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The Ugly Side of the Multi-Billion Dollar Adoption Business
They Won't Be There for You: Friends is Making Enemies
Jessica DelBalzo
"She's a mother without a baby," Chandler says, "Please."
While the image of a would-be adopter begging an expectant mother
to relinquish her child is familiar to my eyes, it is not
something that should be portrayed as acceptable on a well-loved
television program like "Friends." In fact, I would go so far as
to say that the media should refrain from ever showing the act of
adoption in a positive light.
Normally, I abhor the idea of censorship. I wouldn't think of
turning off the television because of sexuality or strong
language, nor would I hide these things from my children. Sex is
a very natural, necessary part of life, and words are words and
nothing more. Yet unnaturally happy adoption stories will not be
tolerated in my home: they are too dangerous.
As an individual who has spent the past eight years researching
adoption, working side by side with adopted adults and parents who
have surrendered their children, I know that the media's portrayal
of adoption is not the reality for thousands of separated
families.
How many television shows have you seen lately in which a
well-loved character surrenders her child for adoption? I would
dare say none. Yet several popular shows currently have
storylines featuring happy adopters and characters planning to
adopt; "Friends," "Seventh Heaven" and "Sex and the City" to name
a few. Movies are equally at fault for neglecting to show the
pain of adoption from the perspective of an exiled mother or
father, though children's shows like "The Country Bears" and
"Stuart Little" certainly promote what an adopted friend of mine
refers to as, "the myth of the grateful adoptee." What a
demeaning thing to show an adopted child, who is quite possibly
feeling anything but thankful to have been separated from his or
her natural family!
Even non-fiction media outlets neglect the dark side of adoption,
while eagerly portraying happy adopters. Stories of satisfied
customers who traveled overseas to adopt can be found in
newspapers and on television with relative ease; all depicting the
adopters as saviors who rescued a needy child. Never do we hear
about the heartache experienced by the true mothers and fathers
who are given little choice but to surrender their children to the
false promise of a "better life" in America. And it is only
rarely that we hear from the adopted adults who were removed from
their homelands as infants but later return in a desperate search
to find their families and their own selves. It isn't difficult
to find mothers, fathers and adoptees who are willing to share
their gritty-but-true adoption stories, but it is near impossible
to find a media outlet willing to make their stories public.
Unfortunately, the majority of Americans have fallen under the
spell of the industry, treating adoption as though it were a
sacred cow not to be questioned.
A study conducted by Market-Data Enterprises discovered that the
business of adoption brings in more than $1.4 billion each year.
That's easily enough to fund massive advertising campaigns,
influencing public opinion and promoting adoption as the most
"loving gift" a young, single, or poor expectant mother can give
to her child. For example, the local radio station that is most
popular with the teen and young adult crowd in my area is
currently running advertisements for two large adoption agencies.
Both spots insinuate that a young, single mother cannot possibly
measure up to an older, married couple, and both clearly state
that adoption is loving and unselfish.
Though high-profile adoption agencies advertise their services
under the guise of helping a woman in distress, they neglect to
mention that their supposed assistance will leave both the woman
and her child traumatized in exile.
Despite the existence of myriad empirical and anecdotal evidence
showing the harmful effects of adoption on surrendering mothers
and their lost children, the industry continues to thrive.
Because the media is so tightly controlled by pro-adoption special
interests, it takes careful research to discover that adoptees are
statistically more likely than their non-adopted counterparts to
develop psychological disorders requiring residential treatment.
Adopted children are also more likely to be convicted of juvenile
felonies, and according to the Center for Adoptive Families, 20%
of adolescents in drug rehabilitation and residential substance
abuse treatment programs are adopted. That last statistic would
be meaningless if adoptees made up 20 or even 15% of the
population, but the government estimates that figure at only 2-3%.
Joe Soll, an adopted adult with more than 20 years of experience
counseling adoptees and natural parents, writes,
"You may encounter many adopted people along the way who will tell
you that being surrendered for adoption hasn't affected them at
all. The adopted individuals might even say they are glad they
were ‘given up.' This is denial of the highest order. Just as it
is impossible for a mother to lose her baby and not be severely
wounded, it is impossible for a baby to lose its mother and not be
severely wounded."
The disproportionately high number of adoptees who suffer from
attachment disorder, depression, and other psychological problems
are swept under the rug, as are their devastated mothers. As long
as infertile couples are encouraged to disguise their sterility by
claiming another family's child as their own, adoption workers
will stop at nothing to increase the supply of adoptable infants.
In recent years, industry tactics have been expanded to include
the false promise of open adoption in addition to the arsenal of
shame, guilt, and misinformation that have been used in the past
to coerce expectant mothers into surrendering their children. In
open adoption situations, mothers are offered contact with their
babies' adopters and sometimes contact with their children
directly in exchange for relinquishment.
Although the concept is very pretty in theory, open adoption
agreements are not enforceable in most states, and in the few
legally open states, adopters are only obligated to pay a fine
should they decide to close the adoption and sever contact with
the adoptee's natural family. My years in the field have taught
me that many adopters promise openness only to disappear once the
adoption has been finalized, having had no intention of following
through in the first place or having been scared off by the
obvious connection between mother and child.
Rather than improving on a terribly flawed institution, the open
adoption trend has paved the way for expectant parents to endure
an even greater load of guilt than they would normally encounter
from the average adoption worker or agency. One look at the "Dear
'Birth'Mother Letters" kept on file at most adoption agencies (and
their affiliated websites) would convince even the most loving,
stable parents that they were inadequate.
Further complicating the situation are real-life encounters that
mirror the scene on "Friends," a would-be adoptive couple
imploring an expectant mother to consider their feelings when
deciding whether or not she will surrender her infant. What an
undue burden to place on a woman who is already faced with the
emotional roller coaster of pregnancy, the significant lack of
support that has led her to adoption in the first place, and the
intense feelings of inadequacy that have been put upon her by the
adoption "professionals" who seek to profit from her loss.
Do we Americans really believe that fertile young women owe their
children to infertile strangers? Is this the world we want to
leave behind for our daughters?
I want better for my daughter. Whether she becomes pregnant at 16
or 36, I never want her to wonder if she is selfish for keeping
her baby; the fact that mothers are irreplaceable in the eyes of
their children should be well imbedded in her mind. She will be
well on her way to adulthood before I allow her to see this final
season of "Friends" and other similarly disturbing portrayals of
adoption in the media. A censor I am not, but as her mother I
must protect her from exploitation, even when those seeking to
exploit her have established themselves as respectable Americans.
Though we are loathe to admit it, media has the incredible power
to shape our thoughts and opinions. Styles and trends are easily
influenced by magazines, movie stars and other pop culture icons,
and even issues like adoption and family cannot be fully examined
without acknowledging the impact of the media. Instead of bowing
to the whims of the adoption industry, newspapers, television
shows, radio stations and movie producers could do tremendous good
for our nation's families by depicting adoption the way it is
experienced by separated mothers, fathers and children. Better
yet, let us begin a new trend: support for all parents regardless
of their age, race or marital status. That's a media message the
world needs to receive!
(Originally published by Clamor Magazine)
Jessica DelBalzo
donotadopt@aol.com I am the 25 year old mother of a two
year old, living and working in Flemington, NJ. I have been
involved in the anti-adoption movement for more than eight years,
and I have been writing as a freelancer for six of those years.
My work has been published in The Courier News, Clamor, The Tampa
Tribune, and online.
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