Tag Archives: Family

Forced to slow down

……when life knocks you on your ass, literally

It’s hard to believe it’s been six months since I was forced to slow down.  I had PLANS to end last year strong and start the new year stronger.   I had lists, goals, things to do, Peloton challenges to beat, until I was stopped dead in my tracks.  In my typical overachieving fashion, I ripped my hamstring tendon off the bone, had surgery, and for 6 weeks, could not use my left leg.   “Non-weight bearing”, with your leg in a brace at a 90-degree angle, means that simple tasks like putting on your underwear or getting in and out of a chair require help.

I don’t do helpless well.  But in this case, I had no choice.  In my mind’s eye, during this forced time in the chair, I was going to write.  I had plans to make good use of the time.   But that didn’t happen.  It was enough to just get through the day, get myself up and to the bathroom without falling.   For the first four weeks, someone was home with me, but spent the last two at home alone, until the children came home from school and could help.

The forced inaction and inability to even leave my home made me realize just how tired I was from constantly going/doing/performing/taking care of all the things.  

I’d like to say that my new insights forced me to change how I move through the world, but that would not be the truth.  The unraveling began years ago.  And my over-functioning, while at times helpful, is just a coping mechanism.

Seven years ago, I took a DNA test to find out my medical history because, as a “baby scoop” adoptee, my history was scrubbed.  I was tired of writing “unknown adopted” on the top of medical forms at the doctor’s office.  My children were impacted by this unknown history, and it was a request from one of their doctors that pushed me to swipe my cheek and see what information I could find out.    I had few expectations.   I’ve read of adoptees spending thousands to try to find family, only to come up empty-handed.  Why would my situation be any different?  Except it was.

The story of discovering my biological family is for another time.  

I look back at the person I was seven years ago, before I faced what it meant to live as an adoptee, and I can’t believe how far I’ve come.  In all that growth, though, I never lost the “hurry/prove yourself/go-go-go” mentality.   It lingered, until it knocked me on my ass.

So here I am, six months post-op, and while I can walk and exercise, if I overdo it, my hamstring lets me know.  At my last visit, my surgeon told me it would be two years before I was fully recovered, and the risk of reinjury is high.  I simply cannot overdo it.

There is a lesson in all of this, if I allow myself to stop and listen.   I can no longer compare myself to who I once was, because I’m not that person anymore.  I can only start exactly where I am.

An Attractive Newborn

Earlier today, I came across the social worker’s notes about my birth family while looking for another file.  It’s been a few years since I read them and six years since I received the more comprehensive information about my bio family. 

I felt like I was reading a story about other people until I realized, that the “attractive newborn with a very fair complexion and a small amount of brown hair” was me.  The one my mother saw through a nursery window and wanted to hold.  The file doesn’t tell me if she ever did get to hold me and since we don’t have contact, I’ll never know.

Three days after my birth I was discharged to foster care and 14 days later, I was placed with my adoptive parents.

My life began in late July, but my story didn’t start until 17 days later when I was adopted.  Between July and mid-August, there is no information about my life -I’m the blank slate that I was sold as to my adoptive parents.

Except that I’m not a blank slate.  Adoptees are not blank slates.  Birth certificates and name changes do not erase genetic ties.  My biological family is a part of me.  I carry their traits, curiosity, love of books, writing, the outdoors, and their ability to tan easily, among other things.  Of course, my adoptive family influenced me, but that doesn’t take away my biology and I’m tired of silencing my voice to uphold the false narrative that adoption didn’t impact me.

Writing about this makes me uncomfortable.  I’m always worried about hurting my adoptive family, especially my mother.  She made it clear from day one that she was my only mother.  There was always this underlying fear that if I made her upset, she could give me back.  This fear shaped my experience.   I became a chameleon, a people pleaser, I stayed small.

The truth is, she is not my only mother.  I can love my adoptive parents and love my biological family.  There is room for both.  This does not fit the narrative that is sold.

If you are not an adoptee, you cannot begin to understand what it is like for us, even those of us raised in a “good” home.  What does a good home even mean??

Even now, I find myself censoring my writing.  No more.   You don’t get to tell me how I’m allowed to feel about my experience.  You don’t get to tell me I’m lucky, I’m better off, or that I’ve been saved.

Just stop.  It’s my turn to talk.