bastard." They said many things
that made mothers feel unworthy. But no one asked if they
wanted to keep their own baby.
Life inside the maternity home was regimented.
Their incoming and outgoing mail was strictly censored. Usually
the only visitors allowed were their own parents. Rarely were
they allowed to speak to or see their friends, especially
not the babies' fathers.
They were not told about labor and many were
heavily drugged or given no medication at all. Most were left
alone during labor with no family present. Some saw and held
their babies but the majority did neither. Some babies were
placed in new homes directly from the hospital. Others returned
with their mothers to the maternity home. Some were instructed
by their social worker to give the baby to her because they
viewed this act as the mother transferring the baby as a "gift"
to them. Social workers viewed this as re-enforcing the voluntary
nature of the mothers' decision, of solidifying the transaction.
It was the expected outcome after months of "counseling."
Many babies went to foster care. As a result,
mothers could not visit or reclaim them. They were not informed
of a revocation period, a time in which they could reclaim
their babies.
The Dotted Line
Some mothers were asked to sign surrender papers
while still in the hospital, drugged and recuperating from
childbirth. Some signed before they left the maternity home.
Some signed in front of a judge. It is not uncommon to hear
that mothers sobbed when asked if they were signing willingly
yet many signatures were still accepted.
Many mothers who signed papers at the agency
did not receive any explanation of the content nor did they
have a lawyer to protect their rights. They were simply told
where to sign. Often parents or friends were not present to
provide help or support.
Papers terminating parental rights can be signed
solely by a minor and be legally binding. Why are minors allowed
to sign a contract of such magnitude with such profound,
life-long consequences? In America, minors are not permitted
to sign any other type of legal contract.
Homeward Bound
Childbirth had changed them forever. They were
no longer girls. They were mothers, even if unsanctioned.
Life at home felt awkward and surreal.
Evidence of their illicit motherhood remained,
leaking breasts and stretch marks, making it impossible to
forget. Drifting through meaningless days, they realized that
they no longer fit into society or their own families. Parents
acted as if nothing had happened. Friends had graduated high
school, were settled at college, busy with jobs or married.
Eventually some mothers married and gave birth
to additional children. Life seemed normal. But alone, they
cried into soaked pillows. Some married men who abused them,
men who took away any remaining self-esteem. Some mothers
never married and never had more children.
Each morning they would re-awaken to the realization
of their loss and accept their penance with downcast eyes.
Some moved farther away, adding distance with such excuses
as college or new jobs.
In their minds, their babies had died. But no
resolution could be found because their babies were still
out there, somewhere. There is no consolation as there is
for married mothers who lose babies to death. Banished mothers
are unrecognized and invalided. They are not normal mourners
who suffered grievous loss. They are invisible. Their babies
are dead by adoption.
Doomed to fail, they are punished for their
fertility, for giving birth, for surrendering, for grieving,
for remaining silent and for lying to cover up their "secret."
Today, they are re-stigmatized for telling the truth, finding
their children and reclaiming their motherhood.
Their loss and grief did not decrease over time;
in fact, those feelings increased and left others feeling
uncomfortable.
Physiologically primed to nurture their babies,
they had been denied this basic right. As time passed, they
learned how to live a half-life, a place of torturous unreality
and psychological death. Those who married became two people,
the disqualified mother and the respectable, married mother.
Having done "the right thing" placed them in
a no-win situation. Today they are stunned to learn that they
are viewed as unloving and abandoning mothers. After all,
says society, "What real mother would give up her own child?"
Immaculate Deceptions
Mothers are questioning the past. Did the government,
to keep single mothers off welfare, play a part in the Baby
Scoop? As it is now known, social workers seeking professionalism,
created the cure for "unwed motherhood" that resulted in the
surrender of babies to adoption in numbers never seen before
or since the 1960s.
In addition, an increasing number of infertile,
married couples were demanding children to adopt. Did social
workers, knowing they had a ready supply of babies, resolve
that demand while ignoring the natural mothers' entitlement?
Many now recognize that social workers assigned
to them did not do their duty to inform regarding specific
means that might have allowed them to keep such as welfare,
child support, temporary foster care, and the right to revoke
consent within a designated time. These choices were not offered.
That they were not is unforgivable.
Mental Health Implications
The loss of a child is a trauma of the highest
order. Anna Freud said, "The horrors of war pale beside the
loss of a mother." The same can be said about the loss of
a child. Our society, however, has looked at the loss of a
child to adoption as a non-issue. These women were told they
would forget and go on with their lives. Would we say the
same to a woman whose child had died or had been kidnapped?
When a woman loses a child to adoption she experiences
the death of that child but, not allowed to grieve, the loss
paralyzes her. Her life goes on hold. Many mothers have said
they died inside when they lost their child to adoption. Because
no one helps them grieve, they must shut down to survive and
consequently loses the ability to experience their true feelings..
They may develop false personae to be able to function.
Those who suffer a trauma and do not get help,
suffer from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. The symptoms are:
panic and anxiety attacks, recurrent dreams of the loss, inability
to fully experience feelings, angry outbursts, hypervigilance,
difficulty concentrating, loss of memory of important aspects
of the trauma, and difficulty loving and trusting others.
In addition to the PTSD symptoms, the following
are common: free-floating sadness, sexual difficulties, fear
of intimacy, difficulty with interpersonal relationships and
extreme guilt and shame. The shame and guilt often cause these
women to not tell anyone of their loss and not seek help.
They think there is no way to heal and indeed, without good
professional help from someone knowledgeable in adoption loss,
these women will be trapped in a living hell for the rest
of their lives. They may be able to put on a good front but
inside they will be in constant agony. Those who do reveal
their loss to their friends and family, are often asked what
is wrong with them that they cannot forget and move on. Sadly
most mental health professionals will ask the same damaging
question.
There were many lies told about these mothers
and these lies reached the ears of their lost children. Lies
that would prevent their children from searching for their
own mothers because they might find prostitutes or drug addicts
etc. These lies would also come back to haunt the mothers
if they had a reunion and further injure them. More lies occurred
when most of the women who had their babies taken by the adoption
industry were told that they would destroy their child's life
if they searched and found them. They were also led to believe
that it is illegal to search. Neither statement is true. Search
is not illegal in any state and searching for one's lost child
is a gift to that child. The process of searching offers an
opportunity to do some healing. One should attend one of the
hundreds of adoption support groups and prepare emotionally
for a search and possible reunion. The support groups are
often a good source for local therapists who would be knowledgeable
about adoption loss. The wounds of adoption loss can be greatly
eased with the right help and the support groups offer the
best starting point.
Anyone seeking professional help has the right
to interview potential therapists in order to be able to select
one suitable for their needs. The prospective client has a
right to know where and when the therapist got her degrees,
whether or not she is licensed by the state, what specialized
training she has had and whether she can accept insurance.
The prospective client has a right to know how much experience
the therapist has in working with adoption-related issues,
whether the therapist has personal experience in adoption
and what kind of experience she has had. The prospective client
should ask for a curriculum vitae from the therapist and also
ask what adoption-related literature the therapist has read.
If the prospective therapist is not forthcoming with this
information, the client might well look elsewhere. It would
be worthwhile to inquire if your therapist ever worked for
an adoption agency as an agency social worker might not be
able to offer the right help.
There are therapists who, with no experience
whatsoever in adoption, have an great deal of sensitivity
to the issues. If you are fortunate enough to find one who
is sensitive to the issues and feel comfortable with her,
she may well be able to help you on your journey.
Posted with permission of Joe Soll at Adoption
CrossRoads and Karen Wilson Buterbaugh.
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