T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
847.1 | "Because it sells..." | CURIE::HAROUTIAN | | Wed Nov 01 1989 12:44 | 23 |
| Gale,
The off-the-cuff reply is "script writers produce this garbage because
it continues to sell"...however, that's not the real problem. The real
problem, imho, is that that type of story-line is so-o-o accepted by our
society at large that it's no big deal, one way or the other, to
include it or not include it in a movie.
What can we do about it? Get more vocal, impose economic sanctions
(tell all your friends why they shouldn't go and ask them not to go),
write letters to the studio, etc., etc.
It's very disheartening that this stuff still goes on, and particularly
when it's insidious and not overtly nasty, but comes wrapped in a
*cute* package. The answer, ultimately, is what we teach our
children...and getting enough of us to teach it so society really
changes.
Re: your other comments about "gentlemen", etc...I don't remember where
I saw it, and I know I'd get the quote wrong, but I recently read
something to the effect that "gender discrimination is encouraged when
we don't treat women as 'cherished equals', but rather we put them on a
pedestal". THIS IS NOT INTENDED AS CRITICISM OF YOURSELF OR YOUR
VIEWS, but as "food for thought."
|
847.2 | I Didn't See The Movie | USEM::DONOVAN | | Wed Nov 01 1989 13:30 | 16 |
| re:.1
When you're way up there on a pedestal it's really easy to fall
off. Especially in high heals.
re:.0
Regardless of how trivial this movie seems, art mimics life. It
does seem ideal for a child to have 2 parents of opposite sexes
who get along well with each other. And don't we all want the
ideal life for our kids?
By the way, I didn't see the movie.
Kate
|
847.3 | Good Role Models for the kiddies | TRNPRC::SIGEL | Your'e SUCH a BRAT!! | Fri Nov 03 1989 11:27 | 6 |
| re.2
I agree with you, good parent role models are hard to find on the tube
these days.
Lynne (who is a bit old fashioned :-)
|
847.4 | Lots of kinds of families exist | VINO::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Fri Nov 03 1989 11:52 | 23 |
| RE: .2,.3
I agree, too - good parent role models are hard to find on the
tube. Especially good alternative family role models. Thank
goodness we've moved away from The Robert Young School of Fatherhood,
but we still need kids to see good solid female parent role models,
and it seems like all the single moms on TV are portrayed as somehow
"inadequate" or not *quite* "right.
MOST families today are not mom, dad, and 2.5 children. They are single
mom, single dad, co-custody, 2 moms, 2 dads, mom and grandparent,
dad and grandparent, and any variety of adults/kids. The main thing
is love, support, and guidelines. Not how-many-what-gender-etc
the parenting people are. TV and movies are still way behind the
times, and unfortunatley still portraying the old nuclear family as
norm (which it isn't) and the only "correct" family form (which it
isn't, either).
Good role models? People who love the kids, support the kids, and
give the kids guidelines for growth and behaviour.
--DE
|
847.5 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Fri Nov 03 1989 12:05 | 6 |
| so true... I still get irked when step-parents are automatically
portrayed as culprits... family is where the love is, no matter what
the legal relationship.
grins,
marge
|
847.6 | Men too | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Fri Nov 03 1989 18:17 | 15 |
| I didn't see the movie, but I agree with .2 and .3 that children
are best off with both parents.
Regarding lousy portrayals of women on the tube, I don't disagree,
but I'd say men get it even worse. They are generally portrayed
as bumbling idots. The problem I have with this is that BOTH PARENTS
(or the parent) are really portrayed negatively. It's the kids
who come off as smart and mature and intelligent.
I tend to think the women are portrayed much better than the men.
It's all so phony and denigrating to adults, that I don't watch
much of it.
Bud
|
847.7 | | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Fri Nov 03 1989 18:34 | 14 |
| re: .2 and .6
Both of these notes state that children are best off if they have
two biological parents, one of each gender, but neither has said why.
I personally agree with the opinion of a few above that the
physical characteristics (number, gender, biological ties) have nothing
to do with how well-off the child is -- that what matters is
how loving and care-providing the parent(s) is/are.
(I've seen the movie, and had the same reaction as the base note, as
well as being offended by the "lesbo" "jokes", and other sexist
stereotyping instances. But some of the baby-talking stuff was funny.)
MKV
|
847.8 | | ULTRA::WRAY | John Wray, Secure Systems Development | Fri Nov 03 1989 19:47 | 60 |
| Re: <<< Note 847.7 by THEBAY::VASKAS "Mary Vaskas" >>>
>re: .2 and .6
>Both of these notes state that children are best off if they have
>two biological parents, one of each gender, but neither has said why.
Well, I think that most children are probably best off if they have two
_biological_ parents, one of each gender :-)
But this raises some interesting questions. I wonder what _are_ the
optimal numbers and genders of "the ideal parents"? Will a child with
(say) ten (non-biological) parents feel more loved than one with only
a single parent? Ten times as loved? Are such things scaleable in
this way? Reminds me of a suggestion I once heard for an objective
measure of physical attractiveness: the MilliHelen - enough beauty to
launch just one ship.
I suppose that a child with many parents might find it difficult to
chose one as a role-model, for fear of showing favoritism. And you'd
always be buying birthday presents (how many parents does a child need
before there's better than 50% chance that you'll end up with two of
them having the same birthday, and you just know you'll end up
offending one of them with your choice of gift when that happens?). I
find it difficult enough just finding something suitable for my two - I
don't think I could cope with many more.
As far as gender goes, with N parents, there are N+1 possible M/F splits.
If you order your parents (by height, for want of a better metric), you
get 2^N possible combinations. Finding an ideal combination for an even
moderately large N becomes quite a challenge. Of course, if you consider
sexual preference in addition to gender (and I suppose you have to in a
marriage), then the number of possible combinations increases alarmingly.
Several times recently I've heard people say that you _need_ two incomes
these days. I don't believe that to be true - I have only one income,
although if someone were to offer me another one, I doubt I'd refuse.
However, if this is a trend, and it were to continue this way, then
perhaps economic conditions will soon demand poly-parental families.
Maybe the time will come when the ability to obtain a mortgage will
depend on the number of simultaneous marriage partners you can attract.
Of course, the larger the size of the family unit, the more resistant
it will be to change, because of the inertia inherent in a large group.
This would make the poly-parental family an ideal candidate for adoption
placements, as it would be an inherently stable unit, the loss of an
individual member having much less of an effect on the family group as
a whole than in a one- or two-parent family.
The concept opens up whole new areas for study, too. Some
poly-parental families might be sufficiently large to be subject to
population-averaging effects, so that their (group) behavior could be
predictable. Sociology and psychology might even become numerical
sciences (Q: What's the difference between psychology and magic?
A: Psychologists pull habits out of rats).
John
I've not seen the movie, either.
|
847.9 | I'll answer, but this is off the topic. | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Fri Nov 03 1989 20:20 | 43 |
| There are two genders in humanity. There are differences between
them in most cases in addition to the obvious specifics of anatomy.
Neither is better than the other, but there are differences.
All females do not have one set of characterics while all men have
another and neither has any characterics of the other. There are
a smorgasbord of traits and any given male may have more of the
traits associated with a female and similarly a given female may
pave a preponderance of traits associated with males. None of the
four kinds of people that I've mentioned or the cases between them
are better or worse, good or bad for having these traits. The point
is that females and males predominate with a majority of characteric
traits for their sex.
The evidence I offer for this simplified description is in two parts.
First, people are attracted to similar people for friendships.
Among small children, boys tend to gravitate to other boys, girls
to girls, and ethnic group member to another member of that ethnic
group. I think it's what feels safe and comfortable. Others including
some of today's leaders have observed the same, such as Farenkeim
(sp??). Something breaks this tendancy between males and females
when they get a little older, and I don't think it is just physical
sex. I think that they are attracted to the other characterics
that the person has. Somehow, the unlike characterics become the
attraction.
I was asked why I felt that both parents were important. My answer
is that I think the child is best off getting exposed to as many
of the spectrum of characterics that are labeled as "feminine" or
"masculine" as possible. I believe this improves their education
in interacting with these traits. I believe they get a much more
balanced education in their early life. I do not believe that any
one person, regardless of sex or traits associated with a given
sex, has a a broad enough set of traits.
I am talking about the near ideal. I do not believe that a single
mother or father is not good enough. People bounce back from adversity
in most cases. I consider this a minor adversity. Love is more
important than the growth that might be experienced with two parents.
And, of course, if abuse were part of the two parent package, then
a one parent package is better.
|
847.10 | indeed, things might be different | NOETIC::KOLBE | | Sat Nov 04 1989 22:01 | 16 |
| What we have here is a case of serious ethnocentrism. There are *many*
clutures that do not live in the Ozzie and Harriet, 2 parents, one of
each sex world. Do all their children grow up deprived? How about the
kibutz(sp) where mnay children are raised togther, or the English
boarding school?
There are cultures where the word for mother applies equally to the
biological mother and all her sisters, the same goes for the father and
all his brothers. These children grow up knowning and being loved by
many parents all living together.
In our country the single parent family is becoming the norm. Rather
than treat it as wrong perhaps we need to modify our culture to accept
reality. Once the cultural barriers are lifted and the society supports
single parents there might not be a problem of children growing up in a
disadvantaged state. liesl
|
847.11 | | POCUS::HOLLAND | | Mon Nov 06 1989 13:53 | 10 |
| I agree 100% with liesl. Especially in New York, the cost of childcare
can be so prohibitive that two incomes are almost a necessity, one
to eat, pay rent, buy clothing, etc., and one to cover the cost of
day care.
It's difficult to imaging trying to raise a child alone if one earns
less that $35-40,000. (I know it's done, but it's probably not
something one plans on.)
|
847.12 | Rat-hole alert | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Mon Nov 06 1989 14:36 | 10 |
| .11> It's difficult to imaging trying to raise a child alone if one earns
.11> less that $35-40,000. (I know it's done, but it's probably not
.11> something one plans on.)
It is difficult to imagine...and yet I know plenty of
two-parent families where *both* parents work outside the
home for a total income less than $30K per year, who plan to
raise and do raise children.
-- Linda
|
847.13 | I said Ideal | USEM::DONOVAN | | Mon Nov 06 1989 14:43 | 17 |
| re:-1
If one income went to the cost of daycare one parent would probably
not work. His income would net to zero.
I said the ideal situation is 2 parents. One of each sex. Kebutz's
are a necessity. English boarding schools are for the mega-rich. Of
course this isn't best in all situations. After the instant bonding
to the mother, a child develops a bond to the father. A child learns
to love and appreciate the difference between the 2 sexes. It seems
like a valid approach to me. A person can have 1,000,000 role models
but can not successfully bond to many more than a couple.
Kate
|
847.14 | Watch out for Cultural Bias.... | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Mon Nov 06 1989 15:11 | 33 |
| I seem to see a very culturally biased point of view being
defended by the statement "It is the right way because it
is my way, my culture's way."
I firmly believe that the way most white middle and upper class
children are raised in this grand and glorious country called
the USA is harmful to them and to our future.
There is not right way to raise children but there sure are
some really dangerours wrong ways. To teach them that they
need to identify with only two options is heading for trouble.
Especially if one of the options is doing physical harm to
the child in question.
Take the time to think about your own culture bias before you
make a definitive statement about what is a wrong way to do
something. Suggestions of right ways are fine as long as they
are not statements about the ONLY WAY.
Life on this planet existed for a long time before the "ones
who walk upright" tried to take over control of the planet.
_peggy
(-)
|
The ulitmate of creation is not humans
it is life in its millons and millons
of forms.
|
847.15 | Ancient custom with new clothes | VINO::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Tue Nov 07 1989 11:30 | 26 |
| Let's face it. One of the reasons we here in the "west" have
the nuclear family in ther first place is so the Ancient Rich Guys
would know who their "legal" first-born sons were so they could leave
'em the loot. Mom stayed home and dad went a-whoring, but that was ok,
cuz he knew who Junior really was.
Now, with some other modifications, this has come down to us today
wrapped in a starry-eyed package of this is how it "ought" to be. It's
gathered a moss of perfection as it rolled thru the centuries.
Well, that Anglo-Saxon stone didn't roll through a lot of cultures in
this world, and lots of other places aren't into this Two-parents-one
of-Each-Gender stuff. And guess what? Nobody's been able to prove that
*their* kids are less well-adjusted than *our* kids. Given some of the
stories one hears about child abuse, and ACOA situations, I really
don't see that the nuclear family is so much all-fired better than any
other situation.
The physical characteristics and number of family/extended family have
nothing to do with love, guidelines, and encouragement in growth.
Western-style infant-rearing may in fact leave a lot to be desired -
read _Touching_ - an excellent book on human contact and how we often
fail our children in that area.
--DE
|
847.16 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Wed Nov 08 1989 17:05 | 25 |
| I saw the movie and what bothered me about it was that the woman
who gets pregnant and then dumped by her married boyfriend, has
a great job, no money problems, supportive parents, and then still
makes her major mission in life finding a father for her son. I
still don't understand *why* he needed a father, specifically, when
he already had a good mother who loved him and plenty of money.
The problem was that she was *obsessed* with finding a "daddy"
for the kid. That was the point of the movie. I could understand
if she wanted to date, and felt lonely and wanted to fall in love
again someday (most of us do, in one way or another). But, she
didn't seem to want the man for herself. She was looking for a
"daddy." What for? I don't buy it that kids have to have one
male parent and one female parent in order to have decent lives.
At least I found it gratifying to see that The Phoenix' review was
similar to my own opinion. They found the basic premise sexist
and old-fashioned, but thought the movie had its funny and cute
moments, and that the stars were somewhat appealing.
Lorna
P.S. As far as incomes and raising kids, I feel sorry for anybody
in the U.S. who is a single parent and trying to raise a child on
less than $30K a year. It must be horrible.
|
847.17 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Nov 08 1989 17:16 | 4 |
| Re: .16
Some of that might be satirizing yuppies, who stereotypically want the
best of everything for the precious incarnations of their gene pool.
|
847.18 | | DEMING::FOSTER | | Wed Nov 08 1989 17:25 | 17 |
|
Actually, now that you say that she had a son, I have to admit that the
idea of a single woman raising a boy is not a situation that I would
want to be in. I definitely would want male role models in the picture
if I had male offspring.
In fact, that has a lot to do with the fact that I want daughters - I
wouldn't care if I was single.
Especially in the A-A community, the lack of positive male role models
seems to have a detrimental effect on boys. Most of the extremely
together, successful young black men I know have had fathers in the
picture. And most of the ones who did not have fathers reflect it in
some very unique and telling ways.
Just my thoughts...
|
847.19 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Nov 09 1989 17:22 | 11 |
| Re: .18
>I definitely would want male role models in the picture if I had male
>offspring.
Male role models have something to offer female children, too. For one
thing, any good role model has something to offer. In this case, girls
can learn what to value, respect and look for in a man through
experience; they're better able to recognize good qualities by having
been exposed to them. Also, a male role model helps form their
attitudes about men.
|
847.20 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | don't look distracted | Thu Nov 09 1989 18:45 | 28 |
|
Because of this note, I've started watching TV Sitcoms for
content (instead of just having them on while I'm doing
things around the house). And I've found some rather amazing
things on the tube that children are watching.
Take for example, the rerun of Growing Pains that I just saw
recently. The children where shattered when they found out
their parents were divorced. They concocted all sorts of
wild, irrational stories about how since they had been
divorced and they were "bad" and unworthy of their love. And
Mike, the older son, always is talking about the "babes" and
treats women like nothing more than sex objects. And on
Cosby the other night (re-run) the show was centered around
the mom going on a crash diet to lose 5 pounds to fit into a
dress and she totally went around it the wrong way, yet it
was labelled as "alright."
Makes me realize that, if our children's lives are being
guided by what they see on TV, then we are going to be in sad
shape for years to come!!
(But then again, I never really "WATCHED" these shows before
and never saw these subtle things......and never really
thought about it.... Do the children really think about it?)
kath
|
847.21 | $$$ | AQUA::WALKER | | Fri Nov 10 1989 11:06 | 18 |
| Re: Do the children really think about it?
They don't have to think about it. It just seeps into their minds as
they are doing other things. It is just accepted as the way it IS.
A ten year old once said, after asking what kind of tree a limon grows
on, "you mean there is no such thing as a limon? I saw one on tv!"
Adults also have these things stored in their minds. While writing
this I asked a person what product uses limon and he quickly replied
"7UP".
I think the media gives us many many distortions of life but it is
close enough to real to be believable and acceptable.
That the media does manipulate their audience for profit does not
make it right. I do think it is a good idea to talk about it and
therefore bring it to a conscious level in more people.
|
847.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 10 1989 11:57 | 11 |
| Re: .21
> Adults also have these things stored in their minds. While writing
> this I asked a person what product uses limon and he quickly replied
> "7UP".
I think the difference is that kids don't get as confused about these
things as adults do. Any kid would be able to tell you that it's
Sprite that has "limon" (I thought it was "lymon", but...).
Steve
|
847.23 | reality 1, marketing 0 | ALEMAP::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Fri Nov 10 1989 12:16 | 9 |
| Ah, but that was his adult mind realizing that although the names are
dissimilar, the product is EXACTLY the same ... meaning that although
marketing types seem to win, they do not always!
The only soft drink promotion I respect is the Canada Dry Ginger Ale
one -- it really IS "not too sweet!" I bought a bargain brand and
could hardly choke it down.
Pam
|
847.24 | Well, they're *smart*, but not *that* smart | VINO::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Fri Nov 10 1989 13:14 | 36 |
| Some various thoughts:
RE: male role models
IT's very possible for kids to have role models of either gender
who aren't their parent. It would make more sense to me for this
woman to have looked for such a role model than for a "father" for
the kid (which he wouldn't be anyway - he'd only be her husband)
RE: Portrayals of smart women as dumb broads
If the woman was so smart, and she didn't want to get pregnant, why
did she? I mean, there's question #1, right off the bat. Is she smart
or not? (Well of course, there wouldn't have been a movie without this
particular situation - but Hollywood seems to be having trouble making
up its mind about whether we're really smart or not)
RE: Effects of media portrayals on folk
This reminds me of a something that happened to me. 5 women in my group
(2 software engineers, a technical writer, a release engineer, and an
operator) worked with a male project leader for 6 months on a project.
My supervisor referred to us as "Dave and Dave's Angels". He thought it
was *praise*. (Ref. "Charlie's Angels") (At least he *said* he thought
it was praise.)
Think of all the wonderful movies with male central characters - heroes
intelligent, strong, upstanding, probelm-solving, etc. guys. Now
imagine the same movies with women as central characters and ask
yourself if the movie ever would've been made. "Chariots of Fire" is one
of my favorite movies, and there isn't a sbowball's chance that such
a movie could be made with female characters.
--DE
|
847.25 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Nov 10 1989 16:46 | 20 |
| Re: .24
>IT's very possible for kids to have role models of either gender who
>aren't their parent.
Certainly. From what I can tell, the advantage to having a parent as a
role model is their consistent presence in the child's life; a parent
is perceived to have more of a "full-time" role in the child's life as
opposed to the "part-time" role of, say, a teacher or an uncle. It all
depends on how much the role model is involved on a daily basis.
>than for a "father" for the kid (which he wouldn't be anyway - he'd
>only be her husband)
Oh, lordy, here's a can of worms. I'm staying out of this one.
>If the woman was so smart, and she didn't want to get pregnant, why
>did she?
Because accidents happen, even to certifiable geniuses?
|
847.26 | too true | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Nov 10 1989 20:46 | 9 |
| inre Chelsea and the response to 'if the woman was so smart and
didn't want to get pregnant why did she..'
in my experience, brains have no relation to getting ones
hormones carbonated...
very intelligent women can be very dumb about matters sexual.
Bonnie
|
847.27 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Fri Nov 10 1989 21:12 | 25 |
| Well, I have three either teenaged daughters or close to teenaged
daughters... I can affirmed that they and the girls they hang around
with ARE influenced by television and movies, and theatre. As much as I
don't like it at times, it is indeed happening even at the pre-school
aged... look how many kids are influenced by Sesame Street!!...
A lot of it is covert, and they (the kids of today) don't even realize
it is happening....
And it doesn't matter if I don't allow my kids to watch something, all
the kids in school tell them ALL about it, so I can't protect them from
it, all the time (sigh!)
I only have two girls living at home still, however after we watched
Look who's talking, we then talked about how STUPID the female was to
think she had to have a father for the baby, and talked about how we were
doing JUST FINE without a father in the family, that she could have also,
and that it was STUPID of her to think she HAD to have one, and then we
talked about how silly and funny the baby was... WE then talked about
how it was okay to have a father, but only for the right reasons, not
for the reasons the movie showed.
I know the movie did some damage, and I tried to un-do that damage, but
how about all the girls that didn't have parents go with them, or even
worse, don't have parents who even care????
|
847.28 | for what it is worth.. | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sun Nov 12 1989 21:56 | 13 |
| Gale,
My daughter and her girl friend went to see "Look Who's Talking"
yesterday with the junior high youth group. Remembering this
discussion I asked them both what they thought about the situation
depicted in the movie. They both said that the idea that a woman
had to have a 'man' to raise a kid was 'pretty dumb' and that
it was a funny movie, but not very real life..
Neither girl is very familiar with single parent families, the
just thought the premise didn't make a lot of sense.
Bonnie
|
847.29 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Delivering the goods | Mon Nov 13 1989 09:17 | 19 |
| >It would make more sense to me for this
> woman to have looked for such a role model than for a "father" for
> the kid (which he wouldn't be anyway - he'd only be her husband)
$ Set flame=lukewarm
I am rather annoyed by that notion. I am married to a woman who raised her two
daughters alone for 12 years. I am now the girls' father- not just the woman's
husband. The lone sense that I am not their father is that I did not contribute
any genetic material to their creation. Other than that, I am in every sense
their father. They don't even call me their step-father anymore when introducing
me to their friends (and haven't for a long time.)
I am quite disappointed at the idea that only the contributor of genes can
"really be a father." I don't think I could have said this any nicer.
$ set flame=off
The Doctah
|
847.30 | Sorry Doc - no offense.... | VINO::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Mon Nov 13 1989 12:25 | 27 |
| Well, here's the deal, Doctah - I was talking about the movie,
not real life. IF you couldn't tell, I believe this flick bears NO
resemblance whatever to real life.
Yes, a stepdad is a dad in every sense of the word (if he chooses to
be). But Doc, this gal got pregnant by <some guy> who presumably she
didn't want to bring up her kids (again, I wonder why a supposedly
smart woman would do this) and NOW she goes off hunting thru the urban
underbrush for ANOTHER GUY to be the "father" for the kids - i.e.,
bring them up! Sheesh!!
It's a much different situation when a marriage didn't work out or
someone died and a second marriage (or relationship occurs). And
in fact, a stepdad who chooses to parent can be as good or BETTER
a parent than the biological one. I agree, Doctah. I just think the
situation in this flick is a)fatfetched and b)garbage. OK?
RE: accidents happen (getting pregnant)
Yep. Accidents happen, but the chances are whatever precentage is the
highest failure rate for a given method of birth control. Let's face
it: this movie is not based on reality and portrays women as stupid.
This was simply the way they chose to show the woman as smart/stupid.
A variation on the Virgin/Whore theme, methinks.
--DE
|
847.31 | I hate when this happens | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Delivering the goods | Mon Nov 13 1989 13:05 | 7 |
| > Well, here's the deal, Doctah - I was talking about the movie,
> not real life.
Oh, well. Now I feel stupid. I thought you were talking about real life. Sorry
for the tirade.
The Doctah
|
847.32 | No problem - glad we made sense of it | VINO::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Mon Nov 13 1989 13:13 | 1 |
|
|
847.33 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:07 | 23 |
| RE: Real movie versus real life and the Doctah...
Well.. This is real life I'm talking about... (that's so its understood
up front!)
I am the single parent of 2+ girls. I have virtually been bringing them
up alone since 1979, although my divorce was not final until 1978. So
I'm "officially been a single mother for only 1.5 years", but I'm been
a single mother for ~10 years. If I were to get remarried (jury is still
out as to whether I ever will or not), the man I marry will NOT be the
girls father. They have only one father. No one can replace that -
that is something that should be precious to them always. They can have
a step-father, that they can choose to call whatever the two of them
choose to call each other, but he will never be their father. He can be
"like" a father to them, he can be more than a father to them, but they
will only have one. The one they have might not be a good one, but
it's because of him, that they are here on this earth, not because of
the next man I marry...
Is it fair? Maybe not, a lot of step fathers are better fathers then
their biological one, but still kids have only one biological father.
Gale
|
847.34 | father vs ? | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:10 | 8 |
| um,
Gale,
What about my adopted kids - I regard my husband as their father
and myself as their mother..
Bonnie
|
847.35 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:20 | 6 |
| I still think even in adoption cases, kids only have ONE biological
father AND mother... I didn't say it was fair, I just said it was true...
Gale
|
847.36 | Depends on the family situation... | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | Could you put your hair up? | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:44 | 14 |
| I think a step-father/step-mother being considered a child's
father/mother depends a great deal on whether or not the child's
biological parent is still 'in the picture', so to speak. My dad
stayed very much involved in my brother's and my life. So we did
not consider my step-father our dad. In fact, when he tried to
be, it caused problems. It wasn't until he stopped trying, and
just tried to be a friend that things started to work out.
In the case of adoption, or if the natural parent is deceased
or just has no contact with the child, I think a step-parent could
indeed be considered a parent, especially if he/she is the only one
the child has really known.
amy
|
847.37 | this is beginning to rathole- maybe it should be moved | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Riff Raff- always good for a laugh | Mon Nov 13 1989 17:02 | 38 |
| > Well.. This is real life I'm talking about... (that's so its understood
> up front!)
Good. But I would have paid more attention this time anyway. Once bitten and
all that...
> I am the single parent of 2+ girls. I have virtually been bringing them
> up alone since 1979, although my divorce was not final until 1978. So
Not to belabor the obvious, but I think you meant 1988.
>If I were to get remarried (jury is still
> out as to whether I ever will or not), the man I marry will NOT be the
> girls father.
Certainly not in the biological sense. However you decide you can make your
relationship work for yourself, your children and your husband is your business.
> Is it fair? Maybe not, a lot of step fathers are better fathers then
> their biological one, but still kids have only one biological father.
In my case, the biological father has had no contact with the kids for 14+
years. Thus he was essentially a donater of sperm. He did not contribute one
whit to their upbringing.
Your situation may be different. Your kids may know your ex-husband as their
father. Mine don't; not on any useful level, anyway.
> I still think even in adoption cases, kids only have ONE biological
> father AND mother... I didn't say it was fair, I just said it was true...
I guess I don't see any utility in making that distinction. Who cares? (Not
meaning to sound harsh or be insensitive- my apologies in advance if it
comes across that way.) The fact of the matter is that on a practical level,
the children functionally have a new mother and father. Whatever the label
you wish to place on the new parents is your choice.
The Doctah
|
847.38 | GGGrrr...... | SSDEVO::GALLUP | just a vampire for your love... | Mon Nov 13 1989 17:38 | 29 |
|
Gale...
I'm sorry, but this really grinds on me...
If you were to remarry, who are you to have any say in how
your girls accept the new man in your life? Don't you feel
it is THEIR decision to accept/not-accept him as a
father/step-father/guy-around-the-house/etc?????????????
He might never be their "biological" father, but perhaps to
them, the love might grow so strong that they wish to no
longer think of him as their "step father" but as their
"father...".....
I have no desire to know the current relationship between the
girls and their biological father, but they should have the
right to determine how they feel themselves, and who they
wish to consider "father."
kath
father (n): A male who functions in a parental capacity with
regard to another.
parent (n): Guardian, protector.
|
847.39 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Mon Nov 13 1989 19:32 | 26 |
| Lets see if I can get this in (the first time around it bombed out on
me!)
I am trying to say is that no matter how bad an ex-husband, or even a
"never married but fathered a child" person is, no matter what he does or
does not do for a child, no matter who is in the childs' life, and no
matter how much better or worse that person is to the child than the
person who "planted the sperm", the person who did "plant the sperm" is
the childs' biological father, just as the one who went through labor and
carried that child for X months (usually 9) is the child biological
mother, and those two people can never and should never be replaced in
that child's life. You can compliment them, but you can never replace
them.
I personally think that what the Doctah has done is tremendous, and I
respect him extremely highly for it, as it takes a very special person
to marry someone who has kids, and raise them for their own, but still,
in all since of the word, they are theirs, but not the same way as a
biological father/mother, no matter how good or bad that person may be.
I think its wrong to think of yourself as a replacement, and to think
you are their Mother/father... you are in the role, but you are not
the biological person if you did not play one of the two vital roles.
Instead you should know that you are their compliment, and work from
there. In the long run, it doesn't matter what you call a person, it
only matters where the heart is.
|
847.40 | Two good meanings of "father" | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Mon Nov 13 1989 21:02 | 20 |
| I suspect that no one is disagreeing about the relationship of a
biological mother's new husband to her children *is*, but only to
what that relationship should be *called*. Gale believes that
"father" means "biological father"; Doctah believes that it can mean
"the adult male in the family unit". The Oxford English Dictionary
supports both meanings.
1. One by whom a child has been begotten, a male parent, the
nearest male ancestor.
...
e. Colloquially extended to include a father-in-law,
step-father, or one who adopts another as his child (more fully,
_adoptive father_.
The quotations supporting meaning (e), by the way, go back to the
1500's, so it is scarcely a new usage.
-Neil
|
847.41 | yea, it's a big rathole.....hummm... | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Got the universe reclining in her hair | Mon Nov 13 1989 23:04 | 23 |
| > the childs' biological father, just as the one who went through labor and
You didn't say biological before.
I have a hard time calling a man that rapes a woman,
culminating in a child, a father. Or any man that "donates
his sperm", in anyway, a father......biologically, yes. But
in every other sense of the word no.
> I think its wrong to think of yourself as a replacement, and to think
> you are their Mother/father... you are in the role, but you are not
> the biological person if you did not play one of the two vital roles.
> Instead you should know that you are their compliment, and work from
> there. In the long run, it doesn't matter what you call a person, it
> only matters where the heart is.
And I have a hard time believing that a sperm and an egg give
someone the right to "forever hold the role of
father/mother." Biologically, yes....but in every other
sense of the word, no.....................I think it's love
that makes a family....
kath
|
847.42 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Nov 14 1989 06:38 | 5 |
| kath,
in re 'love makes a family' - beautifully put, thankyou.
Bonnie
|
847.43 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 07:26 | 16 |
| RE: .41
Kathy..
Sometimes an example makes things clearer than just words, so an
example follows:
If I am 14, and get raped and have a resulting pregnancy, and decide to
do the right thing by the child and not kill it, and give it up for
adoption because at 14 I can not be any form of a "real" mother to it,
that does not mean I'm not its mother, and I didn't love it more than
the mother who will be raising it does.
And I'll fight anyone verbally who tried to tell me I'm not the childs
mother!!!!! It takes more love to give a child a life than it
does to bring one up, especially at 14!!!!!!!
|
847.44 | | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:38 | 25 |
| re: .43
If a raped 14-yr old giving birth to a child has more love for the
child than a woman who adopts and raises that child, does it also
follow that the rapist has more love for the child than a man who
adopts and raises that child? I would be careful about assuming
ANYTHING about the emotions felt by different people in different
circumstances...
I agree that the people who donate the egg and sperm are the biological
mother and father. That's fact. I agree that the woman who carries
the baby to term has invested a lot in that pregnancy. However...
I also agree that the people who actually bring up the child could be
called its mother or father, particularly if they raised it from
infancy. (If you marry someone whose children are past a certain age,
it depends on the family what your role or title will be.) Most of my
friends with stepfathers/mothers call them by their first name rather
than "Dad" or "Mom". My adopted friends call their parents "Mom" and
"Dad" and refer to their biological parents specifically as their
"biological parents."
To me, Mother/Father/Parent by default means "person who raised child."
Biological parents, if different, are called out separately.
Pam
|
847.45 | let us think of the feelings of the first mother | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:42 | 8 |
| May I add here tho, that it does take a great deal of love for
a young woman to choose to bear and then give up a child. That
love and that choice under pins the affection and love that
the child recieves the rest of his or her life. When my children
were younger and I said prayers with them we included their
biological mother in those prayers, especially on their birthdays.
Bonnie
|
847.46 | Why do you think so? | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:49 | 17 |
| > It takes more love to give a child a life than it
> does to bring one up, especially at 14!!!!!!!
Whoa! This seems to be the heart of it, doesn't it. It also seems clearly
untrue. While you, or some other woman who gave life to a child, might love
that child, that is not a prerequisite for giving birth. Believe it or not
there are women who hate the child they give birth to. (I talked to one.)
Even though I am not a parent in either sense of the word, I find this
statement offensive, and I think it belittles the love of all the adoptive
and step parents in the world. As the sister of an adopted person, I have
a very personal interest in this - and you are telling me that his bio-mother
loved him more than my mother loves him. It could be true, having never
met his bio-mother, but how do you know? And knowing that she loves him just
as much as she loves me (her bio-daughter) it seems highly unlikely.
D!
|
847.47 | More Rambles | USEM::DONOVAN | | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:51 | 18 |
| I am sure the parents of adopted children have experienced real
parental bonding. That feeling when your kid has a temperature of
104 you wish it was you. When your kids comes home saying the kids
made fun of him you want to deck all the little brats. That feeling
of comfort when you can keep your 4 year old still enough to get
that "big squeeze". REAL PARENTAL BONDING. Many biological parents
have not known that feeling. It's a shame, really.
I said it is "ideal" for a man and woman who get along to have their
own child. It seems like the easiest way. My husband was adopted
as a baby. Nana and Grandpa are just as near and dear to me as they
are to my children.
Re: male role models being good for girls---agreed.
Re: love makes a family---here,here
Kate
|
847.48 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:59 | 13 |
| .46> As the sister of an adopted person, I have
.46>a very personal interest in this - and you are telling me that his bio-mother
.46>loved him more than my mother loves him. It could be true, having never
.46>met his bio-mother, but how do you know?
Yes that is **EXACTLY** what I am telling you! Yes, the bio mother loved
him so much that she gave him up so that he could have the life she could
never give him. And that is the greatest love of all. Without her, his
raising mother could never of had him to love. The bio mother could
have chosen to abort him, but instead she choose to give him life. I
can't think of a greater love, can you?
G
|
847.50 | FLAMES ON! | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:24 | 19 |
| RE: .43
> If I am 14, and get raped and have a resulting pregnancy, and decide to
> do the right thing by the child and not kill it, and give it up for
> adoption because at 14 I can not be any form of a "real" mother to it,
W H O A !!!
_Please_ do not assume that your opinion of what is "the right thing"
is objective truth!
I think it's fairly clear here what you're implying, and I resent those
implications. I resent what you are saying to those in this notesfile
who may have been in the situation you describe in the past and resolved
it differently. I resent what you are saying about my value system.
If nothing else, I resent what I perceive as a callous disregard towards
a "valuing differences" environment.
Sharon
|
847.51 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:24 | 16 |
| re .46:
I have two adopted cousins, and they've never known anyone
other than my aunt and uncle as their "mother" and "father".
That's not to say they haven't thought about what their
biological mother did, but legally and in all other ways, my
aunt *is* their mother.
Following from Gale's opinion, I can't be called their "real"
cousin, because it's not a biological relationship. Gale, I
find your position on who the "real" parents are somewhat
offensive, especially for the personal reasons I have surrounding
the *real*, adopted cousins that *are* my own.
-Ellen
|
847.52 | I also have an adopted uncle | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:31 | 7 |
| re .49:
I'm sorry that you've never had the shoe on the other foot, Gale.
Having adoptive cousins has been really great. If you had some
adoptive relative, you could then understand why I feel the way
that *I* do.
|
847.53 | Another for the love-makes-a-family position | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:31 | 5 |
| It seems to me one can't quantify love to say what's "more", nevermind
generalize to say how *all* biological parents feel about their
offspring. (The example of a rapist father is the most blatant one.)
MKV
|
847.54 | Flame set on MEDIUM-high. You don't want to see high. | DEMING::FOSTER | | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:32 | 32 |
|
I too am finding the following VERY tough to swallow.
> Yes, the bio mother loved him so much that she gave him up so that he
> could have the life she could never give him. And that is the greatest
> love of all.
Since abortion has only been legal for a short period of time, and is
still consider immoral by many, not aborting does NOT automatically
represent any great love for a specific child. Sometimes, its just a
passive acceptance of a huge mistake. Sometimes, its just not knowing
enough about abortion, or not having the resources to get one. I think
you're really twisting things to jump to the assumption that this is
love. Its certainly self-sacrificing, but sometimes, that's ALL it is.
And other times, its not.
On top of this, I don't see how you can jump from a statement about a
bio mother to a sweeping statement about bio parents, who are of two
genders. I can't see how you can apply your statement to every
situation of a male siring children. NOT AT ALL.
I'm really wondering if you have an axe to grind here in your
statements, because the implications of what you're saying about
adoptive parents are not very positive.
I think the most offensive thing that you've said was your statement
that it may not be fair, but its true. The truth is that the
dictionary's definition is bigger than yours. If you want to be so
specific about what you call a mother, or a father, fine. But don't
spew forth your opinion like its the only correct way to think.
|
847.55 | No Black||No White | USEM::DONOVAN | | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:35 | 25 |
|
Gale,
Where do you thing of the love of the adoptive parent? Surely a
young girl may choose not to abort. But surely you can see the choice
of the adoptive parent to love and nurture a child not of their
flesh. Both sets of parents made choices.
How do you measure this love? Is there a scale or something? What
about the young woman born to poverty who chooses to defy all odds
and keep her baby? Does she love less for not doing the right
thing?
People are people. Love is immeasurible. Young biological mothers
cry when they give up their babies. Young biological mothers desert
their crack addicted babies in incubators in public hospitals. Step-
parents bond. Step parents sexually abuse. Biological parents adore
the products of their gene pool. Biological parents couldn't give
a damn. Reality runs the gammit.
I'm sorry you have had a sad experience.
Kate
|
847.56 | moderator plea | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:36 | 4 |
| Everyone may we please watch what we say and how we say it?
Bonnie J
comod
|
847.57 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:38 | 19 |
| RE: .51
Ellen, I would recommend that you volunteer to be a birth coach to
young woman who have chosen to go through labor and then put their
child up for adoption. I would urge you to watch that mother as she
tells her child she loves him/her and to have a wonderful life, and
hopefully some day they will meet again, and watch as the alligator
tears roll down their checks, with more love in each tear that any one
can fathom. Maybe then you can understand why the stand I take I will
_never_ back down from. Maybe then you can understand why you even had
cousins to be called cousins.. without that young lady in the picture,
you would have never of had those cousins to love.
I'm sorry you find it offensive, truly I am, but until you have had
your shoe on the other foot, I don't expect with that attitude you
would ever understand. I do know what it is like to have adopted people
in my immediate family. I know the love that I gave them, and the love
that was returned, so I do speak from looking at both sides.
|
847.58 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:47 | 10 |
| BTW:
Just for the record, I think adoptive parents are worth their weight in
gold. I think they deserve a very special place in life. I think it
takes a truly wonderful person to be an adoptive parent. I wish that
ever person who wants to adopt a baby/child someday might get that
wish, and be able give the love they want to that young person, and
experience the love that is given back.
Just for the record...
|
847.59 | two very different viewpoints | SSDEVO::GALLUP | open your eyes to a miracle | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:48 | 24 |
|
RE: .43
Gale...
> And I'll fight anyone verbally who tried to tell me I'm not the childs
> mother!!!!! It takes more love to give a child a life than it
> does to bring one up, especially at 14!!!!!!!
Totally different situation.
I'm talking how the child feels toward/about the
parent.....not what part the parent feels they play for the
child.
Biologically, yes you would be a mother in the given
scenario...but that child would never know you, so could
quite easily replace you with someone else in the mother
role.
and most likely would.
kath
|
847.60 | Yes, I am *still* offended! | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:52 | 62 |
| > Yes that is **EXACTLY** what I am telling you! Yes, the bio mother loved
> him so much that she gave him up so that he could have the life she could
> never give him.
How do you know? You are making this grand, sweeping assumption that *all*
bio-parents who give up their children for adoption feel the same thing.
Have you met my brother's bio-mom? Have you talked to her? Do you know her
motivation for what she did? If so, please let me know, as I would love to
meet her and ask her those questions myself. You are apparantly very close
to the woman.
>And that is the greatest love of all. Without her, his
> raising mother could never of had him to love.
This logic doesn't follow. Just because an event results in love, does
not mean the even itself was inspired by love. I met the man who loved
me more than any other man through a casual aquaintance. Although her
introduction resulted in a tremendous amount of love in my life, she did
it out of general concern, *not* out of love.
> The bio mother could
> have chosen to abort him, but instead she choose to give him life. I
> can't think of a greater love, can you?
How do you know she "chose to give him life"? How do you know she wasn't
simply morally opposed to abortion? Or maybe didn't find out she was
pregnant in time to abort him? Or couldn't afford an abortion? Or *even*
(I am not truly suggesting this, but it is a logical possibility) she
really wanted a child, but decided when she had him that she had changed
her mind?
My brother himself has suggested that his mother gave him up because he
was black. (Half black - she was white, her lover was black.) While I
don't necessarily agree with this theory, knowing what I know about prejudice
I could easily see a woman hating her own child for being "the wrong color".
Just because love motivates *you*, why do you say that convenience or
moral obligations might not be other people's motivations?
Finally I will say that you have a very different definition of love
than I do. I think love grows with time. I think the greatest love is
love for an individual. The more you know someone you love, the more you
love them. My mother loves me more now than when I was born because now
I am an individual, a personality that she helped create and shape,
because we have grown closer, and shared things, and she has given to me
of herself. Daniel's bio-mom never *met* him, doesn't *know* him,
and you are claiming that she loves him more than my mom loves him.
So, answer the question I asked before. by your logic, my mom loves me
more than she loves him, since she is my bio-Mom, and all bio-Mom's love
their children more than any non-bio-Mom can. So are you sitting there
telling me that my mother loves me more than my brother?
Actually I think the whole concept of "x loves y more than z" is absolutely
totally ludicrous. x and z are different people and have different types of
love and to say that x's love is greater than y's is comparing apples and
oranges.
There are some people who are incapable of love. Some of them might even
be bio-parents. Think about that.
D!
|
847.61 | In the *real* sense of the word | IAMOK::KOSKI | This ::NOTE is for you | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:53 | 30 |
| Well Gale, I'm in a position to know what I'm talking about when it
comes to adoption and I couldn't disagree with you more.
>It takes more love to give a child a life than it does to bring one up,
Huh? It doesn't take love to have a child, it takes sex. Does it take
love to give them up for adoption, sure, but what it really takes is
common sense. The 14 year olds that are keeping there children are
lacking common sense, do they have more or less love for the child? Not
necessary she just has less sense of reality.
>And I'll fight anyone verbally who tried to tell me I'm not the child's
>mother!!!!! especially at 14!!!!!!!
Age is irrelevant in this discussion you could be 14 or 44...when you
place your child up for the adoption, that child is going to be raised
by a mother & father. Granted no one can debate your claim as biological
mother, but I think that is relatively meaningless compared to the
responsibility taken on by the persons raising the child, who have all
rights and privileges to be known as Mom & Dad.
I recently met my genetic-bilogical mother. Is she my real mother? No.
She'll never be the person that raised me. She is the person that bore
me. Will I ever call her mom? No. As an adopted child I have always
considers Mom & Dad to be titles, titles belonging to people that are
raising children. It makes no difference if your mother bore you or not,
*she* will always be your mother. The person who gave birth to me will
be no more than the person who gave birth to me. She is not my Mom.
Gail
|
847.62 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:53 | 8 |
| Re: .59
Kathy, I agree, all I was saying that the adoptive parent was not the
biological parent... that was all...
But I would also hope that someday the two could get together and meet
and have some sort of relationship. May never happen, but I sure hope
that some day it would, for anyone that has given up a child.
|
847.63 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | You can trust me | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:56 | 8 |
| <** Moderator Response **>
I would echo Bonnie's request that we watch how we say things; and I
would go further and request that we presume innocent intentions when
we read something that strikes us as insensitive. Being fried for a
mistake is never fun.
=maggie
|
847.64 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:03 | 17 |
| .60> So, answer the question I asked before. by your logic, my mom loves me
.60> more than she loves him, since she is my bio-Mom, and all bio-Mom's love
.60> their children more than any non-bio-Mom can. So are you sitting there
.60> telling me that my mother loves me more than my brother?
D! - sorry - I just forgot to answer this... no, that is not what I
am saying... all I was saying that the adoptive parent was not
the biological parent...
I'd also urge anyone who would like to, to volunteer some time at an
unwed mothers home. There is one in Hillsboro, New Hampshire that I
volunteer my time to. I'd be more than happy to give anyone more
information off line about the place.
|
847.65 | Logic 101 | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:19 | 33 |
| >.60> So, answer the question I asked before. by your logic, my mom loves me
>.60> more than she loves him, since she is my bio-Mom, and all bio-Mom's love
>.60> their children more than any non-bio-Mom can. So are you sitting there
>.60> telling me that my mother loves me more than my brother?
> D! - sorry - I just forgot to answer this... no, that is not what I
> am saying... all I was saying that the adoptive parent was not
> the biological parent...
(THis is going to sound nasty, but I can't help it. I have to keep argument
logically consistent.)
Premise 1: Any bio-mom's love for a child is greater than a non-bio-mom's love
Premise 2: Child A is bio-child of Woman X (given)
Premise 3: Child B is non-bio-child of Woman Y (given)
Conclusion 1: Woman X loves Child A more than Woman Y loves Child B
Assume: Woman X = Woman Y
Conclusion 2: Woman X loves Child A more than Child B
Yes, that *is* what you are saying. You gave premise 1. If we assume it
to be correct, that leads directly and logically to conclusion 2. If
you disagree with conclusion 2, either you are suggesting that 1) one of
the premises is incorrect (your premise is the only one possible, since the
two others are givens) or 2) the logic is invalid.
Feel free to challenge my logic. I think the logic is correct. And since
it is clear to *me* that at least one situation exists (my own) where Conclusion
2 is false, then premise 1 must be false.
If you are going to present hypothesis as true, you have to defend logical
conclusions from that hypothesis as also true.
D!
|
847.66 | No, no one broke into my account | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Riff Raff- always good for a laugh | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:34 | 13 |
| People...
When someone writes a reply, they are generally doing so from a perspective
that includes primarily their experiences and experiences related to them by
others. Instead of being angered by the obvious differences of opinion, perhaps
it would be wise to consider that other people's experiences may not mesh
well with our own.
This subject has aroused to some intensely personal feelings and experiences.
Being a supportive community, it behooves us to tread carefully, lest we
injure someone's feelings.
The Doctah
|
847.67 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Riff Raff- always good for a laugh | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:45 | 25 |
| >Premise 1: Any bio-mom's love for a child is greater than a non-bio-mom's love
>Premise 2: Child A is bio-child of Woman X (given)
>Premise 3: Child B is non-bio-child of Woman Y (given)
>Conclusion 1: Woman X loves Child A more than Woman Y loves Child B
>Assume: Woman X = Woman Y
>Conclusion 2: Woman X loves Child A more than Child B
I think you have completely missed the point that Gale was trying to make.
Without speaking for Gale (who is perfectly capable), I would like to say this:
The act of a young girl giving a child up for adoption becasue she knows she
is unable to provide the type of lifestyle that she wants for her child is an
act of tremendous love. It would certainly be easier to abort. Sure, it's not
a perfect solution, but in terms of the psychological impact, it seems to be
a lesser evil. Deciding to go through with the pregnancy is a difficult one,
especially when you know you will be giving the child up for adoption. Deciding
to go through with the rigors of pregnancy and the emotional upheaval of
adoption is especially poignant when the pregnancy is the result of non-
consensual intercourse. That a 14 year old child could make this decision
is astounding, and serves as a model for me, when I start to think about how
great it is that I have accepted my daughters as my own. Kinda knocks you
down a peg or 11.
The Doctah
|
847.68 | Warning - emotional reply | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:45 | 51 |
| I have been asked by a moderator to perhaps explain why I am sitting
here in my office so upset that my contacts are getting extra
lubrication.
This letter was delivered to me yesterday:
Dear Baby,
By now you are not a baby anymore and your probably looking for
answers. Its important to me for you to know why you were adopted, so
as you read this letter hopefully it will answer a lot of your
questions.
I was given many hours of counsel before I finally made my decision to
place you for adoption. my reasons why? By the time you were to be born
I'd only be 15 years old. I didn't have any place to live where a baby
could live also. I wasn't making any money either. Its rather hard to
bring up a child under these circumstances. After days and nights of
praying I knew adoption was the best choice. I love you very much and I
only wanted the best for you.
My time was coming to an end you were soon to be born so arrangements
needed to be made. I started to meet with a Christian social worker so
together we could find you a good home.
I know God has special plains (My comment: I thinks its supposed to
mean plans) for the both of us. I've handed you over in God's care so I
know your in the right place. I'll be praying for you always.
I love you very much,
your
birth mother.
This letter was written by a very special person (my daughter) to her
child that will be born within 3 weeks. Its been a very rough 9 months
for all of us. Within the last year she has gone through an attempted
rape, a rape, grand jury indictments, a guilty plea in court, and now a
(soon-to-be) birth.
She was given the choice to either go through an abortion or an
adoption. Her final decision - Having this baby and giving it to a
couple that could not have a baby might bring some good out of all the
bad that has happened.
I guess now is the time for me to thank all that have been supportive
that has known about this. Without all the extra hugs, and prayers I'm
not sure how at times we would have survived.
Gale Kleinberger
|
847.69 | re .66: good advice for many topics | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:46 | 1 |
|
|
847.70 | .43 or .64?? | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:59 | 34 |
| The confusion seems to be that .43 said, twice, that a biological
mother has more love for her child than an adoptive mother can.
In later notes such as .64, this is toned down to an observation that
an adoptive parent is not the biological parent.
These two statements to me are not the same.
Gale, I don't know what you think now!!
Have you changed your mind, or did you not say what you thought in .43?!
I agree that the adoptive parent is not the biological parent. I don't
think anyone is arguing with fact. People are arguing with an
assumption that a biological mother -- who carried the child for 9
months and gave it up, for whatever good reason -- has more love for
her child than an adoptive mother -- who chose to have a child and
raised it for 18+ years.
Apart from the factual observation, I don't think one can draw any real
conclusions about how much love one person has for another, nor about
how the biological relationship is stronger than an interpersonal
relationship based on years of day-to-day care.
For what it's worth, the American Heritage Dictionary supports the view
that a "mother" can be either biological or adoptive.
MOTHER
1. A female that has borne an offspring.
2. A female who has adopted a child or otherwise established a
maternal relationship with another person.
MATERNAL
1. Relating to or characteristic of a mother or motherhood; motherly.
To me, "motherly" is a state of mind.
Pam
|
847.71 | curiosity can wait... | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Nov 14 1989 12:01 | 5 |
| Gale, I was writing .70 while you were writing your last -- if you
don't want to write further, don't worry about it.
Pam
|
847.72 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | You can trust me | Tue Nov 14 1989 12:19 | 5 |
| [huggggg]
for you and your daughter, Gale. that's serious hard stuff.
=m
|
847.73 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | wipe your conscience!!! | Tue Nov 14 1989 12:34 | 39 |
|
.68 (Gale)
That's a very moving letter your daughter wrote. It took a
lot of courage and, yes, love for the child, to write that
letter.
I think the reason so many people are so upset is that you
generalized your daughter's case into every case of this
kind.
Also, your daughter's feelings for the child (ie, she will
always feel like it's mother) can in no way be compared to
the child's feelings toward your daughter. The child will
go, hopefully, to a loving, caring home....she's have two
parents that will be all she knows. By the time she's old
enough to know that she is adopted, your daughter will be a
stranger to her......
Though your daughter will always feel the mother-daughter
bond with that child....the child probably will not feel the
mother-daughter bond back. Unfortunately this is a realism
for adoption.
Perhaps what everyone is trying to say is that "mother" is a
very dynamic term. Your daughter will always be the child's
biological mother.....and the adopting woman will always be
the "providing mother" (for lack of a better term). It is
possible to have two mothers playing very different roles.
But the choice of who that child, if anyone, chooses to call
"mother" is stricting the child's choice. "Mother" is a very
endearing term, and as Gail Koski pointed out before, no one
gets granted the right to be called "mother" by the simple
fact of birth or even bringing the child up....the term has
to come from inside the child, and from there only......
kath
|
847.74 | | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Tue Nov 14 1989 13:02 | 58 |
| RE: .73
>>she's have two
>>parents that will be all she knows. By the time she's old
>>enough to know that she is adopted, your daughter will be a
>>stranger to her......
One would hope that this child will be told that she/he is adopted at a
very early age...early enough so that the child has an opportunity to
grow into the meaning of the word "adopted."
>>Though your daughter will always feel the mother-daughter
>>bond with that child....the child probably will not feel the
>>mother-daughter bond back. Unfortunately this is a realism
>>for adoption.
I don't think that one can generalize about how adoptees do or don't
feel bonds towards their biological mothers or fathers. I think that
there is a good possibility that a bond between mother and child can be
formed, even though the knowledge of the bond may be lost to one's
conscious memory. There are things that I just knew about my birth
mother before I was told any facts about her. How did I know these
things? The knowledge about her just seemed to be part of my cells. I
have always felt a bond with my birth mother.
>>"Mother" is a very
>>endearing term, and as Gail Koski pointed out before, no one
>>gets granted the right to be called "mother" by the simple
>>fact of birth or even bringing the child up....the term has
>>to come from inside the child, and from there only......
If my birth mother had not died before I found her, I could very easily
see myself calling her 'mom'. There are a lot of reasons why I
wouldn't see this as a problem, but the primary one is that I don't
feel it is a conflict for me to acknowledge that I *do*, as an adoptee,
have two mothers and two fathers. That is my reality as an adoptee.
I met my birth father nearly three years ago and have just recently
sent him a letter asking him if it would be o.k. if I called him dad
instead of Ted. Since we have had some time to develop a relationship,
it feels very comfortable for me to ask him this question. So, it is
up to the individual to figure out what is going to work and feel
comfortable in these very complicated "families" that we adoptees have.
BTW, these kinds of discussions about who is the "real" parents and who
has the "right" to be called mom and dad make me painfully aware of how
we, as a society, view infants and children. This kind of discussion
makes me feel like we are dicussing a piece of real-estate...
Too bad we can't think of children as being on loan to us for the time
that they need the protection and care of adults vs. being owned by a
parent, or parents, or the state or whomever. We really do have a
long, long way to go on this one.
Laura
|
847.75 | | CADSE::ARMSTRONG | | Tue Nov 14 1989 13:03 | 11 |
| Gale, I want to disagree with your first premise in the strongest
terms. And, I would like you to try to see it in a positive light.
I would challenge anyone who says they love their kids more than
I love mine. And all mine are adopted.
So try to have confidence that the adoptive parents of your
grandchild will love that child AT LEAST as much as you and
your daughter already do. She's doing a very brave thing.
Try to help her see that she's placing the child in a new home
full of equally strong love. Give her a hug from all of us.
bob
|
847.76 | Prayers for Gale | USEM::DONOVAN | | Tue Nov 14 1989 13:49 | 9 |
| Gale,
My prayers are with you, your daughter and this baby. Feel good
in knowing that adoptive parents (like my husbands) can bond to
that baby and love that baby.
Thanks for opening up,
Kate
|
847.77 | Same wavelength, I believe. | SSDEVO::GALLUP | put your hand inside the puppet head | Tue Nov 14 1989 14:00 | 86 |
| > <<< Note 847.74 by SONATA::ERVIN "Roots & Wings..." >>>
> One would hope that this child will be told that she/he is adopted at a
> very early age...early enough so that the child has an opportunity to
> grow into the meaning of the word "adopted."
No, I used the word "know", not "told" (like I think you
believed me to have said). The knowledge should, in my eyes,
always be there, but the understanding takes time.........A 2
year old can, quite probably, not understand the meaning of
being "adopted." I agree wholeheartedly with you that
hopefully a child will accept the adoption as part of
him/herself.
> I don't think that one can generalize about how adoptees do or don't
> feel bonds towards their biological mothers or fathers.
Please reread my statement...the word "probably" is in
there.....and in the next statement you make you use the
words "good possibility" and say almost the same
thing.....perhaps we're on the same wavelength, it's just a
touchy subject and causes quick judgements.....when we really
meant the same thing.
> There are things that I just knew about my birth
> mother before I was told any facts about her. How did I know these
> things? The knowledge about her just seemed to be part of my cells. I
> have always felt a bond with my birth mother.
I agree that these is always some sort of mother-daughter
bond.........but the child may choose to view that as a
biological bond, or a love bond....that's up to the
individual child, not something anyone can speculate on
here...we can only speak for ourselves about the nature of
that bond.
> wouldn't see this as a problem, but the primary one is that I don't
> feel it is a conflict for me to acknowledge that I *do*, as an adoptee,
> have two mothers and two fathers. That is my reality as an adoptee.
Again, please re-read.....I mentioned something about having
two mothers that play very different roles......mother is a
dynamic term........there are no rules stating that it can be
applied to only one person....and I hope I didn't imply that
I meant that because I know I mentioned "two mothers" in
there somewhere. ;-)
> So, it is
> up to the individual to figure out what is going to work and feel
> comfortable in these very complicated "families" that we adoptees have.
Exactly my point..it's up the child to determine what works
for her/him........not someone else.....and it is possible to
consider one's self to be a mother of a child without the
child considering that person to be the mother.....it's a
purely individual choice, and no one can make that decision
for the child.
> we, as a society, view infants and children. This kind of discussion
> makes me feel like we are dicussing a piece of real-estate...
I know I'm not discussing the child as a piece of
real-estate..it's important to take into consideration that
the child's emotions and feelings and wants and needs are
more important and ANYONE ELSE'S desires or beliefs.
> Too bad we can't think of children as being on loan to us for the time
> that they need the protection and care of adults vs. being owned by a
> parent, or parents, or the state or whomever. We really do have a
> long, long way to go on this one.
As I said before...........the child picks us.....it's not us
picking the child.......no matter if there is a biological
link or not......it's the child's sole decision to use the
term mother.....but it is also important for the biological
mother to think of herself as "mother" if that is what she so
desires.
I guess my sole point is that "love" is a selfless
thing.....you should never expect that just because you love
someone they will love you back in the same way.............
Love should be given freely, not taken......(IMO).
kath
|
847.78 | OBSCURE BUT THOUGHT-PROVOKING | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Tue Nov 14 1989 14:15 | 15 |
|
Khahil Gibran said, "On Children",
"Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of life's longing for itself"
The entire essay (which, unfortunately I have not memorized, gives
a good perspective on the role of Significant Adults in the life of
a child.
Deb
|
847.79 | A Request | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Tue Nov 14 1989 18:25 | 11 |
| Gail, it's not my business, I just feel compelled to ask you to
read the notes on adoption and to say that if I were your daughter
I would want to do what I can now to make reunion possible in the
future. The social worker should be able to advise how a letter
can be delivered later, or left in file for the child to obtain
later if looking for your daughter. Something may be able to be
arranged.
Your daughter is truely very brave and loving, and so are you.
Bud
|
847.80 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Secretary of the Stratosphere | Wed Nov 15 1989 04:07 | 18 |
| Gale, I feel for you, and your daughter, and her coming child.
And I'm also sorry if the antagonism (even if not meant to be
malicious) against you has added to the grief you already have.
Still, I have to join with some of the others who feel that you
are taking your daughter's case and making it an axiom for how
*all* pregnant women feel. I'm sure that there are any number
of women who view the child as a "thing" that they just want to
be rid of, and had decided against abortion for a reason that has
nothing to do with whether they feel love for the child (i.e.
you don't have to love another person to be against taking their
life).
There are as many reasons for bringing a child full term as there
are women who do so. And, as D! points out, unless you know the
specific person and her motivation, you can't just make a blanket
assumption about what she feels toward the child.
--- jerry
|
847.81 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Wed Nov 15 1989 07:37 | 47 |
| I decided to wait for a day before I said anything more... I was just
too emotional yesterday to do anymore noting in this topic. A person I
care very much about sent this to me in the mail yesterday:
> Well, I'm with the folks who think you could be accused
> of over-generalization...
If I offended anyone, or touched skeletons in the closet that perhaps
were too close to you then I too am sorry that I made you re-live a
portion of your life yesterday that perhaps you didn't want to re-live.
If I was in over-generalization mode, it was because I try so very hard to
see only good in a situation. I want things to turn out best for all
concerned. But it was also because of the work that I'm doing now with
New Beginnings. Until the hospital told us Becky was pregnant, I had
never heard of them, or what they did. They take in girls who are PG, and
have no place to go, and there is no charge for them being there if they
can't afford to pay anything. They are given 24 hour a day available
counsel, and more love than anyone could ever imagine getting. These
girls usually give their babies up for adoption, and I have come to see
that side of it. I understand that there is the side of females who have
babies and leave them in trash cans to die, and could not care less.
But I have only seen the side of girls aged 14 to 25 that with a lot of
love are giving babies up instead of abortion, which was an option to
them. That love is tremendous, I wish everyone of you could experience
it. Those girls will always be the babies mother. Kathy I loved the
terms you used, for the mother that the child will always know.
Somehow, I wish someday that Becky and her child will be able to be
together, so that I can tell it the love she had to give it a life,
under what was the most difficult of circumstances.
BTW: For those of you that inquired, she is doing very well... a little
scared, and unsure of the unknown. She will live with her father after
this, as she doesn't trust just living with me anymore. She wants to
be around a male for protection. I understand her reasoning, although
I don't think her father could have done anymore than what I did when I
heard her screams...
Again, I'm sorry if I was insensitive and was too emotional too see what
you were experiencing also.
Now, I'm sorta dropping out of the discussion... I guess I should have
never entered into it, it cuts too deeply right now to be rational.
Gale
|
847.82 | May I add something ? | BUSY::KUHLMANN | | Thu Nov 16 1989 11:57 | 46 |
| I am getting very confused by reading these last 40 notes or so
each are yelling at another for views that they believe in.
I also belong to the adoption triangle, I amm adopted with two adopted
brothers and had a great life, had things that I know of today since
learning all neat things about my bio parents and their families,
that if my bio mother had kept me, she would have been alienated
from her family. as it was she and her family went to counselling
to help with the decision as what to do with me. and Because they
choose adotion she choose not to visit me after birth because she
felt that if she did she never could have gone through with her
decision, my bio dad moved out west after my bio mom discouraged
any further contact with her afraid of what her family would do
to him. Both had less that 11 grade education. Both came from the
poorer side of town.
If it hadn't been for her and him I wouldn't be here today, I wouldn't
have knowen two wonderful brothers and parents and extended families.
also I too have put my first born up for adoption a healthy baby
boy names Taylor Yorke. 8/30/81. 9:47PM Emergecy C-Section we almost
lost our lives at the end.
When Taylor was 2 1/2 days old I went down to the nursery I held
him in my arms I fed him his bottle I held him as we both cried,
and I said my goodbyes- and I told him that if he was willing later
on in his life I would like to meet him again but as two adults.
No if it hadn't been for my fornuate expeirences with adoption then
I don't know what my decision would have been.
Why am I telling the notes community this, I don't know maybe to
let them know that I felt that because of what I was able to grow
up with and see and feel, LOVE WANTED, EXCEPTED, that I knew that
from the family I chose for Taylor well I know he is pretty much
getting the same things.
If I had kept Taylor I too would have been on Welfare, my family
would have deserted me I was 20 physically 16 emotionally, No thank
you I wanted the Best for MY SON! According to the agency Taylor
will always be my son! and I can call him my son! No I wanted better,
I wanted him to have baby toys, I wanted him to have the life I
knew, where the parents weren't always fretting about where the
money was going to come from.
Lise
|
847.83 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Nov 16 1989 20:28 | 5 |
| thanks Lise
hugs
Bonnie
|
847.84 | don't I count too!!!! | WMOIS::RICCI | | Fri Nov 17 1989 09:21 | 28 |
| I would like to offer my personal perspective on the adoption issue.
I was born 'out of wedlock'. My mother suffered greatly due to this
situation. She was married 4 1/2 years later. I was an abused child
due, in part, to my parents inability to deal with me. My father saw
me as a bastard child (his family is/was so very *proper*) who was
the focus of his wife. My mother, on the other hand, resented me for
"screwing up her life" . Between the two of them, I suffered from many
years of abuse. My memories of childhood are mostly of beatings and the
indifference of my parents. I am 35 years old and have never been
hugged by my father...not once. My biological father never acknowledged
my existence. My counselor thought it best that I don't try to contact
my bio father for fear of his rejection. I haven't given alot of
information here, mostly general stuff, because this note isn't about
my broken bones...but it is about my broken heart. In short, weather
they are biological or not, parenting is a process. I don't feel as if
I ever had a father. My mother had a lover, and a husband. My daughters
consider me their father because of the way I treat them not any other
reason or intitlement. I don't let a day go buy that I don't hug my
children, that I don't tell them I love them, that I don't try to earn
their love. The only other point I would like to make is this. From a
parental point of view, it may seem that the best way to sever the
relationship (in the case of adoption) is completely. I say no..from
this childs point of view, I may have been able to survive with much
fewer scars had I known that I did have someone out there who cared
about me - someone who thought I was worth acknowledging.
Bob
|
847.85 | | BUSY::KUHLMANN | | Fri Nov 17 1989 12:34 | 26 |
|
.84 Yes I also know children that don't grow up in healthy
homes, all I have to do is look at one of my cousins. She has had
4 children, 3 from different fathers, after a while she signed adoption
papers so the children's natural father and his wife could have
full custoday. Just two weeks ago after 11 years of raising the
youngest in a drug and alcohlic home where nodbody including the
child's father could find her, she was arrested and HEather was
returned to her dad and step siblings. God only know what the child
has seen or gone through!
No I am not deniny there are adults that shouldn't have children!
I am just saying because of what I was able to feel, share in, and
expierence, I felt postive enough about it that I could give Taylor
up, knowing the questions, the bad and the good, I felt it was the
best I could do for my child. No I am not 100% happy but what else
could I do?? Did I have a right to ask a child to exist in a world
where I would be out drugging and drinking?? not enough money??
Yes I could have had an abortion but I chose to give somebody else
the chance I had at life and some two people in this world that
my bio mother gave my parents the child of their dreams. I have
not always been the perfect girl/woman, but my parents have made
it clear to me that they never regretted their decision!!
Lise
|
847.86 | if only I counted.... | WMOIS::RICCI | | Fri Nov 17 1989 13:06 | 33 |
| re: 847.85
>God only know what the child
>has seen or gone through!
This statement is so true its painful. Many adults make the mistake
of seeing the 'problem' from the adults point of view.
>No I am not deniny there are adults that shouldn't have children!
There are many people who, for many reasons, should never have
children.
>I am just saying because of what I was able to feel, share in, and
> expierence, I felt postive enough about it that I could give Taylor
> up, knowing the questions, the bad and the good, I felt it was the
> best I could do for my child. No I am not 100% happy but what else
> could I do?? Did I have a right to ask a child to exist in a world
> where I would be out drugging and drinking?? not enough money??
I know that this must have been an extremly difficult decision for you.
I spent my whole childhood with parents who resented my very
exsistence. My grandparents tried to adopt me (went thru courts to get
custody) with no success. The courts feelings were that the child
belongs with his/her biological mother. If they had looked into my
world, they would not have made that decision. I applaud you for
having the courage to forsake your own feelings for that of the child.
Bob
|
847.87 | against the odds | IAMOK::KOSKI | This ::NOTE is for you | Sun Nov 19 1989 20:12 | 18 |
| This discussion reminds me of the first question I knew my Bio-Mom had
waiting for me when she met me. She said she had only hoped I had a
happy childhood. Now I had to ask a counselor how to answer that
question. How do you tell a woman that lovingly gave up her child in
hopes that it would have a better life that the "better" life didn't
exactly happen.
I agree whole heartedly that some people should just not have children.
My adoptive parents were two such people. I've yet to tell bio-Mom the
real truth about my childhood. I stated quite simply that it was a
"difficult" childhood.
Happy homes are a product of content adjusted adults, adopted children
have as much chance being raised in a dysfunctional home as do "home
grown" children.
Gail
|
847.88 | | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Mon Nov 20 1989 08:07 | 28 |
| Gail,
>>How do you tell a woman that lovingly gave up her child in
>>hopes that it would have a better life that the "better" life didn't
>>exactly happen.
I would suggest to you what Susan Darke (The Adoption Connection)
suggested to me several years ago. I was pondering the same question,
not so much about issues dealing with my adoptive parents, but around
other things in my life. Susan advised that I wait until I had
established a relationship and rapport with my bio-family before I
started handling the more difficult items. No doubt that most birth
mothers have guilt about having had to relinquish their children, and
there isn't really anything that you can do to spare her from this
fact, but I think that it will be o.k. for her to know that you didn't
have ideal parents. Have the conversation when you feel ready to talk
about it.
My birth father feels *very* responsible about the years I spent as an
active alcoholic. He thinks that if I hadn't been adopted I wouldn't
have had a drinking problem. I very quietly and consistently talk to
him about alcoholism as a disease, that it wouldn't have mattered where
I grew up, and that the experience of addiction, but even more so, the
experience of recovery has been a very positive force in my life.
Maybe someday he will be able to let go of his guilt.
Laura
|
847.89 | Adoption problems? | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Mon Nov 20 1989 13:36 | 12 |
| re Gail
I hope that you're not quite right. I hope adoption agencies do
a better job of screening prospective parents. They do some screening,
at least at some places. So I would hope (and believe) that there
is a better chance of being raised in a healthy environment when
adopted.
Of course, "a better chance" is not a guarantee. Anyway, it gives
me food for a lot of thought about when this fails.
Bud
|
847.90 | Will have to settle for a happy adulthood! | XCUSME::KOSKI | This ::NOTE is for you | Mon Nov 20 1989 21:24 | 23 |
| re -1
I hope that screening is carried out differently today. However,
I'm not sure it would have screened out my parents, who on the surface
look like "nice" people. I don't like to press my point,because
I hope my situation was the exception.
My bio-Mom told me that the agency assured her I was going to a
"proven" family. What they had proven was that they were fiscaly
responsible and appeared to want children for all the right reasons.
There was, to my knowledge, no follow up once my sister (older)
and I were placed. Had child abuse laws been as enforced as they
are now however, we'd probably have been pulled out of the house. This
would have been true weather the parents were adoptive or natural.
I don't like being a cloud here, I'm just a touch of realism. It
can happen in any family, and unfortunately it can happen in the
"chosen" adoptive households. To often outsiders look at your family
as something special,the children as "chosen", chosen or not, adoptive
families are not special by default.
Gail
|
847.91 | It can and does happen | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Nov 20 1989 23:49 | 19 |
| Having been through the adoption process I have to agree with
.90
We were checked out as to being 'nice people' and being finacially
capable of having more children for the basics...references,
income tax statements, a couple of interviews which didn't probe
all that deeply.
We were fortunate in that we also had very sensitive and aware
social workers who felt it very important to make a good match
between parent and child and who tried to find ways to select
out those who were bad parents.. but with a less than competent
social worker, going by the rules could mean some superficially
'good' parents who had dark undersides could end up adopting.
One of my closest friends was adopted by people who were a bad
match for her and it has affected her, tho she has grown into
a warm and wonderful adult.
Bonnie
|
847.92 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Two 4 a $1.38 - can't beat that | Fri Nov 24 1989 13:01 | 31 |
| I promised that I would update you in the end...
The end came at 12:17am, on the 22nd of November. Baby and my daughter are
both doing fine. We had some serious complications with Becky after the
birth, which required over 100 stitches (the baby tore up her anal canal),
and her blood pressure would not become stable for almost 4 hours, and she
lost a lot of blood, but otherwise, she is doing WONDERFUL (she says she's a
little sore :-) today.)...
I think the Lord knew she could not handle much of a labor, as the doctor
broke her water at 10:15pm, and the baby was born naturally (not even in a
delivery room!) at 12:17am. Becky DID wonderful all during the labor, but
she said it was not her idea of a fun evening, although it wasn't as bad
as what she had thought it was going to be.
She temporally named him Austin Daniel, and Austin will meet his new
parents on Monday, pending being released from the hospital (he developed
Jaundice today). He was 7 pounds and 7 ounces, and 20 inches long.
One *really* neat thing that happened was she had to decide whether to have
him circumcised... after talking with the social worker and the doctor,
she decided to let the adoptive parents decide.
The funny thing was when she and I had to sign the release papers to the
agency, she asked the social worker where she was supposed to sign, and the
lady said on the "mother" line, and she said, "OH, no, I'm used to my mom
signing on the mother line"
All-in-all, we are very glad that this is now over, and that she can go
back to being a teenager, and living a {somewhat} normal life.
|
847.93 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Mon Nov 27 1989 11:28 | 5 |
| <--(.92)
VERY best congratulations and good wishes to you both!
=m
|
847.94 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | nancy b. - Hardware Engineer; LSE | Tue Nov 28 1989 15:33 | 55 |
|
re: 847.81 (Gale Kleinberger)
While all of my messages to Gale concerning her ordeal have been
offline so far, this part of her situation I wanted to publicly
discuss:
("She" is Gale's daughter)
> She will live with her father after this, as she doesn't
** trust just living with me anymore. She wants to be around a
** male for protection. I understand her reasoning, although I
> don't think her father could have done anymore than what I did
> when I heard her screams...
I made it through all of Gale's note, the one containing the
"Dear Baby" letter written by her daughter to the child of the
rape, without shedding a tear until I read that. Then came many
tears; tears of anger and of frustration. Feelings not directed
_towards_ her daughter; just at the situation itself: Her
daughter now wanting/feeling the need to be around a male for
protection and subsequently rejecting her mother.
Something I wrote down in my notebook when I was reading
everything I could on the subject while preparing for the trial
echoed in my mind...
"All men benefit because some men rape."
I didn't understand it very well at the time, but it echoed in my
mind as I read Gale's paragraph above, for Gale's ex is indeed
benefitting because his daughter was raped.
Not that I claim ignorance of this reaction or pretend I am/was
"above it" - I am far more likely to make it through the night
without nightmares if I am sleeping with a man. I hate this
side-effect which, in effect, makes me very dependant on men
for having a normal day-to-day existence.
In "Men on Rape", Timothy Beneke wrote,
"It is painful but necessary to acknowledge the sense in
which men benefit from violence against women. Men compete
with women in myriad ways, both professional and personal;
the threats to women give men definite advantages. It is
sometimes said that men tolerate violence against women
_because_ they benefit from it.
... How much longer will men accept as normal lives of
constraint and abuse for women? "
nancy b.
|
847.95 | Trying the other foot | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Fri Dec 01 1989 11:55 | 15 |
| re .94
I agree with your assessment. The Ex is apparently benefitting
from the side effects of the rape of his daughter. Putting the
shoe on the other foot, however, he may have had an unfairly small
benefit of interaction with his daughter previously because he was
not the custodial parent. I do not know the circumstances, and
don't want to know. I am also uncomfortable about saying anything
that might hurt either Nancy or Gail. I just wanted to point out
that, just maybe, the benefit spoken of is justly deserved by the
Ex. Perhaps it is his fair turn? (Gail, this is not to say that
I think you are anything less than a wonderful mother. What I've
read from you is wonderful!)
Bud
|
847.96 | Try a whole bunch of feet. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Dec 01 1989 12:27 | 16 |
| Ah, but Bud, what of the general case?
If the most qualified person for a job happens to be a woman (as
should happen 50% of the time), but she does not take the job
because it puts her at risk for rape (bad neighborhood, night
work, etc.), has not the man who was not the best benefited?
That's not too bad. But consider the case where the top three
people were women (12.5% of the cases). Then a man who was not
in contention at all would get the job! (Rare is the person who
will consider more than three candidates at a time.) If something
unjust happens 12% of the time, then it's time to look at the
factors involved.
This purely hypothetical suggestion has been brought to you by
Ann B.
|
847.97 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Fri Dec 01 1989 13:03 | 17 |
| Or in general: sometimes an unjustly obtained benefit will in fact have
been deserved, just as sometimes it will have been undeserved. But that
*cannot* legitimize the obtaining of a benefit through unjust means.
The observation of .95 sounds, to me, much like someone observing about
a murder that the victim's survivors might be excellent people, who really
deserve the inheritance that they've just come into. It may be true, but
it's quite irrelevant to the issue, and suggests a disregard of the fact
that such benefit as there may be is obtained through the suffering of a
victim or victims.
Or to be very blunt about it, if *your* daughter were raped, and she decided
to come live with you as a result, would you really say to yourself, "Well,
of course it's terrible that the rape happened, but at least some good came
out of it"?
-Neil
|
847.98 | the "other foot" doesn't wear high heels. | COBWEB::SWALKER | metaphysics with onions | Fri Dec 01 1989 13:05 | 41 |
|
.95> Putting the
.95> shoe on the other foot, however, he may have had an unfairly small
.95> benefit of interaction with his daughter previously because he was
.95> not the custodial parent.
.95> I just wanted to point out
.95> that, just maybe, the benefit spoken of is justly deserved by the
.95> Ex. Perhaps it is his fair turn?
That's an interesting "other foot". Does this mean that you see
rape as a sort of "men's lib" action, restoring "justly deserved"
privileges to men that the courts may have taken away?
Let's reverse the situation. Let's say that the custodial parent
before the rape had been male. Assuming that afterwards the daughter
felt the same way about male protection, what effects do you think
the rape might have on custodial arrangements such as spending weekends
with Mom? What about her fair turn?
I don't think that the debate here is about who "should" have custody,
or who "deserves" to have it. It is about how rape can cause women,
not only those directly victimized, to lose power over some aspect of
their lives. It is about how one of the side-effects of rape can be to
reinforce male-domininence within our society, because women are made
to feel that they need male protection. It is about the poor woman who
lives in a dangerous neighborhood and refuses to leave the husband who
beats her because the alternative (living without a male in the house)
is worse.
If we can accept the view that (one man's) rape can be a mechanism for
giving (other) men their "fair turn" in child custody (abhorrent as
that thought is to me), then what is the analogous mechanism to give
women freedom from fear of violence against them?
Unless we can identify that, I can't shake the image from my mind that
the "other foot" you speak of is one that kicks women when they are
down.
Sharon
|
847.99 | Just a call to Open Minds | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:21 | 28 |
| .95 was mearly in reply to .94 which suggested that the father
benefited unfairly as a result of his daughter's rape. It was an
invitation to examine the suggestion in .94 with an open mind and
from all angles. I like to do that, to look at the other points
of view. It has been a quality that was "valued" by a work group
I participated in a while ago. Few in this conference seem ever
to consider that there is another, valid point of view, one which
does not necessarily benefit the woman in a gender situation.
Of course rape is not justified by any circumstance.
My note did, of course, refer to the extreme gender bias of the
courts in child custody cases. For at least 30 years, fathers have
had very little chance of winning a custody case. The "normal"
way of gauging such unfairness is to use statistics such as how
many men have custody vs how many women. Such a statistic would
reveal the extreme bias I referred to. Sure, the statistic is flawed
as most statistics which purport to show levels of descrimination
are. I would also suggest that when biases are put aside, neither
the mother nor the father is generally more "deserving" of custody,
that is is probably such a case, and that perhaps the father should
have a turn with his daughter. All of the specifics are without
any knowledge of the family, but a suggestion that .94 may not have
been fair to the father even though I understand generally and
specifically what was meant in that note.
Bud
|
847.100 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | metaphysics with onions | Fri Dec 01 1989 15:51 | 38 |
| Re .99 (Bud):
.94 implied that the _means_ by which the benefit was obtained
were unfair, but made no statement on the benefit itself.
I understand the point that you were making in .95. I don't deny
that the courts have had a historical bias towards women in child
custody cases. However, Nancy's statement was that "All men benefit
because some men rape".
So what if some men deserve to benefit? It still doesn't make Nancy's
assertion any more palatable (IMO). Linking the issue of child
custody with Nancy's statement implies that one could whip out an
abacus and do something like the following in a hypothetical case
where both wrongs were present (and I in no way mean to imply that
that's the case in the particular example cited):
1 rape, plus one mother losing custody because her daughter
feels a resultant need for male protection: 100 wrongs.
(move 100 beads)
1 father, who had been unfairly denied custody because of a
court bias, gets custody of his daughter: 2 rights.
(return 2 beads)
_That's_ what I can't stomach. I don't feel that fear is a morally
acceptible vehicle for societal change. Does my argument now make
more sense to you?
Actually, another angle that no-one has brought up yet is the case
of incest, which could easily result in the opposite scenario - that
is, in all _women_ benefitting because some men rape - especially
since it could help feed a court bias. Or that rape historically
played a major role in the subjugation of women which kept them at
home and in the childbearing/childcare roles that the courts often
cite/d when giving child custody preferentially to women.
Sharon
|
847.101 | How's this? | CECV03::LUEBKERT | | Fri Dec 01 1989 16:33 | 16 |
| re: 100
I think we really agree on the real issues. eg. Nothing justifies
a rape.
Nancy raised the side issue of the father "benefitting" (and he
probably doesn't see it that way for lots of reasons--I would gladly
die for the POSSIBILITY of preventing my daughter from being raped)
citing reasons. I took a different view of that side issue saying
that THAT benefit might have been fair. (his turn to enjoy the
daily interaction with his daughter) This does not say that the
means is to be compared to the end. If he was like me, he would
FAR prefer the benefit of no rape. Not even worth a moments pause
in deciding. Just another look from another angle of a side issue
to a side issue.
bud
|
847.102 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | nancy b. - hardware engineer; LSE | Sat Dec 02 1989 23:06 | 17 |
|
re: 847.98 (Sharon Walker)
> I don't think that the debate here is about who "should" have custody,
> or who "deserves" to have it. It is about how rape can cause women,
> not only those directly victimized, to lose power over some aspect of
> their lives. It is about how one of the side-effects of rape can be to
> reinforce male-domininence within our society, because women are made
> to feel that they need male protection. It is about the poor woman who
> lives in a dangerous neighborhood and refuses to leave the husband who
> beats her because the alternative (living without a male in the house)
> is worse.
Exactly, and then some.
nancy b.
|
847.103 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | nancy b. - hardware engineer; LSE | Mon Dec 04 1989 01:50 | 19 |
|
re: 847.95 (Bud Luebkert)
> I am also uncomfortable about saying anything that might
> hurt either Nancy or Gale. I just wanted to point out
Speaking strictly for myself, I would rather you say what
you are thinking about the topic rather than to worry about
hurting me. Similarly, I found some of what was said in
the topic on "Legalized Rape" pretty repulsive, but there is
merit in seeing (however painfully) that there is still a long
way to go in destroying the myths surrounding rape, as 1990
beckons.
In other words, I would rather hear your honest thoughts
than a sugar-coated version because of me.
[anyway, I am tough and can't be hurt anymore]
nancy b.
|
847.104 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Shoot it, stuff it, or marry it | Mon Dec 04 1989 07:43 | 47 |
| RE: 102.. Thanks Nancy... I agree with your reply totally... but to
answer some of Bud's questions directly...
.95> shoe on the other foot, however, he may have had an unfairly small
.95> benefit of interaction with his daughter previously because he was
.95> not the custodial parent.
Just in case anyone else is wondering.. he has 100% visitation rights...
All he has to do is call and say I would like to A) Take the girls,
B) See the girls, C) Have the girls stay with me, D) Come live with the
girls for a week, whatever.... the last thing I wanted was for him to
not have a relationship with the girls (despite my personal opinion of
him, he is still the girls father)... I have actually pushed for him
to have a more active role then what he does have.
.95> I am also uncomfortable about saying anything
.95> that might hurt either Nancy or Gail.
Well, Nancy has already given you her opinion, and I will gladly say
that I don't need to be protected with words being withheld. I had a
really bad weekend, because my emotions were on my sleeve, with having
to sign adoption papers on Friday (Becky is underage), and having to
give her to her father on Friday morning, - I didn't think I was going
to survive this past weekend at all... I didn't act rationally, I
looked at EVERYTHING wrong, and I wasn't in the right frame of mind
for anything, and dropped into tears if someone looked at me wrong!
I also had the need to not be alone this weekend. Luckily I had someone to
lean on and be with, however, that was last weekend, and that is
past. I am going forward with how this situation has ended up. I'd love
to rationally discuss anything you might want to ask about how we felt,
or dealt with what happened. I'd even unrationally argue with you, but
I doubt that would be effective :-). Since I was not raped, I don't
know how to relate to it, and can't answer questions, but I can answer
questions about what happens when it happened to someone too close to
you, and how it can effect you.
(Gail, this is not to say that
.95> I think you are anything less than a wonderful mother. What I've
.95> read from you is wonderful!)
Thanks...
Gale
|
847.105 | soft, fluffy clouds up ahead.... | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:43 | 15 |
| > [anyway, I am tough and can't be hurt anymore]
> nancy b.
Nancy,
Please take the opportunity in the future when you feel up to
it to re-integrate feelings into your living, breathing person-
hood. It will be a tough road while you are on it toward recovery
but will eventually be well-worth taking.
Hang on and hang in there.
justme....jacqui
|
847.106 | I know a little girl with three (3) parents | CHANI::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Sun Dec 10 1989 04:01 | 90 |
|
This is my first entry into this conference as well as
this topic and despite the zillions of ratholes I'd like
to share something to add to everyone's knowledge, perspective,
etc., and perhaps to also finally put in print the pain I've
gone through (I have two but I only want to discuss the one).
First a little background. I'll be brief so please bear with me.
My wife is a nurse at a hospital. Once upon a time she ended
up caring or an ABANDONED baby that was a result of an
alcoholic/drug-addicted mother who never saw the child after
it was born (and also has five others). This mother was also
not married to the "bio-father" who also took no interest in
this practically dead child when she was born.
My wife has wanted a child for a long time (we've only been
married 4 1/2 years and my wife has been a nurse for 18 years).
Taking care of this little one day by day and literally making
the difference between life and death started to take effect
on my wife. She would come home every day to tell me about this
child (who was "at risk" and has fetal alcohol syndrome).
To make a long story short, we decided to become foster-adoptive
parents and ended up with this child for 18 months. I was hesitant
at first to let myself out and care for this child but as the days
passed I experienced what is known as "father bonding".
Now the pain starts. We were in the middle of the adoptive process
when the "state" screwed up things and because the child was
partially of another race, THEY TOOK THIS CHILD FROM US and gave
her to another set of "racially compatible" parents.
What does this have to do with this topic?
Merely that I've gone through a whole gamot of feelings as an
adoptive father, had ****MY**** child "kidnapped" by the state
(all the "t"s and "i"s had not been crossed so our adoption
proceedings were easily nullified) and can truly say I feel
for all of you who have had any contact with ANY kind of this
experience.
In this particular instance the biological parents weren't in
the picture ever. But I will ***FOREVER*** wonder about my
little girl somewhere out there (the "state") forbids contact
because we were just "foster parents", not yet "adoptive" ones.
So I've been an adoptive father, and am grieving for a lost
child, all in less than two years. Not to mention my other
"pain" related to an accident almost five (5) years ago.
The stress of both "pains" has me out on STD now and even the
doctors aren't sure when I'm coming back.
But we are still going to be foster parents and adopt as many
needy children as we can. You can never love a child too much.
I learned that in the short time we had our little girl. And
though she will know another set of adoptive parents as "Mommy
and Daddy", she will always be MY little girl. And I'm not even
her biological parent and only knew her for 18 months.
But let me reiterate what so many have pointed out in all the
replies in this topic (I read them all). LOVE is what makes
parents. And yes, as in our little girl's case, you CAN have
more than one "parent". She now has three (3).
My one consolation is that while there is no "link" to her
biological parents (they didn't give a damn about her), we
have a letter on file with the stupid state so that should
she become interested, she can learn of the "Mommy and Daddy"
who cared for her FROM BIRTH TO 18 MONTHS.
I apologize for this lengthy reply but I felt my unusual
experience could perhaps in some way add to all the good
that's in this topic.
Say a prayer for me for all the unloved children in the world.
The "perfect" ones and the "unperfect" ones.
Thanks for your time.
Warren
PS: I don't get into this conference much since there are so many I
monitor, but I will try to monitor this one topic since it's
so dear to my heart. Feel free to send mail as I login almost
daily.
|
847.107 | They're baaaacccckkkk.... | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Tue Dec 12 1989 23:05 | 16 |
|
To those that sent mail to me, thanks. One even helped
us realize we MAY have made a difference in the childs life
even though 18 months isn't a long time. (Children such
as the one we tried to adopt have a lot going against them
and every little thing you can do for them helps)
To the rest of you, I've decided to add this conference to
my list of those "frequently checked". There is a lot of
good things in here and I've invited my wife to share
in the reading and interaction. We are looking forward
to being part of this conference and all the lives in it.
Warren and Jerry
|
847.108 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Where you hidin' the bunnies? | Thu Feb 01 1990 17:05 | 43 |
| The following is an update on Becky - exactly two months after giving birth
to a baby boy, and exactly six weeks after signing adoption papers. Well,
really, although its an update, its not a pretty one.
A good friend told me Monday night after I got the call, that I would be angry.
At the time though my tears I thought I could never be angry. Now I'm so
angry I don't know which end is up. Most of me has just decided to just
leave this world (not literally), and just invert and not care again.
It seems like everything I care about hurts anymore. I'm tired of hurting.
I'm tired of messing everything up. I'm tired of making the wrong decisions
that should be the right decisions. I'm just so dead tired of emotional strain.
The other most of me wants to be there, let her know I care, that I love
her, and that no matter what - I'll help her though it. But she won't even
let me do that.
But I feel so DAMN GUILTY because I just can't feel like that. Right now
all I feel is nothing. And I feel even guiltier because I'm not feeling the
right emotions. But right now, Dr. Spock hasn't written a chapter on this.
And I don't even know WHAT the right emotions are supposed to be.
Why is it that every damn thing I touch I SCREW so ******* up???? If I have
failed so miserably at one, what in the HELL am I going to do to the other
two?
Why in the HELL didn't she call me???? I am her mother... why does she say
as soon as she can, she'll complete what she just failed at doing? Why
does she say its all my fault, and she might as well be dead, since she
can't have her baby. Why does she look at me and scream "I hate your guts"
"You are no mother" "No mother would have let me give that baby away" "I
begged you the morning of the adoption to keep him, and you told me no" "its
all your fault" "Either get me my baby back, or I'm going to kill myself -
and not fail the next time"
Why doesn't she realize that I love her, and that I want what is best for
her, and that baby also. Why doesn't she realize that I'm looking at this
like she is blackmailing me? WHY IN THE HELL DIDN'T SHE CALL ME? At least
she was got to before the pills did too much damage. WHY DIDN'T SHE CALL ME?
Why does she think I'm her enemy?
I don't think I'm coping anymore!... What in the Hell am I supposed to do
anymore?
|
847.109 | find people who have lived through this already, fast | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Feb 01 1990 17:16 | 6 |
| My personal, totally inexperienced opionion, is to hook up right away with
either one of the individuals who has discussed the adoption triad in this
file, or an organization commited to helping others deal with it.
And take care.
Mez
|
847.110 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Thu Feb 01 1990 17:45 | 10 |
| I'd suggest using EAP, Gale, to get help for yourself and your
daughter. Also, FAST. She may not be willing to communicate with you
just now, but there's a chance she would talk with a third party.
She's grieving, you're grieving. It's a process, and it needs to
happen. However, your daughter requires professional intervention.
I'll second Maggie's suggestion as well.
hugs,
Marge
|
847.111 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Thu Feb 01 1990 18:49 | 4 |
|
God, Gale, that's so terrible, and I'm so sorry for you
and your daughter.
|
847.112 | threat, not treat | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Where you hidin' the bunnies? | Thu Feb 01 1990 21:29 | 11 |
| Re: .110
Becky is in a psychiatric ward right now. She is under 24 hour
surveillance. Until they feel she is no longer a treat to herself,
they will not take her off being watched 24 hours a day. At least I know
she is safe, and not able to do herself harm at this point in time.
It doesn't help all the other emotions, put it puts one of them at
ease.
gale
|
847.113 | *hugs* | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Thu Feb 01 1990 21:36 | 18 |
| Gale, she's okay. She's being taken care of, and watched. This is
good.
But what about you? All I can do is offer hugs and warmth and ask that
you get someone via EAP or some other route who has seen this thing
before, is aware of the pieces that have fallen apart, and knows
something about how to put them back together. Be good to yourself, be
gentle to yourself, and PLEASE, ABOVE ALL, DON'T BLAME YOURSELF.
You've done DAMN well by her, and if you look inside, and see that all
your actions were motivated by your incredible love for her, you will
see her reaction as a reaction founded in her current state of mind,
NOT in the reality that you two have lived for the past 14(?) years.
Seek help. Seek friends. Seek solace. And go gently. Listen to
professional help sources that are available to you. And take it
one day at a time....
-Jody
|
847.114 | | SNOC01::MYNOTT | Hugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikes | Thu Feb 01 1990 23:06 | 39 |
| Gail,
I can only add from my experience. Its not your fault and as hard as
it is, you mustn't feel guilty. It isn't going to change things, nor
will it stop Becky trying to harm herself. The first time Bernadine
tried suicide I felt I had done some dreadful thing and it was all my
fault. I had a couple of sessions by the time she tried it six weeks
later. Then I realised that she would try it no matter what. I
couldn't breathe for her for the rest of her life. She spent six weeks
after the second attempt in a psych ward of a local hospital. By then
I had called her father and asked him to start pulling his weight.
Now, five years later, she is almost there. She talks to me, asks for
advice, is able to discuss her problems, and generally laugh at herself
if she is down or makes a mistake. Of course we still find it hard to
be under the same roof for more than a couple of days. (^'
As far as the other children go, don't worry, my youngest hasn't had a
day of problems. She passed through the teens in a breeze, is totally
confident, together and is my best friend. At 18 months younger than
Bernadine she has had to cope with being not as bright, intelligent
(teachers opinions) as the big sister. It didn't phase her in the
least.
For a long time I kept wondering where this wonderful young girl I knew
had disappeared, but she is slowly appearing again.
I *really* do understand what you're feeling, and if you want to write
off line, do. And to the friends that stood by me during those years,
I am forever grateful. By the way, my mum still blames me for
Bernadine's problems, but even that doesn't worry me any more. Stacy
made a very astute comment one drive back from my folks place. I was
flogging myself yet again about my failure. She said, you treated us
both the same, and I turned out really great!!! I never ever let
myself blame moir any more (^'
I feel for you, and wish I could be there to help. Hang in there.
...dale
|
847.115 | what Jody said... and more hugs | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Fri Feb 02 1990 08:48 | 1 |
|
|
847.116 | more hugs | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Fri Feb 02 1990 09:39 | 14 |
| Gale -
Warm hugs. Lots and lots of hugs. Call your friends and co-workers
and ask for the physical hugs. IT IS NOT YOUR FAULT.
And then go to EAP and ask them for hugs (yes, they give them -
they've given them to me).
And know that you are loved, and your daughter is loved, and the
baby is loved. And that all any of us can do is our best, and you
have done your best, above and beyond what most of us are ever
called upon to do.
Alison
|
847.117 | Support from the peanut gallery | CADSYS::BAY | J.A.P.P. | Sun Feb 04 1990 23:08 | 20 |
| Gale,
You know what a good job you've done. We've talked about it enough.
There is no right or wrong. You do everything you can, as best you
can, and content yourself that you did your best. You have. I'm proud
of you (I admire the hell out of you).
I never hugged anyone in a notesfile, but there's a first time for
everything...
<HUG> !!!
In fact, CONGRATULATIONS! WAY TO GO! You did the right thing, when
there were a LOT of temptations to do something else. Kinda stinks
that doing the right thing hurts so bad. GOOD JOB! <KISS> (sloppy
and wet, of course!).
Jim
|
847.118 | From my experience, my opinion. | WLDWST::DERICKSON | SometimesYaJustGottaSayAAAAGHH | Mon Feb 05 1990 01:44 | 20 |
| gale,
This may not sound very "nice" but I learned a long time ago that
you can give life to your child, give love to them, be there when
you can but the bottom line is... it is their life. You can not
except the guilt as your own. Not anymore than you can except their
accomplishments, recognitions, and achievments as your own.
As the mother of a 15 year old child who has attemped suicide a
few time, I do speak from experience. You are giving yourself an
awfull lot of credit if think you can have the power of life and/or
death anymore for this child. By allowing guilt, you're saying
that there is something you could have done differently and made
everything alright.
You've done the best that can be done. This is not your "fault".
Donna
|