we will update as we publish at AMERICAN INDIAN ADOPTEES WEBSITE - some issues with blogger are preventing this

Monday, July 21, 2014

Adoption laws, protecting dead parents and letters to your birthchild




By Trace L Hentz (formerly DeMeyer)

I think adoption has left many of us adoptees frozen in time as missing children.  Details of our first days and births are sealed in files – leaving us without essential details of our birthparent’s lives when they made the decision to let us go or were forced to give us up.

Our adoption records are sealed so the majority of adoptees are still unable to have a copy of our original birth certificate in all but a few states in America. Why?

If we’re adults, why are we still being treated as children?

Most of us were adopted by strangers. In my case Sev and Edie didn’t choose me. I was available. I was not “chosen” or “saved” or “an orphan.”  Those myths are repeated in blogs, ads and newspapers everywhere, as part of the propaganda by the billion dollar adoption industry. This industry is not about the chosen or saved or orphaned child. That’s the selling part. Those are sappy slogans used to convince people to continue to adopt and pay their money. It’s just a mind drug that you’ve saved someone, or rescued an orphan.

I was not saved from my birthparents Helen and Earl. They were real people, alive. My mother was 22 and my father was 27.  If my mother Helen had support from her parents, instead of condemnation for committing a sin and getting pregnant, she might have kept me. At the very least my father should have had the right to raise me, right?  He would have, I was told when we met when I was 38, but it was too late to change what happened.

Right now, Minnesota has my original birth certificate. They won’t release it to me.

All my parents are gone, all passed. It’s not that I do not know who they were. I opened my adoption at age 22 with a judge in Wisconsin. I know my names, their names and met my father. Why would Minnesota not release my birth certificate to me now?

Archaic laws. Old laws. Privacy? for whom? They are all dead. Why are adoption laws protecting dead parents?

This is my reality. I can’t change the laws myself but if you are reading this, you might pick up the phone and contact your state representative and ask them, who is adoption secrecy protecting? Is it protecting adoptive parents? Is it protecting dead birthparents? Why? Or is it protecting the adoption industry so they can continue their money making and human trafficking?

I know children will still be adopted, no question. The industry can’t be stopped overnight but if adoption is the only way for a child to be safe, find their kin and family (grandparents, cousins) to raise them.

If strangers must do it, give the child their name, ancestry, medical backgrounds for both parents, and a signed letter from each birthparent.

If only birthparents had to write that letter!  Then they’d have to sit down and think far ahead when their own flesh and blood reaches adulthood. What reasons would you give your child as to why you chose adoption and handed them to strangers? What are good reasons? Religion, money, marital status, mental or physical illness?

This letter to your birthchild should be the law of the land.
(That letter would a reality check and could be a real deal-breaker.)

(This was originally posted at tracedemeyer.com which I shut down - my name change is ahead.)

2 comments:

  1. Trace I wrote the letter about myself to the world when I made my blogs ./It was whos who,popularity not just a mother -you have to know someone like you and be up there with them with the Senators ,and all forms that make up legislature.I was told and this came from a well known source that the agencys,churchs,atorneys and the Adoption Industry withhold all those letters that were filled out and notorized and then stuffed in the files to dissolve,they hold out for more of the parents siblings that searches both for their mothers. The letters never even get to the Mothers or sa"Has any adoptee received a letter through the agency that had them adopted out -then months or years pass,so has the adoptee EVER brought attention to show that same letter the mother wrote ? and show this same letter when they had their reunion.I belive if gone through an agency No adoptee or maybe only a few got a social worker that really didn,t care about her job? whatever -The adoptee never shows the 1st letter that would be the most sentimental thing to show her mother and veiwers,so they know not to give up.The letters are not recgonized so how is adoptee know his or her mother exists.?Or the mother knowing if the adoptee exists.SEALED.<3

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I understand completely that you wanted to include a letter to travel to your son when he became an adult. That would have been the most beautiful gift to me to have a letter from my own mother, inviting me to meet her.
      We need to reinvent a broken, archaic system.

      Delete

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