Take a look at this. I was asked to do an interview with The Mail on Sunday, and though slightly suspicious of their angle at first I was really pleased with the outcome. I believe it's important to speak out about positive and successful stories, not just of adoption, but of gay parents.
I'd love to know what you think.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2193675/Dont-worry-little-Zachary-Elton-We-gay-parents-like-children-fine.html#
Sunday, 26 August 2012
Monday, 21 May 2012
They're moving in!
On one of our frequent visits to our local
park recently I saw a friend with her newly adopted two-year-old little boy. He
had been living with her for just 9 days when I saw them and I recognised the
look on her face all too well. That, ‘oh my goodness, what have I done and how
do I handle this?’ kind of look. One that I pulled off everyday for about 4
months when our children moved in.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s absolutely brilliant,
but it just such a shock. Friends that have had birth babies go into a similar
shock where they can’t leave the house or see anyone for the first few weeks
because they can’t believe what they’ve got in their hands and how dependent it
is upon them. It’s the same when you adopt, only for many of us they are
walking, talking little things that you’re just not used to having around.
The first couple of weeks when our two moved
in my partner and I used to argue over who would go to the shop to get milk
just so we could have 15 minutes to ourselves and not have any responsibility
for that short, sweet walk to the Co-op. I even remember sitting in a Frankie
and Benny’s (somewhere we would never have gone B.C. – Before Children) and
looking over at a couple of teenagers on a date envying their freedom to please
themselves. We literally walked around in the hazy smog of shock for weeks. It
lifted slightly when they started school but came back around 3.15 every day.
Nothing can prepare you for the day your
children move in. Nothing. It’s exciting, it’s frightening, it’s exhausting and
it’s forever. The first night ours spent here in their new home after we put
them to bed we went to watch the new series of The Apprentice. It was a Wednesday
night. We laughed at the bunch of buffoons on the show and tried to guess who
would win and it felt like any other normal night until we stared at each other
and burst out laughing because we remembered we had two little children asleep
upstairs. We crept up to take a look at them while they were sleeping and it
was just like a John Lewis advert, if the bedrooms in John Lewis ads had toys
all over the floor.
The next morning there was a tap on the bedroom
door just before 6am. Our son was up and he wanted to chat and play. And so it
began. And so it goes on to this day. The shock has gone. The arguments about
who gets out of the house are long gone and the envy of the carefree teenagers
has never reared its spotty head again. We’re okay now, well, more than okay
actually but it does take time to adjust. I often tell new adoptive parents at
matching panel about how it might feel when they move in, but I know they’re
not really listening. Their eyes are glistening and they just want their family
to hurry up and come together. I was the same. See, it’s impossible to prepare
because you just want your children to be under your roof, and quite right too.
It’s all part of the wonderfully bumpy ride that is modern adoption and there’s
no use telling them. They’ll soon find out for themselves.
Monday, 7 May 2012
Don’t listen to the Daily Fail
This blog is being typed with hot and angry
hands. Not because my kids have poured my favourite perfume down the sink or
cleaned our new car with rocks, it’s because I have just read an article on
adoption in the Daily Mail. I am furious. Have you read this tripe? http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2140586/Scandal-babies-parents-wont-adopt-theyre-called-Chrystal-Chardonnay.html
You see, what if you were/are a prospective
adopter, someone who has struggled with fertility perhaps or is simply thinking
about it as a way to create your family, this article could stop you in your
tracks. I’m furious because it’s so bloody inaccurate! Local authorities and
agencies do sometimes have their own ways of working and can be mildly
different from each other but they all have to adhere to the same guidelines
and I think I understand enough about it to be able to rant in this blog.
I am an adoption panel member for a local
authority and have been for two years. I read those very heavy yellow pages
sets of papers and help the panel come to a decision every month. If a child
with an unusual or highly recognisable name comes up then sometimes we actively
recommend they consider a change to protect the child’s identity. If you’re
talking about a baby, you can introduce a new name gently and they will become
used to it. Obviously get a 4 year old with a tricky name then it needs more consideration
but you are adopting a person, a child, not a name that will embarrass you when
you enrol them at baby yoga. The article was so unashamedly aimed at the middle
classes it was thoroughly insulting to many who have considered adoption or
have adopted. Your children’s friends don’t have to be called William and
Henry!
This was badly researched, highly
sensationalist, wholly inaccurate and actually damaging. The girl called
Chardonnay they talked about in the article is, in my opinion, very likely to
be fine and will find a loving family who will give her a tremendous life. They
are playing us, the readers. Pulling our heartstrings and trying to get us to
think the whole process is in ruins and best avoided. Well I can tell you it is
not.
If you want to do you have to go for it. The
process is nothing like as bad as they say it is. Read my previous blogs to
find out what I think about that. As for letterbox contact, well, I don’t like
it and don’t agree it’s beneficial for any party but still, their view is
wrong. Children never get to write directly to their parents. Ever. It’s like
prison mail and gets checked before being passed on. The Daily Mail is putting
frighteners on people.
There. I said it. I said it quickly and with
a hot head. This might not be my finest blog but it is one of the most
passionate. Now I’m going to watch a DVD with my beautiful children and try and
forget all about the Daily Mail. You should too.
Monday, 12 March 2012
The Trappings of Success
I just this minute got home after going to a book signing by Lisa Faulkner, a regular re-tweeter of my blog and an adoptive mum. We chatted (very briefly) about how we need more positive stories out there about adoption. My blogs are always overwhelmingly positive, but that's because they reflect my experience from the approval process down to the children we now have. I want my blog to be honest, too, because it's not all plain sailing. Going from being a carefree couple with no responsibilities to being mums of two in a matter of days knocked us for six. So this blog is about how a trapped finger helped our little girl, who didn't like me very much, see me as her mummy.
One of the scariest aspects of adoption is worrying if your children will like you, never mind love you. If you've read any of my other blog posts you'll know that our love for each other as a family is now overwhelmingly strong. But it wasn't always so. We have a boy and a girl and whilst in foster care our son was the one social workers had concerns over. He was in therapy and displayed some fairly bad behaviour. Our girl was happy, attached to her carers and a seemingly easy child. All the work pre-placement was around how our son would cope with adoption and how we would cope with him. Well, from day one that boy fitted right in. It's like the tension and anxiety he was carrying around with him just lifted from his shoulders. He was warm, funny, loving and happy to be loved by us. We felt very attached to each other fairly quickly and surprised everyone, especially the professionals. Our happy little girl, however, was having a more difficult time.
One of the scariest aspects of adoption is worrying if your children will like you, never mind love you. If you've read any of my other blog posts you'll know that our love for each other as a family is now overwhelmingly strong. But it wasn't always so. We have a boy and a girl and whilst in foster care our son was the one social workers had concerns over. He was in therapy and displayed some fairly bad behaviour. Our girl was happy, attached to her carers and a seemingly easy child. All the work pre-placement was around how our son would cope with adoption and how we would cope with him. Well, from day one that boy fitted right in. It's like the tension and anxiety he was carrying around with him just lifted from his shoulders. He was warm, funny, loving and happy to be loved by us. We felt very attached to each other fairly quickly and surprised everyone, especially the professionals. Our happy little girl, however, was having a more difficult time.
She loved her foster home and had been there for 3 years, more or less. She was too young to understand why she was leaving this happy home. Her tears in the car on the day she came to live with us still tug at my heart when I think about it. She developed a nasty case of shingles from the stress of it all and we spent many hours at the doctors and the hospital. All the while our son was getting stuck in at school, making friends and happily forming a secure attachment to us both. Our girl was really struggling with me. I’m the main carer and took a year off on adoption leave so it was me that had to say no to things. She found this very hard. One day she looked me in the eye as she threw a finger puppet we were making on the floor. I asked her to pick it up. 'No', she said. I asked her if she would pick it up if her foster mum asked her and she said yes, I would. I had to go to the sink and look out the window because I was so close to tears. She would push me away at bedtime and wipe off any kiss I gave her. She was a tough nut to crack but I had to persevere.
Then one day, something terrible happened and it changed everything. It was Halloween. Our boy was a reluctant vampire and our girl was the cutest witch with the greenest face you’ll ever see. We were on our way to a party when I closed the front door behind me. Our girl just stood still with her hand on the doorframe, not making a sound. I told her to come along and get in the car but her face looked so pained. That’s when I saw that the entire tip of her finger was shut in the front door, which was now locked. I panicked as I tried to get the keys and dropped them on the floor. Eventually, with shaky hands I opened the door and her finger was bright white and flat as a pancake. After the initial silence of shock she now began to scream with all her might. I was terrified. What had I done? This might sound dramatic for a trapped finger but as we were struggling to get on I thought this was going to make things worse.
I called another mum who was also going to the party and she offered to take our son while I took our girl to the walk in centre to see if it needed treatment. Thankfully, they said it would just be sore but nothing was broken and she would be fine with a spoonful or two of the pink stuff. We went home, the two of us, and she cried and cried on my knee. I held her so tightly for an hour or more until she felt calmer and it had stopped hurting and just as I asked her if she would still like to go the party, it was as if something somewhere just clicked. Between us, it just clicked. Even though I was the meanie who trapped her finger I was also the one who took her to see a nurse, hugged her and stayed with her until she felt better. I can remember the exact moment when she looked at me as if to say, ‘Okay. You’re all right. You can be my mum.’ We shared a smile and went to the party. She stuck close by me until the party games started and even then she kept checking I was still there. It felt brilliant.
So, is this a positive story? I think so. It certainly had a happy ending. I wouldn’t recommend causing your children any sort of harm to get them to love you but that trapped finger changed everything for us. I’m also a lot more careful when I go out the door these days.
As for Lisa Faulkner, she does wonders for the image of adoption by speaking about it in her new book as well as in interviews. She’s right. Positive stories about people’s experiences are so important for people thinking about going through adoption. I think it’s fantastic that someone in the public eye is so open about their own experiences. Her book’s pretty marvellous, too.
You can buy it here, if you like: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Recipes-My-Mother-Daughter/dp/0857206168/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1331563398&sr=1-1
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
Letterbox contact
The name of my blog is ‘positive about
adoption’. That’s because I feel extremely positive about the process and about
my adopted family. It’s also because I don’t think there are enough positive
stories out there and there are two many doom-laden Daily Mail articles putting
people off. However, recently a reader through Twitter asked me to write about
letterbox contact. I explained to her I thought I would find it too hard to
write about it. Her comment back was that if we found it hard it would give a
balanced view of adoption. This is a totally fair comment, but it’s more
complicated than that.
You’ll notice I never mention the name of my
partner and certainly never the names or any photographs of our children. I
don’t mention their ages or anything about where we live or the places we go.
Clearly, their safety and happiness is the most important thing in the world to
me. I write my blog because I enjoy writing. I enjoy sharing our stories in a
humourous way and I love the feedback I get from people who feel it has helped
them in some way. It sort of gives you permission to wrestle with your other
half (or yourself) on the day of panel.
This is why I have to be extremely careful
writing about letterbox contact. I don’t want to reveal any details about their
birth family for everyone’s sake. It’s too personal. With that in mind I have
given it lots of thought and this is what I have to say. I don’t like it. I
realise it is part of modern adoption and it will help us in the future because
there is no great secret or story for them to discover. But every time we get
the letters we are reminded of the other family. And it hurts a bit. We can’t
help it. They are our children now and this is our family.
When we get the letters we always take a week
or two to absorb them and find the right time to read them to the children. We
are always mindful of what they’ve got coming up. For example, both kids have a
sleepover arranged this weekend so we will wait until they are home again and
not send them off to their friend’s houses with these thoughts swimming through
their heads. We all sit together and I tend to be the one who reads them out. I
try to read them with enthusiasm and make them sound light and uplifting. They
sit quietly listening and when I’ve finished they slink off to their rooms to
play.
There is almost always a change in their
behaviour in the week or so after reading the letters. Sometimes they are extra
clingy and loving, almost reassuring themselves and us. Sometimes we get bad behaviour.
Obviously we prefer the former but we’re realistic enough to know we might have
to deal with the latter. We get questions, which we always answer as honestly
as we can.
I think if you’re about to adopt, thinking
about it or have adopted then letterbox contact is more than likely going to be
apart of that. Don’t let it stop you. You might find you feel differently about
it. We’re all individuals and deal with things in our own way. If you have any
questions talk to your social worker about it. I had a long telephone chat with
ours not long ago because I was worried about the content of one of the
letters. I will call them again in the future if anything worries me.
Letterbox contact never stops us feeling that
adopting our two children is the best thing we ever did. It is what it is and
we have to deal with it. It just feels uncomfortable and a bit difficult for a
few weeks of the year. It’s still completely bloody worth it.
Saturday, 18 February 2012
A watched phone…
We all get big news from time to time. If you
get the job you’ve always wanted or a house sale goes through or you get
together with the man or woman of your dreams, things that make you feel
brilliant. But I don’t think there is anything in this world that feels as incredible
as knowing you’re going to have children. And when you’re approved adopters
that phone call could come at any time. There’s no way of knowing when it will
be and it’s not like you can eat a bowl of chillies to speed it up.
When you’re waiting for that call you can
drive yourself a little bit crazy. You know something major is going to happen
in your life but you have no idea when. You can still enjoy hung over lie-ins
at the weekend and plan holidays without giving a hoot about term times, but
every so often you remember this won’t last. It’s a time I look back on with a
certain fondness, even though in reality I was probably unbearable to be
around.
You see, I’m a big communicator. Whether it’s
Facebook, Twitter, texting, blogging, emailing or good old-fashioned talking to
someone face-to-face, I like to stay in touch and know the news. Waiting for
this phone call from our social worker was beginning to make me turn purple.
Every time my mobile rang with an unknown number I practically jumped on it. We
had been approved for 3 months and were beginning to get fed up of sleeping in and
pleasing ourselves. Then one day, it rang.
My partner was in London with work and I was
at my desk. It was a normal day. The mobile went. I jumped up and ran into the
corridor to answer it. It was our lovely social worker. She asked if I was free
to talk and I could feel my palms going sweaty. She said, ‘You’ve been
matched’. I felt sick. She told me all about these two little children, a boy
and a girl, and said she would come round next week with more information and
their photographs. Naturally, the first thing I did was call my other half.
Voicemail. I tried again. Voicemail. And again. Voicemail. I shook my phone in
frustration. This was killing me. I couldn’t tell another soul in the world
what I knew before telling her and this was the biggest news of my life.
Sitting back at my desk I tried to
concentrate on writing a piece about sustainable energy for a construction magazine.
As if. I was chewing my lips, sweating, sitting on my hands, banging my head on
the desk and being very melodramatic. Why couldn’t I get hold of her? A friend
asked me if I was okay but all I could do was nod my head with wild eyes. This
was very unlike me. Then my phone rang and it was her. My heart felt like it was
going to explode.
This time I went outside in the bright
sunshine and I finally told her our news. She had been on a broken down tube
for half an hour and came out to about 24 missed calls. We talked all about it
and I told her what little I knew. We kept saying their names over and over
again. I couldn’t believe she was in London and we couldn’t just meet up and
talk even more about it. How could I go back to writing a piece on solar panels
now? At least I was able to tell other people. I called my mum, our best
friends and other adopters who had also been matched. Then I ran in and told my
colleagues the news as well. My boss might have wanted me to spend a bit more time
doing what I was paid for and less time repeating myself to anyone who would
listen but he didn’t let it show. When my other half got home we opened a
bottle of champagne and started imagining what our lives would be like.
As I write the girl is drawing a picture of
her family on her easel and the boy is out at one of the many parties they get
invited to. I’m sat here trying to think of something witty to round off this
blog, but I can’t so I’ll go for sentimental instead. Somehow, some way, we
were matched with the most brilliant children imaginable. It’s not always easy,
I do have the odd ‘fisher-wife’ moment trying to get them out the door, but the
social workers got this match absolutely right. I never did go back to my job
after taking adoption leave, but I was probably a rubbish employee anyway
because I never stopped staring at my phone for those last few months.
Wednesday, 8 February 2012
The Pressure of Panel
There is one word all prospective adopters
fear, not triplets, ‘panel’. If you want to become an approved adoptive parent
in the UK you have to go in front of a panel. It’s part of the process and one
your social workers talk to you about at almost every home visit. It begins to
become the event that your entire life hinges on. ‘Panel need to see that
you’ve thought of this’, ‘Panel will need an explanation for that’. It’s hands
down the most dreaded part of the process. Until the kids move in, of course.
We had the panel date circled on our calendar
for weeks. Just looking at it made my tummy go funny. I was excited. I was
ready for it. This felt like the final hurdle (until you discover there are a
few more once you get matched). The morning of our panel finally came around
and things did not go to plan. My co-mummy works at a law firm and a massive, international
crisis had occurred the day before. She was in the office until 5am on the day
of panel. She didn’t sleep because she was working like crazy and I couldn’t
sleep because I was going crazy. When she finally got home I left her to sleep
for as long as I could. Panel was at 11am.
Previously a social worker friend of ours had
given us some advice. She told my partner not to wear a work suit because they
will think she is too corporate and too committed to her job. Ha. How could we
admit she had worked through the night the day before? To clear our heads we
took the dog for a walk in the local fields and I mentioned I didn’t think she
should wear a suit. Well. I don’t remember lighting a touch paper but something
just snapped in both of us. We actually ended up shouting at each other and
wrestling on a rugby pitch an hour before we had to show ourselves to be
respectable prospective parents. And it was all over what to wear. This was the
biggest row we had ever had, before or since. It was ridiculous and we both
knew it.
Soon our shouts turned to sniggers and we
both laughed at just how pathetic all of this was. We ran back home to get
ready, me in a pair of trousers and a shirt, her in a nice black suit. And you
know what? We were approved. The whole panel agreed we would be suitable
parents and we drove away feeling as close to euphoric as you can get without
assistance. We went for lunch to celebrate and were greeted with a bottle of
champagne courtesy of some gorgeous work colleagues. It was a wonderful
feeling. We were expecting children but we could still guzzle the champagne.
Perfect!
You have to remember that if you’re at panel, you’re doing well. You
got that far. Your social worker and their managers don’t put you up for panel
until they know you and your Form F is ready. My advice to all prospective
adopters is to try not to fear panel. I’m a panel member myself now and I
always make sure I give adopters a knowing and supportive smile when they come
in. There is something utterly nerve wrecking about sitting in front of that
many people and you can’t change that. But just know they want you to do well.
You will be asked a few questions but they are questions you will be able to
answer, because they’re about you.
Oh, and don’t worry about what to wear. Just
feel comfortable in what you have on and you’ll be fine. As for my co-mummy and
me, she is still the main breadwinner in our house but she makes plenty of time
for our children and has never had to work that hard since. Which is a good job
too, otherwise we might have had to go for round two.
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