Adoption in the Era of Secrecy: Practical and Ethical Challenges Facing Adult Adoptees in the Search for Birth Families
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How did adoption impact adopted adults throughout their life courses?
- How did changes in adoption legislation, policy and practice impact adoptees’ life decisions?
- How did secrecy impact the lives of adult adoptees over their life courses?
- How did adult adoptees construct their identities and view the stigma surrounding adoption?
Historical Context
Contemporary Context
2. Methods
Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Deciding How to Search
‘The social worker who interviewed me and obviously was asking me questions trying to find out if I was ready emotionally and psychologically to receive this information. I felt very much like she had my information in front of her and that somehow, I had to pass some kind of psychological test to get that information. However, I obviously did pass it because she handed me my birth certificate’.(Joy)
‘The social worker says, “are you physically able, you know, mentally able to take on the information that we are going to give you?” So, I didn’t do that until I was, sort of, 67. So they’re now saying, you know, are you mentally capable. I’ll tell her, I think so, you know’.(Eva)
‘I wonder if you can help me … I’m adopted. This is my name now, and there’s my birth certificate. This is my adoption certificate. I’m trying to find, yeah, you know, trace any information I can on my natural parents. I was wondering if you can help me. They said, “Yes, certainly. Fill that in for me. We’ve got file here on you with all the records pertaining to your case”. I was like, All right, great. Can I have them? “No”. I was like, Why not? This is long before GDPR, you know, where you’re just filing an information request. So, she was like, “Well, you’ve got to go through a process”. I’m like, Right, what do you mean? “Well, you’ll have to be assessed of … you have to speak to one of our counsellors to make sure you don’t mean any harm to your natural mother or …” I’m like, Are you joking with me? So, I said, “Hold on. I’m the person who’s been adopted. That’s my file”. I say How long does these shenanigans take? She said “about six weeks”. I said, I haven’t got six weeks. I’ve got six days. She went, “Well, unfortunately, there’s nothing I can do for you”. (Pause) ‘So, I jumped in the car, went down to the local Births, Deaths, and Marriages, talked with the woman behind the counter who was lovely. I just said, look, this is me. Tall story. She said, “If you were born here, if that says you were, there’ll be a birth certificate for you”. I said, Right, great. She came back five minutes later. “I’ve got your birth certificate”. I said, Brilliant, thanks very much. She says, “Do you want a copy?” I says, Can I do that can I buy it? She went, “You can buy anyone birth certificate”. I said, Really? So, I bought three copies. And obviously, on your birth certificate, it’s got name of child, date of birth, where they were born, and it’s got the mother’s name’.(Connor)
3.1.1. Decisions after Accessing Birth Information
‘I decided that I wanted to find out—find my birth mother or find a little bit more about her … I wanted to get hold of the adoption papers … the charity involved explained to me that I had to go and talk to a social worker and all of these documents would be revealed to me, so I went and talked to them and started the process of trying to contact my birth mother … I wasn’t sure if I got bored because I started sending letters out to find out whether or not she died … and I thought there are two directories that birth mothers could put their name on that allow their children to contact them and she hadn’t put herself down in those. So, I kind of thought, “well if you’ve not put your name on that, it possibly means that you don’t really want to get contacted”. I knew that you could hire a private investigator … you could probably find her pretty quickly … So by the stage I made those kind of reflections, I just thought actually I don’t really want to contact her because I don’t know what on earth the benefit would be you know … I went through if I was to make that decision to do, I would then have quite a lot of responsibility for the effects that this caused … disruption to her own life, disruption to my life … and why on earth would I be contacting her … I don’t know. If I felt there was some kind of hole that needed to be filled … then possibly there might be some benefit to be gained from it, but I don’t feel it at all … I don’t feel there are any questions that I could possibly ask … and “why did you do it for a number of reasons”, but they are all pretty good ones, so because of that I never took it any further really. I understand why I started doing it because I just had my own first child and this seems to be a very important process and family becomes very important’.(Nate)
‘I think it’s important to say … it was after my mother died that I actually found … went up to Scotland and accessed all my records. I did some investigation around it and I went to the Scottish Adoption Society and asked there is a list of birthmothers who put themselves on the list. On the register to say, yes please, I would like contact. And I think I … we’ve got to be careful about rejection as well and that feeling that … I think rejection is a really big thing and that might be wounds … in terms of underlying … oh, why didn’t she want me? That kind of situation. And rejection is huge if you put yourself again. I didn’t want to put myself again in the situation where I looked at her. I just … and she hadn’t put her name down. And then I’d feel again that there was a bit of rejection. She doesn’t want contact with me. She doesn’t want to make me as part of her life that she would rather completely forget about, which is, you know, her right too. So … yeah and the fact that got married literally six months after I was born to some … not my birth father, someone else, you know, was … was kind of told a bit of a story. mean I could … don’t know the whole story because I haven’t found out, but … There is a possibility that I could go all the way along the line, I’ll find my birth mother and she turns around says, “no thank you, it’s a part of my life that I didn’t want to deal with”. So, putting yourself into a window where you might be rejected again, is also a consideration … I still feel there is a piece of the puzzle missing … even though I kind of say … I’m far too busy with my life … I can’t allocate time’.. She then mentioned that she had ‘signed up to one of the adoption agencies … I’ve decided I’m going to pay for them to search’.(Susie)
3.1.2. Making Contact with Birth Families
‘It didn’t take me long. Through a phone call actually, I said “I’m trying to track down a Pauline Brown, I believe she might work with you” … and they said, “Oh I’ll transfer you” … Anyway I rang back got an address and wrote a letter’.(Tom)
‘And they kind of insisted that they would only meet me and introduce me to my birth sisters so at this point, I’d found out that I had two full sisters. If I agreed to kind of stay around and at the time, I just said, “Yeah, whatever. You know, I’m really interested to meet my sisters, I don’t suppose that’s going to be an issue”. That was really naïve of me. If I was a counsellor, I would have said, back away from that. That’s way too heavy way too quick. But I just piled in both feet as you do and I met them, they were incredibly nervous, I wasn’t. We chatted there soon afterwards they introduced me to my sisters’.(Tom)
‘I drafted a script, telephone. I was calling myself, William Bell from Bell Johnson Solicitors … with a matter that was private and only could be discussed with the person’.(Connor)
‘So now, I’m on the phone to my natural grandmother who doesn’t know it’s me, still thinks I’m a solicitor’.(Connor)
‘So now, I’m speaking to my natural mother within an hour of being told by the Adoption Society it would take six weeks’.(Connor)
‘I’ve not spoken to them or contacted them … but I do know where they are … I’ve not decided myself what I wanted to do about it … I even know where they live … But it’s just knowing … If I decide to do it, I will probably decide to do it. It’s how do I do it? How do you make that first contact? Do you get somebody else to do it? Just write a letter or you … it’d be terrifying to just knock on the door and just …’(Adam)
3.1.3. Finding Birth Siblings and Being Found
‘I couldn’t do anything about the sister because the law before 2007 wouldn’t allow you to search for siblings’.(Joy)
‘I got a lovely two-page letter saying she didn’t want to interrupt and all that sort of thing … then in September 2011 I was going to a wedding and thought it might be an ideal opportunity to meet Joy as she lives in the area and that’s what we did. We had a coffee together. It felt very odd, this lady who said she was my sister. Very … it was very odd. It really is odd. It’s weird’.(Eva)
‘We see each other about twice a year for a couple of days really … I don’t worry about it one way or the other. When it’s this late In your life, I don’t think affection is automatic … And they are all lovely. I mean I haven’t got a problem with any of the … of my sisters, but they’re more like friends than … I imagine sisters are’.(Eva)
‘I remember it 27th October, 2014 … I got this phone call … the adoption agency person … to say that there was a lady … called Joy who thought she might be related to me. Would it be alright if she sent me a letter. So, I thought about it and I thought ‘what can I lose’ and she wrote me a letter, a very long letter and it was lovely’. Agnes added ‘Oh God … I was the last to be found and it’s been amazing. I can’t tell you’.(Agnes)
‘God, yes … I don’t miss them growing up … I never felt that I was deprived in that way but I do wish they had been around. I wish I would have known them a lot sooner … time goes very quickly … nobody knows how long they’ve got you’re 78 going to 80s … that time you could have spent knowing each other would have been lovely. But anyway, we are trying to make up for it’.(Agnes)
‘Wow, wow, wow! I’ve waited for this moment for the whole of my life … it was like magical’.(Joy)
4. Discussion
Implications
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Name; DOB | Context of Adoption | Age at Interview | Year When Adopted/Age | Told by Whom/Discovered | Year of Search and Age |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agnes; born 1942 | Adopted by her father’s brother’s family | 78 | 1946/age 4 years | Always knew/from age 4 | Did not contact, was contacted by birth sister in 2014, age 72 |
Eva; born 1945 | Adopted via a mother and baby home; only child of adoptive parents | 74 | 1949/age 3 years | Adoptive parents/age 4 | Did not contact, was contacted by birth sister in 2010, age 65 |
Joy; born 1947 | Adopted via Social Services | 72 | 1948/age 6 weeks | Accidentally discovered adoption certificate/age 17 | Made contact with birth sisters in 2010/2014, age 63/67 |
Sonya; born 1961 | Adopted via Social Services; only child of adoptive parents | 58 | 1961/age 8 weeks | Accidentally discovered from a friend/age 28 | 1989, information found and contact with birth family made, age 28 |
Tom; born 1962 | Adopted via an agency; one adopted sibling | 57 | 1962/age 8 weeks | Adoptive parents/age 5/6 | 1995, information found and contact with birth family made, age 33 |
Simon; born 1963 | Adopted via an agency; adoptive family already had a birth daughter | 56 | 1964/age 3 months | Sister and then adoptive parents | Chose not to search for birth information |
Susie; born 1964 | Adopted via a church adoption agency; was the third adoptive child in the family | 55 | 1965/age 6 weeks | Adoptive parents/age 8 | 2014, decided not to make contact after birth information found, age 50 |
Adam; born 1966 | Adopted privately via a GP; one adopted sister | 53 | 1967/age 6 weeks | Adoptive parents/age 8 | 2019, information found and contact made with birth family, age 53 |
Nate; born 1966 | Adopted via an agency; only child of adoptive parents until remarriage and then had two sisters | 53 | 1967/age 4 months | Adoptive father/age 4 | 1999, decided not to make contact after birth information found, age 33 |
Kathy; born 1967 | Adopted via an agency; only child of adoptive parents | 52 | 1967/age 6 weeks | Told by school friend and then adoptive mother/age 8 | 1995, contact made with birth family and decision not to continue after meeting, age 28 |
Connor; born 1975 (prior to new legislation) | Adopted via an agency; another boy adopted later | 44 | 1975/age 3 months | Always knew and was then told by adoptive parents/age 4/5 | 1998, contact made with birth family and decision not to continue after meeting, age 23 |
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Robinson, P. Adoption in the Era of Secrecy: Practical and Ethical Challenges Facing Adult Adoptees in the Search for Birth Families. Genealogy 2024, 8, 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8020063
Robinson P. Adoption in the Era of Secrecy: Practical and Ethical Challenges Facing Adult Adoptees in the Search for Birth Families. Genealogy. 2024; 8(2):63. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8020063
Chicago/Turabian StyleRobinson, Patricia. 2024. "Adoption in the Era of Secrecy: Practical and Ethical Challenges Facing Adult Adoptees in the Search for Birth Families" Genealogy 8, no. 2: 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8020063
APA StyleRobinson, P. (2024). Adoption in the Era of Secrecy: Practical and Ethical Challenges Facing Adult Adoptees in the Search for Birth Families. Genealogy, 8(2), 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8020063