<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" >

<channel><title><![CDATA[WHAT IS YOUR STORY? - Blog]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog]]></link><description><![CDATA[Blog]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 21:11:10 -0400</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Unexpected]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/unexpected]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/unexpected#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 14:30:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/unexpected</guid><description><![CDATA[Hello everyone, welcome back to Blogville. Today I am sipping on an English Breakfast tea as I write to you. It&rsquo;s funny how I will just be sitting somewhere, minding my own business, when a random thought will enter my mind. For example, I was sitting in the living room this morning when suddenly I wondered, &lsquo;Was I more unexpected than unwanted by my birth mother?&rdquo;&nbsp;Clearly, in the late 1950&rsquo;s unwed women did not typically plan to become pregnant. It follows then, tha [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">Hello everyone, welcome back to Blogville. Today I am sipping on an English Breakfast tea as I write to you. It&rsquo;s funny how I will just be sitting somewhere, minding my own business, when a random thought will enter my mind. For example, I was sitting in the living room this morning when suddenly I wondered, &lsquo;Was I more unexpected than unwanted by my birth mother?&rdquo;&nbsp;<br /><br />Clearly, in the late 1950&rsquo;s unwed women did not typically plan to become pregnant. It follows then, that I was definitely unexpected. However, my mom and dad&rsquo;s infertility was also definitely unexpected. Both unexpected events brought some form of grief. I can only assume that my birth mother must have grieved having to go through a second pregnancy and relinquishment of a baby, while I know for a fact that my parents grieved their inability to create a baby and carry it to term. Both scenarios resulted in unexpected involvements with the adoption system.&nbsp;<br /><br />I am also quite sure that my birth mother did not expect to find herself pregnant &lsquo;out of wedlock&rsquo; for a second time in her young life. I doubt that she expected to find herself subsequently admitted to a home for unwed mothers to be hidden away awaiting my birth. She did not find herself unexpectedly abandoned by my birth father, it was her choice not to tell him of the pregnancy.&nbsp;<br /><br />My birth father subsequently received an unexpected call about my existence about 40 years after he had had a brief relationship with my birth mother. Quite unexpectedly, my birth father told the government worker who had contacted him that he was in agreement to speak with me. Now THAT was unexpected. I was pretty sure he would hear the worker out and then deny ever having known my birth mother.<br /><br />My birth father and his work colleagues of the time had a little tradition. The single men would lend their names to the married men for their &lsquo;romantic trysts&rsquo; when working in small communities. As he had misunderstood where I had been conceived he agreed to speak with me to help figure out who my birth father was. At one point in our conversation it occurred to him that it was actually him who had dated my birth mother. Clearly, that was an unexpected realization. He immediately and wholeheartedly accepted me as his birth child, an act I never expected.&nbsp;<br /><br />Acceptance by my birth father was never something I expected when I reached adulthood; but then, being rejected as an adult by my birth mother was also quite a surprise. I think I somewhat understood her decision to relinquish her rights to parent me when I was an infant, but I don&rsquo;t think I ever really understood her not wanting to meet me when we were both adults. Her rejection of me a second time was truly unexpected.<br /><br />I grew up knowing that my birth mother had had another baby before me. My mom was under the impression that my birth mother had given birth to a little boy and that he had been kept by the birth family who acted as though he had been born to my birth mother&rsquo;s own parents. I believed my birth brother was being raised as my &lsquo;uncle&rsquo; in my maternal family of origin. Therefore, when the adoption disclosure laws changed somewhere around 1989 I started looking for my older 1/2 brother something unexpected happened.&nbsp;<br /><br />In 1990 I received a call from a government worker letting me know that my birth mother had actually given birth to a baby girl in1955 and that baby girl was also placed on adoption. Well, that was really an unexpected surprise. Apparently the birth mother and her own mother had given birth fairly close to each other; my birth grandmother had actually had a baby boy, while my birth mother gave birth to a baby girl in close proximity to each other.&nbsp;<br /><br />When I told her about it, my mom was surprised to learn that I had a birth 1/2 sister and not a 1/2 brother. This news was completely unexpected. My birth 1/2 sister and I were born almost to the day three years apart. Did I mention that her name is also Lynne (but spelled with an &lsquo;e&rsquo;)? That was also unexpected.<br /><br />Again, as the adoption laws changed, Lynne and I gained the right to have our birth mother contacted on our behalf. Independent of each other, Lynne and I spoke with the government worker assigned to us and let her know of our wish to be in contact with our birth mother. Lynne and I had both indicated that we would be willing to meet her privately and not to interfere with her relationship with her adult children. Many birth mothers are afraid of what their &lsquo;kept&rsquo; children will think of them when they learn about their mothers&rsquo; having had babies before them. Despite our assurances, our birth mother declined to meet us; that was unexpected.&nbsp;<br /><br />At our request, she did provide a photograph of herself around the age she was when she had given birth to us, and she gave the worker a medical history update for us. Together with these things she also included a generic greeting card indicating that she cared about us; that was unexpected.&nbsp;<br /><br />In my experience, many children who have been adopted make up fantasy birth parents. This is especially true of children who were not provided with much, if any, social history information.&nbsp;<br /><br />There is a small part of me that understands adoptive parents making up fantasy stories for their children in the sad belief that this would help their child or children. Therefore, is it so unexpected that children create visions of perfect birth parents who had no choice but to relinquish their parental rights? Often misinformation caused (or causes) a false perception of their birth story, rendering them inconsolable when they learn their unexpected birth story truths. I firmly believe that age-appropriate, true birth history information sharing will actually protect your child. &nbsp;<br /><br />Adoption is very different today, thankfully, but there are many shameful historical &lsquo;adoption&rsquo; acts such as the 60s Scoop; Irish Famine Orphans; and the American Orphan Trains (to name a few). Learning how these &lsquo;orphans&rsquo; were put up on platforms where they could be poked and prodded like cattle was painful for me as an adopted person; as was the fact that siblings were usually separated, never to see each other again. As awful as it was to learn about them, the fact that these orphan trains actually existed until the1920s was unexpected.&nbsp;<br /><br />So, all this to say that I firmly believe that a child&rsquo;s actual birth history should never be made up. Details can be mitigated age-appropriately but the basic story should be true. If you tell your child their whole life that their birth parents sought an adoption plan because they were a young college couple who found themselves pregnant but not ready to be parents, you have set them all up. Imagine how unexpected their true story might be when your child learns it?&nbsp;<br /><br />When parents try to protect their adopted children like this, it often causes their children to wonder about other &lsquo;truths&rsquo; you have told them over their lifetimes so far. Was it the truth when you said they were smart, or funny, or that you loved them? Their adoption truth, (perhaps mitigated age-appropriately) when they learn it, should never have been complete fantasy. That will make their truth completely unexpected.<br /><br />Thank you for reading my blogs. I am likely going to be reducing my posts to monthly instead of bi-weekly as I have taken on a short-term work commitment. When that contract is completed I will decide whether monthly works or if I should resume bi-weekly posts. If any of you have any thoughts on this change, please feel free to reach out to me at ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com&nbsp;</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Where Did I Come From?]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/where-did-i-come-from]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/where-did-i-come-from#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2026 17:58:30 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/where-did-i-come-from</guid><description><![CDATA[My XL orange pekoe tea is hot and soothing as I try to put these words out into the universe. Welcome, and thank you to all of you for always coming back to Blogville to see what I&rsquo;m rambling about!To my birth half-siblings whom I have grown to care about and even to love. Perhaps not the same feelings as the way birth siblings love each other when they have grown up together, but in a way that speaks about being acknowledged and accepting each other as siblings.I am aware of how life circ [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">My XL orange pekoe tea is hot and soothing as I try to put these words out into the universe. Welcome, and thank you to all of you for always coming back to Blogville to see what I&rsquo;m rambling about!</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">To my birth half-siblings whom I have grown to care about and even to love. Perhaps not the same feelings as the way birth siblings love each other when they have grown up together, but in a way that speaks about being acknowledged and accepting each other as siblings.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">I am aware of how life circumstances led to my relinquishment. I accept the decision making at the time was driven by social norms and expectations. At the same time, I live the consequences of my birth parents&rsquo; actions. This blog is about the impact of where I came from impacts on me. (I understand if my birth siblings wish to stop reading at this point.)</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">After a couple of false starts, I found love in the last foster family I lived with before I was adopted. They loved me for seven months and then had to &lsquo;pass the baton&rsquo; to my mom and dad. We never saw each other again. Well, not until I was searching where I had come from. As a result of my search I found my last foster mom before I moved on to adoption. We reunited when I was in my 60s and she in her 80s. Sadly my foster dad had already passed on.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Before I knew love, I knew abandonment and loss. Not knowing where I came from left a mark. That kind of mark may be carried, consciously or unconsciously, by that abandoned infant, child, or youth throughout their lives. It affects relationships in a big way.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">I found love in my adoptive family. My adoptive parents both loved me, and I loved them until their last breaths. I have made peace with the fact that my birth parents were able to move on and find love with new partners.I know that their kept children loved our birth parents until they took their last breaths.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">I feel there is a &lsquo;grown up me&rsquo; reaction and a &lsquo;child me&rsquo; reaction to how I perceive rejection in general, I believe driven by where I came from. There are days when I decide to call a friend and if they don&rsquo;t answer I immediately wonder if they are screening their calls, watching for my phone number specifically.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Other times when I suggest a plan and my friends are &lsquo;not available&rsquo; (that is legitimately how I feel- &lsquo;not available&rsquo; in air quotes) I believe that they just do not want to spend time with me because I was not good enough to have been kept.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Sadly, I sometimes feel this way with my adult children too, not worthy, except with them there is a caveat: that I raised them lol. I&rsquo;ve also learned a trick with my kids, I simply offer to watch my grandchildren or my grand-dog! I know they will likely feel obligated to visit a little when they pick up! (I&rsquo;m kidding, I love spending time with my grandkids and even the grand-dog.)</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">I find that I won&rsquo;t ask twice if a plan changes or my phone call goes unanswered. I think whomever I was making plans with probably didn&rsquo;t really want to go with me or hear from me in the first place. I default to thinking that after all, my first parents didn&rsquo;t want me either. There is an insecurity in my heart that will never go away because of where I came from.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">When I hear from a friend or one of my adult kids that they went with another friend or one of their siblings to do something I liked without me, or went somewhere I wanted to go without me, I am not surprised that I was left out, but I feel left out anyway. Any (perceived) abandonment, though familiar to me, is still so emotionally painful.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Interestingly, as I am writing this blog, one of my birth sisters posted some old (birth) family photos! There are no words to describe how left out I feel, while at the same time how curious I feel as I search faces for any familiarity! When I find it, when I see that I look a little like that person, or that I&rsquo;m built a bit like that person, I feel both grateful and lost at the same time.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">I share all of this as my way of trying to help adoptees and their families navigate and maybe even mitigate some of the trauma. If you have pictures of your child&rsquo;s birth family, share them from the beginning, there is no magic age for your child to see who they might look like, or where they came from. If you have stories or information about your child&rsquo;s birth family, share it when it is developmentally appropriate (check with a therapist or professional if you are not sure).</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Your children deserve to know that the need for an adoption plan was about adult choices, not anything that they did or didn&rsquo;t do. They need to know that sometimes people are simply left out of other people&rsquo;s plans and it usually isn&rsquo;t anything they did or didn&rsquo;t do. They need life&rsquo;s rejections to be normalized and not personalized.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">When your adopted child asks questions, the questions are about them, not about their relationship with you, or their love for you. They are trying to understand who they are and why they are different from other kids, the ones kept by their birth parents. If your child used a walker, or had an artificial limb, or was the only one in your family who could sing, or who wore glasses, you would expect questions right? They are not questioning your love for them, they are just trying to understand how they became part of your family, and to understand why they needed a new family.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Who better to explain all of this to them than their REAL parents? Who better to help prepare them for society&rsquo;s questions about their birth parents than their REAL parents?</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">When I was young, my parents might have been better off exploring what I was thinking and feeling about having been adopted, rather than worrying about having the &lsquo;right&rsquo; answers. I simply wanted them to share what they knew about where I had come from. To share my truth. I just wanted to know what my birth story was.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">Thank you for reading my blog. I welcome comments or questions here or via email at&nbsp;</span><a href="mailto:ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com">ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com</a><br /><span style="color:rgb(36, 36, 36)">&lsquo;See&rsquo; you next time!</span></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Dear Birth Parents]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/dear-birth-parents]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/dear-birth-parents#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 10 Mar 2026 14:51:22 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/dear-birth-parents</guid><description><![CDATA[Hello Blogville friends! Welcome back, it is so nice to see you. This morning I am drinking a green tea with lemon. I added a bit of honey in order to sweeten my tea as I write to birth parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and even cousins on behalf of adopted people who are about to turn 18. If you know anyone who fits into any of those categories, please share this blog with them.In Ontario, and several other Canadian provinces, at 18 years of age an adopted person has some rights to &lsquo;s [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">Hello Blogville friends! Welcome back, it is so nice to see you. This morning I am drinking a green tea with lemon. I added a bit of honey in order to sweeten my tea as I write to birth parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and even cousins on behalf of adopted people who are about to turn 18. If you know anyone who fits into any of those categories, please share this blog with them.<br /><br />In Ontario, and several other Canadian provinces, at 18 years of age an adopted person has some rights to &lsquo;sealed&rsquo; file information, and opportunities to seek out birth relatives. I&rsquo;m not sure what the rules are where you live but if you fit any role in the ones I mentioned earlier, you might want to check out what happens when children who were placed for adoption become legal adults; and if you can connect with them.<br /><br />For birth parents, especially birth mothers as they definitely know about their birth children&rsquo;s existence, this is your chance to update your birth child about who you are today. If they are seeking information this is your chance to tell them about who you are now. They are now old enough to be provided file information from when you relinquished your legal right to parent them. I always hope that their adoptive parents have been providing these details as the child was growing up so they &lsquo;know&rsquo; you a little. However, we must remember that the adoptive parents may not have been given adequate information, and sadly, may even have been given some incorrect information that they have innocently shared with your birth child.&nbsp;<br /><br />Even if your birth child has been given some details about you as they were growing up, typically people have changed in 18 years or so. I am pretty sure you are living a different life today than you were back then. I am not sure if you are aware, but you can write an updated letter and submit it to the agency, lawyer, or private practitioner, that handled the adoption. This is where your birth child with start their search if and when they decide to do so. If they do approach the agency, or agent who handled the adoption, they will be provided the original details as well as any updated information you have provided. I only wish that I could only fully express what a gift a letter of update would be for your now adult birth child.&nbsp;<br /><br />From the original file, your birth child would likely have been provided some minimal information (mostly medical history in my experience) about you and maybe even your extended family members. As a birth parent, you might have provided your worker with some idea of the roles your parents and other extended family members played in why you made an adoption plan for your birth child, which would be shared with them in a file disclosure. In your letter, it will be relevant to let your birth child know how birth relatives have coped with your decision (supportive, ignored it, etc.) over the years, and if in fact, they are still living. You are likely able to provide a more complete medical history on the health of your extended family members as at least 18 years have passed since you first provided information to an adoption worker or adoption agency representative.<br /><br />If possible, a further &lsquo;gift&rsquo; would be to provide updated information about the birth father. We all know that sometimes birth mothers did not give any information on the biological father for many reasons. In some cases for example, the pregnancy occurred as a result of an involuntary scenario and you truly could not provide any details about him. Your adult birth child will appreciate knowing that you actually cannot provide any information as opposed to not wanting to provide it. In other scenarios you may wish to continue to protect the identity of the birth father for your own reasons but you have likely kept up with where and what he is doing today, or can find out. Without revealing his identity there may still be some information you can provide such as physical characteristics, any medial information he may have disclosed during your relationship, as well as type of employment, interests, talents, sense of humour and other traits you may have noticed. Perhaps you know if he has had any other children, these would be your birth child&rsquo;s half-siblings. This person is responsible for half of who your shared birth child is. If you are simply not wanting him to know about his adult child, you must think about the fact that you are purposely withholding information from someone who did not ask to be conceived and was then made to lead a life full of unanswered questions.&nbsp;<br /><br />Your birth child will want to know if they have any siblings that you, or their birth father, may have had. Their original social and medical history will have told them of any siblings born prior to them, but then sibling information simply ends at thee time of their birth as a result of the file closure. If your birth child has been aware of the existence of any older birth siblings they will have had some time to prepare and adjust to that idea. When your birth child learns of any birth siblings born to you or their birth father after them, this may be a bigger adjustment. For some it might mean to them that they were left behind and then replaced. They will need time to consider this huge piece of information, and may even seek counselling to work through their feelings. For others, they may seek an adult relationship with siblings recognizing that all of them were &lsquo;innocent&rsquo; in their separation from each other. Some may also have been raised as only children and relish having siblings, or not. The bottom line is that they are siblings, half or full, who share at least one biological parent and a genetic link with each other. In my experience, birth children simply have not thought about their parents having relationships with other people before they created the family they are a part of today. Personally, I have yet to meet a sibling who resents or is threatened by the child placed for adoption.&nbsp;<br /><br />I know that this has been a hard blog to read if you are a birth parent, it has been a hard blog to write as an adopted person. As you know, having read previous blogs, I have met my older half sibling that I was separated from due to adoption practices of the time. I met my birth father and his other children (my paternal half-siblings). My birth mother declined the opportunity to meet with my birth half-sister and I, but following her passing, we met her other children (my maternal half-siblings). My relationships with my birth father before he passed, and with my paternal and maternal birth siblings are nothing short of &lsquo;normal&rsquo;. We get together when we can, we joke and have fun with each other, we dine out together, just like &lsquo;normal&rsquo; siblings might. Some of us are closer with each other than others, just like &lsquo;normal&rsquo; siblings. We can provide each other with medical information, historical and ongoing, to keep each other healthy, just like &lsquo;normal siblings&rsquo; might.&nbsp;<br /><br />As I said at the beginning of this blog, if you cannot bring yourself to put your name out there (where it is a legalized process) then please give your birth child the gift of information. Information that only their birth parent(s) can provide. Write a letter, or letters, to update your birth child, and then find out where you can leave the updated information for them. You likely chose an adoption plan to keep your birth child &lsquo;safe&rsquo; or &lsquo;better cared for&rsquo; because you truly did not feel that you could manage. They may be adults now, but they still need you, in the form of medical history; yours, your family&rsquo;s, and if possible, the birth father and his family&rsquo;s information. Be there for them today in a way you could not be there in the past. Who knows, this might even bring you closure, and peace.<br />Thank you so much for visiting with me today. I honestly hope I have given you something to think about, and perhaps, even to take action. As always, feel free to comment here or send me an e-mail at ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com. To be notified of new blog posts, so you can stay up to date, please follow me on Goodreads. Simply go to:&nbsp;<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/">www.goodreads.com</a>&nbsp;Lynn Deiulis&rsquo;s Blogs, and start following.<br /><br />&lsquo;See&rsquo; you next time.&nbsp;</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[What I Hear]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/what-i-hear]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/what-i-hear#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 15:46:02 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/what-i-hear</guid><description><![CDATA[&#8203;My cinnamon cardamom tea is hot and soothing as I try to put these words out into the universe. Welcome, and thank you for always coming back to Blogville to see what I&rsquo;m rambling about!&nbsp;This particular blog is about the impact adoption had, and still has on me. It also deals with my thoughts for adoptive and kinship parents that I share in the hope that it might help them manage the loss(es) their children might be feeling.I found love with my adoptive parents. They both loved [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">&#8203;My cinnamon cardamom tea is hot and soothing as I try to put these words out into the universe. Welcome, and thank you for always coming back to Blogville to see what I&rsquo;m rambling about!&nbsp;<br /><br />This particular blog is about the impact adoption had, and still has on me. It also deals with my thoughts for adoptive and kinship parents that I share in the hope that it might help them manage the loss(es) their children might be feeling.<br /><br />I found love with my adoptive parents. They both loved me, and I loved them until their last breaths. I am content knowing that my birth parents were able to move on and find love with their respective partners, and that their legitimate children loved them until my birth parents took their last breaths.&nbsp;<br /><br />After a few false starts, including having been neglected in foster homes, I found love in the last foster family I was placed with before I was adopted. They loved me for seven months and then had to &lsquo;pass the baton&rsquo; to my mom and dad. We never saw each other again. Well, not until I found my foster mom when I was in my 60s and she in her 80s. Sadly my foster dad had already taken his last breath. Those foster parents were the first people to love me.<br /><br />But before I knew love, I experienced multiple abandonments and losses. Relinquishment abandonment by birth parents has an impact (conscious or subconscious) on an abandoned baby, child, or youth. That trauma remains throughout their lives. Their feelings of abandonment and loss impacts their future relationships in a big way.&nbsp;<br /><br />For me, I feel that there is a &lsquo;grown up me&rsquo; reaction and a &lsquo;child me&rsquo; reaction to what I perceive as rejection. There are days when I decide to call a friend and when they don&rsquo;t answer I immediately wonder if they are screening their calls to avoid me. There are times when I suggest a plan and if my friends are &lsquo;not available&rsquo; (that is legitimately how I feel- &lsquo;not available&rsquo; in air quotes) I wonder what is more important than me and usually decide, &lsquo;anything&rsquo;.<br /><br />Sadly, I sometimes feel this way with my adult children too. I&rsquo;ve learned a trick with my kids though; I just offer to watch my grandchildren or my grand-dog for them! They feel obligated to visit a little when they pick up! I&rsquo;m just kidding, I love spending time with my grandkids and enjoy the calming feeling of my grand-dog sleeping by my legs on the recliner. My hubby and I also host Sunday dinner weekly, mostly so I can see the ones who live nearby face to face. Face time has been an amazing way to watch my far away grandson grow and develop.&nbsp;<br /><br />I find that I often internalize it when a plan changes or my phone call goes unanswered. Immediately I feel that whomever I was reaching out to&nbsp; probably didn&rsquo;t really want to go with me or hear from me in the first place. After all, my first parents didn&rsquo;t want me, so why should my friends? There is a scar of insecurity on my heart that will never go away. When I hear from a friend or one of my adult kids that they did something I liked without me, or went somewhere I wanted to go without me, I am not surprised that I was left out, abandonment is familiar to me, but I still find it emotionally painful.&nbsp;<br /><br />So, literally as I was writing this blog, one of my birth half-sisters posted some old (birth) family photos on Facebook. There are no words to describe how abandoned I felt, but at the same time how curious I was as I searched those faces for familiarity. If I find it, when I see that I look a little like that person, or that I&rsquo;m built a bit like that person, I feel both grateful and lost at the same time. I also feel disloyal to my parents.<br /><br />I share all of this as my way of trying to help other adopted folks and their families navigate and maybe even mitigate the relinquishment trauma. At the same time I try to help families formed through adoption. Your children love you, but they are also curious about their birth families in an effort to understand, and to mitigate their trauma.&nbsp;<br /><br />If you have pictures of your child&rsquo;s birth family, share them from the beginning, there is no magic age for your child to see who they might look like. If you have stories or information about your child&rsquo;s birth family, share it when it is developmentally&nbsp; appropriate; check with a therapist or professional if you are not sure how or what to share. Your children are curious and need to know that you are okay with their questions.<br /><br />Children deserve to know that their need for an adoption plan was about adult choices, not about anything that they did or didn&rsquo;t do. They need to know that sometimes children are simply left out of their birth parents&rsquo; life plans and it isn&rsquo;t anything they did or didn&rsquo;t do. Children need life&rsquo;s rejections to be normalized so they do not personalize them.&nbsp;<br /><br />Please know that when your adopted child asks questions, the questions are about them, not about their relationship with you. Their questions are about where they came from and not related to their life with you, or their love for you.<br /><br />Your children are trying to understand who they are and why they are different from other kids. If your child used a walker, or had an artificial limb, or was the only one in your family who could&nbsp; sing, or wore glasses, you would expect questions right? They are not questioning your love for them, they are just trying to understand how they became part of your family, and sometimes why they needed a new family. Who better to explain all of this to them than their REAL parents? Who better to help prepare them for society&rsquo;s questions about their birth parents than their REAL parents?&nbsp;<br /><br />When I was young my parents might have been better off worrying about what I was thinking, and feeling, about having been adopted, rather than worrying about having the &lsquo;right&rsquo; answers. I simply wanted my REAL parents to share what they knew about my birth parents, and where I had come from; to share my truth with me.&nbsp;<br /><br />Thanks for visiting today. As always you are welcome to share your comments with me here or by sending me an email at&nbsp;<a href="mailto:ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com">ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com</a><br />See you next time!</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Foster Mother Reunion]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/foster-mother-reunion]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/foster-mother-reunion#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 15:09:01 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.whatisyourstorybook.com/blog/foster-mother-reunion</guid><description><![CDATA[Hi everyone, welcome back to Blogville. Today I am sipping on a green passionfruit tea as I write to you a about an amazing experience I had a while back. Thanks to receiving my Social and Medical History I was finally able to know who my foster parents had been. I learned who the foster parents were that I had before moving to live with my adoptive parents, and I learned that there had been a couple of other families before them. It took a little while but I did some research and finally found  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">Hi everyone, welcome back to Blogville. Today I am sipping on a green passionfruit tea as I write to you a about an amazing experience I had a while back. Thanks to receiving my Social and Medical History I was finally able to know who my foster parents had been. I learned who the foster parents were that I had before moving to live with my adoptive parents, and I learned that there had been a couple of other families before them. It took a little while but I did some research and finally found my foster mother, but sadly my foster father had passed. This blog is about my meeting with her and how that went.<br /><br />My former foster mother, whom I will call L, lives about a six hour drive from me. When I said I would like to visit she was very excited to see me again and meet my husband so we set up a meeting. We arrived safely in her town, and I messaged her daughter (whom I will refer to as M) to let her know that we had arrived. I asked if she and her mom had discussed any details about meeting the next day. M indicated that they had not discussed any specific plans but provided her phone number and invited me to call her. When I called, I asked M if she wished to be with her mom when we met but she indicated that we could go ahead and meet anytime as she is fine with that. She was also interested in meeting afterwards. M then provided her mother&rsquo;s address to me. I indicated that I would be calling her mom in the morning to arrange a meeting and gave M my cell phone number.<br /><br />I called L to arrange our visit and she told me to come over whenever I could. I said my husband and I would have something to eat before making our way over to see her. I asked her if she is comfortable with us visiting with her at her home or if she would prefer to meet elsewhere. She said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m comfortable with you coming over but my kids aren&rsquo;t. You come here. I want my hug! Besides there is a lovely gazebo outside if we want to use it.&rdquo; Given that she lived close to our hotel (that we unknowingly booked) we decided to walk over after we had something to eat. On the walk over I worried about whether she would like me, if she would feel comfortable visiting with us, and so many other thoughts and fears. It was about a 20 minute walk and when we got to her corner I called and told her we had decided to walk over and that we were almost there. She said she would be waiting for us. The complex was a little confusing but with some help from a group of helpful PSWs (despite being on their break) we found the correct building. There was a woman sitting outside but it was not L so I called her phone number and there was no answer. We entered the lobby of the building and called/buzzed her unit number. Also no answer. I started to worry if she was ok and my husband said, &ldquo;just wait 5 minutes and then call again.&rdquo; Longest 5 minutes, but she did answer and buzzed for us to enter the building. We got off the elevator and her apartment was right across the hall. I knocked quietly and heard, &ldquo;Come in&rdquo;.<br /><br />When that door opened I was met by this tiny (4&rsquo;8&rdquo; compared to my 5&rsquo;9&rdquo;) woman who immediately said, &ldquo;Come here and give me a hug.&rdquo; Some tears were shed as we hugged and my husband stood awkwardly in the hallway behind me. Finally she let go and said, &ldquo;Come in.&rdquo; As I entered the apartment she took a good look at me and said, &ldquo;I see you finally put on some weight.&rdquo; That was awkward, until she said, &ldquo;Everyone always told me you were too skinny, so I was worried that the workers thought I wasn&rsquo;t feeding you enough.&rdquo; I told her that my mother had the same worry once I was placed with her. My mother said that though I ate like a horse I never seemed to put on weight. It worried the doctor and my mother was worried the worker might not let them keep me. I jokingly assured L that my magical ability to over eat and not gain weight eventually caught up with me!<br /><br />We sat together on her couch and she asked about my life, my children and grandchildren. She asked if I had been happy and raised in a good family. I assured her that I had been well cared for and loved very much. She was so relieved, she said, &ldquo;I always worried if they found you a good family even though the worker told me that they had.&rdquo; I told her a little about my parents and my brother. She said how grateful she was for the worker who told her that I had made it through my umbilical hernia surgery very well, even though she wasn&rsquo;t supposed to tell her anything. The worker had then asked her not to call her again as she was no longer allowed to give her information about me. I told L about how that has changed for the most part now, and how foster parents can usually meet the adoptive parents and sometimes they even keep in touch. We talked about life books that children are now given that often include pictures of the foster family, and even sometimes pictures of the birth family members taken during access visits they had had together. She thought that was a great for the children.<br /><br />At the mention of pictures L suddenly got up and left the room. She came back with a handful of photos and proceeded to tell me exactly what was going on in each one. There were pictures of me younger than I had ever seen of myself before. That was incredible to me. L talked about one of her sons who was in the pictures, and how much he loved to make me laugh. She showed me a picture of her and I with some of her children (she ended up having 8 children) and she identified who everyone was. She talked about how she used to put me down on the bed and how her children loved to play peek-a-boo to make me laugh. I was her &ldquo;baby Marie&rdquo;. As we were looking at the photos and she was sharing information, she quietly leaned in and put her head on my shoulder. She seemed so content with meeting with me and I felt the same, like a circle had closed.<br /><br />I shared a little about raising her eight children, and seemed to feel that she had a wonderful life with a loving husband and children. My heart swelled when L said she had never forgotten me and that she thought of me often. She asked how long exactly I had been in her home and, thanks to having my vetted file, I was able to let her know it was for 7 months. I explained that I had been left behind in the home for unwed mothers for almost a month until a worker could come and get me. Once I arrived in my home community I was placed in an &lsquo;emergency&rsquo; foster home. According to my records, I had been in a few foster homes and that one of my foster mothers indicated that I was such a quiet baby. At almost 2 months old I was moved to L&rsquo;s foster home. As I said this, L put her hand to the back of my head and I asked if she was remembering the sores that had been there and she said that she was. I had read about them in my file. Changing the subject, she then asked me if I knew how, when making pies, you cannot seem to wash the lard completely off of your hands? Confused, I said I did. L then said that is what made her try lard on my awful diaper rash that had been caused by my allergy to baby oil. She was so proud to say how that cleared up my rash right away. I felt that I must have meant something to her for her to have remembered that detail.&nbsp;<br /><br />We then discussed some of the details of my time with her family and how loved I was among them. She would have loved to keep me but that was just not done back then and that the worker had told her all along that they were looking for an adoptive family that could take me. The worker had explained to L that the delay in placing me on adoption was caused by the birth mother not cooperating with the Children&rsquo;s Aid Society to sign her consent to adoption. Once that consent was signed, my parents were matched with me and I was moved. At this point, L and her family moved to the community where I was now visiting with her. For me, I had always wondered who had taken care of me before my mom and dad. Now I knew. L and I keep in touch to this day, and I think of her often and continue to be grateful she had come into my life, however briefly.&nbsp;<br /><br />Foster parents make a difference every day. Consider looking into becoming a foster family today.<br /><br />Thank you for visiting with me today. I always appreciate knowing that you are reading. If you have any comments that you would like to share more privately than here, please feel free to email me at&nbsp;<a href="mailto:ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com">ldeiulisauthor@gmail.com</a><br /><br />&lsquo;See&rsquo; you next time!</div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>