100 Reshma McClintock

Transcript

Full show notes: http://www.adopteeson.com/listen/100

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


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(intro music)

Haley – You're listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 100, Reshma. I'm your host Haley Radke. Here we are, 100 episodes. I am just bursting, I’m so happy. I did not expect ever to make 100 episodes of the podcast. And I'm just so honored that you would take the time to listen every week and for my guests to be so vulnerable and candid with their stories and opening their hearts to us. It is truly an honor to work on this show and bring these stories to you. I hope you are finding them helpful. I hear from adoptees multiple times a week, telling me the show has changed their life. I've heard from adoptees who say their marriage has been saved. I've heard from one adoptee who was contemplating taking her life until she found this show and felt that she wasn’t alone. And so, the impact Adoptees On has been having in the world is absolutely so much bigger than I could have ever hoped or dreamed of. So I want to dedicate this show to all of my guests that have shared with us so freely. And all of my listeners who know now that they're not alone. And to my faithful monthly supporters, without which I would not be able to bring you this show every single week. So thank you so much, it’s truly an honor to get to speak to you this way. And I don’t take it lightly or for granted, I promise. Today, my dear friend, Reshma McClintock, creator of Dear Adoption, producer co director and subject of the documentary, Calcutta is My Mother, is here to share her story and celebrate 100 episodes with us. I asked Reshma to be a guest today, because she is so passionate about the same thing I am, adoptee voices. Today Resh shares what shifted her view of adoption, what it’s like for her to talk about India and adoption with her daughter, and the paradox of navigating cultural appropriation for a transracially adopted person. We even do a little time travel today through the magic of podcast editing, so you are gonna hear my interview with Reshma before her documentary premieres, and right after, to fully experience it with her. At the end of the show, I’m going to let you know a couple ways you can connect with Resh and I in person coming up very soon, and if you listen to the very, very end, my kids have a little message as well. As always, we wrap up with recommended resources, you can find links to everything we talk about on AdopteesOn.com. So let’s do it, for the 100th time! Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Reshma McClintock! Welcome, Reshma!

Reshma - Hi Haley, thanks for having me!

Haley – Yeah, I’m so excited! It’s been such a long time since you were on the show because you were. We recorded in person a little, it was at a conference, at the Concerned United Birth Parents Conference. Retreat, I should say. And you talked to us a little bit about your Dear Adoption and why you started it. But I’m really excited because you have big stuff coming up this year and I wanted people to get a chance to know you a little bit better. So yeah, this is so fun! Why don’t you start out and share a piece of your story with us.

Reshma - Absolutely. I was born in Calcutta, India in 1980. And I was adopted out of Calcutta at the age of 3 months old. So I arrived in Portland, Oregon when I was 3 months. I weighed just shy of 7 pounds. And basically, came to start my new life. I, my parents, had a biological son, my older brother, Tyler. And he was 4 at the time that I came over. And then about 6 years later, my parents adopted domestically, my younger brother Simian was adopted. And so there’s three of us in my family and you know, I had a really wonderful upbringing, frankly, an idyllic childhood. My parents and I were very close. My brothers and I were very close and still to this day. As far as family connectedness, I never struggled in that area. I always felt deeply connected and really just valued our time together. And yeah, so we, I grew up in a conservative Christian home. And we talked a lot about adoption, partially because two of the three children were adopted and my brother used to tease, he was actually the odd man out. Because he was biological to my parents. And he used to kind of, you know, feel like the one that wasn’t special. Which is a really interesting conversation, I’ve heard that brought up on your show before about the sibling who wasn’t adopted. So I, yeah, I had a really wonderful, really warm childhood and upbringing as far as thinking about adoption. Growing up I felt really, I don’t know, in a sense it was this kind of obscure thing that I didn’t fully embrace or understand. Although I didn’t realize at the time that I didn't understand it. As an adult I can see that I did have grief because of the separation from my family, my biological family. And separation from my culture and my country. I did have grief but it manifested in really obscure ways and not obvious ways. My parents really tried to present opportunities for me to embrace my Indian culture and it used to just make me really upset. And as a child I couldn’t articulate the reasons why it made me upset because I felt so distant from my culture and it was a scary thing to embrace. But really, I felt like a white person. I still do. I have this huge identity crisis as a transracial adoptee, and I struggle with being Indian and how Indian I am. And you know, because those roots were severed from me. So while I have this incredible family infrastructure that I know not a lot of people, let alone adopted people have, I also have all of these loose ends that I feel, the older I get, you know, rapidly fray. I think that when I meet children who are, I mean, under the age of 15 who are adopted and they are kind of grappling with grief and are able to articulate some of their grief, I really kind of envy them and I tease that at nearly 40, I’m kind of at the same stage as a 10 year old. And some of that is just because they have the, I feel like their parents have better resources than my generation did. And so adoptive parents in some ways, have come a really long way as far as understanding and recognizing the grief caused through adoption, caused from adoption. And then I think, you know, as a society, and I, you know, there’s an asterisk next to this. But we’ve come a long way in just accepting grief in general and being able to process things more openly. So adopted children of this generation, it seems are frequently more able to express kind of their grief and it manifests in more obvious ways because they have the language. And I just didn’t have that. We didn't ever talk about what I lost. We talked about what I gained. And you know, I don’t hold any hard feelings about my parents or my pastors or, growing up about that, because I understand that. But I think if something could have been done differently I would say, it would have been important for us to talk about the things that I lost and to have space for me to be able to grieve those things. Because like I said, as a 40 year old, I sit with a 10 year old who shares and expresses their grief with me, and it makes me really emotional just to think about. But I feel at that same space. And I’m a wife and a mother and a grownup. But I feel very infantile in some sense when we talk about adoption.

Haley – Well I remember very clearly, you’re the first transracial adoptee to ever say this to me. You said, often when I look in the mirror, I’m expecting to see a white face. Like, looking back. And I’ve told that to multiple people because that’s just, your sense of identity is so, I don’t even know what word to use. But, and wrapped up in the grief and all that. It’s encouraging to know that there is, young people are talking about that now. But also it’s like, it’s so frustrating to me, that we didn't have that understanding for you at the time. I don’t know, can you talk about that? Like I just, I don’t have words for that because I don’t understand the transracial experience, I know it’s just a whole extra layer on top of adoptee stuff.

Reshma - Right, it is. I've said that really frequently, that when I look in the mirror, I see, I see myself but I don’t see, well now it sounds like I'm talking out of both sides of my mouth. Because I see myself, I believe my mirrors are working and giving me the proper image, but it’s still difficult to see myself as an Indian woman. And I don’t know what an Indian woman feels like. I don’t know what it feels like to be and feel Indian in a way that is, I don’t know, inherent. Because when I left Calcutta, and I didn't realize this at the time and I don’t think my parents realized this, I frankly don’t believe the adoption industry realized this at the time, all of that was left behind. And it’s like taking on a new identity. And so we talk about about, and I’ve heard a lot on your show, from guests that, we talk a lot about how adoptees are so adaptable, right? We kind of feel like we have to have this chameleon type personality and we can adapt and adjust to whatever environment we’re in. And what’s sort of ironic about that is probably a lot of us really aren’t good at that, but we think we are. You know, we try, we put a lot of effort into people pleasing, or we kind of do the opposite, and we are wallflowers. We kind of just blend into the scenery. So I think growing up for me, I did the opposite, I stepped out. I’m really your classic, and I really, I don’t love stereotyping, but you know, they're stereotypes for a reason, right? I’m your classic performing adoptee. And earning my keep. And while I didn't feel that my place in my home would be threatened if I didn’t perform, I received a really good response when I did. And so I wanted to be the best at everything. And I had a couple of talents here or there, once upon a time. And so I really played on those. But the only thing really that I kind of identified with, as far as being Indian, is that the reaction I got from people, was that I was exotic, right? And so that’s typically the word. And, you know it’s really fetishizing in some sense, not necessarily sexually, right? I definitely am not implying that, but that I was exotic and different looking. So I could kind of embrace that in a way. And anybody likes a compliment, right? So people were telling me I was beautiful or different looking or unique looking. And I’m not saying with any arrogance, trust me. But that was something that helped me stand out. But it didn’t cross all the way over into me feeling like I was Indian. And that that was significant. So another part of, layer of that for me to is that, so much of Indian culture is really based in religion. And it’s based in a religion that I don’t practice. And so, the bulk of India I believe is Hindu. And I am really respectful of that culture and that religion of all religions. But I grew up as a Christian and I'm still a Christian person. And I wonder too if apart from this physical identity of being an Indian person, also my religion and those kind of things, it all makes me feel white. And I've said this a few times but, when I see an Indian woman walking toward me, I cannot comprehend that she also sees an Indian woman walking toward her. Or anyone, I guess it doesn’t have to be an Indian woman walking toward me. But I see an Indian woman and I think, oh, there’s an Indian woman. And something tugs at me or something happens in me. Sometimes I feel irritated, frankly, because I'm envious of her because I'm assuming, I don’t know her background as she’s walking towards me through the mall or down the street, or whatever it is. But I assume she’s more connected to being Indian than I am. Because I feel so disconnected from that. So I kind of tend to overcompensate in some sense, my Indian-ness as I tend to call it. Where I, you know I started wearing a bindi a couple of years ago. Every once in a while just from time to time. A bindi is a sticker or makeup that you put on the center of your forehead, kind of between your eyebrows. And it’s a really significant piece of Indian culture, more specifically for the Hindu religion. And you know, I'm not, like I said, I'm not a practicing Hindu, and so I struggle with cultural appropriation and then I wondered, but if I were a real Indian, and had grown up in India, and not as a Hindu, would I feel more comfortable, would it be okay then? Is it not okay because I grew up with white people? Or is not okay because I'm not that religion? Or is it okay because I'm Indian and that’s enough?

Haley – I wanna ask, pause you here, because I want to talk to you about your documentary. And we’re talking right before you have your world premiere, so the first time anyone else has gotten to see it. And so we’re not gonna do any spoilers ‘cause we want you to go and see it. But can you talk to us about how that came about and I imagine, this theme has led you to this, going back to Calcutta. And what that was like?

Reshma - Yeah, I am 10 days from the premier of Calcutta Is My Mother. So you can imagine the nerves and just the excitement, anticipation, I’m feeling all the feelings. But mostly good, I mean this is a really exciting time and it’s a privilege that not everybody has to share their story on this kind of a platform. So I'm really excited about it. Calcutta Is My Mother started when Michael Hirtzel, he is a friend of mine from high school, I went to high school in Portland. And we were Facebook friends, we hadn’t spoken directly in, I don’t know, almost 17 years I think by the time that we really connected on Facebook. We graduated in 1998 and then he moved to Dallas, I moved to Denver and we were friends on Facebook and kind of saw each other from time to time. But didn’t really connect beyond that. And he went on a trip to India with his best friend, another friend that we went to high school with. And when he came back from the trip, he sent me an email and just said, you know, he was having a hard time processing some of what he saw. India is incredible. It is a beautiful, incredible place with incredible people, but it’s tough, there’s some tough things that we as Americans are not familiar with. So you see some things and experience some things that are a shock to your system emotionally and obviously physically as well. So he had just reached out and said, I know you have been to India, do you have any suggestions for me processing this as I kinda come back into my, settle back into my American life? And I said no. You know, I didn’t really have anything to offer him I just said, yeah it’s hard. It’s hard to go to India and take it all in and then it’s a lot to process.

Haley – You had already been back to India?

Reshma - I had been to India but never to Calcutta.

Haley – Okay.

Reshma - And so it wasn’t my first time in India, it was just, and I’m really happy about that. Years ago I had hoped that my first time back to India would be home for me, would be Calcutta. And I'm actually glad that I kind of had the opportunity to experience India on its own, which was emotional in its own way of course. But without going home and having that added layer of emotions and just part of the experience. I'm glad that happened in two phases, frankly. So Michael and I just kind of started chatting and I had just started writing about adoption publicly, I didn’t know it at the time, but I had just started, you know, crawling out of the fog. I had some, a little bit of curiosity, is really what peaked the whole thing for me. I started wondering about, well, I had a daughter and she was my first biological relative that I could ever know or see or touch. And I thought that would be the only biological relative I would ever know, or see, or touch. And it was just kind of, adopted people we share this when we are able to have biological children. It’s kind of mind blowing. It’s this, having a child is an incredible thing anyway, and when you’re adopted, that’s your first biological relative, I mean there really aren’t words to describe it. Anyway, it all came down to a Facebook message from Michael after we were talking about it. And he said, hey, what would think about going back to Calcutta for the first time and us filming a documentary about it? And I, at the time, I don’t think I really thought we would do it. So I said yes. When somebody asks you to do something scary and you don’t really think you’re gonna have to do it, you just say yes. And you imagine it will peter out and go away someday. But yeah, Michael had done some filming but nothing on this level. He has a real talent and a real gift for it, not only that, Michael and I are very similar in our personalities. And so he was able to really draw some things out of me and help me process my crawling out of the fog, in an incredible way. And he’s not an adopted person and he’s not a person of color, but he had some just real insight that not everybody could have. But he really understood me. so we basically just started, Michael put a campaign together and raised the money on Kickstarter to film. We interviewed people for our crew online, we just did facetime, we interviewed people all over the country. And we found Jeffrey Alexander was our director of photography and Shari Vance was our sound technician. And they did really good work. So we left for Calcutta in, at the end of May of 2015. And we were there for I think, about 17 days. And we were there on the 35th anniversary of the day I left. Which was really significant for me. So I actually went to the place where I was born, likely born on that anniversary. And it was a really heavy day. And it’s one of the best and one of my least favorite parts of the film, is capturing that day, because there was just so much going on internally for me. The whole process again, without giving any spoiler alerts, which is hard to do. The whole experience was really, really difficult. And I had begun kind of navigating a little bit of grief and it was like I stepped off that plane in Calcutta, it’s hard to even think about. And the floodgates opened. It was like being ripped open. And I wasn’t prepared for that. And to navigate that while being filmed was difficult although, I’m really grateful for it. Because again, it’s a privilege. Not everybody gets to do that. Michael, you know, isn’t a therapist. But he kinda was mine in a sense. Every day we would sit and we would setup and interview in the hotel room or outside the hotel. And he would just ask me questions about how I felt and it was really helpful. It was not easy. But it was really, really helpful. And I really went in, I really went all in. I can be really insecure and, but I just, I knew that I didn’t wanna do this if I wasn’t gonna say everything, I wasn’t gonna do it. And so I made a really conscious decision to just say everything. And I did. I said all the things. And you know, seeing all that compiled in a film is just, I think, incredible. You know I've said, the thing I've loved about the film is it captures my unfogging in real time. I'm still unfogging, right? It’s an ongoing thing, I don’t know that we ever really reach the end of it. But I am still coming out of the fog in some ways. But it is, you know, this snapshot of a transracial adoptee, and a search to connect to culture which is really why I went. And the film starts kind of in those, when I'm first just kind of dipping my toes in and saying, all I want is to connect to my culture, I don’t need to find my people, I don’t need to know any information, I just wanna connect to my culture, I just wanna understand. And now when I watch that, it’s kind of laughable. I mean, it’s not funny probably to the viewer, but it’s so funny to me how far I've kind of come from that space.

Haley – But isn’t that, you’re protecting yourself. That’s a safe first step into looking deeper into where you came from, right?

Reshma - It is. And you know, I, I’m really glad you said that, because you know very well. Adoption spaces online are really, really tough spaces. There are a lot of opinions, heavily fogged adoptees. There’s heavily unfogged adoptees, there’s some people kind of in the middle and there’s people in all these different stages, coming together, trying to have a productive conversation about adoption and most of the time it just doesn’t go anywhere. It feels very frustrating, people get angry, people say nasty things, someone ends up crying, someone ends up blocking, it’s just kind of, you know it’s like, I don’t know, high school. It’s terrible. So, but I, and I’ve been criticized for this. But I still stand really firmly on it, it may change someday but as of today I still really stand in this place that I really believe all adopted people should freely be allowed to share. And I don’t, I really for the most part, don’t think that it is ultimately damaging to what the mission is, right? For you and I, we really, we’ve come out of the fog and we have this heart to elevate adoptee voices, to shed some light on what it’s really like to be adopted, to reposition adoptees as the most valued resource and voice in adoption. I wrote something the other day and said, you know we need to really reclaim our place as the most valued resource because it’s shifted to the industry people and to adoptive parents and I think first it should be adopted people and second it should be first families. And I feel really strongly about that. But I've been criticized for I don’t know, I had somebody tell me once, pick a lane. Are you for fogged adoptees? Or are you for unfogged adoptees? And I’ve just said all along, I’m for adoptees. I’m for adoptees who are heavily fogged, and for them say that it was the best thing that ever happened to them. I'm for adoptees who say it saved their life. I’m for adoptees who say it ruined their life. I'm for adoptees who think it is absolutely wrong and should never happen again. I’m for adoptees who still see some redeeming qualities in adoption and I’ll tell you why. For me, if I had never started writing while I was in the fog, I never would have gotten to this place. And so when, even a fogged adoptee, now I’m not saying it doesn’t irritate me. But you know, when I see something online and someone say, oh, an adopted person says, it’s the most beautiful thing, the most wonderful thing I’m like thinking, uh huh. I roll my eyes, just like everyone else, wish there was an eye roll option on Facebook and all of that. It frustrates me and I have my own judgements I make. Which is frankly what they are, it’s none of my business how anybody else feels about it. I don’t feel like it’s setting us back though. I just don’t. I think that the conversations are gonna happen, we’re never all going to agree, but if I had not been, I don’t know, allowed, if that’s the right word. If I had not began writing about adoption while I was still heavily fogged, I wouldn’t now be writing about the adoption truth that I've since discovered. And so it was a part of my process. So while I might be irritated at someone who is heavily fogged or more fogged than me, or who is in exactly the place that I once was, or I would have said, adoption is all good all the time, how could it be bad? At one point I’m sure I said that sentence and it makes me cringe a little. But I might cringe at those things, but I still stand by the, each adopted person, no matter where they are in their journey, in their path, gets to say what they wanna say. And that we should listen. And I don’t always like the way people say things either. People can be mean, but you know, my scale may be different. What’s mean to me may not be considered mean to someone else, and what’s gentle by someone might not be considered gentle by someone else. I really stand firm in that. And so there are, the film begins, and there’s a couple of things I say, really like in the first couple of minutes of the film. And I’m like, oh my gosh, I can’t believe I said that! It’s like, I’m gonna be kicked out of every adoptee group, people are gonna start disowning me left and right. But you know, it’s where it began for me. And it was self-protection, you could not be more right. It’s how I protected myself. It’s how I felt like I needed society’s permission to start talking about adoption and in order to do it, I had to do it under the cloak of, but don’t worry, I’m really, really grateful to have been adopted.

Haley – Yeah, I mean, I get it. Because I do think you’re right, we all kind of start there, don’t we? And having to think about it and actually going to a place where you're speaking out publicly or writing publicly, that’s the easiest place to start. Because then you don’t get the pushback and you don’t, like when I started blogging, yeah. I was pretty in the fog too.

Reshma - Isn’t it funny to go back and read those?

Haley – I mean, that’s why I don’t link to it. Like, I don’t talk about what it was called. Hopefully people don’t look for it. But you know, we do have to start somewhere.

Reshma - Right.

Haley – Okay, documentary, no spoilers. Let's talk about post documentary. So post filming, you come back and you’ve had this cracked wide open for you. And you started Dear Adoption, and you're like in adoptee land. So you’ve got all this stuff happening. What does that look like for you now? On the other side, or in the middle I guess of the fog? Not in the middle, but like, going towards the end?

Well one of the things that really, I think catapulted me out of the fog, was the process of asking for support for the documentary. When we first kind of kicked things off, now again, the trailer that Michael created and used for the campaign, to raise the money for the documentary is pretty, most of what I say is pretty fogged adoptee. I said, I just wanna connect to my culture, I just need to know where I came from and how I came to be, and I just need India. I just need Calcutta. And the title of the film, Calcutta Is My Mother, it came out of a conversation that Michael and I were having. And I said, you know, I can never get to my Indian mother and so for me, Calcutta is my mother. It’s as close as I can get to my roots, is to go back to the place where it all began. Well the outpouring of love and support for me, was unbelievable when the campaign launched. My family and friends of course were incredibly supportive. My parents and my brothers obviously, my husband and my extended family were really, really supportive. There was a couple people here and there were just like, I just don’t really get why you need to do that. But you know, I think it’s cool, that’s fine, that’s fair. And you know, those people kinda still stand in that place I've noticed. But you know, and it’s okay, you know what you can expect from certain people. And you know, sometimes, as long as you know that’s, you can manage that. But in general, adoptive parents and even some agency people, people came out of the woodwork and supported me and I was blown away. Well as that support was rushing in, I started getting friend requests on Facebook from fellow adoptees, primarily transracial adoptees, but domestic, American adoptees as well. And I, my inbox was just inundated with emails from adopted people. And some of them were just saying this is so cool, I wish I could do something like this, or thanks for being brave, which I wasn’t brave. But they were thanking me for that anyway. The bulk of them however, were coming from adopted people saying, I can't believe how much support you’ve gotten, this is amazing, nobody will listen to me. And those kept pouring in, and pouring in, and pouring in. And you know, I found myself staying up until 3 in the morning emailing with adopted people and trying to remember that I'm not a therapist and I'm not qualified to be counseling adopted people but they just wanted to share. They just wanted space and so I wasn’t advising anyone. because I'm not equipped to do so. I was trying to find resources for adopted people and send them that way. But I was so new to adoption land, I didn't know what was out there. I didn't know that we needed to go to an adoptee or adoption apt therapist. I didn't know that. And I think Anne Heffron has said that when you go to a therapist who isn’t, doesn’t understand adoption, well I think we should all be going to adoptee therapist, maybe ideal. A therapist who doesn’t really understand and acknowledge adopted trauma and grief and what it is like for an adopted person, it’s like going to someone who speaks a different language. And as Anne has often talked about, these years of therapy, they really mean nothing because it was, they didn't understand where she was coming from and what the really the root of everything was for her. So I was really struggling to help people and feeling like I needed to do that. And I think at one point, I'd gotten to like 516 emails that I had from adopted people just in the first like 2 months of all of this. So this is before I went to Calcutta. And I was so mad, I was so mad because I was talking to people, I started talking to some people on the phone, and they were just sobbing and pouring out to me, my family won't listen to me, nobody understands that I need to connect to my culture. Everybody thinks that I'm just being ungrateful. Everybody thinks that I'm just angry and maybe I am angry, but mostly I just am so confused about how I feel because I've been told to be grateful my whole life. And it feels like I'm not being grateful if I wanna connect to my culture or if I wanna find my family. And you know what, it pissed me off. And I was just up at night thinking, well I felt really guilty, frankly. I felt really guilty that I had this outpouring, and I still do, I struggle with that which sounds like such a first world problem, right? That, oh, I feel so bad, everybody’s so supportive of me. But I do because my family has been nothing but supportive. I haven’t received any pushback and they’ve just allowed me to do this. Even though I’m sure it's been painful for them at times. But they have put my pain front and center because this happened to me. Because I was removed from my Indian mother. because I was removed from my country and my culture and my heritage. I had my roots severed and they know that I love them. They know that none of this affects that, affects how I feel about them. So basically, Dear Adoption came to me in the middle of the night, and I thought, I’m gonna create a space for adopted people. And I’m not the first one to do this. I didn't know about any honestly at the time. Now I know, there’s so many. I mean there’s so many incredible spaces for adopted people, and so many people doing such good work, who really have laid the foundation for what Dear Adoption now stands on. Because there’s other people who were brave, who were really talking about this and creating space for adoptees way before anybody was willing to listen. And you know, I think they probably received a lot of resistance and I still do with Dear Adoption. I still receive pushback, I get a lot of emails from adoptive parents, I hate to call people out. But truly, I get a lot of emails from adoptive parents saying, what are you doing? Why are you allowing such hate and vitriol on your site? And I just, well now I don’t respond at all. So just so you know, if anybody’s listening. If you send me that kind of email, it gets deleted. I used to respond, though. And I used to say, I’m not intending to spew hate or vitriol, that’s not what this is. You’re not listening. This is this person’s story. This is, you know, someone who is pouring out their heart and you’re not listening. Anyway, I just realized I was beating a dead horse, it wasn’t making an impact, it wasn’t delivering. I would get more and more emails and responses and it was just irritating. Because we need to just listen, even me. I need to sit down and just listen to other adopted people. It’s so important and Dear Adoption was born of Calcutta Is My Mother. Because I got this outpouring of support and so much positive feedback on one side and on the other side I’m getting all these emails from adopted people saying, why are you getting this? And we’re not? And nobody’s listening, and so I thought, I just have to do this. I have to create a space. And Dear Adoption has been really, really successful in that adopted people have been sharing. And I think for the most part, have been well received. And to people who don’t like Dear Adoption, and I get people saying, why don’t you share any happy stories? And I say, I share what I receive. Literally we’ve never turned anyone away. We share every story that we receive. And I’m really, really proud of that. But I will continue to share what I receive and what I would say to people who are frustrated with Dear Adoption. First I would say I don’t think you’re listening properly. And you need to really lay down your defenses and your concept of what adoption is and your ideas or how adoption has even impacted you as an adopted person possibly. But if you don’t like what’s happening at Dear Adoption, you don’t need to click. You don’t need to come there. It’s a safe space for adopted people to share their stories and I will keep allowing them to do that. And if you don’t like it, that’s fair. Fair enough. Go somewhere else.

Haley – Yes. Goodbye.

Reshma - Yeah, right? Exactly. And I don’t mean it rudely, I mean, that’s fair. Go somewhere else, you can, we all have different opinions, and if you wanna learn, then you would spend some time at Dear Adoption. If you truly are for the adopted person and if you truly are for ethics in adoption, then you would listen. And if you’re not, see ya. There’s plenty of, there’s more spaces than not on the internet for you.

Haley – There are definitely a lot of great places for them to get high fived and feel good about themselves.

Reshma - You wanna go ahead and plug those Haley?

Haley – Ah, no. I will not be plugging those. But I do wanna ask you, going back to coming home from Calcutta, filming the documentary and you already have your daughter at that point. And so, how have you tried to pass on your, can I say that? Like newly found Indian culture? Then to your daughter?

Reshma - Well you know what’s interesting is that I really struggle with, as I said, I really struggle with feeling Indian and acknowledging that I am. And frankly giving myself permission to be Indian.

Haley – Well you said before, like, oh is this cultural appropriation? So that’s a fear that you have.

Reshma - Right. Exactly. And I think, I don’t even know, I don’t even know the answer to the question. But I think that maybe an Indian person would never worry about appropriating Indian culture. It’s kind of funny, you know? Because, I guess I’m not! That’s a really good aha moment for me right now. Probably most Indian people don’t worry about appropriating their own culture. I don’t think that’s a thing! But for me it’s kind of a thing as a transracial adoptee. It’s a transracial Indian person thing. Worrying about appropriating your own culture. Which is really, I mean, we’re laughing about it, but it is so sad. I mean it’s really, really sad. Because you just think, that was ripped from me. And now I would do anything, it’s like I’m grasping constantly to connect to that and it’s really sad that it’s an issue for me. But the wonderful thing for me and I feel like, not to sound super cheesy or cliché, but life’s gift to me in all of this is that my daughter, Rubina, she’s 7 and a half. She has no issues with embracing her Indianness. She is so proudly Indian and many times a week, she will confirm with me that she is in fact 50% Indian. She wants to know the stats and the details on that. Well if you’re all Indian and daddy is, you know, then what’s the other half of me. And we kinda tease because my husband is Irish, among other things, but we call her Indianish because a combination of being Indian and Irish. But she loves India, and Indian things, the way I wish I had as a child. And the way I think my parents wished, my dad kind of teased, she’s like fulfilling all our hopes in that way, because my parents really wanted me to stay connected to India and I resisted it, so emphatically. I really did not want to have anything to do with India as a child. I was, I think in a way I was angry with India. I think I was angry with India because I felt forsaken by India in some sense. India didn't want me, India didn't keep me. And I just didn't wanna have anything to do with it and I didn't see how I fit into that in my very, very white world. Rubina loves being Indian. And she loves talking about it. She often talks about, you know, she’s, has brown skin but fair brown skin. And often talks about how she wishes she were darker skinned because she wants to make sure people really know she’s Indian. And I was the opposite. I wanted, hated that I had such brown skin. And now, you know, while I feel that same way, I really, really want people to look at me and see me as an Indian person. And I'm starting to, I mean it makes me sound so unintelligent but it’s really an emotional, psychological, deeply rooted thing for me. I'm starting to grasp that people do. You know, I do have brown skin. Nobody else is looking at me thinking, look at that white woman, is she trying to pose as an Indian? Nobody else is thinking that! But that’s how I feel, I feel like an imposter. I feel like I'm not really Indian and that I have this gift of a little girl who is learning Indian dance and listens to Indian music and reads Indian books in English of course. She wants to wear a bindi, she wants to dress up in her sari, she loves all these things about our culture and I kind of tease she came out of the womb loving the color gold which is very Indian thing. A lot of Indian things, a lot of things in India are gold. And one year for Halloween she said, I wanna be the color gold. And I was like, that just makes my Indian mamma heart so proud. That she just, she loves gold and India. And anything to do with that. So I feel like her love for India has healed something in me. It really has. I'm really strong in my stance that I don’t believe in this life, there is full healing for adopted people. Once that fracture takes place, once we are removed unnaturally from our mothers, whose bodies housed us, once that fracture takes place, I believe there can be many things taken, many steps, reunion, and getting to know someone, researching. Even if you can’t have physical reunion with your biological family, understanding your heritage and embracing those things, I think they can all bring some degree of healing. Rubina has brought some degree of healing, just her existence, just having a biological relative living that I know and I can see. Having myself mirrored in her. And on top of that, her love for India. I believe those things have really brought me a lot of healing. But the fracture doesn’t go away. So it’s a really wonderful thing for me, and I should also say, and I don’t know if credit myself is the right way to say this. But she loves India because I bring that into our home. I mean, she didn’t, I do believe some of it is innate to her. There’s something, I mean maybe it skipped a generation, I don’t know. But it’s like, she just gets it. She just, and sometimes, I teased her recently because I felt a little embarrassed because I feel like there’s things she understands that I don’t about India and Indian culture. And some of that may just be the openness of young minds, right? So I think that it’s been a real, a real joy for me to get to see her embrace the culture and for us to do it together and to really learn together. And the things that I’ve brought into my home and the frequency with which we speak of India and Indian people, it really has an impact on her, but the way she has embraced it is really what the sweet gift is for me.

Haley - Have you let Rubina see Calcutta Is My Mother?

Reshma – Yes. The, I’m trying to think, about a year ago, I saw the first rough cut of the film. Kevin and I watched it together and we talked about having Rubina watch it with us. And we were just all home together when we got and we were so excited. And she was really excited. She didn’t, you know children, can’t fully grasp something until they see it in front of them. And so I don’t think she understood, she doesn’t do a lot of documentary watching on her own time. So she didn't really understand exactly what it was going to look like. So we did, we watched it together. And we, you know the three of us, we cried together when we watched it. And Kevin stayed home with Rubina while I was in India. And so he had heard all the things probably way too many times. But he, to physically see what happened and he knew how much I struggled. But to see it was different. And the three of us, we were still living in Denver at the time, now we’re in Seattle. But I can picture us. We sat on the couch together and kinda huddled up and we cried. And it was really good for us. And you know, Haley, you’ve got these two sweet boys. And I know they know about adoption. And they know what you do. And it’s a really interesting thing to be educating our children about adoption loss and trauma at such a young age. It’s also, it’s difficult with them in some ways as it is with our parents, kind of, our unfogging, right? Because Rubena knows my parents. And loves them. And so I have to, we kind of, together, she has kind of learned with me how I have this longing for my Indian side. And I have this deep connectedness to my adoptive side. And it’s hard. But you know, she asks about her Indian grandma. And the first time she did was really, call me dumb, the first time I really realized the significance of her losses. You know, she too has an Indian family. And I didn’t share this before but three months, you asked me about returning from Calcutta. And three months after I got back from Calcutta, my mom passed away. And that really added this kind of extra layer of grief as I was still really numb and just starting to figure out how I felt about my time in India, my mom passed away and I was very, very close to my mom. And Ruby was very close to my mom. And so, it was in that first three months after my mom died, so 6 months after the film, after we filmed, that Ruby and I both kind of started grieving my Indian mom and my mom who raised me. And it was a really unique thing for us to do together. She was little enough that she was home with me, at the time she hadn’t started school yet. And I remember we sat this one day and she was, she got emotional and said, you know I miss Grammy, which is my mom. And I said, you know, I really, I miss her too. And I started crying and she said, and I also miss my Indian Grandma, but I don’t even know her. And I had this real struggle and I still do with you know, grieving the two of them. Grieving this mother who raised me who was this remarkable, she was this remarkable, extraordinary person and mother. I just, you know, she wasn’t perfect but she was really wonderful. And I never felt any lack of connection to her other than just the knowledge that I was not biologically hers. And then also, in a way, it felt so much easier to grieve her because I knew her. But then I also had this newly found grief over my country and my heritage and my Indian mother. And how do you grieve someone you don’t know? How do you grieve someone who you aren’t sure or not is grieving you? And people say that all the time, this is not a new concept. Grieving the living is so much more difficult. And you know, I'm sure you’ve had this said to you many times too, people say well, of course a mother could never forget her child. Of course she thinks of you every day. And the reality is, we don’t know that. And even if I did know that, it’s not the same as sitting with her and hearing that from her. But you know, she’s likely out of reach for me forever. And when you kind of realize you have to grieve that, it’s difficult. And so to be able to kind of do that with my daughter, my little girl, and also being sure not to burden her with my burdens and really and truly, these things have really come from her. It’s been incredible and I think, you know, that’s why I say it’s like this gift to me. I don’t have like this in house little culture hotspot with her. She’s just embracing it and she gets even at such a young age that we have a family to grieve.

Haley – Okay. Well, you got me crying too. Good job. It’s, yeah. Okay. God, you know every time we talk about grief on this show, something just cracks open and I just, I don’t know, there’s something there.

Reshma - Yeah.

Haley – Okay, I guess I might need to make an appointment with my psychologist. Anywho, before we wrap up, I want to ask you, now you’re, I don’t know if you’re gonna categorize yourself like this, but I’m going to. You’re a public figure in adoptee land, and especially now that you, the documentary is coming out, it will already have premiered when this is released. And you’ve got things coming up, more showings of it, and speaking engagements, et cetera. But it started somewhere for you. You started writing about it. But what would you say to other adoptees who don't necessarily have the public platform that you’ve built? What would you say to them about sharing their experiences and the importance of that?

Reshma - I would say, to just keep doing it. I would say keep plugging away, I would say be prepared for resistance. I think that when you are writing and sharing as you’re coming out of the fog, you are very easily influenced. And I think that if I could kind of go back and do this again, which of course wouldn’t have the same result, right? Had I known anything going in. But I think that, not that I have necessarily any great wisdom to impart, but if I were going to say one thing I think I would encourage people to be so honest, even painfully so. And anticipate that some people may push back a little bit. But I think it’s just worth it to go all in. I think that it is one of the scariest, most vulnerable things to really be honest about our innermost thoughts. I think especially in adoption where there’s this really false narrative out there that people have clung to and are really having a hard time pulling back from. I think it’s just really important to just be honest. And know that you’re gonna get pushback. But I think it’s just really important to keep trudging through it. And to lean on the community. But I also will just say, if you’re going to write about adoption, if you’re going to speak about adoption and you’re coming out of the fog, and you’re just beginning to do some of these things, honestly, I would say get an adoptee competent therapist. I just started last year. For the first time, I found an incredible therapist who is also a transracial adoptee. I would recommend that for transracial adoptees. Or again, at least someone who kind of understands, and recognizes and acknowledges adoptee trauma. I think that really would have significantly changed my processing of it. I think it would have really played a key role. So yeah, I think though, just, I just think you have to just keep going. You just have to keep doing it and keep pushing. And people are gonna say and react however they want. But it’s important. It’s important. It’s worth it.

Haley – Agreed. Well said.

(harp music)

Haley – Well this is like, the Adoptees On time machine now. Okay, so, same interview, but we’re like a couple weeks ahead now. And your premier’s already happened, so I want you to tell us all about it.

Reshma - Oh the premier really went so well, I can’t have imagined it going better then it went. It was a really bizarre experience, to tell you the truth. But it was really, it felt really good at the same time. But definitely bizarre. I mean there’s just no way around being in a room full of 230 people watching your film. This is nearly 4 years, well, 4 years in the making because we had started the process, long before we actually put the initial trailer out. So yeah, it was really interesting and I thought I would feel kind of a sense of relief like an exhale. I’d been holding my breath for about 4 years. And it felt like maybe at the premier I would be able to exhale or in the days following. And I haven’t exhaled yet, so I don't know if that ever comes. I might need to consult an expert or something. But you know, it’s a weird feeling. I think that at the premier, everything went so quickly. We got there to kind of set up a couple of things, and then you know, within minutes, I’m seeing people from my childhood, old neighbors of mine, people from every church I’ve ever attended, every school I’ve ever attended. One of the leaders from a mission trip that I was on when I was 14 came in, I haven’t seen her since, you know that time. It was also, I feel like I need to confess, that it was a mission trip in Hawaii, because I know how to do mission work. But anyway, so, we did work. We did work, we worked really hard. But we were also on Maui. So, anyway, but I got to see her and that was really a neat experience after 25 years. And then, you know, all my family was there, cousins and aunts and uncles, of course my dad and brothers and my in-laws were there. And it was a really nice feeling to see everyone, but also just so, I mean I just, I’m gonna be redundant and keep saying the word bizarre because I feel like there isn’t anything else that could really describe the event. But it was good, good bizarre.

Haley – Good bizarre.

Reshma - I don’t know—

Haley – I don't know if you’re gonna say this, you’re too modest. But it was sold out, that’s amazing to get over 200 people to come to something like that. It’s a huge accomplishment. You were on TV the morning before promoting it, like, come one. Don't be too humble, that’s like a huge accomplishment.

Reshma - Okay Haley, reel it in. No, I appreciate that, thank you for saying those things, I wasn’t gonna mention any of those things. But I appreciate that. It is and I can acknowledge that. I kinda keep saying, there’s two, well I say this frankly a lot of adoption. That there’s two parts of me, but regarding the film, there is producer Reshma who, you know, does what’s for the best of the film. The film’s money is separate from everything. We’re not profiting from this, everything that we make on ticket sales go into fund the next screening. I’m not lining my pockets. Plus, it should also be said, we raised the money for the film on Kickstarter but also Michael and I have put in a lot of our own money to make this happen. Which we’re happy to do, that’s not a complaint and not something that we need a pat on the back for. But just to say, I like to be really clear especially in adoption land. That this is not something where we’re trying to, certainly not a get rich quick scheme.

Haley – Yeah, it’s like the worst way to make money possible.

Reshma - It really is. So, we’re bleeding money, but that’s okay, we’re really grateful for the people who’ve been so generous with their money and with their time. And for us, we just, we see a lot of value in putting this film out there, so it’s really worth it to us. But I just did wanna clarify that. Yeah, Michael and I got to go on Portland’s morning show, Friday AM Northwest. It’s a show I great up watching with my mom. And it was really a cool experience. It was really fun, Michael and his wife flew in from Dallas. Michael’s the director of course. And they flew in from Dallas and the studio, the KATU news studio, they gave the girls a full tour, our daughters. They got to do the weather, all the things. They got to meet the meteorologists. Did I say that correctly?

Haley – Yes.

Reshma - And they just had the greatest time and we did too. We felt like it went really well. And we were really well received. And then yeah, we sold on Friday, the night before. And we had hoped we would sell out. But yeah, it was really exciting feeling to know that we could pack that theater.

Haley – So you’re in the theater, it’s packed, what happens?

Reshma - So I’m in the theater, everybody starts, they start dimming the lights, and you know our host was a really good, is a really good Kevin’s and mine, Kevin’s best friend in fact. And he kind of hosted the event so that we didn’t have to, it was wonderful. And I'd given him a really strict timeline. And all of the sudden he’s up there and you know, it’s like, oh my goodness, it’s 3 o’clock, it’s time. It was out of body. You know, to be sitting there, again just the culmination of events that has led us here after all this time. Michael was sitting in front of me, I was sitting next to Kevin. Michael and his wife were sitting in front of us. And I kind of reached forward and grabbed his shoulders and I’m like, oh my gosh, this is happening. Like it’s happening now and I kept trying to figure out, am I here? You know, am I in, I’m not, I don’t feel in my body. And so I felt really vulnerable and exposed because I was. You know, I really did not hold back in the making of the film. Every feeling and thought that popped in my head, I said on camera. And so those things were shared and a lot of people have kind of followed my journey but didn't have, you know, insight into my inner thoughts, right? And so those were out there. And it was weird, I didn't think, so I told a lot of people before, I won't be able to sit in there and watch the film. There’s just no way that I can sit in a room full of people and watch this, I’ll leave. And I imagined myself sitting in the lobby and just kind of waiting and popping my head back in here and there. But I actually stayed. In the very end I left for a couple minutes, it was kind of an emotional scene. And I did leave for about 2 minutes. But for the most part I sat and watched. And I was really pleased with the response. people laughed more than I thought they would which is really good. because I had been so worried, and I’ve told you, that this is the most depressing film. And so it isn’t. I mean, not the most depressing film, but you know, it documents the journey of an adopted person out of the fog. And that’s a really scary, can be a very sad, really difficult journey. And so it isn’t that, I'm teasing of course that I think it’s the most depressing film. It’s really enlightening, but people laughed a lot and that felt good, people cried a lot and that felt good too, because I felt like the message was conveyed. I felt like people can understand how I was feeling as I was navigating all of these things in Calcutta. You know, they essentially went on this journey with me in Calcutta. So that felt really good. My biggest concern going in was that everything was taken with a spirit with which it was said, right? And so there are times you know, that I talk about kind of longing for my Indian mother and that was a new feeling. That wasn’t something I had really felt I guess, I guess maybe in an obscure way I had been longing for her. obviously I was longing for my country and didn't, I didn't really see that that was longing for my Indian mother disguised as something else, this longing for cultural connection. And so of course we feel like we have to defend everything we say, adopted people. So it feels like, just because I’m longing for her doesn’t mean I don't love my family. And I really wanted to be sure that message was conveyed. And actually it’s funny, because people kind of give me a hard time and say, you go so above and beyond trying to make that point, that we’re actually getting a little tired of how much you love your family. You know? So good, and I’m actually happy, I’m happy to be on that side of it, frankly. But the people who I really, the response, I was really the most interested in the response from my family, from my dad and my brothers most, more specifically. And then—

Haley - Had they seen any of it?

Reshma - No.

Haley – Okay.

Reshma - They had only seen the trailer. So I offered them a preview actually, if Michael’s listening to this, he doesn’t know that. I had told my dad and brothers, if you feel like you need to see it before you watch it in a theater full of people, I’ll make that happen. Because it’s really sensitive obviously to our family. And they said no. Well, my dad said no on behalf of them, my brothers really would have liked to. I said that my dad would make the ruling. And my dad said no, that he wanted to see it in the theater for the first time. So it was a lot for them to see that. And I imagine they're still processing. But I was most concerned about their response first and foremost. And they were so, I don't know, I couldn’t have had a better response from them. They were so, they were really emotional. My brother teased, he said, I only cried once. Right from the start, all the way through to the end. It was, they were really sweet about it. And then the other group of people I was interested in their response, was the other Indian adoptees. There were quite of few adoptees from my specific orphanage. And then, I think there was like somewhere between 12 to 15 Indian adoptees and about half of those came from IMH, my orphanage. And so we share a similar story. And their response has also been really, really incredible. And I you know, I worried about that because in adoption land, it seems like there’s a couple of people out there telling their story at a time. And I am only telling mine. I'm only telling my feelings based on my experience. I’m not a representative, I am not a spokesperson, I would never want to speak on behalf of other specifically transracial adopted people. And so that’s not what I’m trying to do. So I really don't want to influence any adopted people’s experiences who have gone back, and I actually appreciate in the, during the Q&A, an international adoptee from my orphanage actually stood up and she said she had gone to India and she had a very different experience than I did. And I was happy that she said that because I really think that’s so important. I'm not setting some kind of bar to which anybody else needs to either lower themselves to or raise themselves to, right? I just, this was just my experience and that’s all it is. It is Reshma’s experience returning to Calcutta for the first time and Reshma’s feelings surround that experience. It is not representative of the adoptee or transracial or Indian adoptee community at all.

Haley – Wow. Okay, so, you’re doing the Q&A, what other questions were people having or were they just telling you like, how they received the film? What was that like?

Reshma - The Q&A was interesting. I really appreciated that anybody was willing to kind of stand up and say anything. I received some really good questions. One of the first great questions came from a woman who had approached me in the intermission in between, after the film and before the Q&A. And said that she’s currently awaiting the arrival of her daughter from India. So, I think she said she’s within just a couple of months.

Haley – Yikes.

Reshma - And she’s, it was that, that always throws me off guard just a little. Some is just because there’s just natural tension be adult adoptees and adoptive parents. And so, and I won't even get into all that because it’s just such a nightmare. But I, so I always worry a little bit when I’m approached with that kind of information. But I will say, she said that she has been studying and researching for years. That she’s been intentionally seeking out adult adoptee voices and adult adoptee websites and doing a lot of research. She said that regarding India, that the film was the most insightful for her. And so I felt really good about that. That’s what I’m hoping is, that it will open people’s eyes. And you know, it isn’t my job to encourage or discourage people from adopting, I’m just out here speaking truth about my situation and what I believe about adoption. But you know, I long ago, let go of this duty to get people to stop adopting or whatever. I think that when people know the truth, that the, likely they’ll do better and make choices based on that truth. Even just with my project, it isn’t my job to stop adoption. I mean, that’s a ridiculous assignment. And so, anyway, so one of the first questions was from this gal who’s waiting for her daughter from India. And she said, how soon should adopted people know their whole story? And I just said, always. I joked that people ask me a lot, well when did you find out you were adopted? And it’s like, as soon as I could see that all of my family were white. You know, it was pretty evident for me, there wasn’t much hiding. I am not a late discovery adoptee. It would have been a really difficult thing to disguise. So I have always known. Of course my story kind changes through the film from what my parents were told, to what was reality. And that’s, you know, not really, it certainly wasn’t my parents’ fault, but it is industry professional’s fault. I believe my orphanage holds some responsibility there and I believe that the adoption agency holds the bulk of responsibility there. I think they just lied. To make me a better story, right? More saveable. So I appreciated that question and what I, in general about the Q&A, I don't necessarily need to go into all the questions, but what I appreciated was the privilege that I have, that I get to do this, that I get to go around a country and the world, and present this documentary, and then stand up and say what I believe. And talk about my convictions about adoption. Again, not that it’s my job or responsibility, but I feel like I have to really maximize this moment. This is just a brief moment in time, this film. And this opportunity and I have learned a lot. And I think that knowledge needs to be shared. And I've learned it from other people. I’m not just brilliant on my own. I mean, that’s like really funny, because I'm not at all brilliant. But I have learned and I have—

Haley – That’s not true.

Reshma - Well that’s very kind, but I have learned and I have listened a lot over the last few years. And I think it’s really important. I’m thankful for the people who spoke up and shared those things with me and now it’s my time to kind of share those things with other people. So I think it was a great opportunity to say, to expand on my story a little bit. People had some follow up questions about where am I now, 4 years later, right? The film ends and I’m just coming out of the fog and I’m really devastated by that turn of events. I didn't anticipate that, it did not go how I thought that it would go at all. So people had some really good follow up questions about where am I today, how am I today, what are my relationships with my family like, have I gone back to India again, will I go back to India, you know, all of those kinds of things. And I just, I really appreciated the opportunity to answer those questions. And it feels like, I think that, I’m guessing at some point there will be a time where there’s a screening where I won’t have a Q&A after. And I think that’ll be hard. I think that I, for me, I needed that opportunity to address the audience who just kind of went on this journey with me. and so I don't know what that looks like. I mean, eventually people will be able to stream it in their homes and obviously I won't be there for a private Q&A on their couch. And that’s a little bit more difficult for me to think about.

Haley – Sure, ‘cause you can’t get in there and be like, and just so you know, I do still love my adoptive family. You’re gonna have that in the credits? Like oh, and also, lemme just fill in.

Reshma - In case you missed it, exactly. All of my disclaimers, exactly. Reshma’s currently living happily in Seattle Washington with her family. She does still love them and speak to them every day.

Haley – Oh my gosh.

Reshma - Yeah.

Haley - Brutal, brutal. So I know you felt vulnerable and exposed and sorry to bring this up. But they did show a clip on the news. I don't know if it’s from the trailer, or, anyway. You’re walking in India, and you have this like pink something, and your back is so sweaty. And I’m like, oh my gosh, why? Why would they do that to you? That’s so mean. I can’t believe they would do that.

Reshma - Okay, this is hilarious. So, that scene. Okay, yes, it’s very, very, very hot in India. And it’s so funny, because I, the back sweat is like real. I mean, there is more sweat on my back than there isn’t, right? Like it was so dark pink. And somebody asked me after the film, were there any parts of the film that you don't like? And I said, did you see the scene where Michael’s filming while I’m going up the stairs from behind? I don't like that scene! Like, all these things. So, yes, when I'm watching the film, what’s so funny is, and maybe this is a self-protection thing, but all I can see are the, oh my skin looks bad there, oh my gosh, look, I can see a double chin, or look at the back sweat, or there’s my butt going up stairs. I don't know who thought that was a good angle. Yes, yes, I appreciate you addressing the vulnerability on many levels. And yeah, I would tell people, I think I might prefer spilling my guts on screen again than having my gut shown.

Haley – Well, I just, I think that, just for people to understand what it's taken you to come to a place where you can share all of these things. And it’s not just baring your heart, it’s also as a woman, how you feel about yourself. And how you’re portrayed that way. And then, I know you keep saying, I’m just sharing my own personal story. But for a lot of adoptees, they look up to you, they identify with you, and just, we talked a little bit about this, moments ago. But it was a couple of weeks ago. Just about sharing your story and how important it is. But that there’s also a cost that goes along with that. And so now that you’ve been out a week and I looked at your Facebook page. people are like love it, everybody that’s, that went to see it, like some people came to your Facebook page just to tell you how much they loved it and how meaningful it was. How do you feel about that? The impact it’s having, even though there is a cost to you, the impact that it’s had for the people who have seen it and will see it?

Reshma – I’ll go back a little bit where, I love that question, Haley, that’s a great question. Yeah, it did come at a cost and it continues to come at a cost. And some of the, not even all of that has hit yet. I haven’t really experienced very much criticism. For the most part, everything I’ve heard has been really positive feedback. We’ve heard a couple of constructive criticism things about the film. But, I mean, by a couple mean I literally mean 2. And so the film was done so beautifully and so well, Michael is just incredible. And it’s really mind blowing. But, and then really, most of the feedback has been positive. And sure, is there a couple people hiding somewhere who may have had negative feelings or didn't like it or something and they’re just being polite? Sure, that’s fine and that’s fair. But yeah, the cost is great, and I think it will be ongoing. I appreciate what you said just about being a woman and putting myself out there. It’s like, do I wish I lost 45 pounds before I filmed the movie, yeah, you know. Do I wish I’d lost the same 45 pounds that I seem to be holding onto, before I went to the premier, yeah. Those are real things that we as women, and frankly, especially for adopted people because so much, there’s so much weight put on our, pun intended, on our parents, right? And how we view ourselves because we’re always looking for these mirrors. And so, it’s like, oh, this physical part of me looks like that, or oh my nose is big, or my nose is small. Or whatever it is that we’re constantly, we have all these ties to our parents because that’s just such a huge part of who we are and a huge part of what we’re missing. So that for me will just be ongoing. And I ultimately just had to let it go to some degree. I'm not totally comfortable with it, with the back sweat and the bottom filling up the screen going upstairs. I mean, I'm telling you, you haven’t really seen your bottom until you’ve seen it on a movie theater screen.

Haley – Oh my gosh.

Reshma - So you know, it’s not ideal. But, it really is kind of like a metaphor for this experience, right? I really, really, really spilled my guts and bled on that screen. I let people in so far, that it, you know, dangerously far. Because people are going to have opinions about my opinion. People are going to have opinions about my feelings. And it’s just ridiculous, right? because none of us really should have opinions about those things. None of us should voice opinions about how someone else feels about their own experience, but we all do it. We’re all guilty of it. And especially for adopted people, we really are heavily scrutinized on our response to adoption. And that we should just be so grateful and all of that. And so any time there’s any kind of questioning or pushback, immediately labeled as angry or ungrateful, right? I think that, just, the response has been really incredible and I think, I really believe in the film, as cheesy as that sounds, I really believe the response will continue to be for the most part positive. I think that I really believe that people will see my vulnerability and even if they don't agree with what I'm saying or even if they think well gosh that just seems so weird that she would feel that way, I think that people will take it for what it is. It felt that way. You know, what’s interesting about that is, I really thought that having the initial premier would be like ripping off the Band-Aid. And that you know, I would have that exhale, that sigh of relief, like, oh okay I can do this now, I can go on this screening tour. What’s funny is, it dawned on me immediately after the screening, it’s like I had no break. Immediately after the screening I thought, well this is literally the safest environment that I will ever be in showing this film. Like, I could not be safer, there could not be more buffers around me, right? My family, who love me, my extended family who love me. My family and friends. Michael’s family and friends. And all of those people, it was really the safest we could be. And so now I’m a whole new different kind of scared. Going out to show this to strangers who don't know me, who don't know my background, who don't my family. And don't really have that entire frame of reference, you know? They will really just see this snapshot. And of course there were strangers there, there were people there who gave really positive feedback who didn't know me. A couple of people came up to me and said, oh I just found this on the internet the other day. And you know, so we bought tickets. And so there was a handful of people there, I don't know, probably 10 to 20 that we didn't know. And then of course some of Michael’s family and friends also don't know me. And so there were people there who didn’t know me and still had a really good response. But it’s scary and I think that it was naïve in some sense that it would get less scary. I think that the fear of being seen and the vulnerability both just physically and emotionally and all of those things, that fear will continue. But I also think that I will learn to manage it better. We, I’m trying to think, so a year ago new year’s. 2017 going into 2018. We were originally gonna release the film last fall. And so I knew it was gonna come out in 2018 and then we just missed it by a couple of weeks ‘cause of dates and things. But I was terrified coming up on New Year’s, coming into 2018. Because it was gonna be the year the film would come out. And I couldn’t breathe. I was like, dreading New Year’s and I kept crying and I kept thinking, I cannot do this. There’s just no way, I’ve gotta go back, what was I thinking. And so I've come a long way since then and it isn’t easy but it’s getting easier. And I think that will just be an ongoing part. You know our friend Anne Heffron talks about writing the book and she says, writing the book was so hard but it was actually harder when you know people are reading the book. Because you, doing the work is really, really hard. And it’s an emotional process and this therapeutic thing that you have to go through and these really high highs and these really low lows. And then you kinda think it’s over like, I did it! But then other people, other people who, some are very kind and not judgmental and other people who aren’t as kind and are very judgmental. All of those people are going to see this work. And then you have to kind of deal with that. And so that’s where I am right now. That’s what’s next, is people are gonna see this and you know, I wouldn’t necessarily ask anybody to go easy on me. It is what it is and people will react however they’re going to react. I don't have any control over that. So it’s really just up to me at this point to you know, stand my ground in who I am, right? And what other people, you know, it’s that saying, what other people think of you is none of your business. Which is like, absurd. It’s the most absurd statement. Because could anything be more difficult? And every once and a while you hear people say, like, I don't care what people think of me. And I think, yeah right! That’s all I think about! It’s just like, all I think about constantly is what other people think of me and how I’m being perceived. And that’s just something I’m gonna have to keep learning to release and letting go.

Haley – Well thank you. I am so envious of those 200+ people who got to see it.

Reshma - Working on Canada!

Haley – Yeah, yeah, come on up! Wonderful. Thank you so much, Resh, thanks for sharing with us. And hopefully your vulnerability hangover will lighten up a little bit.

Reshma - Yes, vulnerability hangover, that’s the best way to put it. I just wanna say too, on a personal note, you have been so incredibly supportive and encouraging. And over the weekend I received texts and boxes from you, and little notes just encouraging me and I just really means a lot to know that you were out there rooting for me and so far away. It just, it just means a lot. So thank you, I’ve got that from a lot of support from friends all around. And it just really helped to sustain me. So thanks for that.

(harp music)

Haley – Okay, well thank you so much for sharing your story and taking us through some of that journey with you. And of course, for recommended resources I’m gonna recommend that people go check out Calcutta Is My Mother. And I know you’ve got the premier will have finished and you’ve got some scheduled. Where can people find upcoming showings of it?

Reshma – Well the production crew for Calcutta Is My Mother is still working on some of those details. But we do have, following our Portland premier, we will be, the dates are not solid yet, but they will be on our website, calcuttafilm.com. Probably within the next few weeks following the airing of the show.

Haley – Okay, so if people want to see upcoming dates and follow along with everything that’s happening, calcuttafilm.com is the place.

Reshma - Yes, and we’ll be going, right now we have plans for Denver, Seattle, Dallas, Indiana, working on Minneapolis, working on a couple of northeast locations and somewhere in southern California. So we’re ironing out those details, it’s just a lot of work.

Haley – I’m sure, I’m sure. Okay that’s great. And then I have recommended Dear Adoption before on the show, we talk about it a lot here, because it’s such an amazing resource. But today, I asked Resh’s permission, if I could read you, this one example, like if you haven’t checked out Dear Adoption, you’re gonna definitely go after this. ‘Cause it’s so powerful. There’s a few different letters that you have on here, that are from young people. This one is called, Dear Adoption, I Wish I Had her Freckle. And it says, “this piece was submitted anonymously by a 12 year, east Indian adoptee, at a workshop hosted by Dear Adoption. I got adopted and moved to my new family when I was a baby. I do not remember my mom who had me, but I always have this same dream about me being a baby and I can see her hand on my head and her hand has a freckle on her finger. I think that this is my memory, coming into my dream. Sometimes I draw that freckle on my finger with a pen and pretend that I’m her and that I'm like her. I wish I had her freckle. I hope that when I grow up, I can be like her with my looks and everything but I will not make the same mistake she made when she gave me away.”

Reshma - Hoo!

Haley – Yeah. So, really powerful. And you know, this is almost full circle from when we’re talking about in the beginning of the interview, you sitting with a young 10 year old who’s processing the same grief as you as an adult. And that’s just another piece of it and to see it written out, and to hear those words from a young person is just incredible.

Reshma - Agreed.

Haley – Thank you for curating a space like that for us.

Reshma - Thanks for, you’ve been so supportive and wonderful to Dear Adoption, so I really appreciate it very much. It’s really what it is, because people are willing to share as you were talking about earlier. So, I’m really grateful for the people who are willing to share.

Haley - Yes and I wrote a piece for Dear Adoption, you gotta scroll way back to find that, because it was a long time ago. Do deep dive if you wanna find that. Okay, what did you wanna recommend to us today.

Reshma - I just have a couple I wanted to recommend. I know you and I both share a passion for preserving families and not separating them unnecessarily. I really believe that adoption and family separation should happen as an absolute last resort. I do believe there are circumstances that may call for it. I believe they're fewer than what we as a society engage in. So that’s really important to me. I started an organization called Family Preservation 365 with my friend Stephanie. And we basically are just a resource site, an educational site, and I’m just trying to spread awareness for adoption ethics, the lack thereof, rather. And providing tools and information and educating people so that they understand that really most families don't need to be separated. That there is a way to keep them together. So that is FP365 and the other one is an incredible resource that kind of blows my mind by another friend of mine, Katie. And she has started the Family Preservation Project. And the Family Preservation Project has a state by state resource guide for vulnerable women who are pregnant, or single mothers, vulnerable or not, I really feel like all women, when we’re pregnant are vulnerable, married or single or in a difficult situation. Whatever their circumstance, pregnancy is a vulnerable time. Which is why we’ve got to intercept these adoption agencies preying on people who are in these situations. So Family Preservation Project has a state by state resource guide, information for fathers, and it’s vast. And incredible, and Katie assembled this on her own. And if you go to her website and search your state, you can find resources and information that will blow your mind that most people don't even know are available and she found them all. So I highly recommend it.

Haley – And resources can mean places to find financial support, or housing support, or diapers, or places to stay that are affiliated with adoption agencies. Because a lot of, this is so sketchy. There’s places you can stay for free, like we give you free rent and food and medical appointments and at the end, goodbye, it’s just like a baby and mother home and we take your baby.

Reshma - Yep.

Haley – But Katie has vetted all of these places. And so everything on there is a safe place for you to go to if you’re in that situation or to recommend to a friend who’s in that situation. If you’re in any of the Facebook groups that are not necessarily adoptee related but just adoption related, there’s women that are going in there and looking for help. This is a great place to recommend they go. You can say oh go check out the Family Preservation Project, I bet you can find something near you that will be helpful to you.

Reshma - Exactly.

Haley – Resh is not exaggerating, it is extensive.

Reshma – It is brilliant. Katie has a really brilliant mind in general. She’s a first mother, she’s experienced this first hand and she has said, if she had even an ounce of these resources available to her, she would not have lost her daughter. And it’s just remarkable what she’s done in light of really, what has been done to her. It’s pretty incredible.

Haley – Yep, yep, absolutely. Okay great, thank you so much for sharing those. And where can we connect with you online?

Reshma – Well you can find me on Facebook, Reshma McClintock, Instagram same. And I spend a lot of time there and then I have my own, rebuilding my personal website right now a little bit. But mostly social media is a great place to connect.

Haley – Perfect, thanks so much. It was just an honor hearing your story today. And hearing from your heart. So we appreciate that so much.

Reshma - Well, I really appreciate you and we are friends beyond adoption land, and I really appreciate the friendship. But just the work you’re doing’s incredible. I cannot tell you the number of times I’ve seen posts or shares of your show and people just saying that Adoptees On has changed their life and I truly believe the work your doing is life changing. And I’m so thankful for it and just in awe kind of what you’re able to do. And the far reach that you have managed. And it’s just, it’s really powerful and I’m excited this year to see what keeps happening with Adoptees On! So thank you very much!

Haley – Thank you! And just as you said before, we can’t do this work without people willing to open up and share.

Reshma - Yes.

Haley – From their hearts.

(upbeat music)

Haley – Reshma and I are both speaking at conferences in April. If you would like to see Reshma speak, she is presenting at the Indiana Adoptee Network Conference. You can find out details about that over at indianaadopteenetwork.org. And she will also be screening her documentary, Calcutta Is My Mother. And I will be speaking in Washington D.C., at the American Adoption Congress Conference. And I would love to meet up with you there if you’re able to come. Please let me know you’re coming so we can make sure to say hi and I will be posting details of a listener meetup over on the Adoptees On Facebook page so make sure you’re following that to find out details of where and when. But it will be sometime in the span of the conference which is April 3rd to 6th. Again in Washington, D.C. Would love to meet you there, americanadoptioncongress.org has information about how to register. Thank you so much for supporting this show by listening every week. I would love it as a gift today if you would consider sharing this show with just one other person that you know who is adopted and would benefit from hearing from adoptee voices. Just like theirs too, so they can know that they’re not alone on this journey. Thanks so much for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

(exit music)

Kids – You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. Experience. This is episode 100. This is episode 1! hundred! This is episode 100, this is episode 100! You’re listening to Adoptees On. You’re listening to Adoptees On. Thanks for listening to my mommy’s show.


99 [Healing Series] When Reunion Fails - Identity with Pamela Cordano, MFT

Transcript

Full show notes: http://www.adopteeson.com/listen/99

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I’m your host, Haley Radke, and this is a special episode in our Healing Series, where I interview therapists who are also adoptees themselves so they know from personal experience what it feels like to be an adoptee. Today we tackle one reunion’s fail. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley - I am so pleased to welcome back to the podcast, Pam Cordano, welcome Pam!

Pam – Thank you, hi everybody.

Haley - I am really excited to pick your brain because I have, I asked our listeners some of the things that they really want to hear about and one of the big topics was actually, it’s really sad really, it’s reunion fails. And it’s so common. You know, right? There’s so many of us hurting and we search and everything just kind of blows up. But before we do the reunion fails, another little topic that people were mentioning sort of in hushed whispers were like, okay but I also feel guilty that I have a good reunion. So why don't you just talk to us just a bit about that. Because it’s like, survivor’s guilt? I don't know, is that a bad comparison?

Pam - Well no, it’s a good comparison. I saw that on your thread and I even responded to it. And yeah, it’s so sad that people would feel positive reunion guilt and it makes sense of course, but the thing that’s the saddest about to me is that we already feel, many of us feel like we’re outsiders our whole lives. And then to have a good experience and even potentially feel like an outsider among adoptees is super sad. So I'm sure that there’s a lot of, the potential for jealousy, from other people envy and jealousy, because we all want to have a good reunion. So when people have a great reunion and we see it and we hear about it, for those of us who don't who either have a failed reunion or just a lukewarm reunion, it can just remind us of what we don't have. And so people can have their stomachs clenched as they see this happy mom and child on Facebook or whatever. But I mean, so it makes sense. But I think that the people who have positive reunions, really show us how high the bar can be when reunion goes well and when first mom or first dad or sibling wholeheartedly takes us in and treats us as if we are family. And loves us. And so I know for me, it’s been helpful to see positive reunions because it shows me what I don't have if that makes sense.

Haley - And you don't feel, like, left out or do you? I mean, I guess there’s that, I don't know, this feeling like you’re flaunting happiness in other people’s faces.

Pam - Yeah.

Haley - Maybe that’s just like adoptee land, because we don't have any problem putting up pictures of our happy family activities on Instagram or whatever. But there’s something about putting up a reunion picture when you know that your friend over here is just walking out and has been rejected.

Pam - Yeah, I mean, it’s hard because I think that part of a thread that runs through this whole topic is that this whole time there’s a little part of us, like a young part of us, and then there’s also this hopefully older part of us, at the same time. And so hopefully, like the older parts of us can really be happy for each other when we all have different things that the other ones don't have. But it’s the little part of us that’s so brokenhearted and I mean, even possibly feeling destroyed by the reunion rejection that can just have a really hard time bearing the sight of someone else having a happy reunion. But I mean, I'm an idealistic person, so when I saw that thread on your page I thought to myself, what would I want so much is for all of us, is a community to be big enough for each other that we can just really embrace everybody’s experiences. Good, bad, ugly, and take care of our own hurting inner children that need support and get hurt when we just get any reminder of what we don't have.

Haley – So I think maybe a good way to turn that is like, if someone is feeling, if our post brings up feelings for someone else, it’s also an opportunity for them to do some healing work.

Pam - Right. Yeah, that’s right. Because it isn't really the posts we see, it’s the pain we’re carrying inside of us all the time. I mean, if we have had a bad reunion, we’re carrying that pain all the time and yeah, anything good we see from a happy, positive long term reunion, to a hallmark card, or a movie. Anything can remind us of what we don't have. So yeah, that pain is in us already. And I wouldn’t want people to, I personally wouldn’t want anyone to feel like they have to play small just to make the rest of us comfortable. I feel like, positive reunions are real. And gosh, good for them, you know? And if they can’t bring it to us, where can they bring it where people will understand how important it is?

Haley - Okay, I love that, thank you. Gives us a little bit of permission to be a little bit more open, I think.

Pam - Yeah, yeah.

Haley – Okay, we’re gonna move ahead on the scale. And I had one of my monthly supporters, called her reunion tepid. And I’m inferring from that, there’s a scale of reunion where you’re wholeheartedly welcomed as you said to you don't hear anything or you get the door slam or the letter from the lawyer, or you’re in reunion for a bit and then they’re like, I don't wanna know you anymore. To the like, oh it’s so great that you found us and that’s it, here’s your medical history and I’ll send you a Christmas card? I don't know. Somewhere on that scale.

Pam - Well, you might be invited to one family reunion, but not all of them.

Haley - Oh yeah!

Pam - And you won’t be mentioned in the obituary.

Haley - You got like one foot in, that’s it.

Pam – Yeah. You’re a partial family member. Or a—

Haley – Or you have the asterisk!

Pam - Yeah, yeah. A scale of reunions.

Haley - So just, I mean, talk to us about that a little bit. That also feels like, a super painful place to be. I haven’t had that happen, but I can imagine like, you probably want more or is it easier if you just get the door slam or you close the door then? I don't know.

Pam - I just don't think any of it’s easy. I mean, I haven’t experienced the positive reunion, but I just don't think any of it, I mean, I did have a good reunion with my first mother for 10 years, well it was not good for 10 years, but it was good for like a few days and then it was difficult for 10 years. But I just think in some ways, the cards are stacked against us and what I mean is that, again with the little part of us, and then the adult part of us. I mean, we go into reunion. If we have dreams of finally finding our people and finding our roots and belonging to a family and in a real way that feels real, the way that it is for other people, the stakes are really high for us. I mean I know for me, the stakes were high. I thought that, I found my first mom when I was 25 and I thought that finding her was gonna solve my problems. I believed she would love me and that once I was in her, basking in her love, my whole life would straighten out and make sense. So I think the stakes are high and that I don't know, everybody feels this way, but the people I’ve spoken with have felt like they really want a lot, I mean a ton, like it’s a lifeline, out of the reunion. And what’s hard is that we also want our biological families to like us and love us and trust us and not think that we’re crazy or that we’re gonna try to steal their money or that we’re gonna ruin things for them. So a lot of times we’re on our best behavior and we’re not really being our full selves, we’re being like a false self. Just to try to preserve the connection. And I know I did that, I was trying to be good and not bad. But that’s really hard because then it still feels really tenuous. So I don't know if you relate to this Haley, or not. I just think however it might look on the surface, whether it looks warm and inviting or whether it looks tepid or whether it looks rejecting, there’s a lot inside of us adoptees that’s complicated. Like however much we’re bringing our real selves to the table and saying, this is really, really essential for me, that this goes well. Like my life depends on how well this goes or if we have room in the relationship to talk about our pain and our experiences or our anger. Or if we’re more just trying to morph around the family and fit in and be likeable and not be rejected. Do you know what I mean?

Haley - Yeah, of course.

Pam - So yeah, it’s like a circus going on inside of us.

Haley - Yep.

Pam – And then, there’s just so many variables, that’s what I’m trying to say. So tepid, you know, tepid sounds kind of unpleasant and something’s going wrong, right? Like either the adoptee’s not feeling comfortable or safe to bring his or her whole self to the table or there’s just a lukewarm reception that’s more factual and here’s your health history and you only get to come in the crack of the door but not really, really come in the door.

Haley - And there is probably a first family thinking that same way too, right? We maybe don't wanna show them the full picture, ‘cause all families have the drama and the stuff and especially ones that have relinquished and the secrets. And you know? So it’s a whole thing. Okay, thank you, I appreciate your thoughts on that. And now I really wanna focus the rest of our time on reunions that have just totally failed and so that’s whatever, secondary rejection, one of us, either side have closed the door. That is like, heart wrenching pain and then we shift to, well who am I then? Like, how do I find myself again when you’ve been counting on reunion to like give you back a piece of your identity to find answers? And I think it’s just like, it can create an existential crisis in us, right?

Pam - Yeah, because we’re not like other people. Other people find their sense of identity through a biological lineage of people. And we see our faces in other people’s faces and we hear about all the ancestors that came before us and all of the traditions and the locations and that’s how we know who we are. And so, we already don't have that when we’re adopted and then when we find out that we’re not gonna get to be part of that lineage or they’re not gonna have access to us or however the rejection goes, we don't get to find our identity there in the lineage. So we have to find it, our identity in a new way, in a way that’s unusual and that other people just wouldn’t even understand because they don't even that burden and even have to think about that, you know?

Haley - Right! Yeah, you just are who you are! And you can look at your mirrors and you have all those shared history and customs and rituals and all of those things that are just, you just grow up with.

Pam - Right, so I had a client a few years ago who was an adoptee. And she had failed reunions with her first families and she came into my office and she announced, I am a child of the universe. And I really felt helped by her saying that even though I was the therapist and she was the client, it was like, I love the language. Like, I am a child of the universe. And even though my reunion hadn’t completely failed at that point, I really related to that. And I think that, that’s a way to think about a different kind of identity that’s not through lineage but that we are still alive and we’re still part of this universe and we have to find another way to be us, whatever that might mean.

Haley - Yeah, I was just thinking, you know, for those of us who are fortunate enough to have built families of our own, and we’re kind of starting over. And then, but there’s other people that don't have that either and they’re maybe a single person and I'm just thinking of that image of cut off at the roots then. And then plus you have no branches and plus, then you were hoping for more and then you don't even know what kind of tree you are. And all of those extra layers but also going back to being a parent you know, you also don't want your identity to be rooted in just like, oh I say I’m Griffin’s mom. Or, you know, there has to be something that is just me. Like, who’s Haley? And what am I here for? And I think any time we put hope for identity in somebody else, it’s gonna spell disaster at some point down the line.

Pam – Right and I think with failed reunions, there can be a phase of identity where it’s like, well I’m not them, I’m not them, I’m not them. But that doesn’t really say who we are yet it’s just a, I think there’s a period of time where it’s like, okay, I’m not them. They’re not really, they’re not my family, I mean they’re my biological family, but they’re not the family that I belong to in any kind of emotional or even spiritual way. It hasn’t worked, it’s failed, so I have to find something else. But first for me, it was just like, okay I’m not them.

Haley - Well I remember it was so painful. So, so painful to have the door shut on me. And I remember thinking about all the, any negative qualities I had observed because then I was like, oh I am not any of those things. ‘Cause I, it was so painful, I wanted to distance myself from like possibly having those qualities too.

Pam – Me too, I mean, there were foods I had eaten with my first family that I wouldn’t wanna eat after things broke up. And it was painful. It was like a giant breakup. Well, it was worse than a giant breakup. But it was like that, I had an aversion to anything like them. So I think that might be a normal phase of identity is just, the disillusionment, that it is I’m not them, for me even sort of to figure out, well then who am I if not them?

Haley - Right, yeah. And then I imagine some people may just go back to their adoptive family and have, really be like, this is it. This is where I belong and take on some of those, you know, heritage things more as like, okay, this is really part of me. But yet not all of us have that.

Pam - Yeah, I think that the drive to be part of a family is so deep in us that, to not feel part of a family is so excruciating that yeah, that we might be willing to go back and say okay, fine I’ll do that, I’ll belong to that organization I don't really like or I’ll play along, just to be part of a family, with the adoptive family. I didn’t really do that either. But I would, I could see why. If I had had a different kind of adoptive family, I might have done that. I might have said, okay now I belong back with you guys. Just to ease the pain.

Haley - And there’s nothing wrong with it.

Pam - It’s like going back to a different ex, like going back to an ex.

Haley - Right? There’s nothing wrong that. Like, you get to choose, that’s the thing. You wanna feel like you belong somewhere but who else gets to choose? I mean I guess anybody can choose family, like family you choose. When we talk about friends like that. Oh you’re the family I choose. I really have a probably with that because of my situation. But yeah, it’s, there’s nothing wrong with that I guess.

Pam - I’m thinking of this thing I saw on the internet yesterday that I’m not sure if this is gonna make sense at first. But it was this thread talking about true orphans. And I think that they were talking about when they were talking about true orphans, it was like orphans who had truly lost both of their parents to death and so that was why they were then adopted. Like a true orphan. And so I did this thing I always do, where I got my dictionary out and I was just like looking up this definition. Like what literally is an orphan? And you know, I just, I’m not saying this to sound dramatic. I really am just saying this more of a grounded way. I actually think all of us were orphaned because we were estranged from our first parents. So we have that experience of being orphaned in us no matter what. And then that experience, it just can’t be replaced by adoption. We’ve talked about this before. So when we have a failed reunion, we’re back to that orphan piece, I believe. And we can call it whatever we want to, but I’m just using the word orphan to just, I don't know, I relate to it I guess. And it’s just, the pain of it is so incredibly deep that yeah, we may be really angry at our first families and not eat the food like I did, or just stay away from them in every way. I blocked mine on Facebook, I just couldn’t bear to even be near them once it failed. And then what you said about, some people might go back to their adoptive families, and try to find a different place in the home that they had never maybe wanted before. Just to not feel that gaping hole inside, that gaping orphan hole. At some point, I mean I think we kind of have to, to get more and more healthy, we have to be with the enormity of the pain of not being part of that original family and I think it takes time. And we can go through different phases of kind of flailing and grasping until we kind of just let the pain be what it is and learn how to live side by side with it. Where it doesn’t necessarily take over us anymore but it’s just there, like a companion, you know and maybe it becomes even something. I say companion as a friendly word but, it can become something other than what it starts off as.

Haley - It’s like a grieving process right? Just another grieving process, yeah. So can you give some advice to someone who maybe is in that? And is like, really leaning into that feeling of who am I, where do I find my identity? What are some things that they could do?

Pam – It’s hard to answer that question because our paths are all so different. Like if somebody were to stay for years in the anger stage, I could understand that. Especially as a younger person. Like, when I was in my 20s or 30s, I was much more inclined to just live in an angry place. I can still be that way. But I don't like it as much as I used to like it. But you know, just being really bitter and cynical and you know, like that. And I don't think that’s a great way to live, but I think sometimes we don't know what else to do besides being like that. And of course, yeah, sure, going to therapy could help. Making friends with people who have more of a sense of, who are more inclined toward growth and even optimism can be good for us if we’re stuck in that kind of bitter place. I also think that a false self is a danger. I guess I’m talking about dangers. Like I think it can be dangerous thinking, well if my family now has rejected me twice, I better really be on my best behavior out in public. And never let anybody see anything wrong with me or be a perfectionist because it’s just so dangerous out there in the world of relationships and family. So that could be another trap a person falls into. So I think that what helps is, the same thing that helps with grief, it’s finding people who understand and I think that’s where the communities like the one you have created are helpful because we have people we can talk to who are different flavors of our experience and who have room to hear us and listen and understand and care. And I think that connecting with people who understand is helpful, you know? On one of our adoptee retreats last year, there was, we do a thing at the last day where we give each other imaginary gifts. And they're really awesome because they can be really anything. And there was this one woman who gave another adoptee who had a failed reunion, this amazing gift. And the gift was, to go back 20 generations and to be sitting at a dinner table with the best relatives from more than 20 generations ago in her biological family and they would tell her all the stories of their strengths and their victories and their attributes and all the things that are infused in her DNA that have carried into her life. And she just got to eat dinner with them and hear it all from her distant ancestors. And I thought that was such a beautiful wish that this woman gave, this other woman in the group. And for someone to understand that would be a gift that would be meaningful to us, it takes an adoptee pretty much to get that. So I think finding people to connect with is the biggest thing to do.

Haley - For sure. And oh, that’s, what a beautiful picture of like, I mean you could do that for yourself. Like you could write yourself a letter from you know, one of your ancestors and even if it’s not true. You could still tell yourself, these are things that we've passed down to you and you could picture the good qualities that you wanna have. And claim them for yourself.

Pam - Yeah, and I think that it could be more than one ancestor, it could be, I would think at least 20 ancestors that tell us things about ourselves. And it’s not, it’s make believe but it’s also, it speaks to that child part of us that is still in concrete thinking and doesn’t really understand why this would happen twice. And you know these people, 20 generations ago, are innocent. I mean, they’re not the ones that relinquished us or rejected us again and so it’s good to go back to innocent people and it’s kind of like a spiritual exercise. Because we’re transcending time to do it.

Haley - Yeah, like I was thinking the word make believe but it’s almost also like, you know how you can write intentions and those types of things to help you focus in on positives and, or your goals or whatever, we can say all the buzz words. But there’s just something so beautifully reframing and healing for an adopted person who feels like now their roots are completely inaccessible. But just, I don't know, I’m really stuck on this. It’s just such a powerful idea. I love that, I wish I could have been in the room for that one.

Pam - Well now we’re all in the room.

Haley - We’re all in the room.

Pam - You have heard, right, that our bodies don't know the difference between imagery and reality? Do you know that?

Haley - No.

Pam - Okay, I wasn’t sure if anyone had talked about this before on your show, but if everybody right now imagines a fat juicy lemon. You pick it from a lemon tree. And you cut it open with a knife and you pick up half of it and you bring it to your mouth and you squeeze drops of lemon in your mouth, many people’s mouth will actually water even though it’s just an image. And so there’s a lot of power that imagery has for helping us actually feel things that are not really happening. So it is a nice way that the older part of us can soothe the younger part of us through imagery and a sense of belonging to the lineage. Even though current time, we don't.

Haley - So there’s ways that we can sort of give ourselves that even if it’s been taken away?

Pam - Yeah.

Haley - Okay, do you have any final thoughts on this, this whole like, secondary rejection, reunion breakdown, and identity piece?

Pam – Well, I have two hopeful things to say that are important to me that I use for myself since I’ve had full on secondary rejection, that I’m a child of the universe. And one is, that you know, we humans, we are still human even if we’ve been rejected, we’re still human. So humans are really built to be resilient and we have it in us to handle incredible devastation and stress and broken heartedness and our ancestors have been doing it for so long. So I know that, I tell myself that, I tell myself that inside of me I have the capacity because I’m a human to be extremely resilient, I’m built that way. So that’s one thing that I tell myself. Another thing I tell myself is that we, I, have the capacity to hold a contradiction in my heart. Like my heart is big enough to hold a contradiction. So it didn't feel comfortable to feel hatred or to wish harm upon, or to feel mostly hatred toward anyone in my first family. And so I had to hold those really angry and hurt, and furious and hurt and at the same time, they're humans and they have their own reasons for whatever they do and all that stuff. So I used to, when it was really fresh, I used to send them like loving kindness thoughts. Like, you might have heard the meditation, may you be happy, may you be safe and free from danger. May you be healthy and strong in your body, may you have ease, something like that. And I used to just make myself wish them well because I didn't want my heart to be closed on top of secondary rejection. Like I didn’t want to walk around with this anger and bitterness in me. I wanted to live into the idea that I have the right to be my full self, whatever that might mean. But I'm not gonna be my full self if I’m organizing my identity around being hurt and angry and bitter about the secondary rejection. So it took, it takes work I think to move out of that resentment and move into a more open hearted way.

Haley - But I bet it feels better.

Pam - To be open hearted? Or to be angry?

Haley - Yeah.

Pam - Oh, oh, yeah, I’m probably still doing it. It’s sort of a, I think it’s an up or down kind of thing, it’s not like you do it and it’s gone. You know, then holidays come and you don't get a card with them begging you back. Now you feel it all over again, you know?

Haley - Wait, I’m not the only one waiting for that? Okay.

Pam - Yeah, where’s my card? Where’s my, oops, I didn’t mean that. That was the other kid that was given that option.

Haley - Oh my gosh, okay. Well, so good, thanks so much for those thoughts. And I think there’s a lot of explore here. You know, this is a huge conversation and I’d love to hear more from everyone. Like, what you have done to explore what is your identity. Who are you in the wake of secondary rejection? So come find us on social media and tell us about it. Pam, where can we find you online?

Pam - Yeah, you can find me at my email address which is pcordano@comcast.net.

Haley - And we can find out more about your adoptee retreats and what else do you have going on?

Pam - Yeah I’ve been doing some one on one therapy/coaching with adoptees in different parts of the country. And that’s been really fun. And I was able to go to Ohio and do a speaking thing at a little workshop and that was really great. And then I’m taking groups of women on the Community de Santiago in Spain and this coming September, we have, I think it’s 4 adoptees who are already signed up and a birth mom, first mom. And then some other women who are, have had cancer and now they’re trying to figure out what it’s like to not be fighting for their lives again. And so I actually privately think we all have a lot in common. You know? There’s something about the life and death thing. Yeah, so, I have the Community de Santiago in the fall.

Haley - Oh beautiful. Okay, so if we want more info on that, we can just send you an email!

Pam - That’s right.

Haley – Awesome, thank you so much for your time today, I really appreciated your thoughts on this topic.

(upbeat music)

Haley - Okay friend, if you are listening when this episode is just been released into the world, then you will know that this was episode 99. And next week is the 100th episode of Adoptees On. Which is, so exciting, I cannot believe I reached that milestone. So make sure you’re subscribed to this show so you don't miss next week’s episode. I promise, promise, that it is a good one. The other exciting thing I wanted to let you know is that I’m gonna be speaking at the American Adoption Congress Conference, say that 10 times fast. That is the 10th time I’ve recorded that sentence or that phrase. In April, and I would love to see you there. So I’m gonna be speaking, sharing about the value of adoptee voices which of course, is a huge passion of mine. And I’m also gonna be presenting with a friend of the show that you guys have heard from before, Katrina Palmer and we’re gonna be presenting about secondary rejection. So the very topic that Pam and I covered today, Katrina and I are gonna share from our personal experience of secondary rejection from our first mothers. And I think it’s gonna be a really powerful hour. So I’m really, really looking forward to that and meeting some of you in person! Can’t wait. So you can find a link to registration in the show notes, and also if you just search American Adoption Congress online, it’ll take you right to their website and they have all the conference info right there. Looking forward to that and it’s in Washington D.C., I’ve never been. And apparently it’s peak cherry blossom season right when it’s happening. So very excited about that, especially because it is very cold right now while I’m recording this in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. And the last thing I need to say, is a giant thank you to my monthly Patreon supporters and if you think this podcast is valuable and want it to continue, go to adopteeson.com/partner and sign up as a monthly supporter to help continue this work and sharing adoptee voices in the world. This podcast will always be free and so this is a way that we can support other adoptees who maybe don't have access to therapy or an in person support group. So if you’re able, I would really love to have you as a partner. Adoptees.com/partner has all the details. Thank you so much for listening and let’s talk again next Friday when I celebrate with you, 100 episodes! Yay!

(exit music)

98 Karen Pickell

Transcript

Full show notes: http://www.adopteeson.com/listen/98

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 98, Karen. I’m your host Haley Radke. Welcome friend, I’m so pleased to have you join us today to hear another adoptee’s experience. And I just want to give you a little update. You might have noticed there’s a show in change in show numbering. And I started out doing the podcast in seasons. And also biweekly. And I had a lot of things that I’m shifting towards doing strictly episodic, we’ll have series from time to time where we are focusing in on a theme. But for right now, we’re gonna be doing episodic numbering. So that’s why that change is in place. And I also wanna let you know, somewhere we are going to be able to meetup in person again very soon! And so I will tell you a little bit more about that at the end of this show. I wanna introduce you today to Karen Pickell. Karen is the author of An Adoptee Lexicon, and today she share’s candidly about how growing up she felt intensely different from her adoptive family. And we talk about how challenging it is to know who you are when you don't know where you came from. Karen also tells us the realities of what adoption reunion really looks like for her and what role nature versus nurture plays in her life. We wrap with some recommended resources and as always everything we’ll be talking about today are available at the website, adopteeson.com. let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Karen Pickell, welcome Karen!

Karen - Hi Haley, thank you so much for having me.

Haley - Well I’m so excited to talk to you, ‘cause we’ve been friends for a while and you know, and internet friends and we’ve done a couple of book clubs together and I've read your book and seen you, oh my gosh, we’ll talk about lots of that stuff in recommended resources. But I’ve seen you blogging and doing so much work, but I feel like I don't have a good handle on your story. So why don't you start off with that, why don't you share your story with us.

Karen - Absolutely. And thank you by the way for blurbing my book, because you know, that’s kind of a high pressure like, please read my book and please say something nice, kind of a thing. So thank you so much, I appreciated that so much.

Haley - My name is on your book, come on!

Karen - So cool!

Haley - It’s the first time! I felt like a big deal!

Karen - Yeah, so, you know, I have been kind of writing about adoption for a while now, and then kind of involved in the online adoption community for a while, but I tend to not talk about my own story too much. I try not to be you know, I think I'm just kind of uncomfortable talking too much about myself so today, you’re gonna get it all out of me.

Haley - Alright. Let’s go, it’s been building for a while, this is it..

Karen - Yeah, here we go. So I was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1968. And shortly after I was born, I was taken to a place in Cleveland called the St. Vincent DePaul Infant Home. And I was there for about 3 and a half months before my adoptive parents took me home with them. And then I was with them for a year before I was officially, legally adopted in 1969 which I guess is kind of standard, how things were done back then. And I’m guessing I probably found out or began to understand that I was adopted, probably around the time that my parents adopted my younger brother which was when I was 4. And I always understood, they always were very open with me and told me what they understood about my adoption which was that my mother had been a teenager when I was born, and so of course she was so young, how could she have taken care of a baby. And that was why I was put up for adoption. So I always knew that. And they had told me that I was born at a particular Catholic Hospital in Cleveland which was kind of the hospital that, the Catholic hospital where girls went when they had babies they were going to be giving up for adoption. So I knew all that and when my brother was adopted, you know, we kind of knew a similar story about him. So it was, you know, it was just kind of accepted for us that, okay, this is how adoption’s done. And you know, we kind of just a regular middle class family, and we were very Catholic family. My parents were Catholic, my brother and I went to Catholic elementary school from kindergarten all the way through 8th grade. I went to an all-girls Catholic high school. And my parents were not very social. They weren’t the type where they were having people over all the time, we weren’t out talking with our neighbors or doing stuff like that. They kind of kept to themselves mostly. Most of the socialization I had when I was very young just came from the few times during the year when we would get together with my aunts and uncles and cousins but like, before I went to school, in kindergarten, I don't remember ever, there were no like neighbor kids I was playing with or anything like that. So I was always happy to go to school, I enjoyed school, I enjoyed being around the other kids. I was kind of what you’d call a joiner. Like any time there was something that would come up at school where they’d be like, here’s a club or here’s an after school after activity, I was always going home going, oh I wanna do this, I wanna try that. Which was really kinda opposite to how my parents were, because they were so just kept to themselves, and stayed home, and never went anywhere. They never had a babysitter for us, and went out on mom and dad date night or anything like that. They were just kinda like, always home and with us. My dad would go to work every day in the morning before I got up, come home early evening, sit down and watch TV. My mom was home with us, she wasn’t working when we were kids. But, and she’d be talking on the phone to mainly to her mother or her sister, the occasional friend. But we really didn't see people. So for me, it was a pretty lonely childhood. And the older I got, the more I started to realize how different I was from my parents. And not only in that sense of wanting to be more social, but also in the sense of, my parents were very practical. Everything was, I don't even know how to put it. Everything was very, came down to whether it was, how expensive was it going to be, how much effort was it going to be, the house was very, always very clean and very organized, and there was never any clutter, and there was never anything extraneous and I was always very much more creative, more in my head, more imaginative.

Haley - Did you write, did you write as a child?

Karen - I did. Started probably when I was, maybe around 5th or 6th grade. I started spending a lot of time in my bedroom. And started just writing in notebooks and keeping a journal. Started writing poems and I was very, very into music when I was a kid. And so I was always listening to the radio, and I would start, I would be sitting in my room with my notebook and I would listen to the radio and listen to songs and I’d listen to the same songs over and over, and I would start to write out the lyrics for myself as I would catch them on the radio, from what I could pick out. And I would write them on my notebook and then I would kind of look at the words on the paper and kind of see how they were organized. And that’s kind of how I started writing poems, was in studying lyrics of songs. And I also very much wanted to be a singer when I was younger. And I used to go to my room and close the door and spend hours just singing certain songs over and over, to try to learn how a particular singer was hitting those notes. And I would just try to imitate and I would just keep practicing and practicing. So when I was in school, I was joining, if there was a chorus, I was joining it. You know, if there was a musical production at school I wanted to be a part of it. So that’s kind of how I was. I was much more wanting to do something creative and wanting to do something that was more outwardly focused. Whereas my parents were just kind of always like, to themselves and for them, it was difficult for them to understand those kinds of desires to be creative in that way, to be expressive in that way. Because they were the type of people that never wanted anyone to know their business, didn’t you know, they weren’t the type of people who were gonna be expressing emotions. They weren’t very outwardly affectionate which doesn’t mean that they weren’t loving in their own way. But they weren’t demonstrative. And not even with us, like I don't have memories of being a child and like, getting hugs and kisses every night before I went to bed. Or I don't have memories of my parents saying, I love you every day to me. I don't have those memories. So they just weren’t, and it doesn’t mean that they didn’t care about us or that they didn't love us in their way, but I was a very, more demonstrative, more affectionate child. And I wanted those outward displays of affection. So all of these things, kind of combine together, started to really make me, as I got older, feel very different from the rest of my family. And for my brother, I think for him, he was more of a personality type where he was able to adjust to them, maybe is a way of putting it, easier than I was. Because my personality type I think was so different, that it was really difficult for me to be in that environment. When I wanted to be so much more outwardly expressive.

Haley - So you knew that you were adopted, did you like, fantasize about your biological parents?

Karen - I did. And again, because as I got older and started to realize how different I was from my family, and you know, when you’re in school and you meet other kids and you start to go to their houses and you start to see how other families interact. And then you really start to realize how your family, maybe, is different than other families, right? So, then I started to think about, you know, well everything maybe would be different, and everything would be better if I was with my real mother. And that’s how I used to think about it. And you know, that term real mother is kind of a trigger term for some people, right? But in my family, that’s how my birth mother was described. We never used the term birth mother when I was a kid. I didn't know that term until I was probably in my 20s. When I was a kid, my parents always used to talk about my biological mother and my brother’s biological mother as our real mothers. And there was no—

Haley - Whoa.

Karen - It didn’t bother them to talk about it that way.

Haley - I’ve never heard that before, Karen.

Karen - You’ve never heard that?

Haley - No.

Karen – Okay.

Haley - That to me, it like, there’s so many adoptees that are you know, if they're trying really hard not to disrupt the grateful narrative, they will say something like, my adoptive mother is my real mother. And there’s so much of that. Like, that’s what the real mother is.

Karen - Right.

Haley - I’ve never heard an adoptee who’s adoptive parents have called your first mother as your real mother to your face.

Karen - See, and that was different about my upbringing too. And that’s one thing I think is different and it’s a generational thing I think in large part, because at the time I was growing up in the 70s and having been adopted in the late 60s, my parents weren’t looking at it, my adoptive parents weren’t looking at adoption in terms of any kind of a you know, it wasn’t like a biblical mandate for them. It wasn’t something that they were doing because they wanted to be good people. It was, because they couldn’t have children of their own. And because they were Catholic, they went through Catholic Charities and they looked at it as, almost like they were doing, almost like a good deed in a way by taking these children whose parents just were simply unable to raise them and they never had any kind of, I never felt there was any animosity toward my biological mother or my brother’s biological mother from my adoptive parents. I felt like they looked down on them in any way. It was just, it was really presented to us as if, this is just the fact. The fact of the matter is, your mothers were very young and couldn’t take care of you, and we were wanting to have a family, and so we’re taking care of you. And it was just kind of matter of fact and so for them to say, your real mother in their mind, she was real because she was our, she was my biological mother. And there was no conflict in that for them. ‘Cause that was always that was never hidden, everybody knew we were adopted. There was no trying to pretend that you know, we were only theirs and we didn’t have other mothers. So, yeah, that wasn’t an issue. That word was not an issue in my house.

Haley - That’s so fascinating. We’ve talked before, right, about how language and adoption and you talk about that in your book. And it’s just, it’s so interesting.

Karen - Well, and it’s so interesting that every, different adopted people have such different experiences when it comes to how their adoptive parents handled certain things, you know?

Haley - Yep.

Karen - And so you really can’t assume that everybody had the same experience.

Haley - No, for sure. Okay, so you did think about your real mother coming sometimes.

Karen - And when I was about, 11 or 12, my adoptive mother revealed to me that she knew my original birth name, my first name. And she told me that she had accidentally seen it on some paperwork during the adoption process. Whether or not this is the whole story, I am still not sure. But this is what she told me. And she told me at that time that my birth name had been Kimberly. And so I knew from that time, then going forward in my life, I knew what my original first name was. And that kind of reinforced for me, really some of the fantasies that I was having about my birth mother and how I would have felt perhaps more comfortable in my life and in my own skin if I had remained with her and been raised by her. I just had all these, I just had a very, very, very strong feeling of it being unfair that I had had to grow up in a situation that didn’t suit me. And that if I had stayed with my mother, maybe I would have been in a situation that was more in tune with who I really was inside, because I always felt so different inside, from how I was growing up.

Haley – So when you hear the name Kimberly, to you that’s, oh what kind of a person would choose that name. Like that’s like a clue to your biological mother’s personality.

Karen - It is. And it’s also because of the fact that you know, many of us as adoptees don't have that visual mirroring of seeing someone who looks like us as we’re growing up. And so even though I was matched to my family largely because of my supposed ancestry, because they were told that I was Welsh and Slovak. And my adoptive mother is 100% Slovak and my adoptive father was half Irish and I guess they figured oh, Welsh, Irish, it’s the same area of the world, close enough, right?

Haley - Yup, close enough.

Karen - So this is how they did the matching back then, right? They tried to put babies into families where they would blend in. And it wouldn’t be noticeable that a child was adopted. So yeah I was matched because of those things and yes, in many ways I was similar maybe to my adoptive family. In that, we were all white people and we had some kind of the same heritage. But, I was always looking at other faces and trying to find somebody who had my features. And I was always paying attention like, to the other kids in school who had red hair like me, or had freckles like me. And being a redhead is, really makes you stand out in a way that you know, if I had had brown hair like my parents, maybe I wouldn’t have felt so odd. But when I was very young, my hair was more of like a bright orange. So that stands out and so I think as an adoptee, anything that makes you feel like you are separate from your family, leaves an impression on you. You know, because especially for me because I was always feeling so separate inside, and I also felt separate on the outside as well because I didn’t feel like I looked like my parents. So when I heard the name Kimberly, the name Kimberly of course to me sounds more perhaps British or Irish or something from that area of the world. And it felt to me like it matched better how I looked. So it felt more like what my name should be.

Haley – And you were just 11?

It was like 11 or 12, something like that, yeah. So went through high school, and these feelings just increased all through high school. And so it came time to figure out what to do after high school. And I was always a very good student, made good grades, and so it was just kind of assumed by the guidance counselor that of course I would go to college. And so I kind of drifted into college and I kind of drifted into a major in college, not necessarily based on any kind of good advice. But based more on the idea that my parents had always emphasized that you needed to find a steady job, and you needed to have a good health insurance plan and you needed to have a good pension plan and so, they were very practical about these kinds of things. And so, security was everything to them. So that’s kind of the mindset that I was raised with. And I was also raised with the mindset of well, you know, as a girl, what you choose to do after high school in terms of work, probably doesn’t matter that much anyway because you’re going to get married and you’re going to have children and you’re going to be the mom and you’re going to stay home. Because my mom was a stay at home mom and that was our family structure, you know. So neither of my parents went to college, they didn't care if I went or not, they had not planned for me to go to college, they had not put money away for me or anything like that. So my going to college was just kind of because I had gone through high school having all honors classes and the kids in the honors classes, of course they were going to college, what else would you do? And so I just kind of drifted into it. And I drifted into majoring in computer science because I was in high school, I had a number of math classes, I did fairly well in them, and we had some computer classes at school that I was interested in, and I did well in those. And supposedly this was an up and coming thing, and you could make good money, and have a good job, a steady job, and I said okay good, I’ll have the stability, I’ll go do that. Meanwhile, what I really wanted to do, was sing, and write songs. And I even joined a band and was singing in a band at the time, and there was a point in college when I was close to the end, I was close to graduating, and I was at my internship and I hated it. I hated everything I was doing in my internship, I had already decided that all the math that I took in college was a waste of my time and hated that too. When I started off in college I thought that I was gonna use my computer science degree for something scientific. Then I took some science classes in college and decided no, I didn’t wanna do that, okay now what should I do with it? So I decided well okay, I guess I’ll use it for business, so then I started taking some business classes, I was just all over the place. And by the time I got to my internship, I was in a business doing this kind of marketing internship where I had to write this computer program. I hated it, I hated the whole environment, I hated the whole corporate thing. And I came very, very close to dropping out of college at that point and just saying that’s it, I need to stop, I need to take a break, I need to figure out what I’m doing, and I wanna go and try to be a singer and I wanna go and try to be a songwriter. Came very, very close. And in the end I decided not to because I had put so much time and money into it. And a lot of it my own money because I had started off working part time, had a partial scholarship which ended after the first year and then after that I couldn’t afford to keep up with the tuition anymore. So I had to get a full time job and I switched to going part time to college to finish up and by this time, I’d put so much of my own time and money into it that I decided I couldn’t just waste that and throw it all away, I’m gonna finish, I’m gonna get my degree. I’m gonna get a job, get secure, and then I’ll figure out what to do.

Haley - Well, you know, this sounds like lots of young adults don't know what they wanna do, right?

Karen - That’s absolutely true.

Haley - But also you're, so the first one in your family going to college and you don't have the mirrors and nor the encouragement or the push from your adoptive parents so.

Karen - ‘Cause they didn’t really care if I finished college or not.

Haley – Wait. Are there any recordings from that band?

Karen - There are, yes.

Haley - Okay. Well I’m gonna need you to send me some. Okay, so you did not drop out to become a singer/songwriter.

Karen - I did not. So then I went after college and started interviewing for a, my first permanent full time job, right? I was terrible. I had no idea how to interview, I didn’t know how to dress, I didn’t know what businesses were looking for. I had no clue to what I was doing, I had no mentor, I had no advisor, I did not know what I was doing.

Haley – Is adoption stuff in the back of your head during this time? Or are you like, I wonder what my birth parents did? Like are you thinking about that at all?

Karen - Oh yeah. It’s kind of like a pot that’s kind of like simmering, simmering, simmering inside of me. and it hasn’t boiled over yet, but it’s always there, simmering inside of me. And whenever I was feeling lost, I would kind of get into this headspace of going into this fantasy in my mind of, if I had been raised by my real mother, my life would have gone differently, and I would know how to handle things, and I would know how to talk to people, and I would know what I should be doing. And you know, in my mind, it kind of became sort of, you know, this would have been the solution to all of the problems in my life. If I had been raised by my real mother, that would have made everything in my life easier, everything would have been better. And so it really became a very, very, very strong driving fantasy for me. And I ended up getting a job in information technology and I worked in that job for about 9 years. And all through my 20s. And when I got to my late 20s, at that point, I became so stressed out by the job, I hated the environment I was working in, I also had gone through several just disastrous romantic relationships. Again, because I didn't know who I was. I didn’t know how to be myself with anyone. Because I had spent my entire childhood, trying to fit in with people who were so unlike me that not only did I go and I just started spending more and more time in my own room, locked behind a door when I was a teenager. I would just spend more and more time out of the house and at friends’ houses. And I just kind of hid myself away. And the deeper I hid myself, the harder it became to allow my real identity to ever be seen by anyone. And so I gave in to relationships and I desperately wanted to be in a relationship, I wanted the affection, I wanted someone to understand me even though I would not let them see me. And I desperately wanted to get married and have a child because I wanted to have someone that it was related to. And that became a driving force of my 20s, was find someone and get married and have a child. And I had relationships that were just disasters because I would be trying to bend to kind of fit in with this other person and I would not be allowing that person to see who I really, actually was. And it would finally come to a breaking point and then it would have to end. And it happened repeatedly. And these people were not the right people for me but I didn't have the wisdom to be able to make good choices for myself.

Haley – Well if you don't know who are, how do you show who you are to someone else?

Karen - Right. Exactly. So by the time I got to my late 20s, I had an actual physical breakdown. Where I became so ill that I had to take a leave of absence from work for a while. And my medical doctor actually recommended that I go see a psychologist. So I did. And so I saw him for about a year and a half. It was one of the best things I've ever done in my life. One of the best things I could have done for myself at the time. And even that being said that I will tell you that, that entire year and a half, I never mentioned to him that I was adopted. Never talked about it with him. Never told him that I thought about my birth mother. Never went into any of that.

Haley – Do you know why?

Karen - I think I mean, deep down inside, I knew that there was something there. But I could not deal with it yet. I could not allow it to come out yet. I could not even say those, I couldn’t even speak about any of those things that I thought about with another person.

Haley - Too scary?

Karen - I never spoke about it with anybody. I didn’t speak about it with my best friends. I mean, I didn’t speak about it with anybody.

Haley - Just ‘cause you didn’t wanna open the door? Were you scared to know what was under? Like, I’m just wondering like, why? Or ‘cause did you kinda knew that something was there but it was just too—

Karen - Yeah, I think it was too overwhelming at that time. Because you know, I think I kind of knew deep down, that once all that stuff came out, now I have to deal with who I actually am. Now I have to deal with this conflict that I’m having. And I would have to somehow reconcile the pieces and I wasn’t ready to deal with it. And so I got good advice from the psychologist that did help me, because my thinking had gotten to be so circular, I was stuck in this circular pattern of thinking where, that was kind of like, if only this had happened, if only I had been raised by my real mother, then I wouldn’t have grown up in this situation and then I would be a different person and then good things would have happened and it was kind of a, woe is me, kind of a circular pattern of thinking. Where it was like, I almost, I almost really believed that somehow, I could go back in time and things would be different and I could have a different life. And it was, this is really hard to explain. And it sounds a little bit crazy. But in my mind, I wanted to escape from my life. And so, when I would get into this way of thinking, I was trying to figure out a way that my life could be different and the only thing I could think of was to go back and have it start over from the beginning and be different from the beginning. Even though that was absolutely impossible. And the psychologist really kind of helped me, even though I wasn’t telling him all the details of what I was thinking. I was telling him enough about my romantic relationship issues and my work issues, that he understood that I was stuck in some kind of a loop, you know. He understood that much, that I was stuck. And so he helped me to realize that all this going around and around and around wasn’t doing anything. And that if I wanted my life to be different, I had to decide what it was that I wanted, and I had to ask for it. And I was like, woah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I don't get to ask for things and have them happen, that’s not my life. My life is, things happen to me, and I have to deal with them. My life isn’t, if I want to be this kind of person and if I want my life to look like this, then I can ask for it, or I can take steps to make that happen. You know, what is that, crazy talk? But after a year and a half, he got me convinced and he really kind of rewired me, he rewired my brain is kind of how I think about it. And around that same time, is when I met my husband and we started seeing each other. And so at this point I was 30. And thankfully, I met him at the time that my brain was being rewired because if I hadn’t, if I had met him a little bit sooner, we might not be together today. Because at one point, I went to the psychologist with an issue I was having with him. And I was ready to call it quits on this new relationship, I was ready to walk out, I was done, and again, the psychologist, no, no, don't do that. It sounds like he really does care about you, give him a chance, right? Told me hey, this is what you want. And what you want is not unreasonable. So go talk to him and tell him what you want and give him a chance to respond. I’m just like, oh my God, really? This is how it works? This is how relationships work? So here we are today. So I’m grateful for that advice. That was kind of a turning point for me in my life. So then things started to kind of, things started to change in my life at a really rapid pace after that. During my 30s, the entire landscape of my life completely changed. The entire landscape of my family completely changed. I, you know, my husband and I worked out our issues and we decided to commit to each other, I gave birth to my first child who was the first person that I can remember ever seeing who looks like me. And I try not to say he’s the first person I ever did see who looks like me, because I know that as a tiny, tiny infant, I did see my biological mother but I had no conscious memory of that of course. So having a person in my life now, who was actually physically related to me was just mind blowing and I know other adoptees have talked about this. This is kind of a common thing. But it was mind blowing for me. Then a couple of years after that, my adoptive dad unexpectedly passed away. And I had, I can’t say that I was ever super close. I never felt super close to either of my adoptive parents, but I felt closer to my adoptive father. So before he had passed away, and before I had given birth to my son, I had spent some time lurking on internet search boards in the early days of the internet. I had posted some of my own information out there, just in the hopes that hey, if someone’s searching for a baby girl born on this date in Cleveland, maybe they’ll, maybe I’ll get a phone call someday, right? Never got an email, never got a phone call. Nobody ever responded to any of those messages. And I was always, timid about taking any real steps towards searching. And looking back on it now, I think one of the reasons was because, I think deep down I worried that, how my adoptive father would take it. Because I felt like maybe he would be hurt by it. And so after he passed away, it was like something freed in me. And I decided to go forward and actually search. So the year after he passed away, I actually started searching for my birth mother. And ordered my non identifying information from Catholic Charities. And while I was waiting for that to arrive, my husband’s father became very ill. And we needed to go be with his parents for, we were with them for a little over a month. And his father passed away. And I actually received my non identifying information while I was there at my in-laws house when my father in-law was getting ready to pass away. So it was not the right time.

Haley - No.

Karen - But then after we got through all that, the beginning of the following year, I actually contacted, I did some searching on my own on the internet because why not, right? To see what I could figure out from my non identifying information, couldn’t get anywhere. And so I finally took the step of calling Adoption Network Cleveland. And they have all kinds of services for everyone involved with adoption. And one of the things that they do is they will help adoptees with their birth parent searches. And so I contacted them. And gave them the information that I had. And I wanna say, it was within a few days, no longer than a week. I got the phone call back from them saying they believed they had found my birth mother. So it was just a matter of me deciding to be ready and it was that fast that I was able to figure out who she was. So, I wrote her a letter. And mailed it and as soon as she received it, she emailed me immediately. And it was very much, you know, I’m so happy that you found me, I’m so happy that you searched from me, I’m so happy to hear from you. I’ve been thinking about you all your life, I've never forgotten about you, I’ve always loved you, I wanted to keep you. And so it was very positive. And so I was, thrilled. It was like my dream come true, I was so happy. Then I learned her side of the story, right? And her side of the story was a little bit different than how I had pictured it when I was growing up. Because her side of the story, you know, the way that I had always thought about my story was that, you know, okay, my mother was a teenager and of course she’s a kid, how could she take care of a baby. So of course, she didn't have a choice and it’s not a big deal. It was kind of not a big deal in a way. But in a way I knew it was. And after I spoke to her, her side of the story, the way that she always viewed it, was more along the lines of, I was taken from her. I was, she was forced to give me up. She didn't want to and she fought to keep me. But she ran into so many roadblocks that it was impossible for her to keep me. And it was devastating for her. And I don't think ever in my life before that, I had really thought about what it must have been like for her. I was so focused on what it had been like for me. I had never really put myself in that position of, what would you do if you were having a baby and you desperately wanted that baby and you desperately wanted to raise that baby, but you could not find a way to do it?

Haley - Oh my goodness. So you hear from your mom this story that you really did not process before. And like, how did reunion go? Like this is a huge upheaval for a lot of people. So what did that look like?

Karen - Well it started out, I thought, really positive, right? We were both very excited. We talked all the time, we were emailing back and forth, we saw each other numerous times. But I started to pick up on that you know, maybe she was not so comfortable telling some other people in her family that we had reunited. And maybe she was having a little bit of trouble with one of her other children about the situation. And then I got resistance from her when I would ask who my father was. And she really didn't want to tell me who he was. And we got into one of the biggest arguments that we ever had over that. And I finally got enough information from her that I actually was able to figure it out myself, who my father was, or who I thought my father was based on what she had told me and based on what was in my non identifying information. And then we got into a whole other situation that she revealed, while she had actually been seeing someone else at the same time as well. So maybe it was someone else.

Haley - Oh.

Karen – And so, I actually had to convince everyone involved to have a DNA test done. So with myself, and my mother, and the two candidates for my father, we all went and had a DNA test done.

Haley - Really? Wait, okay. I don't want you to skip over this. Because how do you contact two different, like what do you say to someone who doesn’t know they have a kid likely. And say hey, you might be my dad, can you do a DNA test and I’m like, what, you’re 40 years old at this point? How old are you?

Karen - Well, I was at that time, oh Lord. I was in my late 30s.

Haley - Okay.

Karen - Almost 40.

Haley - Okay.

Karen - Yeah, almost 40. So the person that she had told me about, knew that she had named him as my father back in the day. Back when I was born. So he was aware. So when I contacted him, he had already been aware of the situation. And when he replied to me he told me, I understand why you, basically, I understand why you reached out to me. But I think you should ask her about this other person as well.

Haley - Oh.

Karen - So that’s when I went back to her, and that’s when I got her to admit that yes there was someone else.

Haley - Okay.

Karen - And then once I got his contact information, I sent him a similar letter. He came back to me saying, yes, I’m your father and I’ve known about you all this time and my whole family knows about you. And we’ve all been praying for you and I’m so glad that I’m going to know you now, basically.

Haley - Okay! So he was okay with a DNA test because he was like, on board to be a dad. Okay.

Karen - And the other person, like, really was saying it’s not me, it’s the other guy.

Haley - Okay.

Karen - Right? So we went and I said, at this point, I think I had come to realize, even though I really didn’t want to admit it to myself, but I had come to realize that, I really couldn’t completely trust the information that I got from my birth mother. So that’s why I pushed for the DNA test. Thankfully I did, because the guy who was on board, was not my father. And the guy who wasn’t on board, is my father. So, after the results came in though, my birth father was, since the results, he’s been 100% on board.

Haley - Okay.

Karen - 100%. He just honestly did not think that he was my father. He honestly thought that she and this other guy had been trying to blame it on him. Back in the day.

Haley - My goodness. Okay, well, so that’s a lot.

Karen – Soap opera.

Haley - That’s a lot. Okay, so you can’t trust what your birth mother is telling you, is what’s in your head. And now you know who your father is.

Karen - So now I’m trying to go forward with a relationship with him. And she’s basically freaking out because she feels that he, she somehow in her mind blames him for the fact that she was forced to relinquish me. Because she feels that if he would’ve taken responsibility at the time, that maybe there would have been a way for her to keep me. And the only way that that makes sense, if she’s thinking that maybe they would have ended up married or something. But they weren’t, they really weren’t even dating. It was really just a one time thing. I'm really the product of, if you wanna call it a one night stand, call it whatever you want. I’m the product of a one time thing. And I’m okay with that. But she seems to want to paint it as something more than what it was. And she has a lot of really, really negative feelings towards my father. And so anytime that she would hear that I was having any kind of interaction with him, she would just kind of lose her mind honestly. It’s sort of like a jealousy thing, like I can’t believe that you want to know this person. And it was almost like a competition like, well you can’t, you should want to know me, why do you want to know him? It was very strange. And it made it to where I really couldn’t, I really had to stop telling her anything about him. So I got to the point where, if I talked to her, I would only talk to her about things that had to do with her. And I wouldn’t talk about him at all. So I can’t tell her anything that’s going on with him and I try not to talk about with anything with my adoptive family either, because she really couldn’t deal with me having relationships with other people that were parental figures who were not her.

Haley - And so where are you now in reunion?

Karen – But at the same time, she has never been able to come to terms with the fact that we are reunited. And she has never been able to be open and honest with everyone in her life about me.

Haley - So you’re still a secret.

Karen - And so that came to a head because I’m still secret with too many people in her life. And that all came to a head and blew up. And I decided that for the sake of my own mental health and for the sake of my children, because her hiding me means she’s also hiding my children. But I was not going to participate in that type of a relationship. I wasn’t going to, if you wanna have relationship with me, then we’re gonna have a relationship openly. If you want to keep me a secret, then we, our relationship can’t go forward. So we are stuck there, that’s where we’re stuck. And I don't consider it that our relationship is over, I look at it as, our relationship is stuck in that place. That we’re at an impasse.

Haley - And do you still have a relationship with your biological father?

Karen – I do. And you had a show recently that really, really touched me. because you had your biological father’s wife on the show.

Haley – Yes. 

Karen - And my situation with my father is kind of similar to kind of, similar to some of the things you talked about on that episode. Because we’re at a little bit of an impasse and I feel that it’s in large part to the fact that his wife has had a lot of trouble accepting the situation. But I’m still, you know, I’m still in communication with him. We still keep in touch, but you know, the relationship, you can’t progress in a relationship with someone if the other important people in their lives aren’t on board. I mean, that just makes it really, really, really difficult to continue.

Haley - Yeah.

Karen - So I’m really not sure what’s gonna happen there. I’m still hopeful.

Haley - That’s good, that’s good. Being hopeful is good. Okay, we’ve talked about so many things in your story. and you know, one of the things that you talk about in your book a lot is, while, is just this whole concept of identity and knowing who you are when you don’t know who you are or where you’re from. So you know, can you just share your thoughts on that before we do our recommended resources? And how you have processed since the psychologist and when you never talked about adoption. And since your reunions, and I know this is a really broad question, but I just wanna give you an opportunity to kinda share your thoughts on, becoming who you are in this world. Not as an adoptee, just who’s Karen, who’s Kimberly, who are you?

Karen - Right, right. Well you know that’s interesting, because you said who’s Karen and who’s Kimberly? And you know, I have my original birth certificate as well as my amended birth certificate. And so I truly feel now, after having been in reunion for more than 10 years now, I really feel like I am both Karen and Kimberly. And I am not one or the other. And it’s not even that I’m more one than I am the other, when you talk about the whole nature versus nurture thing. It’s very clear to me, that there’s so much of who I am that comes from my biology, from what I inherited from my parents and from my other ancestors before them. But it’s equally clear to me, that a large part of what I value and things like traditions that I have that I pass down to my children, even something as simple as my family sitting down together every night at dinner time and eating a meal together and that being important to me, there’s certain things that I have taken forward with me from my upbringing even though I felt so out of place in my childhood. There are things that I absorbed and things that just feel right to me, because this is how I was raised and this is what I grew up and these are the values that I learned. And this is how people should be behave. These are the things that people should do. And just because I now know who my biological family is, doesn’t mean that all that stuff that I learned as I was growing up, somehow gets tossed away. So this idea that we can somehow, you know, reunite with our birth families and somehow go back to being who we may have been if we had not been adopted, really is a fantasy. Just, that fantasy that I had when I was younger. That is not at all how reunion works. There is, there really is no way to go back. There’s no way to become the Kimberly I would have been if I had never been renamed to Karen. I can never be that Kimberly. But I am still Kimberly inside of me, there’s still a big part of me that is still Kimberly. Because I had inherited things that I would not have ever, ever learned through the environment that I was raised in. So, an example of the nature side, okay? In the whole situation with my two potential birth fathers, right? I had written letters to each of them, emails, right? And I had received responses in writing from each of them. So I had these two letters. And I had one letter from a person saying, I really don't think I’m your father. And I had another letter from a person that said, oh gosh, I think I really am your father, right? And I’m so happy about it! But when I read these letters and I held them side by side and I still remember taking them and having the actual paper in my hand and taking them to my husband and going, you know, I know what these say. But I really feel this person is like me. Because when I read this letter, it sounds like me.

Haley - The person that didn’t think he was your father?

Karen - Right, right. This letter sounds like a letter I would have written. These are words I would have used and I would have put them together in this way, I would have structured it like this, it was just so me, the way it was written. And I thought, I just had such a strong feeling, it’s such a strong feeling that when that test came back, that it was gonna prove that. And I was right. And that to me it was like, you know, all my life I’ve had this feeling, that my brain doesn’t work the way the brains of the people I’m living with works. And here I had these two letters and I really, really felt like this one, this person’s related to me, this person thinks like I do. I can tell by how this is written. And that’s what I was missing. That was probably the biggest thing I was missing in my life. Was somebody in my life whose brain functioned the way my brain functioned. But then I also want to, real quick, on the nurture side. Now having been in reunion. When you go into reunion and you meet your biological family members, you know, it’s like when you get married and you're first getting to know your in-laws. And your in-laws have certain traditions and they have certain things that they do and the way they are in their home and things that they expect. And some of these things are foreign to you and you kinda have to learn how to mesh with their family, right? That’s how it’s been with my biological families. Just because we share that biology, doesn’t mean that, you know, if I sat down with them at a holiday dinner, I’m gonna understand the foods they serve or what’s their custom, what are the things that they do at the holidays, or stuff like that would come up. Has come up over the years. And it just reminds me that even though these people are related by blood, I still have all these assumptions that I have about how things should be that came from my upbringing, and that’s not gonna change.

Haley – So you’re both! You’re Karen and Kimberly.

Karen - That’s right. and I think that’s, I think if we can accept that, I think that’s the key to dealing with a lot of the stuff that comes up in reunion.

Haley - So much. Okay, thank you so much for sharing your story with us, Karen. And I wanna recommend your book. And I’ve done it before on this show, but since you’re here with us, I really wanna talk about it with you and, your book is called An Adoptee Lexicon. And you talk about a lot of the things that we have today. Only more in depth. And I love the way your book is structured. You have all of these different words that we hear in adoption land. All the time. Okay, I’m gonna do a quick flip. Redact, primal wound, lost, surrender, adoptable, kin, Baby Scoop Era, activists, mirror, so many really, really critical topics that we talk about on the show all the time. Things that, you know, we have struggled with, a lot of us our whole lives. And you have essays on them or little thoughts, little vignettes, you have pieces of your story and it’s so beautifully written. And there’s parts that make me angry and there’s parts that are poignant and parts that I know people will identify with no matter what their story is. And I put a little note on here and it’s not even, I don't know, I’m gonna just read a couple lines if that’s okay with you. I was just rereading your book yesterday and this just like, stuck out to me so quickly that this is something I’m living right now. And it’s in your section called Child. And it says, “No child can ever be kept, they all leave. They choose their own lives and their own loves. She who cannot leave childhood behind is trapped, always small, yet wearing an adult façade.” And yeah, there’s so many things in here that you can just think about for, that’s just been with me for days. So like.

Karen - Oh Haley.

Haley - So like, thank you but also not because it’s also bringing up some stuff for me.

Karen - And now I wanna interview you and find out what’s going on!

Haley - Oh no, that’s for the Patreon side. That’s too personal. Anyway, so I definitely recommend people check out your book, it’s An Adoptee Lexicon. And then the other thing, wonderful thing that you do in adoptee land, and I have talked about this on the show before. But is, your website Adoptee Reading. And it’s just, oh my gosh. you know, I brag about that we have resources on my website, but your site is so comprehensive. There’s so many books written by adoptees in all kinds of different genres. There’s memoir but there’s also fiction and poetry and anything that people are interested in, there is a book written by an adoptee, which is pretty amazing. Why don't you tell us about it.

Karen - I don't think people realize how many books there are written by adoptees. Which is why I did this.

Haley - Yeah! Totally!

Karen - Yeah, I mean I did it because I wanted to be able to find these books. I mean, I wanted books by people like me, speaking to my situation. And I think that’s what we all want, we all wanna find those books that speak to our own situation. So you know, I really am very focused on adoptee centric kind of resources. Because I really feel like, we do get the stories kind of pushed onto us from external sources. And we really need to take control of the adoption narrative. And I really, really, I feel so strongly about that.

Haley – Can I just tell you something Karen? This very week that we’re talking, I just got another email from a publicist trying to pitch an author to come on the show. And she’s like, oh this new fiction book she’s written and it’s so great and it’s about adopted people and their experiences and everything. And I looked it up and I was like, I replied back and I was like, is this by an adoptee? And she’s like no, no, no, she’s an adoptive mother.

Karen - Yeah, I get that too. And I may not have, I don't know how much more plainly I can state that, we’re looking for, at Adoptee Reading, books written by adoptees. We don't need you to keep writing about us, we can write about ourselves. But yes, still get those.

Haley - Same. Girl, same. It makes me so mad.

Karen - It’s like, did you read anything I had listed there? Does this qualify? No!

Haley - It’s in the name of the show. Like, did you read the name, no. Okay. So thank you, I’m so appreciative of that resource, it’s a gold mine. And so I always send people there because there’s so many, there’s so many. And we definitely should be supporting each other in that way.

Karen - Absolutely.

Haley - I’m going on and on. What is your resource, it sounds so good, I’m so excited!

Karen - Okay, so after talking about how we need adoptee written books, I’m gonna recommend a book that’s not written by an adoptee—

Haley - Oh my gosh! That’s okay, you can’t pick your favorite baby from your website, that’s okay.

Karen – this is a book. It’s called The Emotionally Absent Mother: a Guide to Self-Healing and Getting the Love you Missed. And the author’s name is Jasmin Lee Cori. And I hope Haley is going to put the resource up on her website because the author’s name has a little bit of an odd spelling and I want everybody to be able to find it.

Haley - Yes, links to everything in the show notes, for sure.

Karen - But the reason I recommend this is, because I think there are lot of adoptees similar to myself out there who feel unmothered, who either have had issues or lack of attachment to their adoptive mother, and/or, their biological mother, or have experienced as I have that secondary rejection from their biological mother. And I found this book to be just amazingly helpful because she lays out in this book why mothers are so important to a child’s identity formation. What a mother really means to a child and why the severing of that mother bond is so damaging. And then how we can recover from it. And it’s not just kind of high level you know, a lot of these self help books, you get a lot of real high level, yes we can all recover from it if we just do this. And then there’s no practical information on how to accomplish that, right? And one of the things I love so much about this book is, she gives practical exercises that you can do to help yourself recover. I’m not gonna say heal, because I’m kind of skeptical about that whole idea of healing. But recover from this break in the bond that should be the most sacred bond between a mother and a child. So I just found it really helpful. And I’m still, it’s a book that I’m gonna keep using for a long time because there is so much in here to help you recover. And recovery is slow, it’s not something that, it’s not like you’re gonna read the book and then whoo, I’m fixed! That’s it, everything’s better!

Haley - Yep!

Karen - So yeah, it’s a book that I keep right next to me, and it’s a book that I’ve been kind of working through.

Haley - Oh, it sounds so good, I was looking at it online and thinking, I could probably use this. Thank you! Thanks so much, I love that. Karen, where can we connect with you online?

Karen – Many, many places, too many. But probably you can find all of them by going to my website, karenpickell.com which is where my blog is. My blog is called Between, fittingly enough. Because I feel always that I am between. And then from there you can link to Adoptee Reading, you can find a link to where you can buy my book, so yeah, everything’s there.

Haley - Yes! And your social media profiles, all that.

Karen - Yes, yes.

Haley - Awesome! Wonderful, thanks so much for coming on this show. I really, really appreciate it and I loved hearing your story.

(upbeat music)

So I mentioned at the top of the show, that there is gonna be an opportunity for us to connect in person. I was invited to speak at the American Adoption Conference which is coming up in April 2019 in Washington D.C., and I would love to see you there. So if you are in the D.C. area, or if you’re able to travel there, I’d love to connect with you. You can find out more information about the conference at americanadoptioncongress.org. And I will also be putting links to where you can register in the show notes or find me on social media and I can DM you the link. I’m so honored to be able to share with you there and of course I will be speaking about the value of adoptee voices and how we can change the conversation about adoption. Because I truly believe that. So please let me know if you’re coming. So that we can say hi. As always I wanna just say a high thank you to my Patreon supporters. Without your monthly support, I would not be able to do a show every single week. And your support pays for editing and hosting and all the costs of running a podcast. If you’d like to join with my monthly supporters, you can go over to adopteeson.com/partner and find out details and all the bonuses that you get when you sign up to be a supporter. And I’m just so, so grateful for you. Thanks so much for listening! Let’s talk again next Friday.

(exit music)

97 [S5]: Sara-Jayne King

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/97

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 97, SJ. I’m your host Haley Radke. Today we are finishing up the Adoptees On Addiction series with Sara-Jayne King, author of Killing Karoline. SJ shares her story with us, including some vulnerable moments discussing secondary rejection, all the different ways addiction showed up in her life, and incredibly, she stuns me with a story I absolutely was not expecting. We wrap up with some recommended resources. And as always, links to everything we’ll be talking about today are over on adopteeson.com. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I am so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Sara-Jayne King, welcome SJ!

SJ – Thank you so much, it’s so great to be with you.

Haley - Yes, and we, I’ve really wanted to interview you for a long time and now we’re in the perfect series to get to chat about your story. So why don't you start out with that? Share a little bit of your story with us.

SJ - Yes, so it’s quite a strange story, although I know we’re gonna be speaking to,or  lots of adoptees will be listening, so perhaps it won't be as strange when I sort of talk about the ins and outs of the story. But essentially I was born in South Africa in 1980 and people obviously know that in South Africa at that time, the country was under apartheid, which meant that obviously black and white people, well a number of very horrific laws were in place. But one of them was that black and white people couldn’t have relationships. My biological mother is from the UK and she had met a white South African while she was at university in the UK. She then returned to South Africa, where he had grown up. And they began living and working together in Johannesburg. Which is one of our biggest cities here in South Africa. And it was while she was working that she met my biological father, and she was actually working in the hotel that was owned by her boyfriend’s parents. There’s now this sort of love triangle going on, but a very illicit one. And it was only when she discovered that she was pregnant really that the trouble became sort of on the surface as opposed to where it had been previously, sort of very much a cloak and dagger relationship. They both risked being thrown in prison had they been discovered. My father probably worse, worse things could have happened to him. And so she had me, told everybody that she was expecting her first child and was delighted, thought that this was the child, wanted the child to be her boyfriend’s child, her now husband’s child. She married shortly after discovering she was pregnant, to her boyfriend at the time. And it was only when I was born that it became obvious about 3, 4 weeks after I was born that I couldn’t possibly be a white child. And I was, it was suddenly realized that actually I must have been a product of the relationship that she’d had with my biological father. And a plan had to be concocted to get this child, as she says, out of the country. Because she would have been threatened with, as I say, going to jail. And so after a night of sort of reprisals and admissions and confessions, she told her husband that she’d had this affair. His reaction was, you have to get rid of this child. You have to remember also the context of apartheid South Africa was that, and still sadly today is that racism is rife in this country. And it wasn’t purely just the government, it was, it filtered down into society to such an impact that it would have been absolutely horrific for anybody to have realized that my mother had had a sexual relationship, had had any relationship beside possibly employer/employee with my biological father. It just simply wasn’t done, it simply wasn’t allowed. And so eventually the decision was made to take me overseas to the UK. And have me adopted. And that’s what happened. And with the support of medical staff here, they concocted a story that I was suffering, still that I was a white child, that I was suffering from a disease. Which was essentially like a very bad type of jaundice, which they said explained my darkened skin. And they took me to the UK and took me to the Great Ormond Street Hospital which is one of the top children’s hospitals in the world I think, but certainly in the country, in the UK. And instead of seeking medical treatment there, they sought the help of social workers to place me for adoption.

Haley - Oh my goodness. That is a crazy story. And unbelievable.

SJ - Yeah.

Haley - So you were placed for adoption in the UK and then your biological mother went back to South Africa.

SJ - That’s right. so I was placed for adoption with the people that I call mom and dad. And at 7 weeks old. And my biological mother and her husband returned to South Africa and obviously they returned without a baby. They needed to explain where the baby was. And so they told this outrageous lie, this horrific lie, that the baby, baby Karoline, had died.

Haley - I can’t, oh my gosh. And that’s the title of your memoir, Killing Karoline.

SJ - Yeah.

Haley - Wow. Okay, so you find this out many, many years later. And looking back on that, what does that feel like to know that this is the plan that they had to come up with?

SJ - I mean, it’s a difficult one in that, the minutiae of everything I learned about when I was much, much older. But I always knew that I was adopted. I couldn’t really hide it, I was adopted transracially. So there were, even if I hadn’t realized it myself, that it was strange that as a black child I was being raised by white parents, other people are, and I’m sure other transracial adoptees will agree with me on this. Other people are really quick to point out, where you can’t possibly, really be from this family. And so, it was, as I say, the minutiae of it, only came out later. I discovered a letter that my biological mother had written about a year after she’d relinquished me for adoption. And it’s funny, we talk about the terminology in adoption and it is hugely important. I think there’s vernacular around it, and I know that the politically correct term is relinquishment. But for me, she gave me up. That’s what happened. She had a choice, she could have raised me in the UK and she chose not to. She gave up. She gave up her baby for adoption and that’s the only way that I can see it. But I mean, I was giving a talk today about the book and it’s funny and people always want to know, well what were your feelings around her giving you up? And really, the feelings around her giving me up for adoption are certainly nowhere near as strong, as the secondary rejection that I experienced later, which we’ll talk about later I’m sure. But the actual act of giving me up in that moment as a 7 week old baby, I kind of, I feel that I have to reserve judgment in a way because I wasn’t in that situation and it was what it was. I didn't go to a horrific family, this is another thing about adoption is, often times when we share as adoptees, I think about our stories. And we speak about our pain, there is an assumption that therefore the families that we must have been adopted into must have been horrendous. Well my family wasn’t horrendous. Yes there were problems and I write about that in the book. But they weren’t bad people, they’re not bad people, but I just, the trauma that had happened to me and then my adoptive brother who was also adopted into my family, into our family, it was so great. And the existing trauma that already existed in the family, before we even came along, led to the problems. And it’s interesting, often I hear adoptive parents say yes, but perhaps you, you know, you should be grateful. We’ve all heard that one before. You should be grateful, you’re so lucky that you went to a family that loved you. Well I’m sure that 99% of adoptees go to families that love them. Probably even more than that. But that doesn’t stop there from being an enormous amount of pain surrounding adoption. So to answer your question, my thoughts around the lie that she told, there are days when I hate her for it. And I hate her with a hatred that is so raw, that I sometimes don't know what do do with myself. And then there are other days where I’m able to be a little bit more pragmatic about it and think, I wasn’t in her position, I don't know, you know, I can’t judge her for that. But yeah, as I said, it was the, the later, the secondary rejection that really put, was the nail in the coffin of how I feel about my biological mother and how I think I’ll probably feel about her until the day I die.

Haley – Well, why don't you tell us about that. When did you search, how did that come about?

SJ - So because, I'd always known about being adopted, I didn’t really have a great desperation, it’s not like I one day found out and so there was an impetus for me to suddenly discover who these people were. And also the story that I’d been told, was, and the letter that she had written, were all very much in a very sort of agreeable way and that as much as the situation surrounding my adoption and coming from apartheid South Africa and that being really the criminal in all of it, was and how it was presented to me, was that the baddie in the story, the villain in the story was apartheid South Africa. It wasn’t people, it was an institution. It was a political system that had done the damage. But that the older I got and the more that I began to fit pieces of the jigsaw puzzle together, began to realize that actually now that there were a few more villains in this story. But I, when I was about 19, I decided just before going to university, that I wanted to make contact with my biological mother and you know, it was one of those things, I didn’t want another mother. Which is always I think what people who people aren’t adopted always assume that you want to go back and you’re desperate to form a mother/daughter or mother/child relationship. And speaking to friends of mine who were also adopted, that’s never what it is. It's really just about answering those inherent questions of who am I, where did I come from. Where do I get my eyes from, whose smile do I have. Do my hands look like my grandparents. I mean, all these really small things but that add up to the one thing that we struggle with as adoptees and I think that is identity and particularly as a transracial adoptees as well. So I’d got in contact with her via the adoption agency. And in fact, she’d left, over the years, she left South Africa, she’d lived in Germany and Italy, she now lives in the United States. And all the time that she had moved, she sent messages to the adoption agency saying, this is my new address, if Sara-Jayne wants to get in contact, and all of this sort of thing. However when it came to actually getting in touch, she’d obviously, had a bit of a lapse of memory that she’d done this. Because the response that I got was absolutely devastating. And I'm sure that other adoptees will also relate to this. That she wanted nothing to do with me. She said, you were the worst mistake I ever made. Do not contact me again. And the blow was extraordinary because that’s not what I had been led to believe. By her own actions, that’s not how I’d been led to believe, that that was going to happen. In hindsight now, I mean, I was still very much in the fog at this stage, it should be said. I hadn’t come out of the fog at all. I still thought I should be very grateful for being adopted, I still felt that I should be very apologetic for even wanting to know about my biological family. Apologetic on both sides, from the point of view of my adoptive parents in terms of, how could you be so cruel, and also in terms of my biological other, which is, you know, you did a great thing for me, biological mother, and why would I ever want to have to go, enter into your life and cause upset? Well, that’s apparently what I did and she was very, very angry. It was very very difficult and it came a time where, I was going through my own stuff emotionally, drinking, drugs, eating disorders, self-harming, and I used her reaction to further my sort of, despair and my journey deeper into addiction.

Haley - Well I wrote down this line from your book, “the disgrace of being reviled by one’s own mother, that was too much.” And when I read that, I was like, oh my gosh. Like, I have secondary rejection as well, but I had a brief relationship with my mother, so we were in contact for about 4 months before she cut off contact. So my timeline was a little bit expanded. Because you had this letter from her that you were, she sounded lovely and wanted to know you and you know, explain some of those things. And then when you reached out, just to hear those harsh, harsh words. I can’t imagine.

SJ – And I’ve never had an interaction with anybody before or since, that was as cold. You know, and I’m a journalist by profession. And so I speak to and interview and speak to a lot of people. And I’ve never, and of course this was personal. But I’ve never had an interaction that was as cold, as detached, as, I felt, cruel at the time. I mean this letter, and I still, I sort of memorized passages of this letter that she wrote back. And you know, her explanation was, is the pain that you are feeling now, worth the fact that I now have to go back into that time. And I thought, what an extraordinary thing to say. You may have told this unforgivable lie that your baby had died. But you know, you know that your baby hadn’t died. So you must surely have been expecting it. And that was the thing that kept going round and round in my head. You must have been expecting it. You must have been expecting it. Or expecting me. And it would seem that she wasn’t, I think, whilst the baby died, the lie very much lived on and I think she perhaps internalized that. And I think if you tell yourself something for long enough and with enough ferocity then, it can become true in one’s mind perhaps.

Haley - Yeah, yeah. I think that’s true, I think that’s true for a lot of people, a lot of buried shame. And you just kind of do what you can to survive it I guess. Not excusing the behavior, but yeah.

SJ - Sure.

Haley – So can you tell us a little bit about your personal life then? You said you were involved in some activities that were risky and drugs and alcohol and then this happened. Can you take us to that and talk a little bit about that.

SJ - I’d always felt like there was something missing. And obviously there was something, a huge something that was missing and that was my identity and my family and who the hell was I. And so, from a very young age, I started to try and we talk about in recovery, filling the hole in the soul. And that’s what I was trying to do and I was trying to do it with food, I was trying to do it with inappropriate relationships, inappropriate attachments, I mean my attachment disorder is off the scale I think. And also, with drugs and alcohol, and that’s despite the fact that I grew up in a household where my adoptive brother was also an alcoholic and an addict. And his biological mother had been a chronic alcoholic also. And as far as we knew about his past, you could trace back and back and back. So for a long time, I swore off drugs and alcohol because I knew what was happening, I could see what was happening in our family with my brother. But my drug of choice I suppose as it was, from the age from about 12, was eating disorders and self-harming. And that would range from anorexia, bulimia, compulsive eating, bingeing, purging, anything to change how I felt. I would eat to change how I felt. I would not eat to change how I felt. I would over exercise to change how I felt. I would eat compulsively, I would binge, I would purge, anything to not feel this inferiority and to anything not to feel like me. The me that I felt had been such a mistake. Then when I got to university and interestingly this sort of coincided with the secondary rejection. Suddenly, I had more freedom than I’d had before. And I began drinking and using drugs quite heavily. Again, the eating disorder was the thing that really took me down and took me into my, the pit of my worst. And I was also dealing with undiagnosed bipolar borderline personality at this time. So to add that to a dual diagnosis, although it hadn’t been diagnosed, I was, yeah I was troubled. I was so, so terribly unhappy. Interestingly, all this time, at that point, still wasn’t out of the fog, still didn't know, still couldn’t pinpoint the source of the misery. And in fact, it was only, I eventually ended up, I moved around a lot. I did, we call them in recovery, geographicals. I moved because I wanted to go to places where I wasn’t. But unfortunately, the problem with moving, is that you always take yourself with you. And so I kept following me around. And I eventually ended up living in Dubai for a while. And that really for me, was where things just went really, really bad. And to such an extent that I found, I found it necessary to book myself into a clinic, into a rehab, a rehabilitation center, and it just so happened that the rehab that I booked myself into, was in South Africa.

Haley - And you, you share some of this in your memoir. But do you wanna talk a little bit about that? And how adoption issues kind of you know, looking back we kind of know this is underlying for a lot of adoptees that struggle with addiction issues. But in the moment, did you know that? How did you come to realize that?

SJ – I had no idea. Because I thought I was okay with my adoption. I thought it was fine, again I was so thick in that fog. And also, I was thick in whatever, and I think so many of us adoptees feel that. Is that even if you sense that there might be something or the thing that is troubling you might somehow be connected to your adoption, I think so many of us have learned to shut up. Don't say anything, for goodness sake, don't say anything about it. You’re gonna be seen as ungrateful. You might be rejected again, that’s the big thing. So even though I had this sense of, I don't know who I am. and the reason I don't know who I am is because I’m adopted, and nobody can help me and when I talk about adoption in my family, it’s dealt with in a way that makes me very uncomfortable. Something doesn’t make me comfortable about it. My parents, my mum and dad, are sort of hailed by everyone as these saviors. The typical kind of, transracial white savior syndrome. And I sort of would sit there in, around when friends and family would come round and they would talk about adoption. And they would talk about my parents in this light of, oh, you know, you’ve done such a wonderful thing taking in these children. And what I heard was, you’ve done such a wonderful thing taking in these unwanted black children. That’s what I heard. And I think to an extent, that’s what was being said. I don't think this was just a figment of my imagination. There was a very much a sense of, I grew up in a very privileged background, in a very privileged area. My parents were very educated, I went to very good schools, we lived in nice houses. All things that you know, two black children, one from god knows where, and the other from South Africa, couldn’t possibly, would never have had access to. And that somehow, again, my life with them would definitely have been bettered. Don't we hear that all the time? What if you’d stayed with your biological family, it would definitely would have been worse. Well we don't know that. We don't know that. And that’s one of the things I’ve learned coming out of the fog. But to go back to rehab and addiction, it was when I came out of, I touched on my adoption a little bit in rehab. But again it wasn’t, I didn’t know, I didn’t, I think I was possibly scared to delve too far into whether my adoption had anything to do with all the horrible things that I was feeling and horrible things I was doing to myself. And also I didn't know. The other thing about for me about being an adoptee, is that I wait for permission to do everything. I wait for permission for a feeling, I wait for permission for a behavior, because I don't know if that feeling or if that behavior is going to be rejected, so I never know. I’m getting better at it now, I’m 12, 13 years in recovery. And I’m also, you know, I do a lot of work around my adoption stuff. And I forgive myself a lot of stuff. And also, I put a lot of stuff back where it belongs. The shame, the guilt, the hurt, the trauma, the stuff, you know, my adoptive mom not being able to have kids. I don't take that on anymore, it’s got nothing to do with me, I put that right back where it belongs. The shame that my biological mother had having an affair with a black man in apartheid South Africa, of cheating on her partner, I’ve put all that back where it belongs. And my goodness it makes me walk a lot easier and sleep a lot better at night. But it was only when I came out of treatment that I had, somebody had sent me an email, from a rehabilitation, and I was back living in London. Somebody had sent me an email which was was from a rehab in the UK and they held talks every month at a library in central London. And one of the talks was, and I remember seeing it so clearly on this email, the link between adoption and addiction. And suddenly something clicked. And that was all it said, it was just that subject line, the link between adoption and addiction. And I thought, if I do anything, and I was still quite troubled at this time, I was clean, I was sober. But I was in very, very early recovery. And I was still very, very raw I think. And so I thought, if I do anything on this particular day, I must get to that lecture. And I remember it so clearly. There was a hall, a library lecture hall packed full of people. And we sat down and there was a guy who was an expert on this very topic. An expert on adoption and addiction. And he spoke my story. And within the first 5 minutes of him speaking, I was just bawling. And I looked around and other people were bawling. And other people were looking at him and nodding their heads and wiping the tears from their faces and reaching out and holding other people, holding the hands of strangers who were also relating to this. It was the most powerful thing. And there was a break halfway through, and being an addict, most of us all ran out to go and have a cigarette. And we were sort of standing around having a cigarette. And I couldn’t believe A, that I was meeting other adoptees, because I’d never had. There were three little girls at my school who were adopted but we never spoke about it. It was the unspoken thing. They were also transracially adopted. I’d never met other adoptees, I’d never met adult adoptees. I’d never met adult adoptees who were happily saying, I hate the fact I’m adopted. It destroyed my life. And they were saying it without apology. And something clicked. And that for me was when really, was when the work started around okay, you need to explore this link between your adoption, your feelings of rejection, your attachment issues, your abandonment issues, and the fact that you are constantly seeking a different state of self.

Haley – How transformative, wow. Okay, who was the lecturer? Was that, sounds like Paul Sunderland.

SJ - Yes it was, it was! That’s exactly who it was!

Haley - That’s the video everybody keeps talking about!

SJ - That’s the video! I was in that lecture!

Haley - Oh my gosh.

SJ - I was in that lecture, yeah. I was in that lecture in London, in Kensington in London. Yeah.

Haley – Wow, okay I have goosebumps.

SJ - That’s exactly who it was, yep. And I was sitting there, on my own in early recovery, with this hall full of people. I must go and look at that, I must go and look at that video again. I have to say after going to that lecture, and remember I really was in very, very early recovery. I had less than a year clean and sober. It was, and I’m so glad, looking back now I was so glad that I went, because I am scared of how long the lights could have stayed off for. But it was really tough listening. He literally spoke my truth. And the thing that stood out for me was this. He said there is a preverbal communication to an unborn child, that when the parent is going to adopt or when a parent is adopting, biological parent, or even when the child is a babe in arms, still preverbal, there is a preverbal communication of, I am not good enough. How’s that? A preverbal communication of I am not good enough. And I wrote about this in the book and I wrote about this idea of, it’s one thing to not get on with your parents, it’s one thing to be distant from your siblings. But to be rejected by the one person on earth who is meant to love you, and who is meant to care for you, and who is meant to have as their very baseness, their very existence, the survival and the care and the love of, and I was her firstborn child as well. That, for that to not exist, is extraordinary. Yeah, it’s so funny, we’re talking about that lecture now, because yeah, it was powerful. And it was, I probably, in terms of looking back now, I probably had no business being there, being that early in recovery. Luckily I had quite a solid recovery so I think I went and spoke to my sponsor about it I think. And said, you know, I’ve been to this lecture and it was really difficult. But that’s the other thing with addiction and I would love for this for change. And I would hope that I would be a part of this, is that, when we go into recovery, and I got clean through a 12 step program. There is still so little known about adoption, so many people are not adoption experts, i.e., not adoptees. And so I would often share about my adoption experience and the reaction that I would get back, would be the stuff that I now look at in adoption groups and adoption forums and want to tear my hair out. So that was quite difficult. And I would love for there to be more adoptees in recovery. And I'm sure that you know, we will galvanize at some point and become a worldwide movement. But I'd love it be sooner because there is, there’s a lot of work that can be done, healing that can be done for adoptees who are working 12 step programs. And who aren’t in recovery.

Haley - And I’m picturing that room, the lecture now that you shared your side of the experience, ‘cause I, you know, you just, in the YouTube video you see Paul standing up at the front and you don't really see the room. But to know the impact that had, just one event, one or two hours, one day, and you said all of those people in that room, and how many people did those, do you represent? That have no idea around the world.

SJ - Absolutely. You know what was also interesting, Haley, was that when he, Paul gave time for Q&As, and I remember asking a question and being terrified. Again, early recovery, really like self-conscious, they'd force me to put on weight in rehab. So I was just not feeling my best. But I remember asking a question which I think was around, eating disorders and addiction and whatever. It was a bit specific, really. The people were asking questions, also didn't seem to know. It just seemed amazing that here was this man, who had the answer to so many of our problems. And the questions that were coming, were, it was almost like, imagine if the room was dark. And then suddenly a few light bulbs would just come on. That’s what it was like.

Haley – And then it’s a cascade of light.

SJ - Suddenly a room full of bright lights, and everyone just going, how on earth did we miss this? Yeah, yeah.

Haley - Powerful. So you said you have, 12 or 13 years now that you have been in recovery. And do you wanna talk a little bit about that? Have there been struggles? What’s helped you? What advice do you have for people? I’d love for you to share your wisdom on that.

SJ – Oh, I don't know about wisdom, but I mean, just experience that just comes with, you know, and for me, recovery is in terms of drugs and alcohol, I’ve been clean and sober from all drugs and alcohol and mind altering substances since August 17th, 2007. And that is, that had to happen. That I couldn’t, I wouldn’t have been able to live the life that I live now if I was still drinking and using. The eating disorder, admittedly, that’s been more difficult. That fluctuates, that has been one of my biggest struggles. And I'm sure that somewhere down, if I could sit in a room with Paul, again, which I would pay good money to do, I really would. It's so bizarre that I’m thinking back to this moment that it was so pivotal and like you say, that video does the round so much among the adoption community, adoptee community. If I could sit down I would ask him for more details around, specifically, eating disorders and addiction and women and female adoptees’ eating disorders and addiction. That has been more of a struggle, but again it’s a day at a time, I take it a day at a time. But my recovery was very much based in 12 step programs. And so religiously for the first sort of 5, 6, 7 years of my recovery, that’s what I did day in and day out, was go to meetings. And that’s not to say that there aren’t other ways to recover or to begin a journey to recovering from active addiction. But that is what worked for me. and writing. Writing helped me an enormous amount. I had to write a lot in treatment obviously, in 12 step programs, there is a program to work and actively doing the 12 steps requires a great deal of writing. And I'm a reluctant writer, it should be said. I’m not somebody who thinks, oh let me get out my journal and I start scribing away like Virginia Woolf, that’s not it at all. I am reluctant, but once I do, I find it very healing. And surrounding myself by like minded people and that’s been really interesting in terms of my recovery, my adoptee journey as well. Because while it seems, it was such a no brainer to me when I got into recovery, that I would need to surround myself by fellow addicts and fellow recovering addicts, I didn't quite see that the same connection with being adopted. Because I always. I didn't realize how many of us there were. And I think another reason for that is not everyone talks about it to people that they don't know where also adopted. For me, it’s because I didn't want to have to deal with, with bull**** really. I didn't want to have to deal with stupid answers or stupid questions and insensitive comments. So I stopped speaking about it, not publicly, but I just, it was something that I shared with people who needed to know. It certainly wasn’t a secret, but I didn’t want to get into discussions with people about it. Particularly not when I moved back to South Africa which was about 10 years, 11 years ago now. And people still hold very, very problematic views in South Africa around race, around apartheid and what happened in, during that time. And so it wasn’t that I’d, I didn’t really want to speak about it. But it’s a no brainer for me now. Now I’m out of the fog as it were. All I want to do is surround myself by adoptees, and hear other adoptees’ stories and be shored up by them and get support from fellow adoptees. It’s extraordinary, that coming out of the fog thing, has been one of the most powerful experiences of my life. Because again, it was like, suddenly, every day became, every day was like a day when I was in a room with Paul Sunderland. In terms of people were speaking my story. They were speaking what I had felt. When they would, if I was in an adoption forum group and somebody, an adoptive parent or somebody would say something that I just thought was hugely inappropriate, and somebody would immediately jump in and I’d think, that’s what I wanted to say! Ah, there are people that feel like me! and now, it’s just, it’s phenomenal and I’d love to be more of that around adoption and addiction. It would be lovely to go into meetings and to just have adoptees sharing. Maybe I should start something, adoptees, addict adoptees anonymous or something. There’s probably already a group out there.

Haley - Let’s look for it. Yeah, well when you were talking about just being with adoptees and they get it, I’m like oh my gosh, girl same, same for me. like I just feel like, you just don't have to explain 90%, right? You just already know, and the other 10 is just getting to know each other personally. And yeah, yeah. There’s great power in that.

SJ – And healing.

Haley - Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. Thank you, thanks for your thoughts on that and for sharing about the 12 step program and writing and I really wanna talk to you about that when we do our recommended resources. But I just wanna give you a couple minutes. ‘Cause you have an update since you published the book. And you were looking for your biological father. And hadn’t quite found him yet. What has happened since you published Killing Karoline?

SJ - What happened was, as you know I’m a journalist and radio presenter. And I have a radio show, here in South Africa. And a friend of mine who does another radio show, on the same station as me had said, when the book came out, in fact it was a few months after the book had came out. And he said, you haven’t been on my show, come on my show and talk about the book. So I said, okay, that’s cool. And in the book, I had changed names. Not all names, like my mom and dad I didn't change, because my dad’s dead, my adoptive father died when I was 21, so that wasn’t really a concern. My mom didn't mind, she was like, no that’s fine. She probably liked a little bit of the, I’m in a book. My best friends were not bothered either. They were cool about it. But in terms of my biological parents and my biological other extended biological family, I changed the name not to protect them because I don't think they are deserving of protection. But because it’s not relevant. What I didn’t want to happen was for people to read the book and to then go and perhaps you know, in this world of social media and google and things, be able to go online and find these people and perhaps get involved in something that I wouldn’t want, that was, as much as I’d written a memoir about, it was still private. It's still my private sort of family, as it were.

Haley – Wait, you didn’t want me going in, emailing your biological mom and telling her what I thought about her?

SJ – Well, this was before the book, now I’m like, want her email address? Just hit me up. It’s so funny you say that. Because the number of people who say, who particularly who’ve after they’ve read the book they said, God if I could hold of that woman. And I think, I have to say, and I know it’s probably not a very nice thing to say, but there is,  I feel there is a great deal of support in that. Because I feel that I was, I do feel wronged by her. And I think she’s behaved appallingly. That said, would I want people to go and email her, no I wouldn’t. And so that was the reason I changed names in the book. It didn't matter. It didn’t matter what people’s names were. As much as, and I should just say again, as much as I think names are hugely important and this is one of my bugbears as an adoptee, is when adoptive parents change their children’s names, I just find it abhorrent and awful and unnecessary. But for the purposes of the book, it didn’t matter. So I was doing this interview with this friend of mine on his radio show and he said to me during a commercial break, why don't you give your dad’s real name? I know how desperate you are to find him. And I was. I was desperate. The momentum was happening with the book, it’s been hugely successful, across South Africa, across Africa. And it was gaining momentum. But there was, I still wasn’t happy. I was still, I was miserable actually. Because there was this man who I didn’t know. And people, I would do interviews and TV stuff and radio stuff and people would say, and what about your dad? And I would have to say, I’ve got no idea. And so I gave his real name during this interview. And black Twitter being what it is, galvanized. Thank God for black Twitter. Within 24 hours, or just over, somebody had sent me an email, which had a telephone number on. And they said, try this number, it could be your biological father. And I phoned and it was him. It was him, and I won't give the whole thing away because I want you to read more about it in the second book that’s coming out, she said shamelessly. But it was him and within a week, I’d flown up to Johannesburg where he lives, I live in Cape Town now. And we’d met and it was, without doubt, the best moment of my life. And now we have a relationship and now I have a dad and I have 2 brothers and a sister. Mohadi (sp?), Tabo (sp?), and Tabiso (sp?), and my dad and they, it is just wonderful. And I’m really, really, really blessed to have them in my life.

Haley - Oh that’s so beautiful. I have like, similar secondary rejection and then I have reunion with my biological father and it’s such a gift, especially for us who have had that-

SJ - That rejection is, ugh.

Haley – Yeah, so you know, there’s a nice piece and there’s a really ugly piece.

SJ - And how was your reunion with him? Was it wonderful?

Haley - Wonderful, then very challenging, and we worked really, really hard to make it wonderful and healthy and good.

SJ - Yeah, yeah. Totally relate.

Haley - Yep. Okay, well, can't wait for book #2. So let’s go on and do our recommended resources. And first, of course, I’m gonna recommend people check out your book, Killing Karoline. And if it’s okay with you, I have just a couple of sentences I wanna read here. This is just before you are checking yourself into rehab. And you write, “I realize I have inherited the worst parts of her. I disappear when things get tough. I’m a pretender, a fraud, a keeper of secrets, a liar. Like her, I do not want to take responsibility and I will do anything, it seems, to avoid the consequences of my own decisions. I have tried to run from something that will always follow me.” And your memoir’s so beautifully written. And for someone who calls herself a reluctant writer, I have a hard time believing that. Maybe just getting to the chair to sit down, maybe that’s the part, but I haven’t read a memoir that has quite as many intimate details as you share. There are moments that are just so heart wrenching and you don't gloss over any hard things. And so, I really appreciated reading your story and to hear more from you today was really special to me. So thank you, and I definitely do recommend SJ’s book, so go check that out, Killing Karoline, and Karoline with a K.

SJ – Yeah.

Haley - And what did you wanna recommend to us, SJ?

SJ - So the, speaking, we’ve been speaking about, sort of coming out of the fog a lot, and also the importance of sharing. And there is an adoption group on Facebook called Adoption Facing Realities. And it is, oh, it is, it has saved me from insanity at times. And it has given me, when there are moments, and I’m also, I’m a member of a lot of adoption forums. And in some of them I’m one of maybe a handful, one handful of adoptees. And particularly having written the book, people want to get in touch with me. Which is lovely, but people are also very angry. Because I speak very honestly in the book about adoption. And when I speak publicly, I speak very openly about my views on adoption. So a lot of times, I will get absolutely dragged in adoption groups. But I know, that in Adoption Facing Realities, I can go in there, and I can say whatever I like, and I have the support. And what’s so important about this group is that, priority, privilege is given to adoptees. And that is so rare. And that is so important too, and I know that a lot of groups don't understand why that’s important. And they will, they will, I think it will come with time, they’ll understand why adoptee voices must be given privilege in groups like this, regardless of what the group is. Adoptee voices must be given privilege. You can’t be in a situation, I think, where an adoptee is sharing their experience and a hopeful adoptive parent or an adoptive parent jumps in and says, yes but you’re being so negative. Or, but that’s just one experience, or you don't speak for everybody. Because, the damage, oh, the damage that that does, I think is profound. And I don't think it’s, I think it comes from a place of fear, I think it comes from a place of ignorance. I don't think it comes from a place of malice necessarily. Perhaps also a bit of guilt, but the fact is that, and the admins in Facing Realities are superb. They are, they speak from their own experience also,  but they admit when they’re wrong, which I think is hugely important. Which in a lot of other groups, I don't have that. I mean, I don't have that. And yeah, there is, there also is encouragement in that group. A lot of times, hopeful adoptive parents or adoptive parents will jump in, and expect to, expect the group to be something it isn’t. And very often people in that group come down very hard on new members. But what’s wonderful, is when you come back or you see those members who stick around. And 3 months later they say, now I get it. Now I get why you came down so hard on me, it’s because x, y, and z. It’s because adoption isn’t about me, it’s about the adoptee. And I’ve just found it one of the most powerful resources. And almost to the extent that I want to keep it a secret. Not from other adoptees, never. But from, as much as I want APs and hopeful adoptive parents, and I mustn’t forget biological parents as well. But I like the fact that it creates a safe space, because my goodness me, do we need one as adoptees.

Haley – Yeah, and you know, groups like that, exactly for those, some of those reasons I have stayed out of. Because I feel like you say something in, that is, something about your personal experience, and then you just get shut down, or told you're negative or, you just, you must have had a bad experience. And it’s like, okay, well, you asked the question, how can we help your kid that’s struggling. We’re telling you honestly, I mean, you just don't wanna hear it. So I really appreciate that there are spaces like this for adoptive parents to come and hear honestly from adoptees. And good for you for sticking it out in something like that, because-

SJ - You know, it really is tough. There are a couple of adoption groups here in South Africa. And when I was writing the book, I didn’t even know that they existed and then I joined a few. Some I stuck with. Because I thought, I have every right to be here. And at the end of the last year, some really, some very negative stuff started happening. And I think also because I’m a quote, unquote, public figure in South Africa, it’s very easy for people to attack me. It’s very easy for them to dehumanize me, it’s Sara-Jayne King, and she’s you know, she’s not a real person. She’s just this person we hear on the radio or see on TV or she’s written this book. But the reality is, is that I am, this most fragile little ego. I’m an adoptee at the end of the day, and I’m an untreated adoptee, I’ve still got a lot of healing to do. And so when I have people, when people come at you in that way, and some of the most awful things are being said. And I ended up leaving the group, and it was something I swore I’d never do, because I believed I had a right to be in that group. But it became a balancing act of, is, which is more toxic, which is better for me, is it better for me to stay in this toxic environment? Or is it better for me to empower myself and leave and remain in groups like Facing Realities who are doing good work and important work with a semblance of knowing what they’re doing as well?

Haley – That’s wise, that’s very good. Okay, well, I want to let everyone know where they can connect with you online and where can they find your first book?

SJ – Okay, so you can connect with me online on all social media, that’s Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook @thisissjking. So that’s across the gamut of social media. And also you can buy the book online for Kindle at Amazont or you can, Amazon, sorry, they’re not called Amazont. Amazon. Or you can order it from any, I think you can order it from Barnes and Noble. I think it will fly in from the states. Or Loot.co.za or Waterstones in the UK which is Waterstones.co.uk.

Haley - Wonderful, thank you so much for sharing with us today, SJ. I just had so much fun talking with you. And hearing you story.

SJ - Thank you so much and thank you so much for having me and thank you for doing what you do. Because it’s really important that somebody does and that we have a voice, so yay, yay for Adoptees On!

Haley - Yay, thank you!

(upbeat music)

Haley - I hope you enjoyed this short series on Adoptees On Addiction. And I have some really exciting shows coming up for you including new Healing episodes, new guests, updates from past guests, it’s all coming up. And we’ve got lots and lots of good stuff in store for you in 2019. So make sure you’re subscribed to Adoptees On, wherever you like to listen to podcasts. And you can find links to everywhere you can download Adoptees On over at adopteeson.com/subscribe. And as always, I wanna say a big thank you to my monthly Patreon supporters, without which there would not be this show every week. So, thank you so much. If you wanna stand with our supporters, you can go to adopteeson.com/partners to sign up. And I would love to get to know you better in our secret Facebook group and there are some amazing things coming up in our Adoptees On Patreon exclusive podcast feed which you will get if you are a monthly supporter on Patreon. So, don't miss out on that. Head over again, adoptees.com/partner. Thanks so much for listening. Let’s talk again, next Friday.

(exit music)

96 [S5] Becca

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/96

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 96, Becca. I’m your host, Haley Radke. Today we continue on in the Adoptees On Addiction series. I’m excited to introduce you to Becca who was  adopted in-family, and if you’re an avid listener, you’re going to recognize some of the sisters we chat about in Becca’s story! And even her voice is familiar, to me anyway!Becca struggled with some early losses and shares about her troubled actions while in active addiction to meth. And how her family, including her biological mother, supported her all the way to a place of recovery for 15 years now. We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always links to everything we’ll be talking about today are over at adoptees.com. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Becca! Welcome, Becca!

Becca – Hi! Thanks for having me.

Haley - And your voice sounds a little familiar, I was already teasing you a little bit about that, because we have actually talked to two of your sisters before on the show. But, without spoiling any of that for you, I would love to hear your story.

Becca – Okay. Well, I am one of 7 siblings, 4 of which were put up for adoption when they were born. I’m one of the 3 older siblings who grew up with our biological family. And even though I did grow up with my biological family for the most part, I grew up with my biological mother’s parents. They actually ended up adopting my older sister and I when I was 8 years old. And so, even though I grew up with my biological family, I’m still, I was adopted by a family member and didn’t grow up with my actual parents. And living with my mom’s parents, I didn’t really get to see my biological parents a lot. For various reasons, my mother couldn’t really afford to travel a whole lot. She did come out a few times during my childhood, but like, once we went to my mom’s parents, we didn't really spend any time with my biological father after that. But like I said, I do have 4 younger sisters who were adopted by other families. And when they turned 18, we were able to reconnect. And now all 7 of us know each other, we have like, group texts things that we text each other on all the time and we’re definitely very much a part of each other’s lives now.

Haley - Yes, I love the reunion stories when, Mary Anna and your other sister Rebecca, recounted reunion after reunion after reunion. Because there’s so many of you and some of you were present for maybe 2 of you were meeting this one, and then 2 of you were meeting… I just, oh my goodness, it’s just so many to keep track of. But you grew up with Mary Anna.

Becca – Yes.

Haley - And so, why don't you talk about that a little bit. Just your growing up years, and being an in family adoption. Was there anything that was different for you, relocating when you were 8 years old and to a different state, is that right?

Becca – Yes, the thing that was a little different for me, so Mary Anna and our older brother grew up for the first few years of their life with our biological parents. But when I was 3 months old, I had a lot of health issues that my biological parents couldn’t really afford to take care of. So when I was 3 months old, that’s actually the first time I went out to Oklahoma to live with my biological mother’s parents. Because they were in a much better financial position to help address my medical issues.

Haley - Okay. So it was basically from when you were a baby.

Becca – My grandparents basically raised me since I was an infant.

Haley - Okay.

Becca – I didn’t go back out to New Jersey until I was 5. My biological parents were trying to work things out and they had thought it was time to bring me back to New Jersey and be reunited with the whole family. And that lasted for maybe about 5 months. And then that was when my brother and Mary Anna and I went back to Oklahoma.

Haley - And so what did growing up in Oklahoma look like for you?

Becca – Well for me, growing up in Oklahoma, like that was always kind of more my home anyway. Like that was what I had known since I was a child. But not having Mary and Jacob there, it was better. I’d grown up as an only child for the first part of my life, so it was really awesome having my brother and sister with me. But I know it was a lot, it was a more difficult transition for them, which I completely understood. Because I knew the feeling of what that was like when I went back to New Jersey. You know, it feels like your world is completely flipped upside down, nothing is familiar. So I know it was a much harder adjustment for them than it was for me.

Haley - So you’re just getting bonus older siblings coming out and you have people to play with you.

Becca – Exactly, exactly. Like I said, it was definitely a much harder transition for my brother and sister, and I think it was definitely a much more difficult transition for my grandparents as well. They had gotten, you know, kind of used to having at least one kid that they were responsible for and all of a sudden they had three. And I think you know, it was, my grandparents didn't know about the other 4 girls, 4 younger sisters who were put up for adoption. And that didn’t really come out until one night at dinner. My brother just asked like, what about my other sisters. And my grandparents were like what are you even talking about? And so you know, at that point, the cat was out of the bag, and you know, my grandfather had a very, I’m sure, interesting conversation with my mother about what my brother could possibly be talking about. And yeah, so that was how they found out. Because my mother had kept it from them the whole time before that.

Haley - Oh my goodness. Do you remember how old-ish you were then?

Becca – I think I was about 6 or 7.

Haley - Wow alright, well, we are in the middle of the addiction series on the show. So do you wanna tell us a little bit of your story with regards to that?

Becca – It kinda started off when I was about 9. That was, my brother just didn’t really adjust very well to living in Oklahoma and being separated from our parents. And he and my grandparents butted heads a lot. And when I was 9 years old, that was when he went back to New Jersey. Mary and I stayed in Oklahoma and he left. And that really devastated me. Like he, and I had gotten really close. Like I was always really more of a tomboy. So I was way more interested in what he had going on than what my sister. And you know, he had all the cool toys and the like, I felt like we had much more in common because I was always down for like, let’s go outside, let’s climb some trees. My sister was more interested in playing house and I wanted nothing to do with any of that. And so, you know, my brother and I had grown very close. My sister and I grew close too, but, you know, my brother was like my partner in crime for a while. And having him gone, just really devastated me. And as a kid you can't completely understand everything that’s going on. I just knew the adults had made the decisions and that we couldn’t really do anything about it. And that’s it really hit home that as a kid, you really don't have any sense of control or you know, any decision making power in what happens in your own life. And kind of shuffling back and forth, between my biological parents and my grandparents and then having Jacob sent back and knowing that I had 4 younger sisters that I had never even met that all these adult decisions had affected how my experience was. And whether I would ever know my siblings or not. And so after Jacob left, I started acting out a lot. And my grandparents sent me to a psychiatrist. And the first psychiatrist I think kind of was trying to be a little bit more organic with the therapy and I don't remember exactly why, but I stopped seeing her and my grandparents wanted me to see somebody else. And the second psychiatrist I went to, he was basically just a pill pusher. I was on, he prescribed Zoloft and Buspar and this was before there was a lo. of regulation on these drugs. And I think my dosage at the time was 500 milligrams, twice a day of both of those. And my understanding is now, even for an adult, you can’t take more than like 150 milligrams in one day of either of those.

Haley - Oh my goodness, and you’re young, you’re quite young then. Is this, how old were you?

Becca – I think I was about 11 when I first was medicated.

Haley - Oh my goodness.

Becca – And I was medicated up until, I think they finally had me stop seeing the psychiatrist when I was 16, but I think I had stopped taking the pills on my own when I was about 14 or 15. Because I just couldn’t feel anything. Like, for a good, I don't have a lot of memory of that time of my life. I just remember being really numb and I mean, like nothing was bad, but nothing was great either. It was just kind of this, vanilla, emotionless, nothing, I guess. And I think having somebody that young on these very strong medications, before they're even going through puberty, I think is really irresponsible. And I don't really blame, you know, my grandparents for that. I don't necessarily blame the psychiatrist for that either, that’s just how things were at the time. And my grandparents were placing their trust in a medical professional who thought he knew what he was doing, you know? But I definitely do think that, that is kinda the catalyst that led to my future substance abuse problems.

Haley  – Well, your poor, developing brain. I mean, oh my goodness. All that stuff, ugh. Goodness. Yeah, that’s not good. And so what’s the future then? So you stopped taking around age 14, and you stopped seeing the psychiatrist around age 16. What happens next?

Becca – So at that point, it wasn’t until I was about 17, my sister went to, she got accepted to a college that was halfway across the country. So she left to go to college in New York. And then that was also around the time that my grandmother got really sick. And she was in the hospital basically, my entire senior year of high school. And I had had a pretty significant knee injury when I was, I think, about a sophomore or junior in high school. And I had been pretty involved in sports up until then. But that was basically a sports ending injury to my knee. And I couldn’t play competitive sports anymore. And you know, with my grandmother’s declining health, and my sister leaving, and my grandfather and I were butting heads a lot. Like, I was not the easiest kid. I’m not saying my grandparents were necessarily the easiest either, but I didn't help the situation much sometimes either. I definitely had the attitude of, I knew everything, and I always had a smart aleck remark to anything my grandfather would try to tell me. And we just, we really argued a lot. And I just kind of fell in with a bad crowd. And that’s when I really started doing, drinking more, and you know smoking a little weed. Which that was never really a problem but it was when I first started doing like harder drugs like cocaine and ecstasy and stuff like that. I just kind of dabbled in that when I was in high school, that didn’t really start til my senior year. And it wasn’t a whole lot. But when I graduated, and went to college, for my first year, initially I wanted to take a year off because I was just really overwhelmed. Like I was the kid in high school who was in all the honors classes and who would do theater programs and also had a job outside of school. And I was the president of our literary magazine and I was the vice president in like 3 other clubs. So I was like, running around all the time. ‘Cause you know, you wanna do all these awesome things in high school to make yourself look as attractive as possible to potential colleges.

Haley – Right.

Becca – And you know, there was a lot of pressure on me to do that. especially from my grandparents. Like I just felt like there was this pressure all the time. So initially wanted to take a year off after graduating high school but my grandfather was not very interested in that at all. So I went to college right after, at Oklahoma State University. Which is a good school, but is also a very big party school. And I definitely became much more interested in partying than going to class.

Haley - And were you living on campus? Like had you moved?

Becca – I was. I was living in the dorms and it was just so easy to find you know, other people who had access to lots of things. And so you know, on the weekends I would be going to raves and doing all sorts of crazy drugs and then like, that would just bleed into, it stopped being a weekend thing and started bleeding more into the week. And then it just kind of felt like for a while, it was just an everyday thing.

Haley - So when did you realize, oh, maybe this is not, maybe this is a problem?

Becca – Oh man, that. So all of the other drugs, like I could kind of take or leave. They were never a real big problem for me. after my first year of college, I lost my academic scholarship, surprise, surprise. I couldn’t afford to go back to college. So I decided to move out of my grandparent’s house. I spent the summer after my first year of college back at home and then my grandfather and I were just fighting so much. And I knew it was really affecting my grandmother’s health, constantly fighting all the time. So I decided to move out. And that was when I was 19. And at first I went to live with a friend in Stillwater. And he was a coke dealer. So it was there all the time. Honestly, I did not know that that was he was into before I moved in. And it wasn’t until after and I was like, oh well, I guess this is a thing.

Haley - Oh my gosh. That’s wow, that’s a surprise.

Becca – Yeah. So things got a little crazy and I ended up moving down to Lawton because I just you know, couldn’t deal with living with a coke dealer. So I moved down to Lawton. Things were okay, I started dating a girl and things were going kind of well and then the relationship ended and my poor little heart was broken. And I became friends with a couple of guys who lived in the same apartment complex. They lived in an apartment about 4, 5 doors down from mine. And we were partying one night. And I had tried pretty much every drug except for meth. That was the one that I always wanted to stay from. You know, with other drugs I would always do my research like, like I hit erowid.com all the time, because I wanted to know like, what are these drugs made of, what is their chemical composition, how are they going to affect me, what are the short term and long term side effects going to be. Like I kind of prided myself on being a intellectually aware drug user. But at this particular point, I was at a lower point in my life and pretty depressed and really down on myself and I felt like nothing in my life was working out. And so I was at this party at my neighbor’s and they passed over a pipe and I just hit it not caring what was in it. And that was the beginning of my affair with methamphetamines. And that’s when things really kinda went off the rails. Like I had never been the type of person to like, pawn my personal possessions for drugs until then. And there were some pretty dark times. I definitely did some things that I never thought that I would be capable of doing. And it was, I think at the point where it was right around St. Patrick’s Day, it had been, at this point I’d been pretty heavily using for about 5 or 6 months. And I just saw myself in the mirror one day, like my gums were bleeding, I was maybe 90 pounds. And I could count all of my ribs. I looked like I had been starving myself forever. And I had pawned my, I’m a musician, I play guitar. And various other instruments. And I had saved up some money to buy this really, really awesome electric guitar that I was super proud of. And I pawned it for drugs. And didn’t even think twice at the time about it. This was like one of my most prized possessions. And it was kind of at that moment, that you know, seeing myself in the mirror and what I had become, that I was like, I can’t do this anymore, I don't want this to be my life. And I ended up moving in with my mom in New Jersey for almost a year after that. She, I didn’t want my grandparents to see what had happened to me. And I wanted to get as far away from anyone I knew in Oklahoma because it was just too easy for me to get drugs that I wanted. And so going to New Jersey was basically my rehab. I went back east, and my mom had a studio apartment at the time. Her and her now husband had kind of been on the outs for a little bit. And right before I moved back, they had actually reconciled and she had moved back in, but she still had about a month and a half on the lease for the studio apartment that she had been living in. So while they were getting their apartment ready, and like getting my room there ready, I stayed at her studio apartment. And I basically detoxed there on my own. And I haven’t touched any of that kind of stuff since.

Haley – So you just had like, this moment of, what am I doing here to myself. And then you just moved across the country and cold turkey? Wow, wow.

Becca – It wasn’t easy.

Haley - Yeah, no kidding.

Becca – It certainly wasn’t easy. And going through withdrawals is one of the worst experiences. It sucked.

Haley - And were you on your own then? Or was your mom helping take care of you? I don't know what that looks like, really.

Becca – I mean, like my mom, like so she worked. She had a full time job. My stepdad had a full time job too. But when she wasn’t at work, she would come over and see me. And make sure that I was eating that I had food. And you know, hang out with me in the evenings and stuff like that. So I wasn’t completely left to my own devices or anything like that. But I started putting on some more weight and getting healthier and I got a job at Target where my mom worked. And you know, really just put my energy into getting away from the past and everything that I had done to myself. And trying to be a better, be a better, healthier me. And put all my focus into kind of leaving that behind and understanding that the past is the past. And you can’t change it, but you can change what you’re doing to do that day. And you can change what you want your goals to be. And you can change what the future is.

Haley – And what did that, like going back to your biological mother, because I know you said you had limited contact her through your childhood. But it’s almost like a reunion as an adult of sorts. And yet in a very, like crisis kind of situation for you.

Becca – Yeah, it definitely was. You know, if you’d told me years before that that would be a thing, I would have been like no way, there’s, no way. But my biological mother and I, we had a pretty good relationship. Like even though she couldn’t come out physically to Oklahoma all the time, when we were growing up, she was definitely very attentive. Like we talked at least once a month. And she always called on the important holidays, she always made sure, even if she couldn’t afford to send us Christmas presents or something like that, she would always make sure to like, at least send a card. And you know, a nice hand written letter or something to let us know that we were loved and that even though we couldn’t be physically together, in the same spot, that she would always be there for us. And that she loved us and cared about us. And she tried to be as present as she could in the situation that we were in.

Haley – So you did really have still a relationship and this wasn’t like a, going to visit a stranger. This was still someone that was present in your life and felt safe enough obviously for you to go there.

Becca – Yeah. And I kind of saw it also a chance to I mean, kind of make up for lost time I guess. I never really was able to have like a face to face relationship with my mother for most of my life up to that point. And that, you know, I wanted that. At least for a little bit, to know what it would have been like to live with her and kind of grow with her, I guess.

Haley - Wow. So how long did you stay in New Jersey? And what did your life look like once you had detoxed?

Becca – So, I stayed there for most of a year. I moved out there in March and I moved back to Oklahoma, November of that year.

Haley - Back to your grandparents’?

Becca – Not back to my grandparents. There was an unfortunate boy who decided that he wanted to try and have a relationship with me. and even though my sister tried to talk him out of it because she said, I think something to the extent of, I quote like, you really don't know my sister the way you think you do, and she’s going to eat you alive. And, which was a pretty honest prediction on her part. With New Jersey, like it was a great place for me to go and detox and to be around, you know, to have a better relationship with my mother and to be around, in a place where I didn’t know anybody. Even though I was born in New Jersey and had spent some time there, I didn’t really like grow up there, I didn’t have many friends there. Or anything like that. And for a while, that was perfect. Because that’s what I needed to get clean. But I’m also very social person. And not having those close relationships with people that were my peers really started to wear on me a lot. So that’s when I'd gone back to Oklahoma a couple of times to visit. I didn't go back to Lawton, but I did go to Oklahoma city where I’d grown up. And ultimately, decided to move back and try this relationship with this boy. I’d originally planned to move back and I had money saved up to get my own apartment. And everything like that. But the trip back was pretty ridiculous. My friend, Morgan, had come out to help me move back. And my little junker station wagon that was towing my U-Haul trailer putzed out in the middle of Pennsylvania. So it did not make it very far. And I had to spend all the money that I had saved, upgrading form a U-Haul trailer to a full U-Haul truck. Which even back then, is real expensive for a one way rental, halfway across the country. So I ended up having to spend, instead of like having to spend just like $200 for a trailer, like almost $1800 for a truck.

Haley – Oh no.

Becca – Yep. So, I, once I got to Oklahoma, this guy was like, well let’s just, why don't you stay with me, we’ll just go ahead and move in together. And that, at the time seemed great, it ended up being a very terrible idea for both of us.

Haley - Just as your sister predicted?

Becca – Yes. Just as my sister predicted.

Haley - How was being back there? Did you see any of your old friends or other people that you knew that you were trying to get away from in the first place? What was that like?

Becca – I definitely saw some of my old friends, but not the ones that were the you know, the influences and the ones who were using meth with me at the time. So I was able to stay away from that. And I mean, in some of the circles, like I said, you know, musician, and played quite a few shows and was in a few bands and was kind of in the music scene, there’s definitely a lot of different things floating around, especially at parties and after parties and stuff like that. But at that point I was able to, you know, I wouldn’t necessarily go out of my way to be around it. But if I was at a party and it happened to show up there, I had the strength to stay away from it. Or leave, or not be around it.

Haley - How did you do that? You had the strength? What is that, it just seems like it would be so tempting. Or was it? Or was it not tempting? Were you like-- 

Becca – It was very tempting. I mean there’s still some days where I still crave it. Like it’s not something that completely ever goes away. But—

Haley - ‘Cause how old are you now? How many years has this been?

Becca – So when I first stopped using, I was 20. And I’m 35 now.

Haley - Okay.

Becca - So it’s been 15 years.

Haley - Congratulations.

Becca – Mostly like, and it’s not the same for everybody. Some people really need a program. Some people really need that structure and you know, that community and that, the whole program in various ways, whether it’s NA, or any other kind of rehab program. Like some people really need that in order to get clean. For me, it’s more just a mental willpower. Just knowing what my life was like and knowing what I want my life to be. And that those two things cannot coexist. And that I don't ever wanna get myself back to that rock bottom spot. That my, how much I hated myself back then is much stronger than any urge to start doing meth again.

Haley - And have you just sworn off everything? I don't know, is that too personal to ask you?

Becca – I mean, I never had a problem with alcohol or anything like that. So I’ll still go out and have some drinks socially, or have a couple of beers with dinner and stuff. Because those were never a problem for me. So like, I can be, go out, have a few beers with some friends on then go right back to work, the next week. If I have a drink, I have a drink, if I don't I don't. Like, I have a bottle of whisky that’s been sitting in my liquor cabinet for the better part of a year that I’ve been slowly making my way through. So I think it’s not, those kinds of substances aren’t a problem for me. the only thing that really ever was a problem was the speed-y things.

Haley - Wow, well that is, I don't know if you think of it this way, but it’s quite an accomplishment I think, what you have done to heal yourself from that and even, I just picture you going back to Oklahoma and the people that you knew there. And being a musician and all those things. Like you’re a pretty strong person to be able to just decide that that’s not what you wanted for your life.

Becca – Well it wasn’t just on my own. I mean, I appreciate that, but I can't completely take the credit. Because I do have, you know very good friends and very supportive family that have always been there to really help reinforce, I guess, the better behavior of not doing a lot of substances.

Haley - Well that’s a good question. Like, who knew, did people know that you were using? Like how much did you hide it from your family?

Becca – My sister knew, like I didn’t come out right and tell her. I actually didn’t really confess to her until, so the night that she graduated from college. So when she was graduating, my mother and I drove up from New Jersey, because I was living in New Jersey at the time when she graduated. So my mother and I drove up to upstate New York. And my grandparents had flown, I don't remember if they remember if they flew in or they drove in. I think they drove in. which is a very long drive from Oklahoma. But anyway, so we all drove in to be there for Mary’s graduation. And Mary wanted me to come like, meet her roommate and her friends. We went out drinking and I taught them how to shotgun a beer. Because apparently if you go to a really elite college in upstate New York, you don't get the full like, college experience of shotgunning beers. That was a fun moment. But at one point in the night, we’d gotten back to her apartment on campus. And her roommates had gone to bed. And we had a very long conversation. And I kinda came clean to her about a lot of things that had happened. And why I ultimately had moved out to New Jersey. And she knew a little bit about it. Like she’s the one who kinda helped facilitate me moving in with our mother and everything. But she didn’t really know the full extent of everything. And so we had a very deep and personal conversation and I came clean to her about a lot of things that had happened. And since then, she’s been really great support to help reinforce not going back and doing those again. And you know, she's always been there for me. That if I was struggling, she was always just a phone call away and would help talk me down basically. And you know, help keep me clean.

Haley – Was she surprised when you told her? Or was she like, yeah, I already knew that?

Becca – She was surprised at some of the things, but as far as me using a lot and being an addict, that she definitely knew. She just didn't know the full extent.

Haley - Wow. So, well that’s, you know, thanks for correcting me on that. ‘Cause you kinda forget about, you do have more people in your life and hopefully they're helping you and not hindering you. And also it’s so great that you were able to share that with her and some of your other family and friends and not hide it.

Becca – Yeah, and you know, recovery, regardless of how you do it, it’s a group effort regardless of which path you decide to take for recovery. That, you know, it’s not anything you ever have to do alone and that having your own like, mental strength and willpower is important but it’s also important to know when to ask for help.

Haley - Yeah. Is there anything that I didn't ask you about, that you wanna make sure that we cover before we talk about recommended resources?

Becca – One thing that really helped me when I was going through recovery, was that, the toughest person is gonna be how tough you are on yourself. That you know, I have done like, things that I thought were unforgivable. Like, I stole money from my family. I stole things in general. I was a terrible friend sometimes. I was a terrible daughter. And a terrible sibling. And I put my family and some of my friends through a lot. But once I was going through recovery and when I was getting myself clean, those were the people who were the first ones to support me, and the first ones to welcome me back, and the ones who I could really count on and lean on when I was bettering myself. And you know, I thought that some of these people I would never get back and that some of these people would never want to have anything to do with me again. And you know, I know what’s like to be in that position and to have those thoughts and to think that there’s’ no possible way, after all the crappy things that I’ve done, that anyone would ever want anything to do with me. And it’s just not true. And that the people that you think are completely gone from your life, will probably be the ones that will be your biggest allies when you get clean.

Haley - Okay, well, I teared up a little bit. That was beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing your story and for sharing some of your wisdom with us. I really appreciate that. And for recommended resources, I was looking around today and of course I was on Facebook, you know, as you do. It just, it just happens. And I don't think I’ve recommended this yet, there is a Facebook page that I follow called Adoption News and Events. And it’s facebook.com/adoptionnews. And everything they share on there, and there’s a lot of content, so you have to want to see lots of stuff from this page. Everything they share is adoption related. So anything that is reported in the news, or sometimes they’re sharing blog posts from people, stuff lots of my audience would probably be following. Adoption blogs from first mothers or adoptees, and lots of news coverage for adoption reunions. And also, ethical violation stories of which, there are so many right now. If you’re listening as we’re recording this, we’re seeing some really sketchy stories come out of South America about child trafficking. An. a horrible, horrible woman was just arrested in the states for brokering, just basically pretend babies. And stealing prospective adoptive families’ money. And yeah, just really ugly stuff. But this Facebook page has links to all of those news stories and especially if you really like the adoption reunion stories, they're coming up all the time, right? DNA reunions and things. They’re constant. I myself find it a little much. It’s always feels like that happy, sappy coverage. Which doesn’t tell the full picture, as you know, Becca. But if you just wanna know what’s happening right now and stay current on adoptee land and reunions and those kinds of things, this is a great Facebook page for you to follow. So again it’s called Adoption News and Events, and you can find it on Facebook, facebook.com/adoptionnews and I’ll have that linked in the show notes. Becca, what did you wanna share with us?

Becca – Well I have a couple of things that I would like to share. One, there is an organization I think they’re still around, Kindred Adoption. It’s an organization that was costarted, if you guys remember the show Glee, the, Samantha? She was the Asian character that was on there. And she is an adoptee. And she and a fellow adoptee have founded an organization called Kindred, the Foundation for Adoption. And it is to help adopted families, especially siblings, that have been separated, to have reunions and to be able to reunite with each other. Because we know that it can definitely be a very expensive undertaking. Especially if people are all across the country. And they try and help fund that and facilitate that, to make it an easier process.

Haley – Oh that’s so cool! I have not heard of that, that’s awesome. And especially you know, I was thinking about when your sisters were on and they were talking about the one time you guys were all together and how you guys were able to crowd fund that, but I know, I can’t imagine the costs of flying everybody in from all corners of the country. And something you don't think about necessarily.

Becca – Yeah, it’s crazy. We definitely set up a GoFundMe and there would not have been any way that we would have been able to reunite for my sister’s book release which is the other resource that it will bring up.

Haley - Oh you gotta give her a plug, perfect! You’re a natural!

Becca – But the first time that all 7 of us were together, was for Mary’s book release. We had all reunited at this point, just we could never get all 7 of us in one place at one time. And it’s expensive. It’s expensive to try and fly 7 people from all across the country, because we’re everywhere. We’re spread out across the entire United States. I don't think there’s one of us that lives in the same state as another one. So it’s definitely an expensive undertaking. And then also to have room and board for 7 people for, I think we were out there for about 4 days. So that’s not cheap either. And of course, Mary at the time, was living in Los Angeles and nothing in Los Angeles is cheap. So you know, thankfully, due to the generosity of many family and friends and people who had just seen the story and decided to donate, thankfully due to their generosity, we were able to all come together and be in the same spot at the same time, finally. And it was for my sister’s book, it’s called Bastards, it’s by Mary A. King. And it is a memoir that kind of recounts her, our experience through her eyes of what it was like growing up and having our 4 younger sisters be put up for adoption and to kind of be shuffled around from family member to family member for a little bit. And to kind of come to terms with everything that goes along with that.

Haley - And of course, she tells a bit of your story in the book as well.

Becca – She does.

Haley - You’re mentioned, you’re in there, a character on the page. How was that? Was that like, what was like when Mary Anna was like, hey, can I write about x, y, z about you? Did she do that, did she have a conversation with you?

Becca – Yes, she did. Anything that was in the book about any of us, she always made sure to make sure that she had our blessing to do. And I read a lot of the drafts that she was making and did a bit of the editing for her. obviously her main editor at her publisher did all of the heavy lifting, but there were some excerpts, especially the ones that could be a little touchy for me, she definitely had me proofread first. And make sure that she had my approval. And honestly, I was okay with her publishing that and you know, being as honest as possible about my part of the story. Because you know, at that point, I was in a much healthier place. And I thought, you know, what if there’s somebody who’s reading this who’s in the spot that I was? And I think it would be really great to be able to see that yes, you know, this experience and being an adopted person and just everything that kind of goes along with that whole narrative can be very overwhelming and can lead you to a path where the, you use these substances to cope with the feelings and the emotions that you have. But that it doesn’t always have to be that way. And that you can get past it. And that you can get better and that you can be in a better place and kind of rewrite your own story.

Haley - I love that, rewrite your own story. Thank you, that’s such a hopeful thought to end on. So where can we connect with you online?

Becca – They can find me on Facebook. My Facebook name is Becca Joking. Joking is one word. My middle name is Jo, and my last name is King, and I always thought that was real funny.

Haley - It is funny!

Becca – Well there is actually a funny story to that. So when Mary and I were being adopted and our last name was changing to King, Mary did not like the original middle name that she had. It was a very flattering middle name. and she never liked it. She found out from I think it was, from the adoption attorney, that since we were already changing our last name, that she could change her middle name too. Like, it wasn’t gonna cost any extra or anything like that. So that if she didn’t want her current middle name, she could change it. So of course, I wanted to change my middle name too. And my middle name originally was Joan. Which was after both of my biological grandmothers on both my mother and my father’s side. And my grandfather’s name is Joseph. And my grandmother’s name was Joanne. And so I wanted to be more all encompassing of all of the grandparents.  And I was also reading Little Women at the time and was very inspired by the character Josephine.

Haley - Perfect, yep.

Becca – And again, thought it would be hilarious to be Becca Jo King. Forever. And honestly my sense of humor hasn’t really changed that much since then.

Haley - Well that’s good, that’s good. 8 year old Becca knew, she knew. Well thanks so much, Becca. It was so good chatting with you.

Becca – It was wonderful chatting with you as well. And thank you so much for having me on here. It was really a great experience.

Haley - My honor!

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Haley - Next week we are wrapping up the Adoptees On Addiction series and there’s a fantastic interview I can’t wait to share with you. We talk to you Sara-Jayne King, radio host and author of Killing Karoline. She has some amazing insights and you won't wanna miss it, I promise. So make sure you’re subscribed to Adoptees On in your favorite podcast app! I like to use Overcast but if you have an iPhone or an android and you’re looking to find what’s the best place to listen, go over to adopteeson.com/subscribe and there’s a bunch of different links there you can try out. And I just wanna say a big thank you as always to my monthly Patreon supporters. I couldn’t keep doing this show without your support. So I'm so thankful for you. If you wanna stand with us and make sure adoptee voices are heard all around the world, head over to adoptees.com/partner and signup! Thanks so much for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

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