Month: May 2011
Tula’s Story
I was a mother of 2 children, I was single. I was working and living in a small apt that rented for 150.00 a month. I was behind on the rent.
My daughter was 8 years old, my son was 2. I had lived with my grandparents on and off since I had my daughter. I was 17 when she was born.
I was trying desperately to live on my own.
I had no help from the father of my children.
I remember going to the United Way office to get a free pregnancy test. The lady told me to come back after lunch to get the results. I made my way over to the office in a daze, fearful of the results. Surely it would be negative, surely.
My son played on the floor and the world collapsed around me. I felt like a giant weight was pulling me to the bottom of the ocean. I cried uncontrollably for the next hour.
I managed to leave the office and drive to my grandparents’ house, where my daughter was.
I was numb. I stayed numb for some time.
When I was in my 5th month, my grandmother who I had not told about my pregnancy passed away. I was at her home, and she reached up to fix her pillow and she died. I started CPR and called 911. She was gone. This was very hard on me.
I mention this because it intensified my stress. I had never felt so alone and afraid.
My daughter was very attached to her great grandma. My mom was not really in my life at this point. I had been depending on my grandparents like my parents for years. They helped me feed my children and keep a roof over their head. I had moved out because I wanted so bad to be on my own. I didn’t want to have to tell them I was having another child.
I told my dad at the funeral.
My mom had given a child up for adoption in 1963. It was a different world then, she had to go to a unwed mothers home, her daughter had to be in a orphanage until she was adopted months later.
I was around 7 and ½ months when I started thinking about adoption.
The birth father had started seeing someone else and he was coming around less often. I was struggling to feed myself and my children. My grandfather was lost in grief, he could function hardly. I couldn’t depend on him any longer. I lost both my grandparents when my grandmother died.
I remember crying a lot, being very depressed. I was broke all the time.
I started looking in the paper at those ads, “nice couple wants to give your baby a home”
I prayed about it, I talked to my friends about it.
I called my mom. I asked her what she thought. I talked to my sister who had been adopted out in 1963; mom and “Sidney” had found each other in 1991.
My older sister, Sidney (her birth name) helped me find 3 couples, in various parts of the country.
I prayed about this decision a lot. I felt peace, that I was doing the right thing.
The couple I chose was from Tx. They lived in Indiana for job reasons. They had been married for 14 years. I met the lady and her mother. I didn’t want them to see where I lived so we met at a restaurant.
They were wonderful people I felt.
They called me and asked about me regularly. My sister called when it was time for me to deliver.
It was the only cesarean I ever had to have; it was like my body didn’t want to give the baby up. It was an emergency operation. I was very scared.
The new parents were there with me and very supportive. The entire baby’s new family was on hand at his birth, grandparents and aunts and uncles. I felt like this baby was going to a warm loving family.
I held him a couple of times just to hold him. I felt so empty and hollow. I was a shell.
I managed to get out of the hospital quickly as possible.
I kept hoping that the birth father would come to the hospital and tell me he would be there for me. He didn’t.
I had to have a counselor talk to me before I could sign. I did, I cried some more. The counselor told me something that helped me many days in the coming years. She said “you’re doing the right thing, you’re going to be ok, and you’re very unselfish.”
I knew that the baby was going to have a much better life with his new family. I knew my children would have a better chance without another child to share what little we had with. I felt like I would be the only one to hurt. I could do that for my baby and my children. I loved them all so much.
I drove to the hospital parking lot and I looked up at the windows, I cried all night.
I signed the papers the next day.
The parents always told him he was adopted and told him about me. I got pictures at birthdays and Christmas.
One day when he was around 13 I got to talk to him on the phone. I can’t tell you how sweet his voice sounded. I was so happy.
When he was 18 he called me the day after his birthday. He asked me if he could come live with me. I said YES!!! I never even thought about why or what or anything.
He came home 18 years later.
This was in 2009. He doesn’t live with me anymore but he lives within 20 min of me. I see him a lot. We have family dinners. He is a part of our family; he is trying to adjust to having a brother and sister. He has 2 nieces and a nephew.
Dreaming Big
This week for the writers workshop I am going to write about 1.) What was your big dream for yourself when you were 18 and had graduated from high school?
The one dream I had when I graduated was to finish college and become a nurse. I wanted to work in either the ER or as a life flight nurse. I feel like I gave up on my dreams because I got pregnant and then lost the will to go back to school. I am hoping that one day I will go back and finish my degree but I don’t know if it will happen. I also am not sure if I even want to be a nurse anymore.
This is a short post but oh well! I want to welcome all my new followers and tell everyone that reads my blog thank you!
Best Friends
Recently I have started talking to my best friend from high school again. I have been looking back and I don’t have a single memory from my senior year of high school that doesn’t have her in it. We always had a great time and my family loved her. We were more like sisters that friends. We were always together until we went away to college and then everything changed. I am not sure what happened or why it happened but we started to grow apart. Around the time I got pregnant we got in a fight about something and to be honest with everyone I am not sure what we were fighting about. I know that it was probably my fault though. I know how I am when I am not on medication and pretty much say that it was my fault and I feel bad because we haven’t spoken in like 6 years or so. It is crazy to think that it has been that long. I never thought we would drift apart like we did but I can’t take it back all I can do now is try and rebuild the relationship and don’t let it happen again. I look back and see where I went wrong with it all. I was so glad that she emailed me because I was to big a brat to email her first. Hell when she emailed me I didn’t even know why I was mad her I just knew I was. After I read her email I realized how dumb I was being.and realized that I did want her back in my life. I am hoping that we will rebuild our friendship and not drift apart again!
Ericas Story
This is Erica Smith’s story about placing her daughter for adoption.
Well, I guess my adoption story starts with the fact that I was already a single mother. Her father had left the entire responsibility on my shoulders. I lived with my parents at the time and while they would babysit for me to work, I was not given a lot of free time to hang out with friends or go out or anything. I probably went out kid-free 5 times that first year and a half. To tell the truth, I resented it. I love my daughter but I was not a person anymore. I was someone’s mother and my identity had been tossed aside. The summer of 2008 I finally put my daughter in a different daycare so my parents didn’t have to watch her as much (thus were more willing to watch her on the weekends) and found another single mother who was willing to trade babysitting so we could take turns going out. I went a little crazy, it all happened so fast that looking back it feels like a lifetime but in all was only a couple months. I was going out every weekend and once or twice during the week. I met a guy through a mutual friend and we started partying and having sex. I found out he had a serious girlfriend and told him I wanted no part of that so the next day he left her and moved in with our friend. I ended up staying there with him almost every day. For awhile I would go to work (which was right by my friend’s house), go pick up my daughter and bring her the half hour to my friend’s house and then in the morning taking her to daycare by my parents house. I was funding all our partying and the guy was stealing money from me so before too long I was broke. I was broker than broke; my bank account was overdrawn by about $700 after all the overdraft charges.. My parents kicked me out and I had no choice but to stay with my friend to be close to work and because I had no money for gas or food I had to leave my daughter with my parents for 3 weeks while I waited on another paycheck. THAT is what I regret the most.
Later I found out the guy was dealing drugs using my car. He was very controlling, would try to tell me what to wear and order me around like a dog to wait on him hand and foot. I didn’t just take it, we would get into horrible fights about it. He would hide my birth control pills or switch them with baby aspirin and sugar pills which looked the same as my pills. When I insisted on using condoms he would intentionally tear them. Over time I found out he had 5 other kids, he told me about them one here and one there until I finally figured it all out. We fought all the time and I was scared of him because of the look he would get in his eye and the way he would block me into a corner so I couldn’t get away from him. I knew I was pregnant when I started getting really tired all the time. I quit drinking but I couldn’t bring myself to take a test. I left the next time I got paid and went back to my parents’ house.
I took a pregnancy test the next day, it was positive. I told my friend right away and she told the guy. He acted like everything would be cool but he’d already moved back in with his ex (who I’m pretty sure he was still seeing the whole time). He wanted me to have an abortion. He actually said, “Well we know that we can have kids together so let’s just get an abortion this time and work on us and then we can have another baby later.” I hated him for that but I made the appointment. A couple days later he called me late at night with his girlfriend on speaker and told me that this involved the 3 of us and that she was going to help us make a decision on whether to keep the baby or not and they would be raising it the majority of the time. I told them both in not so nice terms to stay away from me and cancelled the appointment for the abortion.
Then, I told my parents. They also wanted me to have an abortion and kicked me out when I refused. By that point I was more pushing back against everybody pushing me so I moved to my sister’s house 3 hours away. Long story short I didn’t get along with her boyfriend because I saw he was a loser and using her and she took his side, so I went and got my own place. Finally I felt secure and thought everything would be fine.
A month later my hours got cut in half at work. I could no longer afford my own place and I had nowhere else to go so I had to move back to my parents’ house. Adoption never crossed my mind until I was 7 months pregnant. I just woke up one day and realized I couldn’t do it, I couldn’t take care of another baby on my own and I had no support. Nobody was ever happy during either pregnancy, I didn’t have somebody to go to doctor’s appointments with me or to throw me a baby shower or ooh and aah over cute baby stuff. I was completely alone. I think if I’d had ONE person to say, “Hey you got this, it’s gonna be okay,” then I wouldn’t have made the same decisions. I’d fought to get my other daughter everything she needed for her entire life and I didn’t think I had the fight left in me to start the whole process over with another. I’d stopped talking to most of my friends because of the drama with the guy trying to get dirt on me through them. I trusted no one. The couple friends I casually mentioned adoption to were jerks about it and tried to talk me out of it or make me feel guilty. There was one friend who was awesome about it and I’ll forever be grateful to her.
Once I got adoption into my head, I looked up profiles online. It was a little like shopping for a person on eBay like you would a sweater. M & K’s profile was one of the first ones I saw and I kept going back and comparing everyone to them. I called the agency they were listed with and the next day I got the paperwork in the mail and filled it all out. I lied about the birth father being a one night stand the entire time so his rights were terminated by placing an ad in the newspaper. I knew he’d never sign the papers and I have never regretted that decision. About 6 months after Maddie was born I heard that he had beaten the snot out of his girlfriend and her kids and was using meth. He also attacked me later but that’s a different story. I told M & K the truth about him as soon as the adoption was final but I still refuse to give anyone his real name. She can have it when she turns 18; I’ve already written that letter to her explaining everything. They in turn contacted their lawyer and the courts. That was scary because I had committed perjury and could have faced jail time for it but they were told since I refused his name it was okay because his rights were still terminated legally.
Anyway, I met with the adoption agent once and they set it up to allow me and M & K to email. The first email they sent was asking how my pregnancy was going and thanking me for considering adoption. I emailed back and was talking about “the baby” this and “the baby” so much that I got sick of it and told them for simplicity sake I was just going to call the baby Madelyn because that’s the name I had picked out. They emailed me back immediately and said they had chosen that same name 6 years ago when they started trying to have a baby. That pretty much sealed the deal for me. God knew I needed one hell of a sign to know this was the right thing to do.
I got my first phone call with them on the day of a doctor’s appointment. I was supposed to go to the doctor in the morning and talk to them in the afternoon but my appointment got moved and ended up being at the same time. I talked to them while I was in the appointment (which didn’t make my doctor happy but oh well!) and they were able to hear the heartbeat on speaker phone.
The rest of the process went pretty smoothly. I was induced so they were able to be at the hospital with me while we waited for things to happen. My parents did not want to go to the hospital with me, they wanted me to go alone, have the baby and sign over rights and then come back like nothing ever happened. I guilt tripped my mom into coming with me but my dad was mad at her for it. I did not allow the adoptive parents into the room for the actual birth that was a little weird for me so that part was just me and my mom. I got the epidural maybe 30 minutes before she was born and had a very easy delivery (I think I pushed twice, she was tiny 6 lbs). They put her on my stomach right after she was born and then after they cleaned her up I held her for about 20 minutes and then let M & K come back in. It was really great to watch them hold her for the first time. They stayed at the hospital with me until around 9 and then left for the night. I let them give her the first bottle and change the first diaper. The next day they came back in the morning and my mom brought my other daughter in. It hurt so much to see them together but I hoped by choosing an open adoption that they would be able to have a relationship.
The hospital was awful. Maybe it was because I was induced on a holiday weekend but nobody had a clue how to act around us. One of the nurses took Maddie for vitals during the night and when she brought her back she didn’t get the door closed all the way and I heard her say to someone in the hallway “That baby is so cute, I don’t know how anybody could give her away.” Like cute-ness is the only reason to ever give a baby up for adoption. Those words still haunt me to this day. I cried all night both nights I was there and prayed. I even called my mom and asked her to bring me my car seat because I couldn’t do it but she told me my dad wouldn’t let me come home with the baby and gave me a guilt trip about my promises to M & K.
During the hospital stay I got to know M & K a lot better. We discovered more similarities that made me feel like they were the right choice. Such as;
My hands were shaking and I was crying so hard I could hardly hold the pen but I signed and afterwards K and I hugged with Maddie in between us and cried. M cried and hugged me to and then I walked out of the hotel without my baby. They had to stay in town for 3 weeks after she was born so I was able to see her one last time before they went home. I made her a scrapbook and put all my information in it, including where I was born and the hospital and where I went to high school. I put a family tree and pictures of me growing up as well as all her hospital bracelets and ultrasounds and on every other page I wrote her a letter explaining my decision, how I chose her parents, etc. I gave that to them to give her when she’s older so that hopefully no matter what happens she will always be able to find me and understand why I did what I did.
Our adoption has been pretty good so far, there have been a few small problems but mostly they have kept up with their promises. The updates are unpredictable and don’t always come as often as they promised and it’s an emotional roller coaster for me that sometimes I want to get off but they are great parents and our little girl has everything I ever wanted for her. I send her presents for Christmas and her birthday and get to see her once a year. Everything is harder without her. I go through each milestone and sometimes it hits me harder than ever. Sometimes I cry for no reason at all and nobody really knows how to handle that pain. I often stop what I’m doing with my other daughter and think of Maddie and wonder what she’s doing at that exact moment. Things will never be the same for me. I look at men, sex, relationships, trust, parenting, everything differently. I have lost faith that people will stick around when the times get tough. I’m getting through the worst of it and have way more good days than bad but not a day goes by that I don’t miss her and think of her.
Some Interessting Facts
This week for my MS post I am going to post some facts that I found about the disease.
Facts about Multiple Sclerosis
General Information about Multiple Sclerosis
- First Diagnosed in 1849
- The earliest known description of a person with possible Multiple Sclerosis dates from 14th century Holland
- Multiple Sclerosis is the most common progressive and disabling neurological condition in young adults
- Approx 2.5 million people worldwide, have Multiple Sclerosis
- Around 400,000 people in the United States have Multiple Sclerosis
- In the UK, approx 70,000 people have the disease
- Approx 50,000 people in Canada have Multiple Sclerosis
- Scotland has the highest incidence of Multiple Sclerosis per head of population in the world
- In Scotland, over 10,500 people have Multiple Sclerosis
- No virus has ever been isolated as the cause of Multiple Sclerosis
- Average age of clinical onset is 30 – 33 years of age
- The average age of diagnosis is 37 years of age
- The average time between clinical onset of MS and diagnosis by physicians is 4 – 5 years
- 10% of cases are diagnosed after the age of fifty
- In 1936, only 8% of patients were reported to survive beyond 20 years after onset of illness
- In 1961, over 80% of Multiple Sclerosis patients were reported surviving to 20 years after onset of illness
- 2002 – A patient with Multiple Sclerosis can expect to live to average population life-expectancy minus seven years (mean life expectancy – 7 years)
- Multiple Sclerosis is five times more prevalent in temperate climates than in tropical climates
- Multiple Sclerosis affects women much more frequently than men. Approx. 1.7 – 2:1 in the US and approx 3:2 in the UK
- The ratio of white to non-white is approx 2:1
- Gypsies and Inuit’s do get Multiple Sclerosis although the incidence rate is much lower than other populations at approx 19 per 100,000
- Native Indians of North and South America, the Japanese and other Asian peoples have a very low incidence rate of Multiple Sclerosis
- In identical twins where one twin develops the disease, the likelihood of the second twin developing Multiple Sclerosis is approx 30%
- The incidence rate for non-identical twins, where one contracts Multiple Sclerosis, is approx 4%
- The risk of contracting Multiple Sclerosis if a first-degree relative (father, mother, sibling) has the disease, is approx 1% – 3% overall
- The risk of contracting Multiple Sclerosis if your father has the disease is approx 1 in 100
- The risk of contracting Multiple Sclerosis if your mother has the disease is approx 1 in 50
- The risk among the general population of contracting Multiple Sclerosis is approx 1 in 800
Sources:
http://www.themcfox.com/multiple-sclerosis/ms-facts/multiple-sclerosis-facts.htm