Offers a look at the contentions of Elinor B. Rosenberg on
adoption. She feels that while adoption meets real needs of kids, birth
parents, and adoptive parents, she feels that it also denies deeply held
wishes. Wishes of each party; Examples; Details.
By
PT Staff, published on January 01, 1992
Adoption
GROWING UP IS HARD TO DO, say the '60s lyrics. A '90s researcher
would add that it's a lot harder for adopted kids, and she wishes people
would start admitting it.
"Adoption issues are not being dealt with in families or in
therapy," contends Elinor B. Rosenberg, a therapist in the department of
child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Michigan. She is
also author of the forthcoming book The Adoption Circle (The Free Press),
which puts adoption and its conflicts into a lifelong developmental
perspective.
While adoption meets real needs of kids, birth parents, and
adoptive parents, Rosenberg finds that it also "denies deeply held
wishes": Adoptive parents wish they could have borne the kids they are
raising; adopted kids wish the parents who bore them and raised them were
the same; and birth parents wish the circumstances might have been such
that they could raise the child they bore.
But in gratitude for their needs being met, their longings often go
underground, driving behavior and feelings in hidden ways. In her review
of the literature and after 30 years of seeing adoptive families,
Rosenberg has found that adopted children have greater identity struggles
and that they launch later than their peers. "There is a different course
of what is normal for adoptive families."
For example, says Rosenberg, it's very common for school-age kids
to fantasize that they are adopted and that their "real" parents are of
noble birth. Adopted children have the same fantasy-only it lasts far
longer, often a lifetime, and complicates their quest for
identity.
Among nonadopted kids, the so-called "birth-parent romance" plays a
simple role, helping keep a positive self-image when parents disappoint
them. It usually disappears in adolescence. But adoptees build a more
grandiose romance based on shards of information given to them by
adoptive parents. They use the fantasy to explain to themselves why they
were adopted, who their biological parents were, what kind of children
they are now, and what kind of adults they will be.
"It's a narcissistic blow to be given away," says Rosenberg. "They
must come to terms with it." Similarly, both sets of parents face special
tasks over the course of a lifetime. But that doesn't mean adoption isn't
successful. In fact, she highly recommends it. The Michigan clinician is
herself the mother of two adopted daughters.
Tags:
60s,
adoption,
adoption circle,
adoption issues,
adoptive families,
adoptive parents,
birth parent,
birth parents,
child and adolescent psychiatry,
developmental perspective,
elinor b rosenberg,
forthcoming book,
free press,
longings,
noble birth,
school age kids,
shards,
university of michigan