284 Dr. Alice Diver

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/284


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical, or legal advice.

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm Haley Radke. Today's guest is the remarkable Dr. Alice Diver, law professor and outspoken adoptee advocate. Alice has written multiple journal articles and books on the topic of adoptee rights, including her latest, Genetic Stigma in Law and Literature, Orphanhood, Adoption, and the Right to Reunion.

Alice shared some of her personal story with us, and then we dive into her work, including Language in Adoption, where you'll hear such gems as surplus people and substitute families. We also get to talk about how adoptees are viewed by the law in comparison with adoptive parents. We wrap up with some recommended [00:01:00] resources, and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website, adopteeson.com. Before we get started, I have a little update for you. If you're a regular listener, you'll know I've taken the last few summers off. But since dropping to two episodes a month, we're going to be going through the summer. So please keep subscribed or following wherever you listen to podcasts, as you'll have several opportunities to hear from fellow adoptees this summer.

Of course, we have lots of content going for Patreon supporters as well. And info for that is always available on the website, adopteeson.com. Okay, let's listen in. I'm so pleased to welcome to the podcast, Dr. Alice Diver. Welcome, Alice.

Dr. Alice Diver: Oh, thank you. Thank you for having me. It's good to be here.

Haley Radke: You don't know this, but I've admired your work for years and years. So this is like a career highlight for me truly. So I'm very excited to get to talk to you. And I'd [00:02:00] love it if you would share a little of your story with us.

Dr. Alice Diver: Wow, thank you so much for the, for that. That's amazing to me. Thank you. I guess my, I'm an adoptee. Obviously, I think anyone that knows me knows that because I tend to tell them quite early on.

So I was one of the 1960s vintage babies and I was adopted in Montreal. I was seven months, so I went through the, I would say, mother baby home institutions rather than homes. So in through a mother baby orphanage, the Catholic Welfare Bureau. And my folks, their story was quite sad. They'd been married for 20 years. And had a baby but he passed away after only a few days, so they got me very shortly after that and they said they wanted a girl, so as not to be reminded that they'd had a wee boy, and they were mid 40s, so they were, lucky to have a child at that age because we were coming into the era of, older persons, maybe not being ideal adopters.

They were [00:03:00] very good and they did their best. They took us to, we moved to, it was just me only child as well. Or as I'd say, rescue dog. From time to time, I would describe myself, hard. I don't think they knew what hit them. They'd had cats before, but they'd never had, this deranged creature who yelled a lot that came into their lives.

And because my mom had, because she was Irish. She was always very homesick. So in 1979 when I was 12, we went from Montreal to a small town in Northern Ireland where there was no McDonald's, no Pop Tarts. I thought I'd died and gone to hell. Very upsetting experience to me. And had lots of lots of fair haired, very Irish looking cousins.

And then I was I stood out as being different, but adoption was never really discussed. I think they hadn't told some people, that because it was, they'd been having a baby and then they got me. So some of the family didn't know, but yeah, it soon became apparent. It was in the days of matching characteristics.

So they were very fair. And they were given this blue eyed blonde baby, [00:04:00] then at the age of about, I think about 18 months, the blue eyes, blonde hair disappeared, unfortunately, and yeah, and they ended up with this very brown eyed, swarthy, round baby that bore no resemblance, but I guess what has shaped me in terms of the search, the way Quebec works, it's closed records, as I think is the same for a lot of U. S. states. So when I was 18, I applied for the non identifying information. So they send you very helpful non identifying things like you had big eyes and a nice shaped head and you like to sit outside in the sun. And I thought all of those things still apply. Thank you. Didn't narrow it down. I did discover, though, the thing that really that made it was.

I discovered Indigenous heritage. So I didn't know where I heard Newfoundland, and then I was able to do some research of my own, but that was amazing. So no one had any clue about that. I guess it ties in with not exactly baby scoop, but with maybe stigma [00:05:00] or the need to deny people's ancestry. No medical records.

So I didn't know that most of my family were birth family were deaf or going deaf with otosclerosis. That would have been useful to know. Hearing aids are great. Switch them off at night. It's all good. I'll tell you a little bit just about the reunion, because that's that a lot of people like, they seem to like this bit of the story.

So I, the way it works in Quebec, you write through social services, intermediary person. It's all confidential. I wrote a very lovely letter saying that I was a great person and at that stage I was married had my daughter and sent a photograph of her and I thought this will just be the hallmark reunion, and I'll be welcomed with open arms because what's not to love but after about a year birth mother came I don't know the terms not great, but she's okay with it I'll say mother came back and all confidential anonymous and she said, no, sorry, I'm not telling anyone about you.

I have teenagers at this point. She said, [00:06:00] So no, there will be no contact. Fine. I thought there's not much I can do about that. I just have to accept it. Yeah. And then she wrote a second letter after that, which was more of the same. And I thought she's clearly struggling.

And I guess it was a burden to carry. Yeah, so you try to put that aside for as long as you can, and you get all my things. Then I had four children of my own and I worked. Then DNA came into the public realm. So at 2012, I thought I might just get the DNA done and see who pops up.

And it found some sort of fourth cousins. They were very nice, very welcoming, but I couldn't connect any dots until about six years ago, I found an aunt who was younger than me, and with, and had been doing her DNA to see about tracing more of the Indigenous ancestry. So within half an hour, the way it works, we both got an email.

Within half an hour, armed with a surname, I found an [00:07:00] obituary, I went on Facebook, and I was able to see pictures of my half siblings, who all, her husband, this was about 3 a. m., elbowed him and said, you gotta wake up. And I said, look at these people. Do they look like me?

And he was just, I can't really say the expletives that he said, but he was instantly correct response. Wide awake going, and I was 50 at that stage. He said, yeah, he says, I think we found your people. He said, because your people look like our kids. He said, it's just, look at them. He said, yeah.

He says that, that. That has to be your mother, but just, you're the same person. So my poor aunt, she then tried to make contact. Cause I said, listen this lady's does not want contact. So don't frighten her, please. Cause I don't want to be responsible for someone having a heart attack. I said, tread softly.

I said, I've made my peace. If you can convince her, that's fine. And of course it was Christmas. It was my birthday. I hate my birthday. The first week of January, worst week of the year. So it just yeah, I sat and it was about, probably [00:08:00] took about six weeks of my aunt and some of her sisters convincing her that I was not, an axe murderer and that it was okay and that I didn't want anything apart from maybe to say hello and maybe the odd email.

And ironically, the thing that convinced her that I meant no harm was she was so scared of being discovered because she hadn't said to her kids. I said, if it's the DNA thing that's scaring you in case, people start to see matches. I said, I'll just, I'll take it down. I'll set it to private so you don't have to be panicking. And that seemed to flip the switch. And she said that's a nice thing to do. And then I will never forget it. I was for work. I was down in Cardiff and Wales. And as you do, there's this sort of abandoned castle. It's hard to beat a good castle. So I thought I will walk a rare sunny day.

I thought, I'm just going to go for a walk. And the tour guide was busy telling us about, and I won't even try a Welsh accent, but was busy telling us about, who was hung and who died and what ghosts there were. [00:09:00] When a message pops up on Facebook going, Hey, it's your mother. It's been whatever it is, 50 years.

I think it's time I said hello. And we can chat. I have to now hold it together and walk around a castle. I have to have it. How do I manage this? And I can remember texted after texted my two youngest daughters were out for dinner in a restaurant, having pizza, they live the high life.

I don't, I texted them the message and one daughter burst into tears, loud tears in the middle of the restaurant while the other girl was like, could you stop that? It looks like we're breaking up, pull yourself together. And then she said a week later, she was telling her friends and they all started to cry and she says, I can't handle this. Could people stop crying? What is wrong with everyone? But no, she, it was nice. And after that, and in her defense now, she's never, my mom has not missed a day since then, both morning and night, I get a little Facebook message. Saying, what the weather is, what the, what the menu for the day is.

Lovely, [00:10:00] normal, everyday things.

Haley Radke: For six years?

Dr. Alice Diver: Uh-huh. She's not missed, she's not missed a day and night she hasn't missed. If I miss a day, I'll get a message saying, where are you living? And I'm like, yes! Which is nice to get that bit of maternal, concern or whatever. And initially she said she was going to take a few months to very slowly tell her children about me, because it is quite a bombshell.

But within a week she had told them. And a couple of days later then my eldest brother was messaging me and we talked for about two hours about Doctor Who. So I let, it's little funny things that, yeah, and I've been sent recipes. I've been over to visit, I've gone to Montreal, they came to Ireland.

Went to Newfoundland and saw moose and all the, I have to say it's just been, it's been very good. It's been very good. It can't be easy for people to have this random stranger turns up, I didn't turn up on a doorstep as such, but yeah, so it was, never thought that would have happened and yeah, it's been going pretty good.

Haley Radke: Amazing. [00:11:00]

Dr. Alice Diver: That's my story. Longer than I meant it to be.

Haley Radke: No, I love it. I love it. You're a law professor. From what I understand, you mostly teach family law. And what drew you to become an attorney? And you've been researching adoption for many years prior to your reunion.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yeah, I think I suppose even about as an undergraduate student, we had the chance to do a research paper in final year.

I used mine as a rant against the system, really, to just look at adoption orders, how they close records, freeing orders. Even now, I would look sometimes at cases where contact is denied between older siblings and sometimes for very good reasons, it might, may have to be.

But it's just interesting that the language is still of the 1970s. Sometimes I just, I find it. It's interesting some of the reasons that they cite. Yeah, it's just always been a, it's always been an [00:12:00] interest. When I was a lawyer, I was only practicing for about five years before I went into academia.

So I probably did more property law, some child protection cases, trying to defend a care order or trying to have contact between parents and children, but sometimes that can cut a bit close. There's times you think this is one that's going to follow me home. Academia is much better.

You get paid for having coffee and talking to people and annoying, annoying my poor students. It's much more satisfactory in terms of a career choice. No disrespect to my, former fellow, lawyers. But yeah, and family laws, I say it's a nice one to teach, although we do, a segment on domestic abuse, which is harrowing.

I always say to people now, there's a trigger warning. I find increasingly more over the last 30 years, more care experienced people coming through. What would have been known as care leavers here, but now care experienced. And I know when I'm addressing a room, I'll say, I know there's adopted people out there.

I won't make you put your hands up. [00:13:00] If you wish to talk, because you can kill a conversation stone dead by going, anybody adopted? That's not yet acceptable to do that, maybe someday. But generally somebody, one or two people will come up maybe after a week or so and say, I was adopted or the thing about the UK records are open so you can get your birth certificate at 18.

Don't necessarily get maybe all the supports to go with that. It's getting better. But there's still some issues. There's still the belief, that, I'm thinking of Ireland, where records were recently opened and maybe not going that well, and their redress scheme. But there's a sort of a thought that you get that piece of paper, now you've got a name, or, now you can identify your people.

Away you go. And they assume it'll be the hallmark happy ending. And it isn't always. They forget that people can be rejected, that there's stigma, that regions can break down. But they can just wither quietly sometimes where people go, yay, and then it's okay, novelty wears off. So I would love to see more research being done into that, [00:14:00] if possible.

I don't know. It's a funny one.

Haley Radke: Do you think if you hadn't had your original rejection from your birth mother, that you would have dove so deeply into critical adoption scholarship?

Dr. Alice Diver: Wow, that's a really good question, which I've never really thought about. Possibly yes, because I'm quite bad tempered and grumpy.

So I possibly would have, I'm very good at seeing the negative in any situation. Would I have, I probably might not have been just as angry about the system and about everything. But yeah, I definitely, I would have seen, because I would have seen others struggling with the brick wall and the closed records.

So I think it probably would have, because suppose the thing about reunion is if you manage to get one and even if it goes well, you can be happy, but there's still the voice at the back saying I really get along with these people. They're lovely. And I can see I'm going to be fond of them. [00:15:00] But I lost 50 years.

So for example, like my sister, we unbeknownst to ourselves we have a daughter only a week apart back in the 90s. So if we had been, in touch, then that would how amazing would that have been that we would have been pregnant at the same time and just all the little things that you missed.

And I've often I think I've said to my brothers, it would have been just so not about an only child. I know you're maybe going to be a bit odd. But I've frequently told them, I says, if I'd had you guys growing up, even, they're younger than me, but they're a lot bigger and it just would have been nice.

You wanted someone to fight your corner. I just would love to going back to have been able to say, I'll get my brothers. Feel like Daenerys Targaryen. Here's my dragons. That's what it would have been like, cause they're quite, you know, they're big fellas. And I think they would, I like to think they would have protected their short, grumpy sister, maybe.

Haley Radke: Have quite a bit in common. I'm also Canadian. I don't know if you knew that. And my, I had a rejection from my birth mother, but we've never been in contact [00:16:00] since our brief reunion. And I started the show a couple years into reunion with my father. And I don't know, had all the things gone if this is where I would be, I'm not sure.

I'm thinking about that too. And I also was raised an only and have siblings now. So it's a real shift, isn't it? From being an only, solo focused to being a sister?

Dr. Alice Diver: It's nice. I like it. I do like it. Although I have to, cause I'm they would be the oldest. I have to rein in the urge, to dispense advice or to try and, maybe be bossy and stuff. I have to, it's unusual to have, it's lovely, but unusual to have siblings. I never know if it's said to be marked.

Haley Radke: How do you rein in that urge? Maybe that's a conversation for another time, but I could use some advice on that.

Dr. Alice Diver: Oh, badly. I've managed to do it very badly, as my kids could probably could probably advise as well. They could say, yep. [00:17:00] Mother has started again. She's off again with the advice that we don't want.

Haley Radke: I'm curious if you let's shift to more sort of work focus. Have you done much looking into adoption annulment, or rescission or any of those kinds of things? I saw your presentation at ASAC. And another lawyer was presenting, Greg Luce, and I don't know if you saw his presentation.

Yes, you did. And when you were initially sharing your story, and I've heard you share it a few other places, you said your coloring changed, so you went from fair to a little darker. And you also found out later that you're deaf. And I thought, oh, your adoptive parents actually had recourse to return you if they had cared to do, I don't know if folks know much about that, but I'm [00:18:00] wondering your thoughts on that and flipping it over to the adoptee rights side of things. We have no such recourse really.

Dr. Alice Diver: Exactly. But I do I found out after my mother had passed away, my dad let slip one day that apparently when I was about two, he said, yeah, I think she wanted to send you back at that stage.

But I said, no. And it's okay, that's an interesting thing to, yes, but then I thought maybe that just came out of somewhere or, I think he meant well to say it. And, again, I was handful and she was grieving and. Yeah, so that's, I know it's a threat too that sometimes, adoptive parents will say in jest to their children.

I know so many people that was said to, and even if they weren't serious, that's not the thing. Do not say that.

Haley Radke: Never.

Dr. Alice Diver: To an adoptee, because we're always yourself, I think we're always looking for any potential signs of rejection, so someone, maybe stops speaking or is angry at you, you immediately assume that [00:19:00] I'm gone, I've, they've written me out of their life, so it's a funny one.

Oh yeah, I think this was, whenever the deafness was discovered, funny enough, I was about 27, and I remember telling them, oh, I'm going to get, adoptive mom. I said, I'm going to get hearing aids. This is great. And she said, we were told there was nothing wrong with you. And she was quite cross.

And I was all there's loads wrong. Behold, there's, there are many flaws. Again, I think she meant it well, but it didn't come out that way, and yet it just reminds you that you're a bit of a commodity sometimes you're filling a role, which is a dark way to see things. I know.

But that's how we see it sometimes, because that's.

Haley Radke: Facts are facts, frankly,

Dr. Alice Diver: 100%. Yeah, they absolutely are. Yeah, it's funny. The thing about rescinding one's adoption, the UK doesn't allow you to do that. And I had funny enough, a symposium last year, and I think it was I had Scottish and English adoptees coming in by Zoom.

And we had a really great heated discussion, a [00:20:00] Northern Ireland judge was in for that one. So they, I went out and got coffee and left them to it. It was very lively. I should try and find the recording. They were saying, why do we not have the right to appeal our adoption, to take back our original name.

If an adoptive place, but especially if it's abusive, why is the, why are, why can't we reclaim our identities like this? And I remember that the judge, this lovely man, and he said, no, I agree. He said, the law is flawed. That's something that really needs to be looked at. And even with, I suppose the notion of redress, and recompense is really what's all about at the moment.

We're hoping that the UK will apologize to adoptees. They haven't yet. We're still waiting. How they, how it wasn't their fault, the ill treatment, I'll never know. But yeah.

Haley Radke: Nor has Canada. There was a the Senate hearings and those things, but there, nothing really came of that to this point.

Dr. Alice Diver: But even when you do get the apology, is it a piece of paper? Is it a word? Does it open the door to you maybe getting compensation? I know Northern Ireland at the minute is the ongoing [00:21:00] investigations. How do you compensate someone for a life that wasn't lived, or the relationships that you didn't have, or a placement that wasn't ideal?

There's just some things that are that little bit too horrific or beyond the pale that they're a tough one. And yeah, law is, I guess I'm back on my soapbox, but law is quite inadequate at trying to, unless I had a time machine, maybe that's why I'm thinking, maybe that's why we talked to the Doctor Who, me and the brother, maybe because, a TARDIS would have been good, because I think we would have, we've had, we had some discussions about, in childhood, would we have gotten along and, things that we could have, they were appalled to hear that as an only child, if you're playing a game of, let's say chess. I wasn't great at chess, but checkers, battleship, Clue, Ludo, games that you normally would have one other person, you would nearly, you'd have to go away and come back to forget your last move to work out a way to play a board game by yourself.

You'd see what my parents wanted to return me. Actually, I was a creepy kid. [00:22:00] Creepy kid with many personalities. But yeah, no, it's a strange with the law, I think is gradually waking up as adoptees get older and as countries start to ban international adoption and surrogacy has come into the mix as well with people saying, we're complex.

Lenny's issues are tricky and difficult and there isn't a fix for them. Yeah, so at least there's a bit of growing awareness not as much as there should be I would like society to take better notice of us not use this as punchlines that's the bit that really you know, it gets my goat.

I don't, I, you don't have to go more than a few days before you'll, something on social media, someone will be making a joke where the punchline is, and you're adopted. And it just makes me rather cross.

Haley Radke: I, I've heard you say this before, that the law is flawed and is not in any place to fix these wrongs right now for us.

And [00:23:00] in your new book, you talk so much about adoption and literature in, in various forms. And I've also heard you express this idea that fiction helps move culture forward. So can you talk a little bit about that, because I don't want to speak for you, so can you expand on that? And then what kinds of books and representation we're seeing more and more adoptee authored work in the world, which is wonderful, that's getting accolades and hitting bestseller lists and stuff, which is amazing, and we're celebrating those adoptees.

What more things do you want to see in the world that you think could shift the law?

Dr. Alice Diver: That's it. The memoirs are doing great work. I think it's so important that people are, that they're like testimony, they're like evidence, a long form of it where people are saying, okay, I know the narrative is that adoption is a thing of wonder and it's very beautiful and it can be a [00:24:00] good thing.

However, there needs to be a light shone, talk to the adult adoptee and get them to talk about their childhood. Because people, unless you, you've been there or walked in the shoes, you don't really get it, I don't want to say the kept because it sounds mean, but it's not a bad term either. It does. It does sum up.

Haley Radke: That's what I say.

Dr. Alice Diver: I'm sorry. There is kept privilege. There is. They just don't all get it.

Haley Radke: Another adoptee therapist of ours, Pam Cordano, calls them muggles.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yeah. Perfect. That is civilians. Yeah. Muggles is good. Because they, their world was very different to ours, from, you could say from birth, from pre birth, they didn't have to track people down.

Things that they take for granted, knowing who you look like, having someone that you look like and not having that. I think we do the eggshell walk quite a lot. I think we're often so scared about saying things to not drive people away, or maybe sometimes we drive them away first. I don't know.

There's just a lot of little differences there. It's just, [00:25:00] it's funny when you know when you're in a, if you're in a support group, if you're in a room of adoptees, even if you're not the same age. You could tell a story and the heads will start nodding and people will be like, yeah, I get that. Let me tell you this sort of one of mine.

And it's just, it's been in a warm bath. You wouldn't be in a warm bath with people. You know what I mean? Emotionally, it's not literally, but yeah, it's just you're among kindred spirits. I like that the muggles, I do like that. Yeah. They don't have our magic powers to read people in an instant or to cope with things that other people would find.

Sometimes you'll say something about your childhood. And you watch people's jaws drop and you think, oh, so I forgot you were in a little different universe and that wouldn't have been a thing for you. It's quite nice to appal them though. I do the, cause then we lose our filter and it's, I just think it's an appropriate response for them to say that was wrong.

Yeah, do you think? Yes it was. And then the conversation can move on, I think we just need to keep them educated. But fight the good fight. That's what I think we're doing. You were saying about, yeah, law just [00:26:00] doesn't quite do it. Even in other areas, it doesn't always promote justice as well, as we know.

Literature, I think the memoirs, definitely they're fantastic. Sometimes pop culture can do a thing, can reach the parts, that law doesn't. I probably said it at the ASAC talk. The movie Philomena, not without its problems, but it brought quite the message. It definitely brought it home to people, here's a thing that happened, a thing that was very wrong.

It's a pity the adoptee had passed away because it would have been good to have had his story and a bit more about that. The book, I suppose as well, I've gone through various eras to see how adoptees are treated. They're not always adoptees, sometimes they're foundlings, sometimes they've been rejected.

So there's a lot of folklore in there, and I was amazed to see how some of the odd little things in folklore that have survived. So burial, where were the unbaptised babies buried in Ireland? Was it [00:27:00] on consecrated ground? Was it a septic tank? What traditions went with that? Did you even get a burial?

A proper, dignified, humanising ceremony to happen. Why is there this fear of us? Because there is the fear of the unknown stranger turns up and goes, I'm your sister. Brace yourself. Some people are okay with that. Others are like, what do you want? Do you want money? That, please don't hurt me.

And quite often if there's a, a psychopath in a I don't know a Netflix tale. I just know I think that they're either adopted or they've got some missing thing. They're not identifying a parent. It's a little bit, it's a little bit tired. I'll still watch it. I'll still watch it.

And then I'll complain loudly to whoever's in the room with me, even if it's only myself. Because we're we got so used to that. What else does the book have? The books, I was told recently that it was quirky and a bit of a mashup. And I said maybe that's what I was aiming for. It has a bit of everything.

Where else would you get? You've got, we've got Heathcliff, we've got the Dickens orphans, getting along together. [00:28:00] Jane Eyre, because she had her witchcraft. That's the hill I will die on. And then I suppose going into The happy 20th century where you've got your Anne of Green Gables, which so many people love.

And I feel so bad for raining on their parade by saying, yeah, okay, she was an orphan, but she was the poster girl for a very bad system of transportation and the farm children. But even in the book, they're like, yeah, we're fresh out of boys, you'll have to take a girl, just lots of little little things that are there.

But it's good for us to read about it because on the second reading you start to see the little bits that don't add up and the gratitude, her main thing is gratitude. So that's in there.

Haley Radke: Can we talk about The Giver?

Dr. Alice Diver: Absolutely. Absolutely.

Haley Radke: Because. So that's by Lois Lowry. I looked it up today. It was published in 93 and it won the Newbery in 94 and that's when I read it and I was 11 and I recently gave it to my son to read and he's 11 when we're recording this [00:29:00] and he's oh, it was depressing.

And I was like, huh. Anyway, I loved that book. I loved Anne of Green Gables. I had many books that deeply permeated my childhood. And you said you were playing games by yourself and turning the chessboard. I was reading by myself in my room the same books over and over, including The Giver.

And when you talked about The Giver in your presentation, I was like, oh, my son had just read that, so I got a, my literal childhood copy. And I was like, I gotta reread that, because some of the points you made, I was like, what? I don't remember that. So reading it with my adult eyes, I was like, oh my word.

The whole all of society is adoptees. Birth mother is a job you get assigned. And it's this low level no glory, servitude sort of situation. And I was like, oh my [00:30:00] goodness, all the bombshells I had from that. Thank you for reawakening that for me.

Dr. Alice Diver: That's, that's, it's a great book. I suppose we home in, if there's an adoption, not even a subplot, but just the elements of it.

So they had to, so yeah, everyone was adopted because obviously they took tablets that they wouldn't have the stirrings and the feelings and there was no romance. There was no yeah, no music, no color, none of these things. And yeah, and the term birth mother, it was built up to be, this is an honorable profession, but then you very quickly see that they're just discarded three births, that's it. We see an older lady later on who, had been one, but she never got a family of her own. And it's just very, they're very derided and so on. I don't know if you've read the sequel. There's three sequels. Son is the final book. That's the one maybe to go to for a little bit of closure. I don't want to give spoilers.

But it is takes you back and gives you more of an insight into what was happening to the [00:31:00] girls that were producing the product is what, how they refer to the babies. I think if I could, in some senses, it's perfect. It's bleak, but it shows you the dark side. What would happen if family life was totally changed and there were no laws protecting it?

And I think that's exactly what does happen for some adoptees. Goodbye family life and we'll just get on with it. I would warn mothers reading it if they'd gone through a system like that. It made me think of a lot of the Irish testimony, the English testimony. the brutality the ill treatment as the product was taken away and given to another family.

Again, lots of drugs, either to dry up the milk or to suppress the emotions and so on. And then you remember, this is a book for kids. It's for teenagers. But then I think you know what? Maybe it's, it's good that they read of such things and then they'll think this is fiction.

And then we can do a Margaret Atwood and say, oh no, it is not. It's happening somewhere sometime. Yeah. [00:32:00] And it's sometimes you need to shine a light on things that aren't right. Cause how else are you going to change them? Even if it upsets people, if no one ever got upset, nothing would ever change.

And we'd be like the little happy people in The Giver that don't know that apples are red and that never have music. They don't even have grandparents, don't have Christmas lights, don't have, any of these things. So it's yeah, I think it's a good, it's a good work.

Haley Radke: One of the terms you use in your book repeatedly is surplus child.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yes.

Haley Radke: Can you talk about that? Because that lit something in me. I was like, Oh my God, I'm a surplus.

Dr. Alice Diver: I'm sorry. I apologize. I never like people on fire. I apologize for that. No, it was a term used in I'm fairly certain it was used in one of the novels might have been Handmaid's Tale. Somebody used the phrase, of course, I jumped on it and thought, oh, that's bleak.

I'll use that. Why not? It's a bit of darkness. [00:33:00] I will appropriate it and use it. I suppose that, yes, they were, that was, they kept population levels in the giver. They kept them low to prevent future famines. So a twin was automatically going to be sent elsewhere, euthanized, whatever, to how they chose.

The child that didn't fit in, so Gabriel that sparks the first book and we later find out why he didn't fit in. But yeah, he's not, he's going against the system because he's, you're not sleeping, you're not eating, you're crying, you're want, you're not being sedated the way the others are. So he's a little, but he's not, again, surplus to requirements.

Handmaid's Tale, you saw the children, I think horrifically they referred to them as, shredders. So they were somehow flawed and were not kept. And again, she slips that in very quickly near the end, that one of the babies that we thought was being very embraced and celebrated and appropriated didn't quite conform, so there's a rumor that maybe it was chosen to be rejected. I think the first chapter with [00:34:00] the illegitimacy, the cheerful first chapter that talked about illegitimacy and children being exposed and abandoned. Or seen as changelings left out, they're fairies. Again, in a way, I suppose surplus to requirements or not fitting with, if the product was not acceptable, we didn't quite fit with what was wanted of us.

So you could have been imperfect because you were born out of wedlock. Or maybe through some disability or something. So yeah, it does put it up a bit to the adoptees will get it. I think I was like, who am I writing for? As I'm writing this couple of people said, who's your audience? I said, I would imagine it'll be angry adoptees.

That's what I'm hoping. I'm hoping it'll be. That, or people that have to live with us that want to try and understand us. But I'm thinking you nearly need to be blunt for the muggles or the kept person to go, okay, I get it now that you are facing that stigma and it has roots that go back a long way.

And it can sometimes be just a little bit subtle where you're maybe left out of something either by your [00:35:00] birth family, your adopted family, or maybe by friends. If you don't get you, maybe you don't get the invite to go to the pub that evening. Most people won't mind. An adoptee might go, what have I done? What's wrong with me? Abandonment again, and it just could be that you got left off the email. You'll maybe get a call later, but you do the little things that sort of are always there, always haunting us.

Haley Radke: Yeah,

Dr. Alice Diver: To be surplus , yeah, it's a loaded, it's a loaded word, isn't it?

We're bonus people, that's a better way of putting it. It's

Haley Radke: extra.

Dr. Alice Diver: I'm a bonus person.

Haley Radke: It is, but I was thinking and this is something you addressed too, right? We've got orphans, adoptee, foundling, and, sometimes we're labeled with an incorrect word, right? I'm not an orphan. I had living parents. I'm not a foundling, like I was born at a hospital and relinquished, I have friends who are literal foundlings found in a field, by a mentally ill mother who didn't have supports she needed. Yikes, [00:36:00] the terminology is so, problematic and you do point that out throughout the book.

I love having this extra word, surplus. And substitute family.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yes.

Haley Radke: Because I, I love it when people say,. I love I do, I truly love this when people say I was adopted by strangers.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yeah.

Haley Radke: Cause that's, that's not everybody's circumstances. Sometimes we have kinship adoption, but like that is what happened to me and to you, strangers, stranger adoption. So can you talk about substitute family?

Dr. Alice Diver: I think we're probably, yeah, when we're always scared of being seen as ungrateful because we're meant to be grateful because we, probably get reminded quite often. Oh, but you had good, I've had that said to me a few times, but you had good parents and I'm thinking I wasn't complaining.

I maybe just made some comment like I've been to Canada to see, why did you go there? You had good parents here. I think they're no longer living. It's hard to visit them. So I will maybe go and visit the living [00:37:00] in Canada instead, but yeah, that's the terminology substitute. It does sometimes sound very blunt and a little bit shocking.

Stranger adoption. It sounds like you're rejecting strangers that brought you in and you might not be doing that, but you're stating a fact in that, and I will always say we're mammals. We have other ways of sensing if we're in the right place, and that might not be, it may be a bit unfair, because I'm sure quite often the substitute family, the stranger, can be very welcoming.

Stranger's just a friend you haven't met yet, but when it comes to, baby and family, yes, it's a dark term. And if it upsets someone, I'm not gonna, I can't apologize to the kept person who says, oh you're critiquing the whole system. Yeah, I'm afraid I am because there needs to be something.

What does it say about a society if mothers can't keep their babies? That lack of support. It is an indictment of society and backin, up, up the church that thought this [00:38:00] was a good idea to create this industry. I know we're living in changed times and different times, but I think it's one of, that's one of the worst and darkest things that can happen to a human being, that can happen to a baby, that can happen to a relinquishing mother.

So yeah, I'm sorry that I can't have, the flowers and rainbows. My daughter told me, the youngest girl told me, the one that, keeps marching me off to hairdressers and telling me I'm awful. Because she means well, tough love from her. She had there was an office party a few months back and she said that she saw a cake and she thought, oh I wonder what they're celebrating.

And one of the ladies in the office had been cleared to be an adoptive parent, didn't know what kind of baby she was getting, didn't know the age, was told it would be an older child, was told there would be problems, but wasn't told which types of problems and so on. But anyway, so they had, Prosecco and champagne and there was balloons.

Everybody was really festive and cheerful. And my daughter says she says, I just, I couldn't do it. She says, because I thought this is lovely. This is nice. But also there's a child out there somewhere being abused. [00:39:00] There's a mother about to lose her child. There's something horrendous happening, especially for a two year old.

And there's issues, but we're not, we can't tell you the issues because it might prejudice you. But I feel quite sorry for the lady. I thought you might want to you know the issues, if you went to get a rescue dog, they'd warn you. He bites, or he's gassy, or he's smelly, or any of the things that you might want that information on.

But they thought, I thought, that's mad that's still happening. And I thought, yeah, that I wondered, were there any adoptees in the room that were maybe going to go and share in the cake? Maybe. But she's, I didn't eat, I didn't eat any cake. I said okay, but you're always on a diet anyway, cause you're terribly thin.

So I knew you wouldn't have eaten cake. But she says, no, she's just, I did just I did you say to anyone? Oh God, no, she said, I didn't want to be the bad fairy. I didn't want to ruin the vibe. She says, but I had to come home and tell you that I felt a bit so that maybe as a sums up society.

There's still that thing of, you can't speak out and you have to be like, yay, this is great. Somebody somewhere [00:40:00] eating the cake must in the back of their mind have thought, is there not a bit of darkness under here and are celebrations appropriate? And she was celebrating the idea that she was getting a child.

And I do feel for the lady that was, just infertile and I can see why she was overjoyed. But equally, I'm thinking she might have needed to have a bit of warning that, especially an older child, that's not a baby, you're getting an older child that's been through a lot of abuse.

Yeah, it's very complex. And how does law fix that? It can't. How does society fix it? I don't know. Grumpy people like me yelling at them might be the thing.

Haley Radke: Me too. I'm in, I'm yelling to Alice. I am. I'm doing my best. I'm, I still have this. I cannot reconcile how people celebrate the initial adoption, and we also get full coverage for every adoption reunion that people want to make [00:41:00] public.

And it's this happy, amazing story that people cry tears over. Do not know how the public reconciles that in their brain. Like why are you celebrating? You were celebrating when they were separated. Why are you celebrating that they're back together? I don't understand.

Dr. Alice Diver: That is a brilliant, there's an article in that somewhere, that's a brilliant point.

Yeah, it's make up your mind. Why do they have to be, yeah it's all so beautiful. Let's just go live with, let's do what the giver does. So everybody gets to be adopted, everyone gets to have all that joy and then we're all, yeah there's an answer, it's a strange one.

I think most human beings, we try to make the best of things, but I think sometimes ignoring underpinning realities, they're going to bubble out later on.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Dr. Alice Diver: We're very good at masking and saying everything is awesome, everything's wonderful. But yeah, sometimes then they said, oh, I wonder why was she angry today? Don't know. Something has maybe, the [00:42:00] little triggers are everywhere. If they could stop with the triggers, if they could stop with, stop triggering us, does it, do you have to have it as a, oh, if I got one more subplot or one more twist, the big reveal is, guess what?

I'm not your father, or I am your father, or it might be, or whatever the, whatever that reveal is yeah, they need to find something else to, yeah to entertain people with that's very cynical, but yeah, it just, it's becoming a, it's a little bit tired. It's doing us a disservice because it ties in with the whole thing of but you're fine now and you should be grateful and why are you not great? Like Twitter is a scary place to go to. Some people will get really violently angry at any adoptee who dares to not even criticize, but to just say, yeah, your system could be better. Whoa, you will open, the portal to hell and people will start abusing you. I wonder why. I don't know. I don't know what their, what the issue is, but yeah.

Haley Radke: They have a secret child somewhere that they're afraid is going to show up on their doorstep [00:43:00]

Dr. Alice Diver: Something like that, yeah.

Haley Radke: There's something. I don't know. I have one more last topic I want to talk about before we do recommended resources. And when you presented at the ASAC conference, your topic was forced adoption as a war crime.

Dr. Alice Diver: A cheerful one. I do like a cheerful, a happy little topic.

Haley Radke: I loved it.

Dr. Alice Diver: Totally. I spread joy.

Haley Radke: Absolutely. I did. I totally loved it. I feel like there's some tie ins from the book, some examples that are similar, but can you talk a little bit about that? Because I really do think it, it's on theme with the rest of our conversation.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yeah, I could, I can do that. So casting my mind back to the paper, I think I was looking at Ukraine and what is happening there the occupied regions where the Russian Federation has come in. Now they have, they decided that this is a war crime, [00:44:00] the forcible displacement.

So children are being, and older children as well, are being fast tracked and sent off to being adopted by Russian families, in some cases going up into far away places. It was the fast tracking of the passport that got me. So they're changing their nationality very quickly. They're saying that these children are in some cases they say they're abandoned, so they were in care. Again, we see the falsifying and that a lot of them weren't abandoned. Their families tried to get them back. So that they're orphanizing them. They're saying, oh yeah, no parents that we could find. We know that's not true. They're using international law as a bit of a double edged thing.

So they're saying we're not war criminals. We had to do this to stop them being stateless. Because to be stateless is in breach of international law. It's a terrible thing. They're using child protection principles with saying it's in their best interests. You don't want 'em to stay in an institution, so we're gonna send them off to this loving family.[00:45:00]

But how do you square all of that? And I know it's a very different situation to ourselves because we were peace time adoptees. We weren't fighting a war. But you can connect the dots. How many similar issues were there? There's, Reuters did, and Amnesty, I think, did reports of these adoptees.

They weren't allowed to wear the colors of Ukraine, so they weren't allowed to wear the blue and yellow. And they were taught certain songs, so there was propaganda. And some of them, as they got a little bit older, were saying, oh yeah, that was our former country was bad. Do we see a similar thing like that happening with us, as in, how many of us didn't talk about birth family in front of adoptive family?

How many of us, I never said that I got my non identifying information. I never would have said that I was going to search. I waited till, really till the folks were I didn't wait till they were dead. I did it and didn't tell them. But in some ways I was glad reunion happened after they passed away because they would have lost their minds, Oh my God, it was the taboo subject of don't mention it.

My mom once, she said, I think I was a [00:46:00] teenager, and she said one time, I want you to know you're free to search anytime you want, but wait till I'm dead. She had a very pragmatic way of looking at things. So I just, yeah, I just think there's, maybe, I don't know if the war crime will ever be prosecuted, we'll wait and see if that's ever a, if that's ever a thing, but it will be interesting to draw maybe some lessons from wartime adoption across to the peacetime adoptees, because we're fighting our own little battle, it's just a small personal wars. Against society and against, anyone that annoyed. I'm ready to overturn cars now. I will start the revolution.

Haley Radke: Some of the notes I took were you say, you said, are there some war crimes that are acceptable? And it feels like this is one of them.

Dr. Alice Diver: Yes.

Haley Radke: Yeah. See, look at you. You're like, yeah, past Alice. Good job.

Dr. Alice Diver: We're really listening to this talk. That's a bit

Haley Radke: Come on.

Dr. Alice Diver: Oh, I'm not used to people listening. My students tend to doze off. They [00:47:00] get very bored by me, so that's great. That's lovely that you took it.

Haley Radke: I took plenty of notes.

Dr. Alice Diver: That's a note.

Haley Radke: I, it was really evocative for me. And so was your book. And I really hope that folks follow more of your work. I know you've published many articles around this topic and your new book, The Genetic Stigma in Law and Literature, Orphanhood, Adoption, and the Right to Reunion. It, I think a lot of adoptees who, like me, have read so many adoptee stories will really find it engaging and I love how you bring the law into it, even for someone like me that is not really trained in it or anything like that.

I found so many things, I was like, oh. I want to learn more about this. I want to talk more about this. And so I know folks will really connect to a lot of those points that you're bringing forward. I think it's wonderful. I [00:48:00] know you've written so many things on the topic. And so for folks that are new to you, I think they'll be excited to deep dive more of your work.

For podcast listeners though, I do want to say you have three episodes on The Law Pod podcast, which is that part of your university?

Dr. Alice Diver: It is. Yeah. The law school do that. They put out weekly on just on various different topics, very good explainers, law, politics. This one was slightly different to suppose that because it was I had Korean adoptees over, I had Canadians. So it just got us in a round table to to talk about everything.

Haley Radke: I love this. Avoiding origin deprivation. So we'll link to those and your conversation with Emily Hipchen as well. Who also oversees ASAC.

Dr. Alice Diver: She's very good. She's very patient with me. She puts up with my bad writing. She's a great editor and she's very good.

Haley Radke: Anyway, we'll link to those things. I hope that folks check out [00:49:00] all of those things and other work that you've written. Is Forced Adoptions as War Crimes, is that going to come out in ASAC?

Dr. Alice Diver: Oh, yes. I think so. It's being, it's gone.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Dr. Alice Diver: I think at the peer review stage.

So I think it's probably come back to be revised a little bit, but I'm hoping it might be winter or maybe spring. So yeah, I think it, it ties in, you've reminded me, I think it ties in with The Giver and the Handmaid's Tale with the lack of reunion at all. So again, it's those novels, they shy away from really exploring too much of adoption.

So maybe that's where the, are some things like even for the dystopian novel, yeah, reunion, they don't go there. It's yay, happy ending reunion. End of book . I'm like, that was they, God. How did they get on? You've given us this A one.

Haley Radke: Did they get a message every day with a recipe and the weather? I don't think so.

Dr. Alice Diver: Absolutely. , that's absolutely that's the reunion handbook. You know, I not very bad.

Haley Radke: I keep saying ASAC , I should say it's the [00:50:00] Alliance for the Study of Adoption Culture. And it's a journal that comes out twice a year and there's a conference that's biennial. So maybe you'll present in a future conference, people could see.

What do you want to recommend to us today?

Dr. Alice Diver: I'll give my favorite novel, which I only really touched, I touched on it briefly in the book. Again, I think a book I read when I was about 10, An Episode of Sparrows. Now it's not, strictly to do with adoption. But I like it because it follows the experience. To me, it's, it marks a sea change. So it's set in the 1950s, just after the war. And it follows the experiences of a little girl who is very slowly and gradually abandoned by her mother. And she's focused on wanting to, to dig out, to plant a little garden among bomb ruins, like these ruined streets in London, but it actually has moments of humor.

She builds up her own substitute family. She builds up kinships with people and it's not a very long story. [00:51:00] And it's got, I will tell you nothing of the ending. Cause it would just be a, it would be a spoiler. The gardeners will like it because she's she gathers. She's quite a cheeky wee girl.

Like she'll, so she'll occasionally, she'll occasionally shoplift to get things that she needs. And she'll, it's, I just, I can't recommend it enough. And there's just a tiny bit of law near the end. But again, I couldn't tell you too much about it because it would spoil the ending, but it's just great.

And I see, I've read it a few times over the years because you know yourself, you read something as a child, you read it as an adult. And we get a glimpse, very briefly, inside of, a convent, a home of mercy, or whatever. She's so defiant the whole way through, her defiance. It's very funny and it's for once it's actually, I know it really sounds really bleak, by the end of it, you're edified, you'll be doing messy crying, you'll be doing hot mess crying, but the tears won't all be sad tears.

It'll be okay. But it'll ring you out on the way. So yeah, it's just if you're bored of life or if you want to upset yourself, for the week, you can [00:52:00] probably read it in a day.

Haley Radke: And there's no plot twist that there's an adoptee that's a murderer. We're good.

Dr. Alice Diver: Thankfully, no. That's what it means. Thankfully, there's none of that carry on because, yes, I'm one Elf away from losing it. It's.

Haley Radke: Oh my gosh. Yes. Yes. You and Emily talk about Elf in your episode, so people can hear your Christmas movie thoughts there. This has been just a privilege. Thank you so much.

Where can folks connect with you online and find more of your work?

Dr. Alice Diver: Thank you so much for starters. And I'll have to say thank you for having me. This has been brilliant. I was very scared, but you were nice to me. So okay, let me think. I'm on. Yeah, I think I'm on Twitter. I don't post much on Instagram.

I just, I will have a look on it. Obviously, through the university's website, I have a page. Facebook from time to time I will go on as well. I probably just mainly post pictures of the cat because he's a bit of a lunatic and he [00:53:00] merits currently fighting with a magpie. He's having war with magpies at the minute in England.

So yeah, like I'm on Twitter, Facebook LinkedIn. Yeah, I'm open to all, open to anybody, or anybody wants to email, you can give out, the email as well. I'm happy for conversations. If anybody wants a chat or to complain at me I'm good for that too. Or to ask about the book, granted, anything, it's all really nice. Everyone, all welcome.

Haley Radke: Wonderful. Thank you. Thank you so much.

Dr. Alice Diver: Thank you as well. And it was really good to have to meet you properly and to have a chat. It was lovely.

Haley Radke: Isn't she remarkable? Just so impressive. And to add to that, if the high cost of an academically published book is a barrier for you, please note that Dr. Diver has offered to make a PDF of her book accessible if you like to email her. And all that info will be in the show notes [00:54:00] for this episode, which will be on adopteeson.com. Or if you're listening in a podcast app, you should be able to just click on the picture and click through the show notes should appear and there'll be links there for you. Thank you so much for your ongoing support of the show. I would love it if you would share this episode with just one friend, perhaps there's a fellow adoptee that you know that would really benefit from hearing from Alice's work.

I am so thankful for my monthly supporters. And another way you can support the show is from, with just like a one time donation through PayPal. And there's a link on the front page of adopteeson.com if you'd like to support Adoptees On or our new project. We would love to have you, um, back the work we're doing and help us keep the lights on and paying all of our fellow adoptees for their work here.

Thank you [00:55:00] so much for listening. And as promised, we are going to talk again very soon. This summer. Oh, you can hear my dog. Spencer cannot be chill today while I'm trying to record this for you. Sorry. He's digging on my carpet. We are going to have shows throughout the summer and there'll be two episodes in July and two in August.

And our first July episode will be coming up for you on July 12th, 2024. Thanks for listening. Let's talk again very [00:56:00] soon.

283 Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/283


Haley Radke: This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical, or legal advice.

You're listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm Haley Radke. We have a returning guest, adoptee therapist, Cam Lee Small, back with us today. Cam has a brand new book out, The Adoptee's Journey from Loss and Trauma to Healing and Empowerment, published by A Faith Based Press.

I recently got to meet Cam in real life, and he is just as warm and genuine as he appears on the internet. In our conversation today, Cam and I talk about how most churches have majorly missed the mark in serving adoptees. We address how gotcha day [00:01:00] misses the lost-ya day and the grief of adoption. One of my favorite things Cam shares in his book, and we do address it, is that just being an adopted person takes an extraordinary amount of cognitive and emotional bandwidth.

Before we get started, I wanna personally invite you to join our Patreon adoptee community today over on adopteeson.com/community, which helps support you and also the show to support more adoptees around the world. We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website, adopteeson.com.

Let's listen in. I'm so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On. Welcome back to Adoptees On Cam Lee Small. Hi Cam.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: I'm so glad to be here, Haley. Thanks for having me.

Haley Radke: I am so excited because you have a brand new book out and it's part [00:02:00] memoir, like you have a chunk of your story in there and I loved hearing more about that directly from you, but I know you've been on the show before, but would you start and just share a little bit of your story with us for folks who may not know you?

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Absolutely. I am coming into this space as a Korean American adoptee, and right now, professionally, I serve as a mental health provider here in the Twin Cities, and a lot of my work is pointed to serve adult adoptees, teen adoptees, and their families. And just normalizing this conversation on mental health.

So that's a snapshot and I'm sure we'll get further into that as we go along.

Haley Radke: Let's start with the obvious. Your Instagram handle is Therapy Redeemed. You are publishing this book with IVP, which is a faith based organization. And so we are coming at this today from more of a [00:03:00] Christian faith based lens.

That's the questions I'm going to come to you with. So can you tell me a little bit about your background with Christianity and where you personally stand today?

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Yes. And as an early reader, Haley, I'm very thankful for just your partnership and support in this in the beginning of the book, and I'm referencing that because in the beginning there is part of the dedication and it basically is an invitation to say that for folks who grew up in the church, in the local church environment, we may not have always had the language or permission to think about our adoption stories, or our personal stories in general, beyond that lens of thanksgiving and gratitude.

And, it's possible there even just, me personally growing up in the 80s, there just wasn't an organized [00:04:00] system or set of words and testimonies. This particular book is written as a sort of love letter to all adoptees and adoptees who grew up in the church wondering, what do I do now? I've got some emotions coming up for me. I've got some questions and wonders, and I don't know if I can bring that to the fellowship or who in my church community would be willing to sit with me in this without me feeling ashamed or guilty or betraying my faith in any way. And so really this book is it contributes to the work that our adoptee elders have done.

And I hope to provide another entry point for folks who want to talk about this while preserving their sense of their valued faith, what they believe about scripture, [00:05:00] about God, about Christ, about all of those layers that might be very important to them, but they do have a hunger to know more and perhaps be engaged and participate more in this global movement of adoptee consciousness.

That model we're even just co creating still, not me personally, but co creating as a community. As these publications continue to come out.

Haley Radke: So I know you and I both know this, but I'm gonna say it out loud that so many of us were adopted into Christian families. Then as we were raised in the church had this sense of we are supposed to be this model for how God adopted us as well.

And we're like literally the poster child for, whatever you want to say, the symbolic adoption of God into his family. [00:06:00] And so unpacking that as teens or adults, or whenever we're coming into adoptee consciousness has meant for so many of us, this break in faith and this break with the church because it's like the two things cannot live simultaneously within us. I know you have thoughts on that. What do you want to say about that? And have you observed that in your own clients? I know so many of us, people who've been on the show have fully walked away from the church and so many people in my community will say so as well.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: There's an interesting perspective that came to my mind as I was hearing you walk me through that Haley, there's maybe someone who feels like they, they've, have too much of one kind of background [00:07:00] to completely subscribe to or embrace this new conversation or a different conversation, a third space, so to speak, and I'm putting to get this together on like in real time with you right now.

That's why I'm so grateful for these types of dialogues that, oh, maybe I'm too Christian. To say that adoption isn't just love, or adoption isn't just beautiful, maybe I'm too Christian to even wonder, is it more than that? And then, there might be someone who feels like, I feel so strongly about challenging some of these dominant themes that have hurt so many people in communities. I have that within me. Am I still able to explore faith and what that could mean? Am I even still welcome in this small group at church? Will you still pray for [00:08:00] me? Do I still pray? These are the types of complexities that are coming up for folks and that I've navigated myself as we think about unpacking and expanding, widening the scope of this conversation about adoption, faith, and mental health.

That's a, in a nutshell, what I'm seeing personally going through that walk. And it's an ongoing, always in process kind of journey, especially as my children have different questions and different wonderings as they get older. And also as I work with adoptees, adult adoptees on a daily basis, really wanting to honor their story and where they're coming from and sit with them, not in a sugar coated manner.

And definitely not in like I'm an expert on you. Let me, as a clinician tell you what to think, feel, and do. But really as a co struggler, a soldier nerd, just a fellow human trying to make sense [00:09:00] of this 80, 90 years, however much time we've got on this spinning rock, I'm right there alongside you.

Let's sit with this together.

Haley Radke: Have you had conversations personally with leaders in churches you've been involved with regards to adoption?

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Yes. Two layers there. I guess there's the church communities that I've personally been a part of. And yes, we've had conversations about this before.

And having space to share my testimony and work through that with folks and for myself, the ones that I've worked with, just the fellowships that I've been a part of in the local community I personally have been thankful for the invitation, the permission, the encouragement to ask away, to not just accept what we tell you blindly, but this is a conversation.

This isn't [00:10:00] a fully top down I am the pastor, or I am the small group leader, or I am the whatever, and you do what I say because I heard from God this week. It's really tell me more. This is a layer of the human experience that matters. It's significant, so we can talk about that here. So I've been grateful to have that open space.

So that's one layer. Another layer, the second layer, is church communities and leaders that approach me and invite me in to speak or to work with their congregation or their community. They're already invested and interested in this conversation, and they're already aware and have a desire to learn more and connect the people under their care to this conversation.

Now, it's possible that, it is the case that I've been in, spaces that [00:11:00] are associated with or adjacent to a faith background where not everyone in the audience agrees with what I'm saying, or they have some reservation about even, oh, racial identity is something that demands our attention. Oh what about X, Y, Z?

What about reverse? Sure. Let's talk about that. And I think for me, that's been the part of my work is the work to meet folks. And like I said, for me, I'm not saying anyone else has to do this or should do this, or this makes you good or bad. But for me, part of my journey is meeting folks there. At that conference or in that audience, let's sit together and talk about that.

Now, it's not going to be my job to say, okay, by the end of our talk today or by the end of my session, you're going to leave here believing everything that I believe or agreeing with everything that I say, but at least you have a category in your mind. And so do I. Of a time when you sat with someone who didn't fully agree with [00:12:00] you and you were able to have a constructive conversation about it and we exchanged ideas.

That's a dialogue. Like my goal is not to convert you, even though maybe your goal is to convert me, but my goal is to sit with you and learn from you, but also share some of what's in my mind and heart and body and soul with you. Because now all of the neurons in your mind or some of them have rallied together and organized and now a thought.

And maybe just part of the thought that was in my mind is now inside your mind, and that's what you can take home with you when you consider your 17 year old teen adoptee who is wondering about race, but you're telling them you don't see color. Now you have something to take to them.

Haley Radke: Do you feel like there's been a shift in the last few years. I know I've recounted this story on the show before. Forgive me for repeating myself, but a number of years ago, I'm going to say six, maybe ish years ago, I asked at my former church, if I could [00:13:00] host my adult adoptee support group there and through a series of meetings was declined. And I really got the sense it was because we don't want to hurt any of the adoptive parents feelings in our church by suggesting that there's anything wrong with adoption, like why would adult adoptees need a support group? And so that was spiritually excruciating for me, eventually leading me to not attend that church anymore. And now we're attending a new church and say the last six months or so. And I recently had a meeting with our pastor and his wife, we had them over for a dinner meeting, sounds so official. And I explained the circumstances of that. And we were talking about adoption and it was interesting to me, their response about seeing adoptees as having had a loss and the pastor's wife in particular, she was saying like, oh, like I can see there's like this [00:14:00] grief, this unacknowledged grief.

And I was like, Okay, now this is a 180, so have you seen any shifts in conversations over time? Do you think it is having the church wake up to some of the, I'm a white adoptee adopted by white parents. But there's been so many more conversations about race lately that some churches are waking up to as well.

And I know there's so many intercountry adoptees that were raised by Christians as well. So thoughts.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: The welcoming of conversation associated with mental health support. We're destigmatizing that. We're normalizing that conversation and we're widening the doorway to who can benefit from mental health.

We're also rebuilding what mental health means or is or implications of it. So rather [00:15:00] than mental health support is a punishment or a consequence for deviant behavior, it's actually this very essential life giving practice, including preventative care as well, that increases and fosters and nurtures our connection with other people.

We're relational beings. And once we started to see in over the past decade, I think, yeah, the spirit of the times has shifted once we have begun to see mental health in that realm of an actual like healthy thing that we don't just make people go to I think that is that's one of the significant factors in the conversation being more accessible in the church and leaders in the church being more willing to explore so what does that mean for everyone, and especially for [00:16:00] adoptees. So what your dinner guests would say, wow, there's some, I can acknowledge there's some grief related to the experience of family separation and adoption and the way that we would normally have a survivor's group for a natural disaster or domestic abuse or any kind of experience where it left an imprint on a person or an individual, and now there's a support group for it. Yeah, the notion of where is the adoption survivor support group? Adoption isn't something that we survive. And then we get into the semantics of like adoption. But we're saying that if you're in a family and for whatever reason now you're not, that can potentially leave an imprint on you, whether you're an infant, or a toddler, or at any age.

That [00:17:00] doesn't just go unnoticed by our mind, body, soul. Okay? If that is true, then it's also true that anyone who has experienced that might benefit from being able to talk about it. Because that's how healing works. Part of the process of healing is being able to explore, identify, and organize my thoughts around something that happened and be invited and even practice this sort of increased capacity to make new meanings out of it and ultimately make decisions about it in my life for what does that mean now for my relationships, for my roles in my family, my role professionally, my role as an advocate, a community member. So that's where I see some of that shifting happen is that first of all, we're widening the doorway to say anybody can benefit from mental health.

And then we're clarifying what is mental health. It's not a punishment. It's something essential [00:18:00] for humanity for if you have a brain and a nervous system and a body, you can benefit from mental health support. Now there's formal support. There's informal support. There's so many different ways to do it.

And then there are different like cultural, there's a tenor of what that means depending on where on earth you live. But in general, being able to talk to someone and receive help from outside of yourself to organize your thoughts about something that happened to you, Or an event that you endured or navigated through, we're here for it and people are coming out of the woodwork to say, let me help, that's what I've been seeing and yes, we're always going to have the folks that are saying no thank you and pushing back and even, if you think about What's it called?

The the second touchstone in the adoptive consciousness model is rupture and it's almost this digging my heels in to see, say, yeah, maybe there's some new information that I heard about adoption, but I'm sticking, I'm going to double down. [00:19:00] I'm sticking to my guns here. Adoption is beautiful.

It, there's so many great stories about how it works. That's my final answer. And I'm not, we're not shaming anyone. We're just, we're describing that idea that when you hear new information about something, our body is immediately going to put up a little bit of a guard because whoa, maybe something in my limbic system says beep, threat.

That's unfamiliar to me. Something bad could happen, and that's normal, but that's part of the process, and then we move on to sitting with these conflicting feelings, dissonance, and then expansiveness, and all of that. That was, Yeah, that's what comes to my mind as I think about that shift.

Haley Radke: Thank you for saying that. And I appreciate the call about mental health, too, because that is something the church struggled with for so many years. We'll just, say a prayer and it'll go away. Okay. I have church critiques. I do. I do. Anyway, I love this line from your book, you say, [00:20:00] The amount of cognitive and emotional bandwidth it all takes from us is extraordinary. You're just talking about living as an adopted person. Thank you for that acknowledgement.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Yeah. That's where I think this notion of you don't have to be at a certain location in these five touchpoints of adoption because it can be protective to say, actually, I don't time, I don't have time this week, this month, this year kind of thing to devote to the deep dive Into all that adoption means for me, because when I do that, I know what it's going to require from me emotionally, physically, like the energy it takes to even allow grief to come in.

And yes, if we don't devote this sort of like attunement to that, it might come out semantically in other ways, [00:21:00] stomach aches, back pains, muscles, I get sick, my immune system. What we're saying though, is that I understand there's a protective layer to saying, I don't have what it takes to talk about that right now, or to think about what it means for me.

I know status quo term it can feel loaded, but what I, the way that I interpret or the way that I, one of the ways that I mobilize that in the way that I work with folks is to allow them that space to say yeah, I can understand why you wouldn't want to engage in that conversation so deeply right now.

This might not be the time for you and that's okay. But yes, it is extraordinary, just the amount of ourselves that is required when we move around the world conscious about these adoption related layers. [00:22:00]

Haley Radke: I've heard you say that the book is really focused on adult adoptees as the main audience and that you hope that an adoptive parent may, so to speak, read over their shoulder in order to gain some understanding about us by reading the book. And I know we're not in the comparison trauma Olympics. But I'm going to just say your story is a little different from a lot of adoptees. So I was an infant adoptee. So many of us were, and then we have adoptees that were, relinquished at an older age or removed from their family for some reason.

And you share a bit of your story in the book I mentioned earlier, and you were just past three years old when you were made available for adoption. And I wonder, in talking about adoption as a trauma, [00:23:00] and still trying to tell people this is a trauma, being separated from our family is a trauma. I wonder if your story can highlight that a little bit more for folks that really don't get it.

You were a baby. You don't know any different. You went from one family right to the next. Some of us in the delivery room, however sketchy that is. Do you have thoughts on that? Do you think that your story just being just that slightly bit older and having some, early memories, does that change anything for an adoptive parent hearing that and being like, Oh my goodness. You really did have parents and I'm so sorry that, your father died when you were three, and that was seemingly the impetus for your separation from them. And, I don't know, it's oh, you were part orphan, like it's [00:24:00] very evident versus an infant adoptee who's relinquished at birth, etc.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: I wanted to give adoptee readers a chance and an invitation to pause and consider there may be a history that belongs to you that gets left out of our intake documents or the gotcha book or, the coming home party. So we're really hoping readers would get that. And as I considered adoptive parents reading this, the hope is to honor the fact that the reader's story, anyone who reads this is going to have a different one than mine.

And I make that very clear that your story is individualized in there and what are some of the comments that we face. And I think at whatever age one is at relinquishment, it's true that we [00:25:00] can say there is a significant history that belongs to you, relational experiences, interpersonal realities, at whatever age, even in the womb, in utero, prenatal, that would matter.

So if you've been taught that your life began at the gotcha day party. I wanted to give you permission to, you can still hold that card if you want, but I want to put another card in your hand to say, maybe my life didn't begin with my adopted parents. That's why I say I was a son before I was adopted.

Now whether you're an infant or a toddler or whatever, I think like children don't need us to tell them that maybe they can feel it already in their bodies, but they do need some guidance perhaps, or some mentorship or role modeling. Some kind of help allows them to articulate. What does [00:26:00] that mean for me though?

When I'm walking through the hallways at school, or even just when I'm looking at my family pictures or when I'm sitting alone in my bedroom, when I'm laying in bed at night, wondering why am I here? What's going on? What happened to me? That's the hope that something did happen. Not just what we're looking at in the Hallmark celebration party card.

But maybe there are some other important events that happen and important people that are potentially still happening. They might still be alive and depending on, regardless of the background of what that means, if it's a quote unquote hard story or kind of a difficult circumstance, there's this idea that, like for example, an incarcerated mother is still a mother.

Okay, that's a complicated feeling for some folks and I want to honor that. Just, the overall zooming up 30, 000 foot helicopter view is to say, that's a thing. This shared history in this individual history is a thing. [00:27:00] And if you've never been given space to talk about that or think about it, here you go.

And don't fully count on me to unpack that fully, it is normal to reach out to a professional or someone you trust or an adoptee group that fits for you and find a space where you feel comfortable to utter your first word about that. I think there's more to my life than what I experienced in my adoptive family.

I don't know what that means fully right now, but I, it's, something's coming up for me and to have someone or a group of people say, me too, that's welcomed here. Let's talk about that. So there's an adoptee whose parent disagrees with this, or they've never been exposed or haven't had access to the conversation you and I'm having today.

Haley. My hope is that if they get their hands on a book like [00:28:00] this, it can be the RSVP, it can be the invitation to say why don't you think about this too, because it could benefit you and your family.

Haley Radke: I just heard Pam Cordano, fellow adoptee therapist, describe this as us being pulled out of the spiderweb of legacy of our family, right? Because it's not just we had a mother and father and they had parents and they had parents and then there's possible siblings and cousins and, all think of the centuries back and back and back, right? So that's building out like the spider web. And then we're like, pulled out of this whole system.

So I love that this call to remember we had a history. That's so beautiful, Cam. Okay. You say in the book, this is so good. Gotcha day misses lost-ya day. This affirms that situational [00:29:00] gains are enough to minimize or silence the impact of relational losses or events that happen to and within the person. Can you talk about that?

Because I still see some adoptees, again, no shame, celebrating their gotcha day. And I'm like wow, this is, I thought we were past that, but I guess not.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: It misses the lost-ya day. And one of the disclaimers in the book is I am not hoping to project or prescribe that a reader should feel a certain way.

What I mean by sometimes a gotcha day misses the lost-ya day is really asking a question. What have we missed or who have we missed out on by saying gotcha, period. That's it. done, end of story. [00:30:00] My hope is to say, part of the story can be your gotcha day. I want to honor that because that's your life. You get to co create, and live out that meaning.

That's part of the story. What if, or who would you be, or what in your life would change, or what would you potentially gain by saying or asking, what else belongs in this story? Who else belongs in my story too? Who else is in my story, but they've been erased or not mentioned, or maybe white out over there, over the ink on the intake form.

And when we can acknowledge that, I'm thinking about this YouTube clip, and it was a story maybe I actually don't know how many years ago, maybe five years ago, six, seven, eight, nine, ten about an adoptee who reconnected with a sibling. And the music, it's interesting, [00:31:00] the music over this story is like a Today Show kind of idea, like it's happy music.

And I don't want to take away the happiness that the two adoptees in this story were feeling, or layers of it that they might have been feeling. I don't want to take away from that. But it struck me that, the music, the soundtrack to that three minute story of two adoptees uniting, the music doesn't match the loss.

The music doesn't match the misery would have been potentially part of the first part of the story. And again, that's just a three minute clip. So I don't know what they did personally on their end before, during, and after that meeting, we just saw what the news team copying pasted and chunked up together in, in their videos, editing software.

That's all we saw. But if our culture [00:32:00] is saturated with videos and stories like that one only or predominantly, then what about the adoptee sitting there watching YouTube saying that's not my story, and I don't even see my story. That's a great mirror for folks who want the happy thing, or that's all they have, but I don't have a three minute happy thing.

Where's my story? The hope of, about, gotcha day misses lost-ya day is for you, dear adoptee, there is a story for you. There is a place for you to see yourself represented too. If you don't, if you're thinking, I don't have all the answers. I don't have all of the major happy music feelings in my life.

I've got questions. I've got unfinished layers of who I am and what I've experienced. It's dear you're welcome here. And we're trying to create more of what you need to feel like you're not the only one sitting there. That's what we're, that's what I [00:33:00] mean when I say it misses the lost-ya day.

That we need more of those pieces represented so that the adoptees sitting alone in their room feeling like they're the only one, they don't have to sit there much longer. We're coming for you, buddy. Just wait. There's stuff already out here. Let me show you where that is.

Haley Radke: I love that throughout the book, you are referencing all these other scholars, and I think this idea is from Gabor Maté. This is a quote from you. Adoptees especially are vulnerable beneath the push to sacrifice their authenticity for the sake of attachment. And I think that's, it's reminding me of that when you were talking about the gotcha lost-ya day, because there's this like big celebration and in order to be a part of the family and to show that we're a part of this family I feel like there's this pressure for us to, you want to participate in that because that's what a member of this family [00:34:00] does is celebrates you joining our family. And so I hope that, with your book and these conversations, especially for any adoptive parents listening, like we also need to have room for acknowledging the loss. And, I know lots of people are like, yeah, we get it. We get, but there's so many families that are still not doing that. And so disappointing. And I'm so hopeful that your Invitation to them to think about that will welcome that in.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: What do I have to sacrifice or erase in order to feel secure and safe and loved by you guys in this family? And Amanda Baden has that research from, I think, 2012 about reculturation but in, in that paper, there's this idea that, and I'm talking about international transracial adoptees, of assimilation is a survival issue.[00:35:00]

And so the reason that touches me personally is because I was three and a half years old. I was speaking Korean language, eating Korean food, knowing Korean culture. And now I'm here in the Midwest, Wisconsin. And so for other adoptees who've experienced something like that, the idea of assimilation is a survival issue because in order to get my needs met in terms of attachment and caregiving and feeling protected, the question is, what do I have to do?

Now, if I don't know the language I better drop whatever it is I know. And I better start picking up on things pretty quickly to say, I'm hungry. I have to go to the bathroom. I'm tired. I need a change of clothes. I'm cold. I'm too hot. I had a nightmare. I, and of course, like all children have to learn the language, but for folks who've already, who are already had that language, there's that part of assimilation that says, if I don't learn, how you're talking right now, something bad is going to happen to me [00:36:00] or my survival, my safety, my identity, my sense of self is dependent on how much I can communicate to you, dear caregiver, that I feel sad right now or lonely or I need a hug. Now, I'm not saying that is verbatim what happened to me and my family. It's a wider scope. It's on a global scale. It's saying what parts of ourselves as adoptees would come alive if our attachment wasn't dependent.

On that sense of assimilation, or that sense of you're with us now, you belong to us, the past is the past, they made their decision, people like us do things like this is a family tradition, you're a you're a Johnson now, or whatever, you're part of our family, what parts of ourselves and our lives and our stories, our capacities and potentials would come alive if there was that acknowledgement that you were a part of a family already [00:37:00] before we even thought about adopting, you were already part of a culture, a legacy, tradition, a history. What parts of us will come alive? If we allow that into the mixture as well. And so Amanda Baden has the reculturation term, and it doesn't mean that is the end all be all goal that we ought to pursue as if that's the badge of honor and the mountaintop, but there are different outcomes of this idea of how much of my origin story, my heritage culture is important to me.

How do I incorporate that? What does it mean to allow some of that to be lived out in practice? How much of it? None of it? Some of it? Both? That's all up for an adoptee, each individual, to decide. But if they don't know that there's language for this, and if they haven't been given access to this encouragement or affirmation that it's okay to explore that, then, What parts of them will they miss out on, what parts of them will [00:38:00] we, as the world, miss out on, because it wasn't given space to come alive.

There's a gift. There's a strength. There's light in all of that, somehow, and part of this is the invitation permission to say let's see it. It's part of you. It belongs here.

Haley Radke: I have this vision of adoptees who I'm going to use the term are still in the fog and haven't really thought about adoption critically before diving into your book and And just really becoming aware, and I hope that they would do it slowly because, wow, that's a big process but I think you're, I'm going into recommended resources because I'm going to recommend your book, and I don't endorse every book that gets sent my way, by the way. I take it seriously, and I read it, and I told you that in my email to you. It's called The Adoptee's Journey from Loss and Trauma to Healing and Empowerment, and I [00:39:00] really feel like it is that invitation to really examine it and so thoughtfully, and I love that you present the research and you talk about all of these things. So I'm going to mention a couple things. So you talk about ACEs and PTSD diagnoses and how it's not really recognizes that yet, but maybe it should be. And like the research that's happening right now you share about this framework that you use that most chapters you have, questions for us to go through and like really look at our personal experiences and within the context of support, which you've mentioned, I noticed that you do this, you're always like, is there other adoptees? Is there a mental health provider you can talk through with this? Because it is these like deep woundedness and loss. That if we're [00:40:00] opening that up, and we haven't done that before, it can be a threat to our survival. It can very much feel that way. And I love that gentle process that you talk through, just like your presence, right?

People will hear it in your voice. Your book is so thoughtful in that way, and like leading us through these things. I also love that you mentioned talking about Korean adoption and like the whole family and this you talk a lot about racial awareness and colonialism and a lot of things that people may not necessarily immediately think of when you talk about adoption, but those things exist for a reason, and adoption is a part of this colonialist practice.

And talking about how Christians have behaved badly in, in this space, and including the whole family, I was like, good for you, Cam. I really appreciate that. [00:41:00] And when you share your story of reunion and the challenges personally, like I know what it probably costs you to write about that. I thought this would be so helpful for so many people.

And I also just want to say that there's been other guides written and things, but this one is very you really go there, there's no surface level anything. Who do you hope reads your book and what do you want to say to folks? Especially keeping in mind, I know a lot of my listeners are like, I was in that Christian thing and it was harmful. So I don't know about this. It feels a little scary.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: I am blanking on the author's name about this. F. O. G. as an acronym, Fear, Obligation, Guilt, and I'll send the [00:42:00] author and the paper to you after this. But when I think about the readers here, like if you have ever felt afraid for whatever reason, my hope is that I am inviting you into this to provide some comfort and validation that I can sit with that fear and let's take as long as you need.

I don't want you to take this book in one sitting. I think somewhere in there, I say if you don't feel ready for this right now, feel free to pause, put a bookmark in it and come back to it when you're ready. Maybe five years, whenever. And the obligation and guilt is potentially tied up in I'm obligated to really uphold these traditions, these doctrines that I've grown up with.

And if I don't do that, then I'm a bad person, or even bad Christian, maybe. And I want to say I don't have all of the answers for you. What I can say, though, I wonder if our [00:43:00] faith can be sharpened, because how do we sharpen one another by this as a dialogue. I don't want to put this in your mailbox or in your hands and say, look, here's the Bible, you better believe this or you're going somewhere that you don't want to go. I'm saying this is my story and this is many of our stories in the adoptee community a handful of them. What do you think about that? Let's talk about it. And for regardless of your faith background, I was really hoping that I can meet you in this book and say, look, I acknowledge there are crystal clear reasons and there are reasons unique to you why you don't want anything to do with the church.

I want to meet you there and say, I hear you. I see you. I love you. I'm interested in hearing more about that story. Here's a [00:44:00] potential entry point in that. I have my background, my training, my own testimony. Can we still talk? And it's not that I just, I want you to come to church. I just want to give you more tools and resources to work it out.

Whatever you believe about anything in life, this is a sort of generalized somewhat universal kind of tool that you can just put in your toolbox among the many amazing, brilliant tools that you already have, and that will continue to come into creation. This is just one of those. You don't have to use it today.

Maybe it takes a while, or maybe you don't find the thing ever. But at least it's in your toolbox and that's the offering. Okay. That's really who I hope reads it. And as I mentioned before, it's just a slice. It's a, my personal contribution to this overarching JaeRan Kim calls it the adopt an adoptee renaissance happening right now, this is just my two cents [00:45:00] and I'm here with you for you. You can take what is helpful. You can pass on the rest. I'll be cheering for you and us either way.

Haley Radke: Thank you. And I can absolutely see this something that people would come back to, to, if they're ready for a reflection or oh my gosh, I have an appointment with my therapist.

What am I going to talk about? You can go ahead and look for some questions and be like oh, I got something to go. Thank you. I loved it. Truly, and I just heard you are reading the audio book yourself. So for folks that like love your voice and your vibe, like that will be amazing. I can't wait. Okay. What do you want to recommend to us today?

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: I mentioned Dr. JaeRan Kim and that comes to my mind. I continue to be impressed and I look up to JaeRan as a mentor from a distance and just learning from her. So you can go to harlows-monkey. com and get access. And what I love about JaeRan's website is you can click on any one of her tabs and it like can take you on your own [00:46:00] deep dive journey, like back like decades.

And it's clear that her connection to the conversation, it's deep, there's roots there, and it's wide. You can find so many different topics. I know I wasn't planning to say that, we talked about this earlier, but please take a moment and check that out. And then that's where you'll also find the Adoptee Consciousness Model, either through there or Grace Newton's website, Red Thread Broken, and browse around, but definitely resources there.

Haley Radke: JaeRan was on the show and explained the Adoptee Consciousness Model to us. So if you want to like have a little taste of it before you read the paper, it was episode 235. Yeah. Amazing.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Episode 235.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Right on. And so the book behind me, When We Become Ours, the adult adoptee anthology, I just love the imagery that evokes.

And it's almost like if you're a comic book fan and you're waiting for a [00:47:00] superhero that represented you. It's like folks who started reading Miss Marvel, Kamala Khan of there's this person just on the street level. Anyway, that's a far reached metaphor. But what I'm saying is that if you've been looking for adoptee sensitive, adoptee centered kind of stories that go beyond some of the positive narratives that we've heard, I think it's just a, it's such a refreshing robust, rich, diverse pool of experiences and I hear it. It asks us questions. It doesn't always give us answers. At the same time, it like invites us to make our own imagery. What would I do in a situation like this? It's just I can't say enough about it. And the swimming analogy slash metaphor. If you feel like, when you learn how to swim, I talked about this in the book, my son is in swimming lessons, three years old, like it's a process you begin in this [00:48:00] part of the pool, but that other part of the pool, the deep end that still exists, but we're beginning over here.

And when he's ready for it, he moves on to level two lane where he can do a full submersion. And the people in the deep end are not looking at my son going oh, what a loser you're, no way. We're all learning how to swim together. Okay, and I'm there with him. That's why, part of this process it gives you time to say you don't have to go to colonization right away. Just know that's part of the pool over there. Okay, go in through an entry point that feels comfortable to you. You can go in alone if you want, go in with someone or a group of people, and start exercising some of that questioning, the wonderings the, just looking at it through a critical lens and allow yourself the time and space to go in, flop around for a while, take a break if you need to, get out, dry off, get a drink, [00:49:00] whatever.

That's part of how I've experienced this journey myself. And that's just one like example picture for folks as they get into that and including the resources that I just mentioned today.

Haley Radke: I love that. Thank you so much. Such a good I love talking with you. Where can we follow you online and where can we find your blog?

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: My website is still therapyredeemed.com.wordpress. You can find my book wherever you get your books, Amazon, Barnes and Noble. And I will be hosting some discussions online. So check out my website for updates on that and my newsletter. And we'll go from there. And maybe you'll see me at some of the upcoming conferences or adoptee community events. Be great to see ya. Stop by, say hi. But yeah, that's where you can find me. Wonderful.

Haley Radke: Thank you so much, Cam.

Cam Lee Small, MS, LPCC: Thank you, Haley.

Haley Radke: I know I mentioned at the top of the show that I [00:50:00] got to meet Cam in person and he came to the screening of Calcutta is My Mother that was held in Minneapolis in May 2024 and we had a brief time together and spent encouraging each other, which was so amazing. And I got a hug and we had a photo together and everything.

So special. It's one of those things where you, I don't know you feel like you get to know people right online. You, I've had conversations with him and. And you interact with people on Instagram and all those kind of things, but it's still between a computer screen, right?

So when you get to meet someone in real life, it's oh my gosh, you're you. You look the same as on Zoom. And you like. And you're just as he was just so kind to me and encouraged me before I went on to host the Q and A. So it was really yeah, special moment for me. So anyway, [00:51:00] congratulations, Cam, on your book. So excited for you and I hope it serves adoptees well. I know it will. And yeah, I'm just thankful for that connection.

Friends I'm working on another show behind the scenes. I have a lot of content for you on Adoptees Off Script, which is the Patreon show that we released weekly for Patreon supporters.

And recently I dropped the podcast to two episodes a month. And with that in mind, I'm going to keep putting shows up for you all through the summer. So no summer break this year. Lucky all of us, we get to keep hearing from amazing adoptees and hearing their stories and the work they're doing in the world.

And I'm really grateful that I can do that for you. So please support the show if you're able to, it helps the work [00:52:00] continue. And I'm excited to share all the cool things that are happening and coming up. And I wish I could tell you, but I can't yet. And, all those things. So thank you for listening to the show.

One of the great ways you can support the show is just by sharing it, this episode with one person. Maybe, a fellow adoptee who has been hurt by the church and would like to hear a little encouragement from Cam today. It'd be wonderful if you'd share this episode with them. Thank you for listening.

Let's talk again soon.

282 Alison Larkin

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/282


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical, or legal advice.

You're listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm Haley Radke. Alison Larkin is here today and we are so honored to have her with us. It's likely a lot of you already know Alison, but for those of you who are new to her, she is a standup comedian, voice artist, audio book narrator, actress, producer, screenwriter, and bestselling author of The English American.

Today we get to hear her story which includes reunions with both birth parents, seeking out a therapist after meeting Nancy Verrier and how she finally came to truly fall in love in her fifties, only to have her fiance die suddenly during the [00:01:00] pandemic. Alison recounts this in her brand new one woman show called Grief, A Comedy, which is embarking on a world tour this summer.

Before we get started, I want to personally invite you to join our Patreon adoptee community today over on adopteeson.com/community, which helps support you and also the show to support more adoptees around the world. We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website, adopteeson.com.

Let's listen in.

I am so pleased to welcome to adoptees on Alison Larkin. Hello Alison.

Alison Larkin: Hello.

Haley Radke: What an honor to speak with you. I know you've been serving adoptees for many years, but to folks who might be new to you, do you mind sharing a little bit of your story with us?

Alison Larkin: I'd be delighted. I came to [00:02:00] America when I was in my mid twenties in 1991 to find my birth mother about whom I knew absolutely nothing. I was adopted by the tidiest family in England and I had a very English upbringing. And the reason that I went to find my birth mother was because every time I was on a date with a guy, I'd find myself on constant alert waiting for the object of my affections to leave me. I'd be sitting in a restaurant and I'd go, he's going to go off with the waitress if I go to the loo. And I never let on, of course, because I was embarrassed about having such feelings. And I was, my love life was run along this philosophy. The key to dealing with a fear of abandonment is to date people you don't like. So if they do leave you, it doesn't matter.[00:03:00]

I began to wonder if maybe if I found my birth mother and I found out that it wasn't so much that she didn't want to keep me, but that she simply couldn't, maybe that would free me up to live and love like other people. I would watch my non adopted friends fall in love and be at peace. When I was in love or, really attracted to someone, along with it came this absolute terror that I didn't understand.

I was completely unconscious that it had anything, to do with early childhood abandonment at that time. I didn't know. And I, but I had a hunch it might have something to do with having been adopted. So I idealized my birth mother. She, as far as I was concerned, could float. She wore a white dress. She was angelic. And I had found when I was 15 [00:04:00] some non identifying information about my birth parents. And I remember it said about, her 5 foot 2, 110 pounds, American. And then I remember it, about him, it said something like, I don't know, 5'11", varsity football team, and then of the birth mother, it said relinquished baby because didn't want to ruin father's political career.

So of course, I knew immediately that I was a Kennedy. So with those kinds of expectations, and to be honest, a pretty naive, I had led a we'd lived in East Africa and West Africa. My dad worked for the World Bank and we lived in third world countries and we traveled a lot and I had traveled a lot.

I'd lived I'd traveled to Hong Kong and India and China on my own as a young woman. So I was [00:05:00] thinking, okay, I'm just going to go and meet my birth mother and it'll be like a regular trip. So I remember finding her with great difficulty. At the time, the only book that had any information about how to find a birth parent, I kept the adoption agency in Washington would not allow me to have contact with my birth mother, even though she had come into that agency and said she wanted to have contact with me.

It was very cruel. And I had this moment where I'm in London, and I go into a bookshop and my hand reaches up and I swear to God, I pulled down the only book at that time that had the name of the person who could help me in it, and it was Lost and Found by Betty Jean Lifton and I opened it. And there was a man called Tony Vilarity from the [00:06:00] International Soundex Reunion

who legally was able to put my birth mother and me in touch if our dates matched and the info matched. And I managed to persuade the adoption agency to ask my birth mother to contact him. And long story short, finally managed to find contact. And she invited me to come and visit her at her home in Bald Mountain, Tennessee, where she was living at the time.

And I met her and it was as any adopted person who has been through reunion will know, it was overwhelming. It was a complete shock and frightening. And I had expected that the two of us would walk towards each other in slow motion, like they did in the movies. And that our souls and our hearts would join, [00:07:00] instead

I was suddenly inundated with an enormous amount of information about her, which of course I wanted to know, but it was also about me because I had this very English identity. And then suddenly there was this woman who was telling me all about my creative genes and the writing and the artists.

And I was going, Oh my God, this is why I'm so creative. And some of the stuff she was telling me was really scary. About problems in the family. There was one relation who was suicidal, so he threw himself off a cliff, but failed. So he now has no arms and legs and sits in a wheelchair. And so there were things like this that was given to me as passing information.

But of course, I was absolutely riveted by her and what she was saying. [00:08:00] So I met her for three weeks, which I think was a mistake. I think it was, had there been any adoption counselors at the time, anyone I could have talked to, they would have said, hey, maybe don't go stay in her house for three weeks on the other side of the Atlantic.

Maybe just meet for coffee.

Haley Radke: Slow down.

Alison Larkin: Although whether I would have listened, I don't know, because I was in this, I felt like I jumped off a cliff and I had to do this thing and I didn't know why. And then I met my birth father with whom I had a real connection. I, my birth mother, and I found, I don't know why, but I was overwhelmed and I went numb.

When I met my birth father, he listened. My birth mother talked a great deal and I think found it difficult to listen at that [00:09:00] time in her life and I think when I met my birth father, it was a great relief because we were very much alike. We had the same favorite foods. We had the, you know the story.

Any adoptee who's been in reunion knows the story, same, all that stuff. And the connection was actually with him. And then he said, why don't you come to America? Because I was an actress and a playwright at that time. And he said, I think you do really well in America and being an adventuring type, which I am.

I decided to give it a try. So I started by thinking, I'd always thought I might want to do a one person show and I saw an ad for standup comedy in New York. And I thought, oh, I'll try that. So I stood up. I didn't know anybody in New York. I had no support whatsoever. I didn't tell my parents in England or my friends how [00:10:00] completely traumatized I was by the reunion because I didn't want to upset anybody because that's what we do is adopted people.

In my experience, we protect everybody else's feelings and we really ignore our own. So I was standing up in the club saying, hello. My name is Alison Larkin and I come from Bald Mountain, Tennessee. And of course people were cracking up and then people would say, oh my God, that's stuff you're doing about being adopted and finding your birth mother.

That is so funny. And then they found out it was true. And then I thought, if I'm going to express, they'd say, what was it like meeting your real parents? And the way the casualness with which they referred to my real parents, as my birth parents irritated me. And I thought, how can I express why someone from a very happy adoptive family might need to find the truth about the people she came from without sounding like a lunatic?

[00:11:00] So I thought, I know what I'll do. I'll write a one woman show and I'll combine stand up comedy and theater. And I will play a comedic version of myself, my English mother, who I had sound exactly like the Queen of England to differentiate her accent from my own, and my American birth mother who was her diametrical opposite in every single way.

And I started to talk about what was really happening through jokes. So I would say things like, I think everyone should be adopted because that way you can meet your birth parents when you're old enough to cope with them. And I'd say things like, of course, the adoption agency, things the lottery, you never know who you're going to get as parents.

I got lucky. Then again, if I'd been adopted by Mia Farrow today, I could be married to Woody Allen. So I was talking about it through humor [00:12:00] and the show, no one had done that at that time. We're talking like the mid 90s and no one had done a one woman show before. And I did. And I then realized, that I married a man that, who was very quiet.

My birth mother wasn't quiet and I needed somewhere quiet. And I met this man and he was quiet and he was very good at cleaning the kitchen. So I married him. I was not in love with him. I didn't love him in the way that I now know one can love, but I thought he was safe. And as an adopted person, and again, I think it was to do with my adoption, I think I chose him because I could trust him.

I knew he wouldn't go off with a younger woman because I was a younger woman. And I didn't have those passionate [00:13:00] feelings for him. So the anxiety wasn't there. So the fear of loss wasn't there. So I did marry him. And then we went to LA and suddenly I was going to have my own sitcom on television with Jim Henson Productions and ABC and then CBS studios.

And I worked with Gail Parent who created Mary Hartman, and who was also the head writer on the Tracey Ullman show. And we had, I had two, I was developed in Los Angeles to star in my own show and was doing stand up comedy on the side and then I had these two children and that changed everything because for the first time in my life, I was connected to another human being and when I was pregnant, I mean as an adoptee

I, my mother never was pregnant, the one who raised me, so I didn't know anything about it. [00:14:00] So I would go to complete strangers in LA, where I lived at the time, and ask them, what was it like when you were pregnant? And they would tell me because I had this nice English accent. And that was when I had not had any counseling or any support.

And at that time Nancy Verrier was giving a talk in Santa Monica, and I thought, oh, that sounds interesting. I'll go and listen. And she said something to me that changed my life. She equated, the primal wound theory, the part that I heard was that we adopted people are separated from the mother who gave us birth.

We're cozy and safe in the womb and then suddenly we're taken away and we're supposedly happy to be adopted by completely other people. But it was the first time any concept [00:15:00] of there being a loss at the heart of me ever came into my conscious mind. It was there unconsciously, but not consciously. And I asked her if she could help me

as a therapist, and she said she lived in San Francisco, but there was a woman called Dr. Marlou Russell, who lived in Santa Monica, and that she was an adopted person who had also had children. And so for the first eight years since my reunion, for the first time in my life, I had a trained adoptee counselor who was able to understand me.

And I almost, at that time, wasn't going to do the one woman show in a big way. I'd already done it in a little way, but there was a lot of interest in it. And I thought, oh no. I can't hurt everybody's feelings. I can't say things I can't speak up. And she said, why not? You have the right to your own story.

[00:16:00] And I thought, you know what I do, and maybe I can help other adopted people if I do this. So I, so the show then really took off and then I left Los Angeles. I was going to have my own TV show, actually a talk show. But I had these kids and I thought, I don't want to raise them in LA. The celebrity culture seemed to me very artificial and if we're, we adopted people who've gone through a reunion, it's all about finding out who we really are.

It's all about the truth, right? So I can't, how can you possibly live in, live any other way other than authentically once you've been through reunion. You're not going to, are you? You've been through hell to find out who you are and who you came from. So I said, oh to hell with Hollywood and moved with my then husband and two children to New Jersey, where he had some family.[00:17:00]

Then, yeah, I didn't want to be in the clubs. I didn't want to perform at night. I wanted to be with my kids while they still wanted to spend time with me. And I was fascinated by the fact that here were two genetic relatives of mine, who I actually wanted to be with. My, my birth mother scared me. My birth father, was my birth father with all sorts of complications.

But these two came from my body. And I then felt I knew how to parent them. Having been adopted by the English, I was never hugged. I was kept at the end of the corridor in a crib obviously, because that's what the English do. But I held these children. They slept with me. I nursed them.

And as I did, I think a part of me healed. And so to any adopted person listening, who is afraid of having [00:18:00] children, I would say, have children. Don't be afraid. I was scared. But when I did I learned what love was. So I quit performing. And I went to in New Jersey, I thought I was getting a little pissed off by the fact that in every commercial novel, adopted people are portrayed as eternally damaged victims at best, or serial killers.

And I thought, there's no commercial fiction here with an adopted heroine as opposed to an adopted victim at the center. So I thought, oh, wait a second. I could write a book while my children are sleeping. And then I get to hang out with them when they wake up and I won't have to go to the clubs. So I wrote this book.

It took me a year called The English American. And at first I was telling the [00:19:00] story from three points of view, as I had in the show, from the point of view of the birth mother, the adoptive mother, and myself. But my very clever agent at that time said, why? This is your story, Alison. This is the adoptee's story.

Tell it in the I voice. So I thought I better make it fiction because that way I'm free. So I wrote this novel and it was about my alter ego Pippa Dunn who finds her birth mother in the United States in the book. I decided to give her a non adopted sister, which I didn't have in real life, because I thought it would be really interesting to compare another child of the same parents who are actually genetically related to them.

And it was a fascinating exercise. And I wrote this novel because I wanted to have short chapters. I wanted it to have a what the hell's going to happen next quality. I wanted to put in great love [00:20:00] stories. So there were two men, the guy who is the soulmate. And then the guy who's like the, the nice guy, there was, there were two men, there were two sets of parents, there were two countries.

And within, so I was writing, I think to bring myself together the nature and the nurture. And this miracle happened, and there was a bidding war for it, and Simon & Schuster published it, and I got a massive advance, which at the time, I'd never get again. Wish I could, because nobody, publishing's just gone to hell since then, but that was great.

And it was very exciting and I did a lot of benefits for adoption organizations at the time and I was always very interested in helping adopted people specifically. I was very interested in kids in foster care and I remember actually doing a benefit in California [00:21:00] and I was invited out there by a very nice foster family.

And there was another family there and they were going, oh, there's, those are our foster kids. And of course, everybody's medicated. They're all medicated. I said, Why is that? And they said adopted people all have ADHD. And I looked at them and I go, oh, my God. And they had no understanding of what these children had been through.

The and I find myself getting really cross. I'm just like, and I was doing a show that night. And I had this song at the end. And then I, it just came out of my mouth and I just said, there was like a line of, I don't know, maybe 20 foster care kids and adopted people in the back of the room. And then it was all the sort of parents at the front.

And I said, look, I said, I've been thinking about what it's like, to be moved from home to home. And it really does occur to me that it should be the parents who should be taking the medication. And these kids stood up [00:22:00] and we're all like going, yes, because, and I think this is, this gives purpose to my life.

I can, if I can give voice to what it's like. I'm just giving voice to my experience, but if I can continue to be honest, then I can help. Then there's some then I can, there's some use to all of this because it was very painful, a lot of it. And as a comedian, I see every, I do see humor in just about everything.

So flip forward. I then got a, I just became, I'm in New Jersey, and my husband, now my "wasbund", I found out that he had lost all my money. And he, I had trusted him not to go off with another woman, but, never make the mistake of thinking that just because a man knows how to do laundry and clean a kitchen, it also means he knows how to handle the family finances.

Now, he was not a bad man, but he was really bad at math. [00:23:00] And he had lied to me. He had not told me what was going on. And I realized that all the money I'd made from the book, from Hollywood, had gone. And there I am with a seven year old and a nine year old. And I, actually, funnily enough, I reached out to the adoption community.

Nobody, maybe they'll remember. So I was on Facebook. I wrote to the Facebook people, does anybody have any ideas about somewhere that I might like to live that has creative people and that is around nature? And I got all these suggestions because I'd been doing adoption conferences as a keynote speaker.

So I knew a lot of adoptees and people kept suggesting two places, Charlottesville in Virginia, and then the Berkshires in Massachusetts kept coming up. So I went to Charlottesville and, I always, I don't know how you are, but as adopted people, we have a really strongly developed [00:24:00] intuition.

Pippa, in my novel, The English American, talks about her knower, as in K N O W E R. And I've always said to people who've said, do you think I should do this? I said, trust yourself, trust your instincts. You may not be able to trust your mother or your father or your husband, but you can trust yourself.

So my instinct said not here, maybe the Berkshires. So everybody kept saying, oh, you don't want to go up to the Berkshires in New England in February. So I went up in February in a storm and I got out of my car and I knew this was where I was going to raise the kids. I left my husband, I had to, and we had, now I'm going to tell you this because we'd been sleeping separately for ten years because he wasn't that interested in that side of life.

It was a very lonely marriage. And so here I am in the Berkshires, I move up here, and I'm going, what the [00:25:00] hell am I going to do? Especially about money. And then Tantor Audio called me up and they said, is this Alison Lurkin, the writer comedian? And I said it used to be. And she said, Oh this is Tantor Audio.

And if you can promise us 15 audio books a year, we will set you up with your own home recording studio so you can earn a living in the middle of the countryside where there is no other work except writing, which you don't seem to be doing much of. Can you do an Australian accent? No problem, mate. How about Scottish?

Oh, absolutely. I could narrate sweet pink Scottish romances with titles like Mad, Bad, and Dangerous in Plaid. Can you do a Brooklyn Male? Why certainly, and I would swear at this point, but I'm assuming that might offend some people in a Brooklyn accent. And so they set me up with a home studio and suddenly I was able to earn a [00:26:00] living and be with my children.

Because the good thing about when I'm writing a book, I can't think about anything else. But when you're reading other people's books, you can shut the door on the studio at three o'clock and then listen to your children's tales of woe or joy, depending on what it is that day. So I did that and then I decided.

People, I still had a name and some of the big publishers, I was working for Macmillan and HarperCollins and Audible. And somebody said, look, they're using your name to sell audiobooks. Why don't you use your name to sell audiobooks? I said what do you mean? They said why don't you set up your own audiobook company and call it Alison Larkin Presents.

So I thought that's rather American, but why not? So I started with the one book that I knew I could do really well, which was Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. And I produced it. I figured out how to do it. And to my utter astonishment, it [00:27:00] sold. It sold really well. And I said, oh, I'll do another Jane Austen.

Then I did all the Jane Austen's. Then I did Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and Peter Pan. Then I did Alice in Wonderland. Then I started, I just kept going. And people seem to love these books. And then I thought I'm going to make them different. And what I would do is at the end of an audio book, I'd have a conversation about, a lot of the themes that like, we're all still talking about love and Jane Austen was talking about love and we're all still falling in love with the bad guy.

And why as women are we falling in love with Wickham? And anyway, those that interested me. So then flip forward 10 years, my kids are in college. And I begin to realize that I'm really lonely in my recording studio, because it's just me, the microphone, and basically a padded cell, as you will verify.

Haley Radke: Yeah, we're in the same cell. [00:28:00]

Alison Larkin: So I started to, I hung out at the coffee shop, and I went down to the coffee shop, and there was this couple there, and they were really happily married. And I heard that one day that he had died. And I managed to pluck up the courage to say to the woman, I've avoided love my entire life because I didn't want to suffer the way you are now.

Was it really worth it? And she looked at me and she said, Oh yes. Was your choice to avoid love really worth it? And I said, I don't know. And then I realized I'm 52. If I don't do something about it myself, I will never know what it's like to know true love. So a friend of mine got me online dating, which [00:29:00] of course was hilarious, and I put, I write about that in my show, the new show, and then I'm getting a newspaper at the Red Lion Inn, which is down the road from where I live, because I like to do the Sunday Times crossword, and the last paper's taken, and the woman points over my shoulder and there's this man, and he is smiling at me sheepishly, and he's holding up the Sunday Times magazine, which has the crossword in it.

And he's offering it to me because he's heard that I wanted that the last, he's taken the last paper. And I say no, I just I only do it for the crossword because on Sundays it's so much easier than Saturdays and he says, yes, it is. That's true. And I noticed he has the most incredible brown eyes and we start talking and he was from India, from South India, Vizag, near Hyderabad.

And like me, he had come to [00:30:00] America 30 years before. And he came when he was 22 to do a PhD in chemical engineering from India, and I came from England to find my birth mother. And we both got stuck here, and we were away from our own, where we'd grown up, the people we knew when we grew up.

We connected on many levels and we fell in love. And I fell in love for the first time in my entire life. For me, what that means is there was peace. There was connection. There was trust. There was somebody who really got me and who I really understood. And I remember one day saying to him, we can't be in love.

And he said, why not? And I said, because there's no friction. We don't have to negotiate. And he said, I know, isn't it great? So [00:31:00] we just loved being together. So all that stuff that I'd experienced in my, when I was much younger, was gone. The lack of connection that I had with my husband wasn't relevant.

And I was so happy. And he was too. And we were together for a year and a half and we had just decided to get married. And a week later, very strangely, I was on a call, my very first call to a group of adopted people. It was, Marcie Keithley's group and it was a group of adoptees and birth parents and they'd asked me on and I thought, sure, I'm going to talk about being in love.

And I think Bhima even called during that. It was a sort of live Zoom thing. And I stayed at home one night longer to do that talk and [00:32:00] to encourage my fellow adopted people not to be afraid of love because guess what? I'd finally found it in my fifties. I'd found it and it existed and what a waste of life, but anyway, there I was.

And then the next day I went to Bhima's house. And we had a perfect day. We went, spent that night looking at the stars, actually. And the next day he said he wasn't feeling very well. Now this was in July 2020. He had a heart issue when he was 49, he was now 54. And the doctor said, if you get COVID, you cannot get COVID.

So he wasn't feeling very well the next morning. And so we thought we better go down and have a COVID test. So we go down to the hospital where they were doing the COVID tests, but it was a side room at the hospital. And I'm waiting outside and I'm calling my "wasbund" and the kids [00:33:00] and saying, look, I'm going to have to quarantine because there's a chance that Bhima has COVID and making arrangements.

And they wouldn't let me in because of course, because it was COVID. But I said, just, he's had a triple bypass, just stay with him. And then about 20 minutes later, this security guard comes over and says that they left him alone in a room and that he fell on the floor in cardiac arrest.

And that they were putting him in an induced coma and flying him to Albany Hospital. And five days later, this beautiful, brilliant, 54 year old man was pronounced dead. And there was a funeral on Zoom and somehow I managed to drive home. [00:34:00] Now, I have this theory that if you've experienced loss very early on in life, it has, there's a perk to it.

Because when you experience sudden loss, again, it's almost there's a muscle that's familiar. It's oh yes, I remember this. And I survived it last time and I know I can survive it again. So I, of course, nobody came to the house because it was the pandemic. I was numb, which is exactly what happened when I met my birth mother.

It was as if, I don't know, it's a physical thing, it the body protects you from the pain somehow. And on the surface of things, I was functioning very, but I was like numb. And I would, I would. Of course I would scream in the car [00:35:00] when the numbness thawed, which is a very good stress reliever.

I highly recommend it to everybody who is listening. If you are really having a tough time, scream in the car. However, if the cop pulls you over and says, what's going on, ma'am, then just point to the radio and say, I was just listening to Lady Gaga. That's my recommendation, but that's a joke.

Anyway, so I got after a few weeks after he died. I started, I just got this sense that he was saying to me, Alison, get in the best physical shape of your life. So I started to go out into the mountains around where I live, and I started to work out with a group of people who were doing that during the pandemic.

And I ate very carefully. I knew that if I had sugar, I'd crash. I knew that if I put really good things into my body, it would help. And as I worked out my body grew [00:36:00] stronger and I one day realized that the numbness had gone but instead of the pain that I had been expecting which of course I had felt in snippets there was this extra energy and a kind of deep peace and a sense that he was right there

and that's when I got this other theory about again I don't know if it's an adoptee thing and I'd really love to know from your listeners what they think. If they've experienced this, and God, I hope they haven't, that perhaps because as adopted people, we are separate from our birth families, right?

But we're not, we're connected because those of us who have been through reunion know that actually we're connected to our birth families. We've always been connected to them. Even though they've been physically away, there has [00:37:00] always been a connection. And when we actually meet in person, that connection becomes visible and tangible.

And I'd sometimes wonder whether the fact that I have a great sense of Bhima still, almost four years since he died now, is something to do with the fact that I was trained from a very tiny baby that to connect with what you can't actually necessarily see it doesn't mean it's not there. I don't know.

And I don't know. It's a sense. It's not like literally, but there's a sense. And I have this. It's song at the end of my show. Oh yeah, just to finish the story. Yeah, I had known Archbishop Desmond Tutu because Archbishop Desmond Tutu had seen The English American, my first one woman show, and had read my novel and he loved them and he I was in touch with him at that time and I said, look, I don't understand Why am I not completely destroyed?

Why am I not toast here? Why am I able to function? And not only [00:38:00] why am I able to function, why do I want to live more fully and love more fully than ever before? And he didn't answer my question, but he did say, Alison, you have to tell this story because the world needs hope and it will bring hope to people who have suffered loss.

And then I thought, I don't really want to write another book. It's so hard to write a book. And he said, so tell jokes, sing songs, whatever, but tell it. And you can't say no to Archbishop Desmond Tutu. So I'm in my house on my own. I'd given up writing. I'd given up performing. But I remembered that when I was processing my very painful reunion with my birth parents, I wrote a show in a book.

So I started writing another show. And then a producer said, we're going to put it on. And then I wrote a book which starts six weeks after Bhima died, when he shows up at my kitchen [00:39:00] table determined to help me find love again. And then suddenly the book that I do the show and then suddenly the Soho theatre in London, they want it, and then I'm on the BBC, on BBC Radio 4 doing The Woman's Hour interview, talking as I have been with you, honestly, because I don't care what people think.

I really don't and suddenly, there's all these people and these people who've lost people are coming to the show. And then, suddenly, it's being produced and the show is going to the Edinburgh Festival starting June 30th. And then, it's going there all month to the assembly rooms. Then, it's going back to London.

Then, it's going on a theatre, a 30 theatre UK tour. Then, Australia, New Zealand, Mumbai, and then the United States. And the book that I have just finished, we are making available only for people who have just seen the show, because I want them to read it first. And I don't care. I'm breaking the rules. I love to break the rules, don't you?

And so [00:40:00] that's people can get it at the shows. And so that in a nutshell. Is the answer to your question. And that's not a nutshell.

Haley Radke: Oh my god. I've researched you, I've read both your books, I've watched multiple interviews.

Alison Larkin: Oh, you have?

Haley Radke: Yes, I have. Absolutely. I get prepared.

Alison Larkin: Oh.

Haley Radke: So I was ready, but you took us on a journey, so I'm thankful. You're such a great storyteller, of course, because of your expertise in that area. I watched that, ironically, it's called The Happy Hour interview that you did right before Bhima died.

Alison Larkin: Oh, you did?

Haley Radke: I did. I watched it before I read your second book and you were like glowing with joy when you were talking about your relationship with him. And so to know just a few [00:41:00] short days later, you would lose him is just.

Alison Larkin: Two days later, literally, under 48 hours later.

Haley Radke: That's just unreal.

Alison Larkin: But here's the thing, here's the thing. If I, with my background, can go through that, and not only be okay, but be fully alive, and I know I will love again, then we all can. I believe in the end, my daughter said, and again, I wonder if this relates to adoptees as well, but my daughter said I think I know what happened. And I said, why should I be doing a course on the neuroscience of love? And she said, I think when Bhima died, the love didn't. All that joy that you saw in that interview, all the joy that I felt [00:42:00] was still there.

And what it's, the love has gone into this new show in this book. And it is time for me, I have basically for the last four years seen very few people apart from my dachshund, Charlie. And it is time for me now to go out into the world and reconnect with people again. So that what I want to do is to go back to that adoptee group and say, it's okay.

The most, the thing that I was most afraid of, the reason I avoided love all those years was because if this sort of thing happened, I would never survive it. Not only have I survived it, I've been transformed by it. And that love, whether you're alive or not, it's there. That's what I believe. And so does that make sense to you?

Haley Radke: I think so. I think, so one of the things I really appreciate about The [00:43:00] English American is it brought to light, was it was published in 08, is that right?

Alison Larkin: Yeah.

Haley Radke: First, for the first time. It was, it brought to light the challenges of reunion where, we can get really romanticize reunion and you stay very connected with your adoptive parents.

It re reunion challenges help you have conversations with your adoptive parents, and I think one of the things you've been able to really articulate well to us in all of your work is that it's not, it's normal to want to know where you came from and you can do that and keep connected with your adoptive parents when you're talking about things with them.

Honestly, they're open about it. They didn't seem to feel threatened by it, right? So you have this very good balance there, and you are still supported there. And I think a lot of [00:44:00] adoptees can be critical of that.

Alison Larkin: I have to be honest with you. That was a novel.

Haley Radke: Yes.

Alison Larkin: So in The English American, I wrote what I would have liked to have happened.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Alison Larkin: Because when you're writing a novel, you can create whatever you want. The reality is that I didn't really talk about it with my adoptive parents.

Haley Radke: Oh, do you wish you had?

Alison Larkin: I talked about it enough, but then when I wrote the book, I had told them. So I told them through the art what happened and how I felt about them, but they wouldn't, they were English. So the English don't really communicate. I, so in real life, I relate to people who felt they couldn't talk to their adoptive parents. And yeah, I just created a story I would have loved to have happened, but it wasn't all factually true, just to to be.

Haley Radke: Thank you for sharing that, because I do, yeah, yes, fictionalized the experience.

Alison Larkin: Yeah, it's just, I wouldn't want to think. That [00:45:00] was, yeah, that's why I'm right. That's why I wrote the second book. I wanted to create something.

Haley Radke: OK, so so putting that together, I think a lot of us have struggled with relationships. I personally, I got married very young, and I met my husband in our first year of university together, and this year will be our 20th wedding anniversary.

And I lucked out big time. He is amazing. And yeah. study and stable and all those things that I am not necessarily always. And so when I, and I watch my friends struggle with that and talk about these, like how hard it is to connect or, find the person. I love that you were sharing all of those learnings you've had through the decades like, because we don't talk about that enough.

And I think it's, you're opening a conversation with [00:46:00] adoptees who maybe haven't figured out, oh, it's from that. Oh because we can feel broken. We can feel like, as you said earlier, like the normal story, fictional story of adoptees, it's serial killer, or it's like we're these broken, traumatized people.

Alison Larkin: Which actually I find quite irritating as well. And I've actually taken Nancy Verrier on a little bit on some of her writing. I've challenged her in person, and I'm sure she would respect my mentioning it here. I do not believe that anybody is doomed. I believe that we all have the capacity to choose how we spend each day.

And the thing about adopted people is that we didn't have a choice right at the very beginning. But you know what? We do now. [00:47:00] And as adults, retraining that part of us that thinks, oh, I don't have a right not having confidence or to say, actually you do, each day you get to choose how you will spend it.

Don't waste a minute, cause tonight might end it. Don't waste your time. Those are the last lines of my show, Grief A Comedy. Don't waste your time. Because however we came into the world, we can't control what happened to us when we were very young. But you know what? We can control not what happens to us, but how we respond to it.

And that was what Desmond Tutu said to me when I first met him many years ago. And it was the phrase that kept coming into my head when Bhima died. I can't control what happens to me. [00:48:00] But I can control how I respond to it and the adopted people, I know every single one of them is a hero because I know what they're dealing with, whether it's conscious or subconscious.

If you have been abandoned for whatever reason, it causes it's tough. It makes, it can make things hard and we can choose to live fully anyway. And I defy anybody, anybody to say you cannot, you are going to be eternally damaged because I just do not believe that is true.

Haley Radke: When you went to therapy with an adopted person, was it because you were afraid you wouldn't be able to connect with your children or be the best mom to them or what was the thing that was like, I got a [00:49:00] deal because some people are just too afraid to go there.

Alison Larkin: Such an interesting question because, I'm trying to remember why I think I knew that I wasn't even thinking consciously of having children at that point actually. It was before I had kids.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Alison Larkin: I knew I was in a relationship that was disconnected. I knew that, I'm not an unattractive human being, but I was always afraid people would leave me.

And I knew that there was, it was such a sort of light bulb moment when I connected the dots in Nancy, thanks to Nancy Verrier, when I connected the dots and realized, wait a second that's a physical reaction. So the closest you can be to another human being is either being in their womb and growing in there, which we all do, [00:50:00] or having sex with a person later on in life.

That is two bodies together. Intimate. And I, for me anyway, put it together and go, oh, now I know why if I am physically very intimate with somebody, it triggers a fear that has no place here. It's to do with something that happened a very long time ago. And I wanted to go into therapy because I needed some help navigating a way to live without that fear.

Constantly in my life. And do you know what? Now, I am free now. I'm free of it. With Bhima, it was thanks to him partly too. But by the end of our relationship I wasn't afraid anymore. Because whenever, he somehow knew if he was talking to a really good looking woman, for example, at a, [00:51:00] jazz club or something.

I'd be going I'm about to leave. That's it. I'm going to dump him. It's gone. I'm just heading for the door. And he'd come up to me and he'd whisper, Alison, I want only you. And it all went. And now, because I know how quickly life can go. I will not waste a minute of whatever time I've got left on old insecurities that have got absolutely nothing to do with my life now. I am not going to let what happened to me then affect me now because my life is too precious. I want love in it. I want connection in it. And a friend of mine, this may be helpful for your listeners. It certainly was helpful for me.

I had a friend who, as he was dying, I was asking him I think it's in the book you just read. I said, if you could give three pieces of advice to the people you leave behind [00:52:00] you, what would they be? And he said, that's easy. One, love is the only thing that matters. Two, remember, most people are doing the best they can with who they are, which doesn't excuse abuse or bad behavior, but it helps you understand it.

And three, connect, because it is only in connection that love can find expression, which brings me to your podcast and the work that you are choosing to do, because this is a lot of work. I know how much work it is to put together a podcast. And you are choosing to connect with all the adopted people who are listening.

And that is really important work. And bravo to you.

Haley Radke: Thank you. How about we'll wrap with one question and then we'll do our recommended resources. I love how you have balanced being an advocate for [00:53:00] adopted people, but being in out there in the mainstream and I know that your show Grief A Comedy will be touching many people who've lost loved ones and maybe not have a connection to adoption at all.

So I appreciate that you bring adoption into that conversation. How have you done that, bridged that cause some of us are like only in adoptee land.

Alison Larkin: I know. Actually I got a bit overwhelmed after The English American came out and I would get lots of letters from people telling me their stories and I wanted to help them all and I couldn't.

I couldn't, I wasn't, I wasn't a therapist for a start. So I ended up on my website, which is alisonlarkin.com with one L in Alison, putting a list of resources so that if people needed help, they could go there. I was in the end, I needed to raise my [00:54:00] children. So I focused on my children and I let the work do it for me.

So the book was out there, The English American was out there and this new book is absolutely talking about the challenges of being adopted and the fact, and just to throw this in at the end that I, the first thing my birth mother said to me was, did you know you had a twin? You did, only he died in the womb. And, uh, so there was twin loss as well.

But I put that in honestly, because I felt it was important. It's part of my story and I'm hoping so for me the way I do it is through the work. So you hear you are you're doing it through your work, you're doing the podcast and you're in and I've I'm just telling the story and letting it unfold as it will and that's I just that's how I'm doing it and, yeah, I'm not really very involved in adoptee or adoption groups anymore. Although I'd really like to be, I just don't really know how. So maybe they'll find me again, I don't know. But yeah, so I hope that sort of answers your [00:55:00] question.

Haley Radke: Thank you. I really love loved, truly, reading Grief, A Comedy, and the book!

Alison Larkin: Did you really like it? Because you might be the second reader, or third.

Haley Radke: No way!

Alison Larkin: Yeah, seriously, it hasn't even come out yet. It's coming out in two weeks, and the only place people can get it is after a show. Yeah, I'm just so thrilled.

Haley Radke: I know. We're going to talk about, I'm going to, I'm going to briefly talk about it, no spoilers, and tell people they can't get it. No, you're going to go see Alison when she is performing. I've seen clips of you perform. I've never had the honor of being in person, but I'll tell you, I did stand up comedy one time. I took a class and I did a set. I know. The bravery it takes to get out there and to do, I don't know what it takes to do a whole hour show or however long your show is.

Yikes. [00:56:00] Overwhelming. Anyway,

Alison Larkin: that's fun. .

Haley Radke: I'll at the very end, I'll tell you the joke I opened with, and you can tell me if you think it's funny or not.

Alison Larkin: Yes.

Haley Radke: Stay tuned. No I loved it. I loved it because it was memoir from you. And so I knew this is your real story. And I knew English American was fictionalized. But it felt also biographical, as I'm reading it, right?

Alison Larkin: Yeah The English American was extremely autobiographical.

Haley Radke: Yes, which is why I felt.

Alison Larkin: With the new book, it's did Bhima literally show up at my kitchen table? Therein lies a big question.

Haley Radke: But as a comedian, Alison, as a comedian, and having read English American first, which I know is fictionalized.

Alison Larkin: Yeah.

Haley Radke: I started reading Grief A Comedy and you lead with the story about connecting with Desmond Tutu. And I'm like

Alison Larkin: [00:57:00] Desmond Tutu? Yeah. Yeah.

Haley Radke: Is this pretend? Is this made up? Like that.

Alison Larkin: That was true. Word for word true. Yeah.

Haley Radke: Which I know now. And I knew after reading it, but I was like, no, I truly loved it.

I think a lot of readers will really connect with you. And I love how you show Bhima leading you. I don't want to say anything for spoilers. So it's beautiful.

Alison Larkin: He does go on dates with me. He's determined that I'm going to date again. And I'm just saying, absolutely not. I'm going to sit in the house and think of you and that's going to be what I do.

And he makes me go online and he accompanies me on a few extremely funny dates, which is all we'll say at the moment.

Haley Radke: Yes, I know. I think folks are going to love it. And I'm a little annoyed that you're only going to sell it to people after the show, but you're like to be the rule breaker.

Alison Larkin: I know, it is going to be released much more widely. And of course, there'll be an audio book [00:58:00] at some point. But at the moment, literally, literally, I just finished writing it a week ago. It's literally got the very first. But people can I tell people can go to alisonlarkin.com and then all the details of how to get the book where the shows are, where the tour is, you can reach me all that stuff is on the website. Now I think they put it up.

Haley Radke: Wonderful. Okay, wonderful. We will link to that. What do you want to recommend to us?

Alison Larkin: I want to recommend two things. I want to recommend that if you're not sure, and you're in hell. Reach out. Reach out to another adopted person. Find an adoptee support group. Reach out.

And trust yourself. Because here's a couple of lines from the final song of my show, Grief A Comedy. I'll give you the lines. I can walk. I can breathe. I can [00:59:00] speak and see and hear and I can bend my knees. I've got two legs. I find things funny and if I keep my living simple, I've got enough money.

I can read any book. I can eat feta cheese. There are people I love who are living. I can spend time with these. It's not the life I thought I'd live, but I'm good at changing plans. I've got a lot to be thankful for and a likely long lifespan. And when I'm missing my true love, if I get very still and close my eyes and take a breath, I can bring him near at will.

I can walk, I can breathe. I can shut out all distractions and take the time to grieve. And if grieving is the price we pay for the deep love that we feel, [01:00:00] then grief is just part of the deal. So I would say to adoptees listening who may be grieving, and to anybody listening who isn't adopted too, is that I just think grief is part of the deal, it's the other side of love.

And yes, it hurts, but the pain will pass. And it's accepting the fact that yes, it's going to be painful, but it will pass. That is the secret that then you go, oh, wait a second. You mean pain is just part of everyday life? So is joy. And so I would say, focus on the joy, turn your head towards the light and accept the fact there's going to be pain, but in order to be fully alive, that's part of the deal. And that's what I would say.

Haley Radke: Thank you so much. If folks are [01:01:00] listening right when this is released, you have a couple shows in June they can go to if they're in Massachusetts area. And yeah.

Alison Larkin: Yeah, that June 6th through 9th, the Barrington Stage. Yeah, if you go to my website, it's all in there. June 6th through 9th. Yeah.

Haley Radke: Wonderful. Thank you so much, Alison. Just an honor to get to speak with you. I'm going to tell you my joke. It's okay. If you don't laugh.

Alison Larkin: Please. Yes.

Haley Radke: I said, I was like, I'm Haley Radke. I'm adopted. The best part about being adopted is never having to think about your parents having sex. She's clapping.

There we go.

Alison Larkin: I love it. Funny. Big love..

Haley Radke: Okay, friends, I loved hearing Alison tell her story. [01:02:00] I was captivated. I teared up in multiple places. I don't know. She just has this incredible energy and I think it probably came across to you. And this is how she is in all the conversations I've seen her participate in, this incredible willingness to be vulnerable, which that's my vibe, I love people who are willing to really go there and share their authentic self with us. And so I think that if you're able to go see Grief, A Comedy, and when it's released to the general public Grief, A Comedy, the book, I think you'll really feel connected with her. And I love this levity she brings to the serious topics. It's just really. It takes a very skilled person to do that.

I try to do that and I know [01:03:00] I fail often when I'm trying to do that. So I really look up to the way Alison talks about that. I didn't talk too much about The English American. We mentioned it was published in 2008 and she reads the audio book. And so to refresh my memory of it, I listened to the audio book to prepare for today.

And it's so good. She does all the voices in which she, showed us today as well. Her accent game is. 10 out of 10. And so it's, I'm going to say it leans towards like beach read vibes, which is so different than most of the adoptee authored work that we feature on the show. Like often we're reading memoir or like these serious academic texts together.

And so I'm, in hindsight, like I didn't read this in 2008. It's I don't, I'm not sure [01:04:00] when I first came across it. I know a listener recommended it to me even last year. And I was like, oh yeah, I remember that book. So this book is, it's very different. And knowing that it was a bestseller, sorry, I lost my train of thought there for a second, knowing it was a bestseller and that, thousands and thousands of people read it.

I was listening with those sort of eyes, ears. Because she really shares in The English American, a lot of the insecurities we have as adopted people, like she's oh fear of rejection and, this and that, like all these like quirky little things that most adoptees I would say have as character traits.

And so that was really amazing. And then the other piece I liked, and I don't know that I expressed this fully to her in our recording, but was she really shows like reunion, like this [01:05:00] excitement, the honeymoon phase. And then it's oh, what if the people you're reuniting with aren't quite well and haven't quite dealt with their stuff.

And I, I don't know if you can hear my dog snoring in the background, but anyway, Spencer's having a nap, sorry for the snoring. She's it really normalizes that view of what reunion really looks like, but also. It's like a beach read. And don't want to call it chiclet exactly, but it's more that lighthearted paced book.

And she's said before she likes to write short chapters because that's what she likes to read. And that kind of thing. I've heard her say that in other interviews. So anyway, if you haven't read it, I think it's a great one to check out and just see what kind of work adoptees have been doing through the years, she mentioned Betty Jean Lifton's book hitting it, touching it at a bookstore just like randomly. And 2008 is a long time ago already. So to know what [01:06:00] folks have been doing before us now I think is important. So I hope you'll check it out. I hope you'll go support her. And when she said world tour, like she's not kidding.

Grief, A Comedy has got so many dates. If you're listening, when this episode drops, it's 2024. She's got a couple spots in June in Massachusetts, and then it's whoa, the list is long. So if you're an international listener, make sure you go check because I think you will be inspired and laugh and cry if you go and see this, I am envious of those of you who get to go in person. Okay, blah, blah, blah. That was enough. I just, I really, I'm so thankful, I feel so thankful for people who have paved a way, and I believe Alison is one of those people for me, people who have paved a way to talk about adoptee rights in the broader community and [01:07:00] I, in researching her like I, I listened to all kinds of interviews and she mentioned she had a happy adoptive family and good childhood and all those things.

She always brings it back to but adoptees are misunderstood and birth certificate rights and she is an advocate for us, believe me I feel really thankful for the work she's done. And I'm really excited to see what comes of her new work. Now that she is back and touring the world and God, don't you want to hear her comedy?

I want to see a standup set too, by the way. Okay. I'm so glad. Sorry. I just, I had a great time with her. I'm sure you can tell. Okay. Blah, blah, blah. Let's end it. Thank you so much for listening. Let's talk again soon.

281 Janet Sherlund

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/281


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical, or legal advice.

You're listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm Haley Radke. Today we're welcoming Janet Sherlund to the show. Janet is the author of the brand new memoir, Abandoned at Birth, Searching for the Arms That Once Held Me. Janet shares some of her story with us, including her challenging relationship with her adoptive mother, her struggles with anxiety, and the reason she finally felt free to write her memoir.

Before we get started, I wanna personally invite you to join our Patreon adoptee community today over on adopteeon.com/community, which helps support you and also the show to support more adoptees around the world. [00:01:00] We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website, adopteeon.com.

Let's listen in.

I'm so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Janet Sherlund. Welcome Janet.

Janet Sherlund: Thank you, Haley. I love being here and I really look forward to speaking with you.

Haley Radke: I'd love it if you would start. Would you mind sharing a little of your story with us?

Janet Sherlund: Sure. I was given up at birth and I was adopted about a month later, five weeks later, I was in foster care in between.

Was raised in a family with two parents and a three adopted siblings. So there were four of us all adopted and you know had the same experience that I think all the adoptees listening to this had of that big black hole in me and the emptiness and the not understanding what was going on and what was wrong with me and really thought about, I wondered who my birth mother was, every single day of my life.

I cannot [00:02:00] imagine a day that I didn't wonder where I came from, who I was, what was my story. I just knew it from, we, I knew from the get go that I was adopted, we were never, lead to believe otherwise, but I just had this longing to know who she was and where I came from and who I looked like and what my ethnicity was and it was there literally every day of my life and I started studying about adoption in college when I took a class in early childhood development and found there were, this is in the 70s, discovered that there are people writing about it and researching it and talking about it.

But I didn't write my book until I'm now in my 60s, and although I wrote bits and pieces of it along the way, when something major happened, I'd write about it, but then I didn't know what to do with that, or actually, more honestly, I was afraid to do something with it. I was afraid to write this book while my adoptive parents were alive.[00:03:00]

I didn't want to hurt them. And I don't think that's really why it turned out. It turned out that they both died while I was writing the book. But I really, that was really, I really feel that was a big part of my hesitation in doing this earlier. It's how could I possibly publish a book and have them find out about it, or friends talk to them about it or, God forbid, they read it.

When people now talk to me about I know an adoptee and they don't, they're fine. They don't care. And they don't want to search for the whole, the drill. And one of the things I always say is, you have no idea how much the fear of hurting the only families we have holds us back from looking at our truth and finding it.

I said, it's, that's really real. And so it took me until my sixties to really just be compelled to write this book and let it out

Haley Radke: Janet, do you wish you had done it sooner? If you could take the courage you have now [00:04:00] and pass it off to younger. Janet. Do you wish you had?

Janet Sherlund: Oh my god. Yes, I There was the other thing about writing this book I thought when I was writing it that I was just going to be telling a story that I had lived in that you know, I thought I knew all the components.

I thought about adoption every day. I read about and studied it. I did an independent study class in college on it. I wasn't a social worker, sociologist or anything, but I talked about it. I read everything I could. I had been in therapy my whole life. I figured, I thought I knew it. And when I started writing the book and had to write the book, I, and actually I sent the first pieces to a retired book agent and it was really more, it was more prose.

It was poetry. My original intention was I want to try and capture the feeling of being adopted. I want people, first of all, I want to share that with other adoptees and say, you're not alone. [00:05:00] And then I wanted people who just don't get it to get it. I wanted them to have that moment of aha, a feeling, to then take that emotional intelligence back to the conversations about it.

So I was just writing these moments that I thought captured that, and I just thought I'll just string those together and people will get it. And the book agent said to me no, we need to know your life, we need to hear the backstory, we need to know what your family was like, and we need to put this in context and do this with you.

And when my husband walked into the room after that phone call, I was crying. And he said, What's wrong? Didn't she like it? And I said, No, she loved it. But she told me I have to write a memoir, and I don't want to go there. I don't want to do that. But I was finally convinced that was the context that I had to put it in.

And so I did it. But, so in writing the book, the knowledge of myself I gathered, even though I had done all this other work before, was mind boggling, and I thought, Oh God, I wish I had come to this earlier in life. [00:06:00] I wish we'd had those conversations in my family about being adopted.

And I wish the world understood it better. And I wish that I had understood my pain and grief and loss in a way that was beyond, the therapy and the reading and things. It was just a whole nother level. And yes I really wish that I'd had this knowledge and was able to put it together earlier in life.

I would have had a much freer life.

Haley Radke: Interesting. That's an interesting choice of words. I had written a question for you in case this didn't come up naturally, but what it's like to speak freely now that people have passed and there you go. I guess the freedom is here.

Janet Sherlund: It is.

Haley Radke: Did you speak to your siblings who were all also adopted about being adopted.

Janet Sherlund: My sister. Yes, my brother It was funny Chris back in the 50s and 60s when we were being raised people just didn't talk about it, like it [00:07:00] just wasn't a thing it was and because maybe we were all adopted it was the same reality for all of us. We knew we were. It was part of our bedtime story, how they went to the agency and picked us each up.

And I was in second grade when we adopted my youngest sister. So I was part of that, that journey. I saw the social workers come and visit the house. I knew the whole drill, but no, we really didn't talk about it, but I was raised in a house where no one talked about anything. That just wasn't the way we were raised, but as we got older and after we left the house and as young adults my sister and I would talk about adoption and being adopted But it wasn't something I shared with anybody and in fact when I did say to friends things like oh, I really wish I'd see could see who I looked like or and they just dismiss it.

They'd say oh, that's not important. I don't look like my parents or any that really necessary factor of being mirrored in the world, which we all have, that we don't get as adoptees. [00:08:00] Anyone I mentioned it to, and I didn't know anyone else was adopted, and I wasn't talking about it with my siblings, but they just dismissed it and made me feel stupid for asking it.

That's not important. I'm not like my parents, I have different interests and I look different and that's a what are you talking about? And it was a whole different level of course that I was talking about and they were if not seeing themselves reflected in their mirrored and their parents they were seeing it probably in a grandparent or an aunt or an uncle or a sibling and they just there was no context for them to understand what I didn't have and what I was longing for.

Haley Radke: So in your story, I saw this continuous need to prove yourself, right? So you said you had this independent study in university where you wrote about adoption. You've sent it to the adoption agency. Can you talk a little bit about that? Because well, I also made a note that it was in 2010 so only 14 years ago that they still [00:09:00] required an interview with you before they would like, the constant infantalizing of adoptees is so frustrating.

Janet Sherlund: Yeah. And in New Jersey where I was adopted and raised, my records are still sealed. I'm in my sixties. Both my adopted and birth parents are dead. And, but they're still, God forbid I know who I am and where I came from. But yeah, I wrote when in college I, and I went to Colgate University and when in college I started finding all this literature and stuff about adoption and early childhood development that was so captivating to me. I asked the university to allow me for one of my classes to do an independent study and identity and adoption. And I had an A plus on my paper and felt so validated. So when I wrote to the adoption agency, just really begging for any non identifying information, I didn't even dare ask for identifying information, but not anything. I sent that paper to them to like, try and prove that I wasn't just some, crazy, [00:10:00] lonely maladjusted adoptee who was seeking to sooth themselves with some fantasy. It was like, look, I've studied this.

I'm legit.

Haley Radke: But they still didn't send you your identifying information. No.

Janet Sherlund: No. They still sent me a fantasy fantasy letter. That was 1977.

Haley Radke: Okay. I, you say something I have never heard before that the agency, the adoption agency that your adoptive parents used would present parents with their a new baby in a certain way. Can you describe that?

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, because I experienced that with my little sister.

And so their original location was in this big old Victorian house, and I think it was South Orange, New Jersey. And we all went to get my little sister. And we'd go in and they had this, big hallway with these tall ceilings and these ornate pocket doors, really heavy, [00:11:00] old pocket doors.

And we're standing there, we're talking to the social worker and I don't know, my parents are always signing some of my papers or something. And then it was time to see the baby and they, the social worker like pushes these big, heavy pocket doors to the side. And there's this old, in this big, this lovely like parlor room, there's this cradle with the tall bonnet, like the tall bonnet, little like roof on it.

And we all go, and the baby's lying there and it was really a, it's really a show. And here she is, your new baby.

Haley Radke: I don't know why I fixated on that fact. I guess I never really thought about the handover, but just making this big show of the new infant you've purchased. It's just

Janet Sherlund: yes,

Haley Radke: there's something there. Oh my goodness.

Janet Sherlund: Absolutely. Absolutely. That was, that was in the early sixties. So I think we adopted her in 61. And so there was still [00:12:00] very much that, that sort of ownership or that, that the children, the adoptees were, you being passed from one person to another person.

And, it was just a very odd kind of, Presentation. You're right.

Haley Radke: Can you talk a little bit about your life growing up? I find it fascinating how we become so loyal to our adoptive parents in a way that can be completely detrimental to our own selves and our sense of identity. And you had a bit of a challenging relationship with your mom in particular.

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, of course. I. There are four of us growing up and it was split 50 50 in the very textbook adoptee coping mechanisms that two of my siblings were Hellions and just, pushed every boundary [00:13:00] and tested every relationship and two of us were the good kids, the and I was the worst of them all and and being, the good kid I was so insecure and so afraid of my I had such a need, to be wanted that I just, I was just the good kid.

I was also later found when I went to discover more about who I was, that is part of me. That's how I was born, but I just was, I just had this real need to please. And I had a wonderful father, who was just kind and generous and, elevated everybody that he was around. And that was, he was wonderful, but my mother was, she adopted four of us, but she did not like being a mother.

She was a real achievement oriented, academic and, had multiple degrees and taught. She's a mathematician. She's a math major. And she really should have discovered after one child that, oh, this isn't for me. It was the 1950s slash 60s. And, and you had to have children, that's what, everyone did if they wanted to [00:14:00] fit in.

So they adopted four of us and she wasn't, or I never remember her hugging me and, or any of us, and she was very judgmental and she was just very achievement oriented. And we were just very different people. The things that I innately liked, the arts and visual things that she could, no, interest in our concept of and it was it's funny so two people two very close my husband and my best friend when they read the book said we didn't realize how sad your life had been and I said, yeah I didn't either until I wrote the book and I knew I was anxious as a child and I knew there was something I didn't think of myself as depressed, but I think sad.

I knew there was that big black hole there. There was that big black hole in me every day, all the time. And there was just, I was just tuned into those feelings. Just like there are some [00:15:00] people who are more introspective than others. I think I was just born like that, but whatever the reason, I was very much tuned into the, I want to say almost chemical stuff that happens in adoption.

There's so many things that happen that aren't, that we don't have words for. And there was just this level of, I think, grief and loss that just sat with me and lived with me and I just had nowhere and no one talked about that. I didn't know it, but when when you're in your 60s and you're looking back and you're putting it all together to put it in a book and tell that story. It just, I can't believe that I lived with that every day of my life. It was really quite sad. To use the word again. And but it also freeing and that it explained so much.

Haley Radke: You mentioned [00:16:00] earlier that you've been in therapy a lot. You've been studying adoption stuff for, did you ever have a moment where you were like, oh, this is because I'm adopted. We often use this like coming out of the fog or coming into adoptee consciousness lingo. Did you experience that?

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, there absolutely. And many times I had made the connections and thought about them and even in therapy had these, real moments of enlightenment and connection.

And so that's why writing the book surprised me. I thought I'd already had those things. I didn't feel like I was in the fog, but it was just, it was a whole nother, the whole nother level. And there's something that I think it really, when I first started writing the book, I called it the blood calls. And that was a reference to a comment my housekeeper made the day I was going to meet my biological mother.

But it was also and then the publisher said, no, you can't do that. It sounds like a vampire novel. So that's why I changed the name. But what I, [00:17:00] the point I was trying to make is there's stuff that happens I think between human beings and in clans and families too that we just don't understand or don't have words for it.

It's almost like we see it better in animals There's an understanding of belonging. There's a biology to belonging it's like when you finally meet blood kin and you feel this level of peace and comfort and connection and you don't even know who you can't answer five questions about them but you feel this in your cells, it's almost like our cells can recognize that they've, that these are other cells like yours that have evolved through the ages and there, there are feelings and understanding that we have in us that go beyond our consciousness and that go beyond those aha moments.

It's just, it's you're in an ocean of stuff and you're underneath the water and there's all this stuff floating by you and stuff and I don't know, it's just I think of it when they talk about animals who recognize their babies in, in a field of [00:18:00] identical young animals of their elk or, the way they talk about animals sensing our emotions and our feelings.

And, we're animals too. There's something, I don't know what it is, but there's something about belonging. There's something about being with your blood. There is something that is just very primal and we haven't figured it out yet. But I think one of the issues that we face as adoptees is that we suffer when that's taken from us and no one understands it.

They don't think it's a big deal and it is such a big deal. And just to wrap this, but there are stories in The Primal Wound Nancy tells a story of this child who's, in the hospital being treated for being burned all over and is crying out for its mother. But the mother was the one who burned him.

And, you hear that story again and again that children even in abusive households, want to stay with that parent. And is it just a [00:19:00] nurturing connection? I don't think so. They're not getting any nurturing in that family. But there's something that is compelling in us as human beings to stay with our own. And when that's broken something real is broken.

Haley Radke: Yes. Do you mind sharing a little bit about your reunion experiences?

Janet Sherlund: No, not at all. I had two reunions. I met both my birth father and my birth mother. And they were the polar opposite one was absolutely fantastic and one was awful when I went to the my adoption agency, I discovered they were doing searches and they filled out the application and waited the year till they were gotten through all the other people they found my mother and turns out she lived like in the next town from me, but found my mother and I was so excited and she refused to meet me. Now, I was in my 50s, [00:20:00] and she was in her 70s, and, hadn't lived in her hometown in, 50 something years.

She had moved away when she was first pregnant with me and never gone back. She was working outside the home. It was just like, it didn't make sense to me. What do you mean? We could, no one has to know. We can meet for coffee. You work. Just, but no. She refused to meet me. Didn't reflect well on her she said, it's yeah, no kidding. This is reflecting worse on you. But so the agency said we have the name of your birth father. Would you like us to reach out to him? I said, I never thought about my birth father quite frankly, I had also been told in 1977, via that letter from the agency that you referenced that he didn't know I existed.

So I thought, how's an old man? He doesn't know I existed going to do anything for me, but then I thought about medical information. Maybe there was some medical information. So I said, yes. And it was transformative. In finding out about me, his [00:21:00] response was if she's my blood, she's my daughter.

We met in the moment we met that big black hole filled up in me and I couldn't answer two questions about the man, but it is that it's, again, that's one of those things. It's just so primal and cellular. And I was just home for the first time in my life. And it took five more years to meet my birth mother.

Finally, my social worker. I worked with have been saying the whole time you need to reach out to your siblings. She has five other children and you need to reach out to them. You're all adults. And I kept saying that, I know they were raised by her. They wouldn't want me to, I just didn't.

Haley Radke: Because your mother had kept you a secret. None of them knew.

Janet Sherlund: Oh yeah. They didn't. Oh gosh. They didn't know anything about me, but I just thought they'd be like her. I don't know. I just, I didn't want to do that. And then again, that back to being the good adoptee I realized at some point that I was saying, she'll be mad at me if I do.

As the woman [00:22:00] who was refusing to meet me for five years that I don't even know, and I don't want her to be mad at me. Seriously, that's just amazing.

Haley Radke: That's really relatable Janet, just so you know.

Janet Sherlund: I know, so I'm like, she won't be mad at me. Oh my God. So I finally, I do a write to them and, blow their minds.

They were I, overnighted this letter to all of them. I actually got mad reading Joan Didion's book, Blue Nights. I was mad at the stuff she was saying about her then deceased adopted daughters being found. Anyway and I love Joan Didion, but that really made me mad. So I wrote that letter.

They got it all the same day. And I would, the social worker's right. Finding my siblings was wonderful and really helped. I did eventually meet my birth mother because of their telling her she better stand up and do this. But it never she never wanted me in her life and she was cold to the end it was really, you [00:23:00] know rejected me in the end too.

It was there was never a connection there. She just couldn't she just couldn't go there and it was very painful I will say that the fear that some adoptees have about searching is that they're going to face that second rejection or they're going to find something terrible. And that's true, but I wouldn't ever recommend someone not do it, that fear.

If you have the, if you are rejected by your parent, it is very painful, but if you recognize that and you understand that and you work through that's helpful, and if you find something you don't like, like an awful, like my birth mother is not a great person, it is disturbing to think that you could come from someone like that.

But I think it's also a good cautionary tale. I think to be a really fully realized and at peace human being, you have to [00:24:00] know the good, the bad, and ugly about yourself. And I could see traits in myself that she had full blown as an adoptee I could always look at something negative in myself and maybe pass it off as i'm just in a mood or that's something or And when you see but you see those things full blown in someone you come from I was like, oh man, don't let that in, keep that arm's length.

So it was, I would really urge people to search and to deal with whatever they find. And when you come out the other side, you will be stronger and happier for it.

Haley Radke: Have you read The Girls Who Went Away or any of the other books on what mothers experienced when, they chose, quote unquote, or were forced to relinquish?

I wonder if you've thought about that in context of your own mother, your own birth mother. What impact losing you to [00:25:00] adoption had on her? I think about that for my mother, too, because I also experienced secondary rejection from her. And, I don't know I summon up a lot of grace for I don't know, reasons, but, I just, the impact losing a child can have on someone, I just wonder about that.

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, I do wonder still, and I wish we had been able to talk about that. But yes, I had read all those books before that. And even in my letters so the way the agency did it is that you would write a letter to your birth parent and tell them, who you were, why you were looking for them, send them some pictures. And so it was, I see you laughing.

Haley Radke: Okay. First of all, they made you do an interview first.

Janet Sherlund: Yes. Yes.

Haley Radke: And then you had to write this prescriptive letter that they had to approve and send before.

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, they had to approve first and then they sent it to them. Yes. Yes. [00:26:00] It's very controlled.

Haley Radke: Huh.

Janet Sherlund: And in that letter, I told her that I understood her, feelings and that I didn't want to out her and that I understood to the best of my ability what she went through in the 1950s when she had me and so I wasn't insensitive to that. She had gone on to have five other children with, she was married within months of having me to a different man and had her first child there within nine months of that. And so she had five more children and it's interesting in talking to those siblings, she was a cold mother and all business and we were all trying to figure out whatever, what happened to her, what went wrong? Was it different before? And I don't know because she didn't share those aspects of her life, even with her own children.

Haley Radke: With the kept.

Janet Sherlund: With the kept children. But it was interesting that in the [00:27:00] adoption agency, the notes they had about her, they, she was very unusual for the women of her time.

So this was an adoption agency dealing with lots of adoptees and birth parents and she was a puzzle to them. She was in such denial and she, just rejected me, I didn't want anything to do with you, you didn't want to see me, she said I wasn't even real to her, so she had an incredible level of denial coming into this experience, and I don't know what that's from, it's got to have impacted her, she was a young, vivacious, beautiful, popular woman.

And in 1953, when she got pregnant and, it has to have impacted her life when she talked about her life, looking back at it in, I was born in 1954 she talks about what she was doing and doing that year and there's no indication that along the way during that year she had a baby. She just completely wiped it out of her memory bank.

So, I've [00:28:00] read the books and I've tried to put myself in their shoes and understand the times and the judgment. I've, watched the movies and all of that. It still seems that she had an extra dose of denial in her for, and she had, her family life wasn't great so I'm sure there are other issues along the way, but it's still hard to be on the receiving end of that.

Haley Radke: You had two rough mom experiences. I was just looking at my notes from your book and at one point your adoptive mother says, I've always been grateful that grandma Leaf treated you kids like you were real grandchildren.

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, that was pretty horrendous. And I think that's, I think without this more open conversation about the pain and trauma and adoption and educating, which I know now things have changed and I think they're, people are much more open about it and talking about it. But I think that also reflects, it reflects my mother, certainly, but I think also the [00:29:00] thinking of at the time and she didn't know any better. But I was so shocked to hear that was one of those life moments that you just never get over, it's like what so I my feelings are correct I am NOT a real child and there is a difference.

Yeah, that sort of nailed that for me.

Haley Radke: So bringing that into your own motherhood. What was it like for you to have your boys and parent them? And I'm assuming wanting to do something a little differently for them.

Janet Sherlund: Yes, a little different. I love being a mother. I have two boys and they're both great grown men now in their own lives, but I love being a mother.

I was a stay at home mom by my choice. I wouldn't have considered, this was back, they were both born in the eighties and at that time there was a real. There was a real status to being, a career woman and think working girl, that movie. I think it was the thing to do was, have your own career.

And that was what I just wanted to stay home and [00:30:00] I wanted to be a full time mother. And I wanted to be the perfect mother, which of course I was not. I try, I, I tried to be, and I just wanted, I wanted to be there. I wanted to respect them and who they were as individuals. And I just wanted to be there and be present and be and support them and be engaged and just made sure they felt loved and appreciated.

But yeah, I, it was the opposite of, I met at my, this isn't in the book, but it's funny. One night when my first son, my oldest son was only like 15 months old and Rick was traveling and we lived in New Jersey. He was traveling to California on business. So he was far away and this is before cell phones, it's the eighties, right?

I become violently ill. It turns out I had kidney stone. I did not know and I am like, I'm in mortal pain. And we have to, I realized at like midnight that I have to go to the hospital, but I have my little 15 month old toddler upstairs bed and no one. So I call of course a [00:31:00] neighbor and she comes over and then the other neighbor drives me.

But I call my, then I'm there and they figure out I have a kidney stone and they're going to admit me. So I call my mother and ask her to come and, take care of the baby for me. And she was really annoyed. Because I had just been down in that area. I had meetings down that way. And now I've come home and now you want me to drive all the way back down there.

And I'm like,

Haley Radke: Oh no.

Janet Sherlund: My God, so yeah, it was that was like even as a grandmother she just wasn't there. It wasn't her. It wasn't her thing.

Haley Radke: Did you ever talk to your boys about being adopted and what that was like for you?

Janet Sherlund: Yeah, I'm sure I did. I can't remember a specific conversation, but they were very aware of it. And in fact, talked about it. My older son, especially as he grew older and he said but mom, I want to know, I want to know more about your family and like where we come from. And there was a real interest in, on his part to know more about [00:32:00] himself that we didn't know through for me.

Haley Radke: Did they experience any of the reunion moments with you?

Janet Sherlund: They weren't there for the reunion, but they met, no one met my birth mother, but they all met my birth father and, yeah, interacted with them and said he my birth father and my oldest son are two peas in a pod. So that was really a special for him I think that was really special to be able to see himself mirrored in that way.

Haley Radke: Oh my goodness. So important. You share at multiple points in the book about your journey dealing with anxiety and panic attacks. Do you mind talking a little bit about that and how you've worked through it?

Janet Sherlund: Yeah to this day I'm not sure I really understand the complete origin of that. I have to assume based on what I've learned and with the [00:33:00] doctors I've worked with over the years that I had, that my body was born with this hair trigger of adrenaline so that when I was, faced with an uncomfortable, anxiety provoking situation instead of, eking out a regular amount of adrenaline, it shot out this, huge amount of it.

And then my body went into chaos and had all these strange symptoms. And, but I also believe and have talked to therapists and doctors about this, that the fact that as an adoptee, I lived every day in a state of heightened anxiety. Like I was never complete. I was never centered. I was never, I was always this big black emptiness in me.

So I was living in a state of chronic anxiety. And that's exhausting and wears all of us down. So you constantly wear down and put pressure on that adrenal system. And then, and there's something, there must be something hormonal about it too, because my [00:34:00] first panic attack was towards that pre adolescent age.

And interestingly enough, then left me like after I had my children. And but it was, that was such a life altering factor to have these full blown horrible, you thought you were dying or going crazy, panic attacks from a young age. No one could explain them to me. No one told me what was going on. I don't know if they understood them back then, but it kept me so dependent on familiar people and familiar places and it took away choice in my life.

I couldn't choose to do things go places engage in ways that other kids my normal kids my age were doing and it really throughout my whole life that I had them. So throughout my from, 12 to 30 years, it's roughly that I wasn't free to make choices. I was making choices based on avoiding panic attacks.

And that's just such a waste of all those years. I [00:35:00] wasn't free. I wasn't making choices out of free will. And when I did, I tried to push those boundaries and I did. And I think I wasn't homebound. I did push those boundaries, but I always paid for it. I always had panic attacks, and they were just, they were terrifying to go through. Just terrifying. And I'm really glad that I finally found a doctor who understood what they were and helped me, prescribe some as needed beta blockers back in those days, and got me through, and I luckily haven't suffered from them since then, but I think it was twofold. It wasn't just physical. There was that constant state of anxiety and chaos in me from being adopted that really fueled the hair trigger.

Haley Radke: Thank you for sharing that. I know that there's a lot of folks listening that have experienced panic attacks and anxiety as well.

Janet Sherlund: They say, I've read things about how [00:36:00] much more of a higher incidence there are of that in adoptees, and I don't have any data to back that up, but it really makes sense to me. I think the one thing I say is, you're not crazy and just find a doctor who knows how to help you and work with them and you can get through it, but it's. It's really scary.

Haley Radke: All right. As we're wrapping up, I'm curious to know, are you involved in adoptee community? Do you have adoptee friends? Do you, yeah.

Janet Sherlund: I know. It's funny. I, not really. Yes, I have adoptee friends and it's so wonderful to, speak with someone else who knows what you're talking about, but I haven't been involved in the adoptee community the one that's out there now in online and you know in podcasts and posts and it's wonderful.

It's wonderful to see all those discussions and to hear people being so honest and to calling out to have our voices heard. That's very special I avoided [00:37:00] those during the three years I was writing the book because I didn't want to be influenced by someone else's story or journey or focus. So during those three years, that was a big, that was a big chunk of the time this has grown so large.

And I just needed to listen to myself to write the book and to just tell my story. And now I'm, now that the book's done and I'm talking to people, I'm putting my toes in those waters and discovering. And I think it's so wonderful. My gosh, I wish this had been around when I was young. I, it is the best thing.

And it is, my book was really written with two intentions. One was to really try and capture that experience for adoptees to say, yes, you're not alone, but the other was to try and let people who don't get it glimpse the feeling because I think when you have a feeling it's more powerful than words or data.

I think it's you know, the Maya Angelou quote "people will forget what you did and what you [00:38:00] said, but they'll never forget how you made them feel" and I just wanted to try and get people to feel this for a moment so that they could bring that consciousness and that intelligence to the decisions they were making on political issues to, to adoptee rights to the donor conceived individuals to international adoption to, reproductive rights.

Think about these things and think about them from the individual's perspective, not the birth parent or the adoptive parent, but the person whose life is really impacted by this. And so the sharing of these conversations going around everywhere, I'm very interested in now and tuning into as many as I can, and I'm so happy to see them taking place.

Haley Radke: Welcome in. We're happy to have you.

Janet Sherlund: Thank you.

Haley Radke: Janet's book is called Abandoned at Birth, Searching for the Arms That Once Held Me. And what I really love is you don't pull any punches. You talk, you're sharing your story and [00:39:00] then you overlay constantly like a lot of adoptees struggle with this and this like your giving those facts all the way through, which is so helpful for people who aren't adopted and don't get it which makes sense from what you just explained to us. I read it in one sitting. I was captivated. I wanted to know what happened. And I think that folks will really be interested in hearing your whole story. And really, a lot of us will relate to many things that happened in your life. And yeah, it was just a pleasure to get you to know you to get to know you through your book. How does that feel to know people are going to read it and be like, Whoa. I really know Janet now.

Janet Sherlund: It's a very vulnerable feeling, it's one thing to write a book. It's another thing to, to talk about your book and, face to face with people and it's I was very [00:40:00] unsettled ever since I realized I was actually going to get this published. I've been very unsettled. I've been, I felt very vulnerable, but I also know that everyone seems very interested in it and the topic and people who don't understand it seemed to be going oh okay, and that was the point of it. And so I always think the more personal we get the more universal we become and I hope that you know that achieves that in a few places at least in the book and but yes, I do it is a little uncomfortable to feel all the yeah, I was right. I was very candid in the book

Haley Radke: Yes, deeply personal and very easy to connect with you and as an adoptee, to see those things pointed out that a lot of our listeners will totally get, but a lot of folks who have no concept of what it's like to be adopted will really learn a lot from them. I also wanted to mention by the time this airs, this book is going to be in the [00:41:00] world, but Gretchen Sisson has a brand new book called Relinquished, The Politics of Adoption and the Privilege of American Motherhood, which is such an important book. It's so well written. I followed Gretchen's research for a number of years, and she really talks about reproductive justice, and there's this fallacy that folks are choosing between abortion and adoption when she proves that's not the case and it's very interesting, very timely, and I hope folks will read it. It's, just, oh, yeah, it's so timely. Excellent research from Gretchen.

Janet Sherlund: Good. I'll read, I will read that.

Haley Radke: Yes. Yes. It's wonderful. What did you want to recommend to us today, Janet?

Janet Sherlund: I'm reading as many books on adoption as I can get my hands on, always have. I keep going back to The Primal Wound.

I just, I, every [00:42:00] time I read that, I see something new, see something different. I don't know how Nancy did that, but the, she got it, that book, when I read that book for the first time, it made me uncomfortable. It was so honest and so truthful, and I, it just shook me to my core. And I keep going back to it.

I just think it's brilliant. And I haven't seen it trumped yet. I must say, and I know there are all the other, big bibles out there and standards of adoption work. And there's, I think I've enjoyed every book I've read, but. For me that's the gold.

Haley Radke: That's the one. All right.

Thank you so much for sharing your story with us and your insights. I'd love it if you would share how folks can connect with you online.

Janet Sherlund: Thank you. I have an Instagram @janetsherlundofficial, and my website is abandonedatbirthbook.com. Or janetsherlund.com will get you to the same site.

Haley Radke: Okay. Perfect. I know folks are going to enjoy reading your book and thank you. Thank [00:43:00] you for writing it and having more adoptee work in the world.

Janet Sherlund: Thank you. Thank you, Haley, for all you're doing for all of us in this world. Appreciate it.

Haley Radke: Thank you. I hope you do take me up on my offer to join our Patreon community. We have so many amazing events and sometimes we're recording far out, and so I can't always tell you about them live on the show, but if you go to adopteeson.com/calendar, you can see all of our upcoming events and it's updated regularly with new book club events, new ask an adoptee therapist events, our off script parties with Pam Cordano. We have so many opportunities for you. And another thing we've been doing are some writing workshops. So it's [00:44:00] pretty good value in my opinion, for all the things you get, plus you get our weekly Adoptees Off Script podcast. So I would love to have you join. Your support helps keep this podcast going and it's also helping fund the work for the brand new show that I'm working on behind the scenes.

So I would love it if you would please join adopteeson.com/community. I'd love to have you. And if you want to just try it out, there's a free trial so you can check it out, poke around and see if you feel like you want to hang out with us which I'm sure you will. And give it a try.

I'd love to have you and get to know you over there. Thank you so much for listening. Let's talk again very soon.

280 Svetlana Sandoval

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/280


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical, or legal advice.

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm Haley Radke. Oh, we're back and I'm sick again. My voice is only going to be like this for the intro because luckily I was healthy when I interviewed this week's guest Svetlana Sandoval. Svetlana is an international adoptee adopted from Russia at about six months old.

We talk about what sparked an interest to search for her biological family, how she navigated the language barriers using technology and a friend of a friend. Svetlana also shares about her decision to reclaim her original name. Due to the sensitive nature of her reunion during the war, [00:01:00] she will not be commenting directly on the conflict.

Before we get started, I wanted to personally invite you to join our Patreon Adoptee community today over on adopteeson.com. I'm going to leave that in. Because, listen, my dog just licked the microphone. That's Spencer. He's busy chewing on my hand, being a rascal, and keeping me company as I have my sick day here.

Okay, supporting me on Patreon helps support the show and supports more adoptees around the world. And it also supports my brand new podcasting project I'm working on. I'm keeping mostly everything pretty secret right now but we'll be excited to share more news with you soon. We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website adopteeson.Com. Let's listen in. I'm so [00:02:00] pleased to welcome to Adoptees On Svetlana Sandoval. Welcome Svetlana.

Svetlana Sandoval: Thank you so much for having me. I'm so excited to be here.

Haley Radke: I would love it if you would share some of your story with us.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, absolutely. So I am an international adoptee. I was born in Yaroslavl, Russia. It's about a five hour drive northeast of Moscow.

I was born in March 1997 and then adopted six months later the same year to my family in northeast Ohio. I had a pretty quote unquote normal childhood. I'm a same race adoptee. I was adopted by white parents who look enough like me that people looking at our family didn't assume that I was adopted. I always knew that I was adopted.

I think I primarily knew about my adoption through my parents telling me their bedtime story version of how they wanted a child so much that they flew across the ocean to get me and here we were, [00:03:00] happily ever after. And it seemed simple in those terms and that was the only way my child self could understand how I came to be here.

As a young child, being adopted was something I was really proud to share with people. Sometimes I would introduce myself and be like, and I'm adopted from Russia. It was like my fun fact or, go to. When I was little, but I remember pretty early on, maybe around first or second grade, that pride started to shift when my classmates would ask me questions like, but who is your real mom?

Or they would ask me something about Russia that I honestly couldn't answer because I didn't know much about where I was from. And I think those interactions formed a shame that made me not want to talk about my adoption anymore. And those questions that I couldn't answer definitely shaped my own disinterest in my heritage throughout my childhood.

Then, throughout my preteens and adolescence, I had many mental health [00:04:00] crises that stemmed from what I now see as an obvious series of identity issues that stemmed from my initial loss due to adoption, and I didn't necessarily, again, look adopted to others. And in a way that kind of erased my own sense of self and curiosity of who I was outside of the context of my adoptive family.

Haley Radke: Did you have siblings growing up?

Svetlana Sandoval: So I grew up pretty much as an only child I have three half brothers from my adoptive dad, but they were all pretty much grown and out of the house by the time I was adopted.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah,

Haley Radke: So lonely.

Svetlana Sandoval: It was lonely. And then the identity issues I had just intensified through my late teens and early twenties.

By the time that I was in high school, I remember saying things to my friends like I must have been discarded after I was born. I think that like core belief formed pretty early on, even though my adoptive parents never said anything like [00:05:00] that to me. I was always told the typical narrative, your birth mother must have loved you so much that she wanted you to have a better life.

But I think as adoptees, we tend to assume the worst and we have no definite information where, how we came to be where we are. And then getting into my early 20s, I started to question more where I came from and I slowly collected information from my adoptive parents from their time in Russia. And then over the winter of 2022, I was looking at this document that I believed was my birth certificate.

I had it in my fireproof file box under the label birth certificate. But it was in Russian, so I couldn't read it. And I just happened to have a friend who had a friend. She offered to translate it. And in fact, it wasn't my birth certificate. It was a completely different document. It was a certificate of my adoption.

So when I had that first translated document, that's when I really started to more critically question my adoption and what my truths [00:06:00] were. And around that same time is when I found Adoptees On and started searching for adoptee community. And then I continued asking my parents for any information that they had, and they collected everything for me and gave me this Talbots box filled with all of the court documents and paperwork from Russia.

And among all of the documents was this tiny yellow folded up lined paper with my birth name written in Russian cursive handwriting. And wrapped up in this paper was this little silver Orthodox cross necklace that had been left for me. And that necklace gave me more information than all of the documents.

Just knowing that something had been left for me immediately changed that internal narrative that I was discarded. And then in the documents, I also had access now to my birth mother's name, her date of birth, some other identifying information. [00:07:00] So I started searching for her on Russian social media sites.

She passed her name on to me. So we share our first name. And unfortunately, Svetlana is like the most common Russian name. And at the time, I didn't really have understanding of how common, commonly used like their nicknames are and didn't have a good grasp of the language and how the names are listed on social media.

So I didn't have luck finding her on my own. The day after then I had all of these documents and started searching. I found a private investigator and a Facebook page for Russian adoptees that some others had success with. And within a few hours I was in contact with my birth mother. It happened so fast. I wasn't expecting it.

Haley Radke: How old were you then?

Svetlana Sandoval: This is a year ago. So I, yeah,

Haley Radke: This is new.

Svetlana Sandoval: I was 25 about to turn 26. I'll be 27 next month. Yeah. So it's all real new [00:08:00] still.

Haley Radke: Oh my goodness. Okay, so to slow down just a little bit.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: The Russian it's, there's a different alphabet, right?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: And how's Google Translate when you're trying to because you can't look at it and type something in, right?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. I now can because I've downloaded the keyboards and everything.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: Then I had no knowledge. I had never explored Russian language before this. So I'm just like copy and pasting. They have the feature where you can hold your camera up and it might pick up all the letters.

Haley Radke: Uh huh.

Svetlana Sandoval: I was typing things in English on social media because they also use English somewhat on social media. It wasn't great. And Google Translate is not good for Russian.

Haley Radke: Okay. I didn't know.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, no, I didn't know either.

Haley Radke: I'm thinking if this had happened, say 20 years ago.

Svetlana Sandoval: Oh gosh, yeah, I know.

Haley Radke: You'd need that friend of a friend to come and help you translate it into English [00:09:00] and then who knows if you could find or not. Oh my goodness. That's a lot. That's a lot. So this is going really fast. The investigator finds your mom and

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, within a few hours, I was in contact with her. I had her phone number. I had her picture. And, I sent her my introductory spiel. My name is Svetlana, my birth last name, I was born March 1997, I'm adopted, I'm looking for my birth family. And her response was totally skeptical. She thought I was a scam. Until I sent her a photo of the necklace and the paper it was wrapped in, and she immediately recognized my grandfather's handwriting, and our connection was verified.

Haley Radke: Wow. Did you ask your adoptive parents why you had to ask for those things from them?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. I think it's like we were in this cycle of I was disinterested. [00:10:00] They didn't inspire the interest. I was also getting these external signals of being grateful. My parents did this wonderful thing.

So I had all these signals that maybe I shouldn't really think about this. So therefore I didn't show interest. And they're they've sometimes had you didn't show interest. I'm like, yeah, I didn't show interest. So it was just like in this cycle of they weren't nurturing the interest. So I wasn't showing the interest.

Haley Radke: I have this obsession with objects that were given or left with us and finding out how folks eventually even find out these things exist because often they're not given to us.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: It's interesting that they did have it waiting for you for when you asked.

Svetlana Sandoval: A lot of it I really do believe too. It was just put away. They didn't have to worry about it once they had me here, so I don't think they honestly remembered everything that they had, or the details of the information. It really just sat in the [00:11:00] closet, and we didn't have to look at it, so that's where it stayed. Till last year.

Haley Radke: So you said it's your grandfather's writing?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: So do you know your story now from your mother?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yes.

Haley Radke: Oh.

Svetlana Sandoval: Since then I've been in this like virtual reunion with I have a babushka, grandma, dadushka, grandpa, I've got a little brother, he's five years younger than me, an uncle, cousins, aunts.

So we've spent the year just trying to catch up and make up for our lost time. And yeah, I have gotten their side of the story. So to give a little bit of context here, I've heard some other Russian adoptees refer to our adoptions that happened in the 90s in post Soviet Russia as like refugee cases.

My family has certainly verified the economic hardship that they faced following the collapse of the USSR, but I don't necessarily identify or agree [00:12:00] that I am a refugee of the situation. My grandparents and mom have expressed that they had every intention to keep me. I was with my mom for four days in the hospital before I was relinquished.

They ultimately made the decision because they were told that I was so sick, there would be no way for them to afford the care that I was going to need. But that really wasn't the case, according to my documents. After I was relinquished, I got a round of antibiotics and shortly after was sent off to the orphanage that I was placed in to be adopted out of.

And I see the adoptions that happened and came out of Russia in the 90s as a much broader issue that the international adoption industry that was booming at the time took advantage of the economic hardship that was happening in Russia after the USSR collapse. And I really believe my family. was somewhat victim and coerced by the system.

There was a lot of like [00:13:00] misinformation and false diagnoses happening and Russian adoptee cases.

Haley Radke: So I don't know a ton about Russian adoption. I was researching a little bit before our conversation and I've seen different figures like there's 60, 000 Russian adoptees from that sort of time period in that decade.

Many of which went to the United States and, the big news a while ago was that Russia closed adoption to the United States.

Svetlana Sandoval: 2013.

Haley Radke: Yeah. And it's interesting, the medical diagnosis, I've heard that from a few adoptees. I don't think that's too unusual, sadly.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: Including current day in the United States, domestic adoptions. I'm sorry. I'm really sorry that happened. Yeah. You're super new in reunion.

Svetlana Sandoval: I am.

Haley Radke: And it's far [00:14:00] away, long distance. What does your communication look like?

Svetlana Sandoval: We mostly message and text. It's easy to copy and paste through a translator, Yandex. Russian adoptees is a much better translator than Google Translate. I've also, spent some time learning introductory Russian before I decided to go back to college. I spent last summer doing tutoring. We do video call, but, with the language barrier, what could be a five minute conversation takes us an hour. It's difficult.

Haley Radke: Okay, yeah.

Svetlana Sandoval: I don't know that I'll ever, really feel like I can ask the questions and get the answers that I want until several years from now when I can speak with them fluently and there's also this fragility of trying to communicate these like deeply personal intimate questions and feelings with a language barrier and with the cultural differences woven into that there's always this fear that I have that it's going to be misinterpreted.

Haley Radke: Yeah, [00:15:00] and I started what I was thinking in my head is I'm like and it's really easy to stop communication when you're so far apart.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: It feels less consequential. I don't know.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, no, that's definitely been a fear. I think it was a fear more so earlier on and now The fact that we've continued to be in communication and plan to meet one day when that's possible. They're still as involved in my life as like we can be virtually today as they were a year ago after I found them.

Haley Radke: Can you mentioned cultural differences. Growing up. You knew you were from Russia, but did you know what that meant, where Russia was, like, anything about Russian culture?

Svetlana Sandoval: No. Yes. Yes. Okay, so I knew where I was [00:16:00] born, and I could point to that on the globe or on the map.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: I knew about Russia the way I think most Americans know about Russia. It's matryoshka dolls, it's vodka, it's bears. Or it's the bad guy in the movie. That was the general understanding that I understood. Because that's all that I really was exposed to.

Haley Radke: Mhm.

Svetlana Sandoval: My parents did have some things in the house. A lot of my like children's books and fairy tales were like U. S. adaptations of Russian fairy tales. My favorite one was The Little Snow Girl.

Haley Radke: What's that?

Svetlana Sandoval: It's, oh, I'll have to Send it to you. It's a, I think, I don't remember the author's name right now, but The Little Snow Girl is this Russian fairy tale.

It's very Americanized in the book that I had, but it's a story of this little girl that's made of snow and her parents aren't made of snow and they bring her inside and make these things for her and one day she melts, but then she becomes a real girl and that's not [00:17:00] really the story of The Little Snow Girl in Russia, but it had these like illustrations that had some of the Russian folk art in it Little Snow Girl in Russian is they have a different version of our version of Santa and she's like his sidekick and she has like different backstories depending on what era of Russian folklore you're looking at.

Haley Radke: So the Americanized version is that you're made of snow, your parents are not, so you're adopted and you are brought into the house to melt?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yes. Literally, yes.

Haley Radke: And be formed into what they would like you to be.

Svetlana Sandoval: The little girl that they wanted. Yes, you heard that correctly.

Haley Radke: Oh, good. Yeah, okay. Okay. Interesting. Having, the, let's call it the [00:18:00] Americanized glasses on for a view of Russia up until you're, say 24. Now that you're like, oh my gosh. I don't understand the differences. What does that feel like? I feel like I'm imagining this pressure to fast forward, must learn so I don't say the wrong thing or offend or.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, I absolutely have just felt like I cannot grasp everything fast enough. And I remember when first found them, I was like, just so upset.

I'm like, why can't I learn all of this right now? And I also have to accept that there's some things with my family, nothing is that I learn no matter how much time I could spend the rest of my life learning about my history and culture. It's not going to be the same as if I had grown up there with them, and I'm still going to have this Americanized version of [00:19:00] it.

And it feels like I don't totally feel like an imposter in some ways, like I'm grasping on to everything I can to learn about it, but it's still just never going to be enough or authentic enough.

Haley Radke: Do you have a sense, this might be too early to ask about, but do you have a sense of what your Russian family thinks of your American perspective?

Svetlana Sandoval: They think it's American. They say that. They're like, Oh you're purely American. But, I think I'm, I don't know if this is like unique, but my family and my birth mom has been really, open and accepting and willing to hear my side for the most part and is more interested than shut down or that's wrong. And I think, they just accept that. I didn't get to grow up with them. You have a different version.

Haley Radke: Yeah. I know you can't speak for transracial adoptees because you [00:20:00] are internationally adopted, but same race and could blend in your white, beautiful, blonde, like your beautiful, traditional American beauty too, right?

So I'm curious. if you have heard from fellow international adoptees who are transracially adopted, and if you can relate to their stories on a cultural barrier.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: You know what I'm trying to say?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, I think so.

Haley Radke: I'm trying to ask you this, but okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yes and no. I always, I feel like I relate to other international adoptees a lot more in those respects of this loss of language that makes it hard and the loss of culture and literally being displaced on another continent and like in some ways we've had to like physically adapt to being [00:21:00] on the other side of the world. But I don't know I guess I feel like I respect that like my and understand my experience because I am still a same race adoptee is not comparable in that way so I don't really feel like it's my right to take up space in their specific adoptee groups.

It's, it has been hard finding like an intersectional space for me of like international adoptees and adoptees that are over here exploring consciousness and want to talk about all of the feelings and things, cause, in my experience, I haven't found a lot of Russian adoptees that are over here on our side of adoptee land.

Haley Radke: Exploring the complexity of adoption and the ethics and such. I am curious and let's talk a little bit more about that. Because in the ethical, and we're unethical side of adoption. I know that many adoptive parents [00:22:00] have pursued or did pursue international adoption from Eastern European countries, especially in the decades we're talking about here in the nineties, in order to have white children, at a good rate.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: So have you thought a little bit about that?

Svetlana Sandoval: Oh, totally. And my parents have verified that for me. And part of me is thank God you didn't try to adopt another race adoptee, because that just would have been such a horrible environment. And now we know like the outcomes and extra trauma of like transracial adoption.

And then there's added complexity of yeah, I was white, so I could blend in somewhat. More of this blank slate, not adopted daughter.

Haley Radke: Yeah, I I know there was a lot we've criticized Korean adoption many times on this show for their exporting of children, but I know that was happening a lot in [00:23:00] some of the, those countries too. I won't speak specifically to Russian adoption because I don't know, but.

Svetlana Sandoval: I think there's a same level of white saviorism in international adoption. It was like we were being saved no matter where we were coming from. We were being saved from a like I said, I've seen others refer to us as refugees, like it was saving us from Russia.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: The same way it was saving us wherever else the other international adoptees were being done.

Haley Radke: So from the collapsed USSR, the poverty,

Svetlana Sandoval: yeah,

Haley Radke: All the tropes, stereotypes that you can think of. Okay. I know you're one adoptee. You're not speaking on behalf of all Russian adoptees. Why do you think that there are fewer Russian adoptees speaking publicly and critically about adoption?

Svetlana Sandoval: I think there's probably several [00:24:00] reasons, but I guess my most general, guess Is I know that I really rejected my heritage and culture when I was little because it was just these like really broad stereotypes that I mentioned earlier and there was no curiosity there or really any redeeming qualities or places that I saw my culture being portrayed in a positive light that made me want to explore it.

So my guess is maybe there's just this internalized shame and I mean for me that also made me like ashamed of like adoption and being adopted and I just wanted to not be adopted and I don't know I can only assume that maybe that's a big reason that they're not exploring all of that because I think if you start to explore your heritage and identity then you it's goes in hand but then you have to the next part of that maybe is exploring the adoption piece and how that has formed you.

Haley Radke: So as you've unpacked [00:25:00] more and more of this, are, have you, how do you unhook this skewed view? you've had from the constant diet of American media about the Russian stereotypes like you listed off before. Like, how do you unhook that for yourself?

Svetlana Sandoval: For me, my family, just knowing my family has just humanized this before what was just an idea of Russia and like getting to know them and having connection with them and sharing recipes with them and cooking their food. And that's really, they're my bridge to humanizing this part of me that before was just stereotypes.

Haley Radke: And now that you've shared a little bit publicly about being a Russian adoptee [00:26:00] and we're in a time where Russia is not only portrayed as from, movies as the big bad, it is in the news all the time. Because of the war. So how are you able to interact with people who may criticize you personally for the fact that there's this world event going on that you live in the States you have nothing to do with? Like it's, you're very separate from.

Svetlana Sandoval: It's, fortunately, I haven't had any big confrontations yet so far.

I know some people that have, but at the start of the war, it was like, couldn't be a worse time to be, like, reclaiming my heritage and being like, I'm proud of who I'm from and I'm, want to explore my heritage for all these things, because literally no one wants to hear [00:27:00] how excited I am to be Russian right now, and it's tricky, and I definitely have evolved and have come to a place to allow myself space to explore and celebrate my heritage, but it does still feel like, I have to be sensitive and careful what I say and how I express my pride because of what's going on.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Svetlana Sandoval: But yeah, it's just so out of my control. It's just horrible timing.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Svetlana Sandoval: To be excited.

Haley Radke: Worst timing. And speaking of travel there, like I went and I was looking on, I'm like, oh, restricted. It's not recommended.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, you can't even. You can't even buy plane tickets from like the main, if you just search plane tickets and go on Delta, whatever the major airlines are, it's no flights, sorry, no flights available at this time, it's like absolutely restricted.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Svetlana Sandoval: There are ways, but in general, it's a big red flag, don't do it.

Haley Radke: Right. What's the [00:28:00] recipe that you got, were shared that you made, or just one?

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, so for my birthday last year, my, Grandma and I both made her Miedewijktoort. It's this honeybee cake. And I know this is common for a lot of adoptees, like just hated my birthday. Didn't really know why for a long time, but just hated it.

And since my reunion this year, like everything has been a big first celebration. So it was like my first birthday since finding my family and really felt like the first time I could celebrate it. And I made her recipe, and my babushka made the recipe in Russia, so we got to be, virtually connected through that, and that to me was just so sacred.

And it also, it was early on in our reunion, and it also just verified for me that it was as equally important for them, finding [00:29:00] me, as it was for me to find them.

Haley Radke: And what do you think of the cake?

Svetlana Sandoval: Oh, it's delicious. I love it. It's like a, the Miedewijktoort is it's a traditional recipe and her version's a little bit different than what you would buy at the Russian deli.

But for me, that's makes it even better. That means it's, my grandma's.

Haley Radke: Authentic. Yes. Oh, that's so special. Okay. So your name at birth was Svetlana and now it's Svetlana.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: Did you grow up as Svetlana?

Svetlana Sandoval: Absolutely not.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: No, they, my adoptive parents changed my name. I was Elizabeth.

And somewhere around high school, I started going by Lana. It's like I was like trying on this like more Americanized version of my Russian name.

Haley Radke: Okay, so you knew?

Svetlana Sandoval: Oh, I knew what my name was. And then I like, started trying it on in high school, but I totally denied it. People would be like, where'd Lana come from? And I'd be like, I don't know. I think I [00:30:00] heard once that Lana Del Rey's name is Elizabeth. So maybe Lana is a nickname for Elizabeth. So I totally tried to disguise it and whatever, but it was, I was totally just trying to try on this part of me. My friends called me Lana. My teachers called me Lana. My family made fun of it and it didn't feel good after a while and then by the time I was like getting married and I just didn't want to explain my name, so I was like, I'm ditching this. I'm going back to Elizabeth. It's easier for everyone and now I'm like, I just want to hug my teenage self and be like, no, you knew who you were.

I wish I had felt supported to explore what my name meant to me at that time because I decided to take back my birth name after I found my mom and you know she passed on her name to me and it's like I can feel a change in my nervous system in the places where I only [00:31:00] exist as Svetlana. There's only a couple of those places right now because I'm still navigating the, I'm still new to the name change within the last year, so there's plenty of places where people don't know what to call me.

But in the places where I'm only Svetlana, like it just calms me and soothes me and I feel it in my core and it's this is who I am. And it's really frustrating too trying to explain to people they, when they look at me and are like, oh, that's so radical. You've changed your name. Like, how do your adoptive parents feel about that?

And I'm like, no, that's not the crazy part. I'm just taking back what was mine. I've always been Svetlana.

Haley Radke: I've always been Svetlana. I love that. You said you knew what your name was. How did you know what your name was?

Svetlana Sandoval: My parents told me. They shared that. Like, when I asked, I really don't remember the conversations were short and not too in depth, and I think they would tell you it's because I didn't ask more, and I would say I didn't feel like I [00:32:00] could ask more.

But that was just one of the things I knew along with being adopted was that was my name.

Haley Radke: How is your relationship with your adoptive parents?

Svetlana Sandoval: Continuing to evolve and change.

Haley Radke: You're a mid twenties girly married reunion. It would be anyway.

Svetlana Sandoval: Changed a lot just in the past year, I'd say, since my reunion.

I was you know, I'm pretty typical terrified to tell them that I was in reunion, but they've mostly been they have been really supportive. There have been moments where, I wish they had have could have shown up for me in a different way or asked more about my family primarily is like where I feel the gap sometimes is it feels like two separate things.

And if I don't volunteer information, they won't ask about it. It feels I don't know. If you don't talk about it, we won't talk about it because we don't want you to feel like you have to talk about it. Again, it's this cycle [00:33:00] sometimes. But, it's been interesting for me, too, because I always felt like I had a pretty strained relationship with my, particularly my adoptive father.

But, recently, it's really been cool because he's connected with me and has seen my story as an immigrant because he's a first generation immigrant. And so it, I just it's totally been a surprise for me that he has, understood and I feel really seen and heard from him in my need to go see my family eventually and he's just yeah, of course. Absolutely. Like it makes sense to him. And we've, connected in that a little bit over food too. And yeah, that's

interesting.

Haley Radke: So you talked about this desire to go and meet your family. And I've heard this rumor that you can keep [00:34:00] your Russian citizenship if you're an international adoptee from Russia.

So they've sent you off abroad somewhere, whatever country, that you have Russian citizenship until you turn 18 and then you either have to accept it or deny it. I don't know.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. So this was. This is news to me.

Haley Radke: Okay. Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. I'm going to give you a little bit of background here on my adoption agency.

My parents were told when I was naturalized as a U. S. citizen, my Russian citizenship was renounced, so I was only a U. S. citizen. Wasn't the case. I'm going back here. Again, to give a little context, like my adoption agency was actually shut down on a federal case in 2016. Most of the charges were fraud related.

I've talked to some other adoptees that were adopted through them too. And we have a lot of shared accounts of like our parents stories of the blatantly unethical practices and [00:35:00] bribery that was done at the time.

Haley Radke: Whoa.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. So it's not really surprising to me that my parents were not told the truth about my citizenship status.

But it's you know, there's no handbook. So I'm just figuring this out as I go along. So you are we have like birthright citizenship. You are still a Russian citizen. No one else can renounce it for you so it's like literally impossible that anyone else could have done that only the individual can do that over the age of 18 or to travel you would have to confirm your Russian citizenship with the embassy or consulate that your state's assigned to, and then go through another, once that's confirmed, process again of renewing your Russian passport, because neither place right now recognizes the citizenship in the other.

So I can't travel to Russia as a U. S. citizen. I can only travel as a Russian citizen with my renewed valid Russian [00:36:00] documents.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: So if you're a Russian adoptee, you may want to look into this if it's of interest to

you.

Svetlana Sandoval: I am, and all the forms have to be completed in Russian. So I'm working with this agency in Chicago and they're helping me fill out all the documents and everything, but it's such a long process and there's no definite timeline here. The citizenship portion can take three months, it can take six months, it could take a year, and then when you fill out another set of forms, again all in Russian, send it off to the embassy, then you have to make an appointment and go in person to the embassy or consulate, and then again you wait another three months, six months, a year, so there's no definite timeline.

And that's, devastating and frustrating to not know when I'm ever going to see an end to it.

Haley Radke: And just doing that impact in any way your U. S. citizenship?

Svetlana Sandoval: No, not [00:37:00] at all. U. S. citizenship's pretty, I don't know, simple. We're, as long as you're actually, naturalized as a U. S. citizen, not, Russia can't do anything to change your U.

S. citizenship. I just can't travel legally there as a U. S. citizen, which is, it's wild to me, like my husband, he was born in the U. S., he could technically, political situation aside, get a visa and travel tomorrow, because he was born in the U. S., so he's only traveling as a U. S. citizen, and I can't, because my passport says I was born in Russia, so.

It's wild.

Haley Radke: Okay. Yeah, that is very interesting. I've heard from a few different adoptees who are trying in some way to get citizenship in their country of origin and for reasons it's always so complicated.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, I know, especially with the language barrier. It's I'm so nervous to go to my appointment at the embassy because I have to be able to at [00:38:00] least request a translator, which I hear they're supposed to provide for you.

But I'm like I should be able to explain myself a little bit and ask for the translator at least.

Haley Radke: And there's still a, there's a Russian embassy in the States or more than one.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, there's a couple consulates. One was shut down a few years ago. There used to be one in Chicago, but I believe there's three altogether now There's one in I think Houston then New York, which is the one I my state's assigned to so I'll have to go to New York and then there's the embassy in DC.

Haley Radke: Wow. All the things I never knew and we're recording in 2024.

Svetlana Sandoval: Could change.

Haley Radke: And we're not lawyers. We actually, I don't know what you do, but I'm not a lawyer.

Svetlana Sandoval: I'm not a lawyer. No.

Haley Radke: So we're not giving advice here, but yeah. Okay. So you had assistance with your search, but now I understand you are connecting with other Russian adoptees and helping with what you can now that you've navigated some of this.[00:39:00]

Svetlana Sandoval: I have found some Russian, there's a couple, a few, maybe Russian adoptees that I've really connected with. I think maybe this is repetitive to what I said before, but the specific specifically Russian adoptee spaces and communities just have been a little disappointing for me in that not a lot of exploring the adoptee consciousness and I have to remind myself there's no right way to be adopted. It's all different. It's all nuanced. You're not supposed to feel any certain way. But for me, I find more community and validation of my experience in the general adoptee community. But I have a handful a couple of Russian adoptees that I've been able to share that with, which has been cool.

And then I am also, I haven't done a lot yet, but I started volunteering with Adoption Network Cleveland and helping them because they do search volunteering. So helping them, like providing all the [00:40:00] information I can to help Russian adoptees specifically navigate starting the searches now that I have a better grasp of the language and how names work and how some of that searching can be done. On their own.

Haley Radke: Again, I know you're not an expert in all things Russian adoptee. Just throwing it out there because I'm curious. Do you find that a lot of Russian adoptees would have paperwork that has a birth parent name on it? How are people mostly finding? Can they DNA test? Is it? No. Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: No DNA testing. I'd say most of the time, from what I have seen, people have some document with a birth parent's name and date of birth,

Haley Radke: whether or not they can read it.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Svetlana Sandoval: And then there's also in Russian names, you have the first name and then the patronymic name and the last name. So there's a whole, this whole other part of understanding how the the patronymic name is in the place of what we would have as a middle name.

And it's usually, [00:41:00] it comes from, it's a derivative of your father's name or grandfather's name traditionally. So also from that, you can decipher maybe a grandparent's name or a father's name. Usually there's a name, DNA testing. No. I did 23andMe initially and got nowhere. I've got, 5th, 6th cousins. They don't have the same DNA testing.

Haley Radke: Unless you're lucky enough that someone has moved to Europe or North America or something, Yeah. Sure. If they've sent out other Children to be adopted out didn't help you find them either. It just helps you find your connections. Okay. Okay.

Interesting. I'm glad you're in community. And thank you for sharing your story and some of your expertise now on this topic, is there anything else that you [00:42:00] wanted to make sure you shared today with fellow adoptees or fellow Russian adoptees or anything like that?

Svetlana Sandoval: My hope for Russian adoptees is that, they come over here and explore like adoption land too. I wish I saw and heard more Russian adoptee voices. I remember when I was first looking for adoptee community, I was like searching for Russian adoptees on these podcasts like Adoptees On, and I don't know. I hope my voice is that assurance for someone else who doesn't see someone else over here from Russia. So.

Haley Radke: I'm gonna just make a little guess. I don't know if this is the case or not, but I'm guessing it's because you're all so young still.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah and there's this other factor that there's not gonna be more of us, right? Like they were cut off. So it's like this is it. Which is a good thing, but no, let's not internationally adopt maybe but yeah, it's limited and this is what we've [00:43:00] got. So this is what we have to work with.

Haley Radke: Yeah. So I'll say the thing that, that you're hinting around at the Russian adoptees that I have interacted with most online, there is still just mostly gratitude and rainbow heart eyes over the whole thing.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yes.

Haley Radke: And, like you said, people can feel any type of way they want about adoption.

That's fine. However, I think, you mentioned this a little bit earlier, with that prejudice that is built in North America surrounding our media intake as Russia as the big bad, it's, it must be easy to be like, oh, thank God I was saved. Out of Siberia or wherever.

Svetlana Sandoval: No. Yeah. No. Yeah. I'm like trying to dance around it and be nice to my fellow Russian adoptees, but that's totally the case. It's like this gratitude and [00:44:00] yeah, it's, it goes hand in hand. It has to with this perception of we were saved from these stereotypes of Russia,

and maybe my case is just unique, and I'm seeing it through my other heart shaped glasses, but like my family knowing them has just verified for me this is not a better life.

This is just a different life. This is just an alternate life that I'm living.

Haley Radke: Wow. Thank you.

Svetlana Sandoval: Thank you.

Haley Radke: I, you mentioned earlier about the Adoption Network Cleveland. And I was going to recommend that because you wrote a piece for them, which is really great. We'll link to that in the show notes for folks.

Lost and Found Heritage, an International Adoptee Journey. And so you chronicle some of your story for us and some of the things you've changed your mind about upon, about, through reunion, but they have this Monday evening speaker series that I've gone to a few of them and I didn't realize [00:45:00] the whole thing is on YouTube, all the recorded discussions.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. That's awesome.

Haley Radke: Yeah. So they have fellow adoptees on, but they also have other folks on who've got books or documentaries or things. The ones I went to, there was a few therapists who've been on our show before who've been on and I went to see Ann Fessler who wrote The Girls Who Went Away and I really enjoyed that conversation.

That was in 2021 Svetlana it's pandemic times. But it's so good. Have you been to some of those?

Svetlana Sandoval: I have. Not as many as I would like, but I it was a few months ago now. Susan Kiyo Ito is on there, and they've had a really good lineup this year.

They've got some other good ones coming up, and it's free. It's virtual. You just sign up, register online, and like you said, they're all available afterwards, too, on the YouTube.

Haley Radke: So we'll link to the YouTube playlist of the ones that are recorded and their current and upcoming events so you can see who's coming, but I really like that they focus on just like a variety of topics that, oh, [00:46:00] many of us would be interested in whether it's searching or yeah, emotional support or I saw some, they've got some donor conceived things happening.

And yes very good. Okay, that's our joint recommendation. But what else? I know you had one more thing you wanted to tell us about.

Svetlana Sandoval: I wanted to recommend Michelle Zauner's memoir. People might know her as jbrekkie or from the band Japanese Breakfast. Her memoir is Crying in H Mart, and it's not adoptee specific, but her memoir is about her connection through her heritage food, and she talks about the imposter syndrome of when you lose a biological family member not feeling fully your heritage enough to fit into those immigrant spaces anymore, and it just really resonated with me, and I'd like, think it's a good resource for other adoptees who feel that imposter syndrome in their heritage.

Haley Radke: Is there something that you think, I'm going to talk about food again, is like traditionally Russian that you're like, [00:47:00] I know this is like their favorite thing, but like I can't. I should though because I'm Russian.

Svetlana Sandoval: Totally. Luckily, I actually have genuinely enjoyed things. Most of the things that I've made, there is this recipe I have not made yet.

It's this like fish milk casserole. And I'm like, I don't know, I'm going to make it eventually, but we'll see. And my uncle recently showed me this it's like very Soviet era food. I don't know how else to describe it it's like chicken Jell O in a mold and it's literally like chicken, shredded chicken and Jell O.

Haley Radke: Reclaim your heritage, if you must.

Svetlana Sandoval: I think I'll just save that. I'm like, I'll wait for that one. You can make that when I go there. I'm not gonna do the jello and chicken, but yeah,

Haley Radke: Oh good. I'm glad I asked. All right. So where can we connect [00:48:00] with you online? If we would like to see photos of you trying fish milk casserole,

just kidding. Those aren't there. Those aren't there.

Svetlana Sandoval: I do. I mostly share like on my Instagram about like me exploring my heritage through food and stuff. That's my primary platform. And I'm @mynameisstill_Svetlana. And then I will also leave you my email address to put in the show notes.

Haley Radke: Okay. Awesome. Thank you.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah. Thank you.

Haley Radke: It's been so good getting to know you today. I've really enjoyed.

Svetlana Sandoval: Yeah, no, it's absolutely been an honor. Thank you so much. I am just honored to be your first Russian adoptee. So thank you for having me.

Haley Radke: Thank you.

Thank you so much for hanging with us today. I really loved my conversation with Svetlana and I actually follow her on [00:49:00] Instagram. I found a lot of amazing, interesting adoptees on Instagram. So if you want to follow along with what's happening with Adoptees On and any new show news, we will post that on Instagram.

You can find us @adopteeson and if you know another adoptee, perhaps one that is also from Russia, would you consider sharing this episode with them? They'll probably find it super helpful. And thank you so much for listening and bearing with my voice and my little pup noises in the background.

Thank you for listening. Let's talk again very [00:50:00] soon.