Adoption Unfiltered
Revelations from Adoptees, Birth Parents, Adoptive Parents, and Allies
Abstract
Reveals the candid thoughts and feelings of those most directly involved in adoptions: adoptees, adoptive parents, and birth parents.
Adoption Unfiltered authors Sara Easterly (adoptee), Kelsey Vander Vliet Ranyard (birth parent), and Lori Holden (adoptive parent) interview dozens of adoptees, birth parents, adoptive parents, social workers, therapists, and other allies—all sharing candidly about the challenges in adoption. While finding common ground in the sometimes-contentious space of adoption may seem like a lofty goal, it reveals the authors’ optimistic aim: working together with truth and transparency to move toward healing.
Healing isn’t possible, though, without first uncovering the hurts—starting with adoption’s central players: adoptees, who are so often in pain, suffering from what the latest brain science validates as the long-term emotional effects of separation trauma. By encouraging others to vulnerably share their stories, the authors discover that adoptees aren’t the only ones in the adoption constellation who are hurting. Birth parents regularly shut down after being shut out by adoptive parents. Adoptive parents often struggle with unique parenting challenges and hidden insecurity, feeling the need to hide the fact that they are not the Super Parents they led the agency to believe they would be. Across the industry as a whole, misinformed and even unethical practices abound.
Adoption Unfiltered models the importance of adults in adoption working together in the spirit of curiosity and empathy—to better support adoptees and their first and adoptive families.
Schlagworte
Adoption Amy Seek Joyce Maguire Pavao adopted child psychology adopted children adopted family adoptee adopting parents adoption anxiety adoption challenges adoption culture adoption depression adoption triad adoptive parent birth family birth mother birth parent child rearing childhood trauma children healing children trauma closed adoption foster care foster care children infant development multiethnic adoption multiracial adoption open adoption parenting parenting insecurity teenage adoption- i–xiv Preface i–xiv
- 1–16 Introduction 1–16
- 219–258 PART IV HEALING AND HOPE 219–258
- 259–262 Acknowledgments 259–262
- 263–266 Resources 263–266
- 267–286 Notes 267–286
- 287–298 Bibliography 287–298
- 299–310 Index 299–310
- 311–312 About the Authors 311–312