By Joe, She's Almost Got It.  

Monday, June 1, 2009

Okay, because of my age and the exposure to old movies I can't help but feel a little like the original Dr. Doolittle in the the movie My Fair Lady. He takes a street urchin (Audrey Hepburn) with badly broken English and turns her into a socialite. Months of hard work on his part and hers, turned an ugly duckling into a beautiful swan. To which he exclaims, "By Joe I think she's got it" (might have been George instead of Joe but you get my drift)

Another weekend down state staying with my mother so my son can get to his training. SHE brings up a Dr. Phil segment that she taped so I could watch. Oh yippee, just what I want to do. She says it's about two kids who aged out of Foster Care. I about slid off my chair.

WHAT!!

You taped something, anything, about kids in foster care? ( not out loud)

Really, I questioned, calmly. She starts talking about the injustice to these kids.

Aliens ate my mother and stole her appearance, moved into her house and are posing as someones next door neighbor. Gotta be, because this is not my mother.

We started watching the tape and talking about these kids stories, how the one girl was thrown out on the street at age 18, never being adopted because she was deemed a danger to other children because she watched her methed out mother kill her baby sister. Not only that, she froze her little body for a week, laid her out in the closet as a sort of make shift funeral viewing and then her and her husband hacked her into bits and burned her in the homes fire place, spreading her ashes later in the river. Mom was convinced that the kids were demons and vampires and she put drops of bleach in their ears and eyes, and made them drink bleach to exercise the demons.

My mother was outraged. I made her stop the tape. I pointed out to her that there are millions of people who honestly believe that "I" am on some form of level playing field with this woman, because I surrendered my daughter. And that when they threw this girl out on the street, not only did her support stop, so did her medication, if she was on any. We talked about kids being unnecessarily drugged to near catatonic states with psychotropic drugs so they won't be a bother.

Resume tape.

A young man tossed to the curb when reaching the age of 18 by the foster care system, can't get a job because he has no birth certificate. He has been moved so many times no one even has record of him any more. He's literally not in the system, (or so they say). When the case worker would come new clothes were purchased and hung in the closet, only to be returned for the cash after the visit was over. Again no where to go, couch surfing, and spent most of his nights sleeping on a wooden bench.

STOP TAPE.

MOM DO YOU REALIZE someone has been collecting money off this kid for years who is now mysteriously NON EXISTANT? ARE YOU AWARE that since 911, tons of adoptees can not get a passport, because the only legal document they have access to is a falsified birth certificate which is no longer accepted by the very same people who FALSIFIED IT? Which is illegal.

Although Dr. Phil and a few other distinguished guests, managed to get each of these kids something. The girl got a crib full of stuff for her 8 month old baby so she didn't have to sleep in a play pen any more, a $20,000 scholarship to obtain a career to support her child, and a $1,000.00 gift card for clothes from JC Penney's. The guy got the same gift card and someone to help him look into documentation so he can obtain a job, and i can't remember if they offered him a place to stay or not, I was getting irritated by this point.

My mother asked me if I was disgusted yet? Taking the focus off of the fact that Dr. Phil just helped 2 out of 500,000 people and returning it back to the fact that my mother seemed to understand what the program was about, I started to tell her about some of the stories of the people I talk to on line. The Canadian foster care system, children stolen and sold, how much an adoption costs these days as opposed to how much it cost in my daughters day. How some women were told their children were dead, only to find out years later that it was a lie. How one adoptive mother staged the death of her adoptee and had a funeral so the first mother wouldn't search. How lots and lots of men in our prison systems are in fact adoptee's who were kicked to the curb just like these two she just watched, labeled as habitual criminals, because they have no life skills and they get cold and hungry. While the whole time someone was collecting money off their existence as an income. The least they could have done was taught them something that would help them when their time was up in the system.

It was a riveting, and stimulating conversation, she actually knew something about something that mattered to me. My mother, the never have an opinion, never make waves, NEVER speak out against your government, was finally starting to pay attention to something that mattered to me and we actually had a discussion about it.

I felt a little teary eyed with pride, when I told her to imagine she was an adoptee, who like my daughter had already found her entire family, at her own age, 76, was told by some snot nosed, and i paused, "LITTLE BITCH" she says, (holy shit who are you) (who ever you are I like you sooo much better than the woman I have known all my life,) that you CAN'T HAVE your original birth certificate, that it is in fact NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS. My pollyanna, 5ft. nothing, petite, gray haired mother said "GOD, that makes me want to reach across the counter and rip her throat out."..... YES! OH MY GOD YES!!! who ever you are I don't care what you did with my mother, don't bring her back. You stay. Pleeeeeease.

It has been T H E most riveting conversation I have ever had with her. We talked about my grand son who needed his WHOLE medical back ground, not just half. We talked about generations lost and what some people had to wait through for all the tests to be run to find out what they would have already known had they SOME FORM of medical history. My mother has passed kidney stones before, she remembers what that felt like.

When talking about International adoption, and some domestic, I asked her how she figured there were so many orphans in the world, with no one to care for them. She looked at me and with a puzzle in her voice she replied, "I don't know".

I started on the grateful bit, and alas my mother had returned. SHIT, I lost her again. She sees no reason why an adoptee shouldn't be eternally grateful.

Al in all, it will probably be the only conversation with her I have ever felt had any substance. We made great strides, and I shouldn't expect perfection. I should not be disappointed, but I do want to know if the alien who took up residence for such a brief time will be returning in two weeks when I have to go down state again. I deliberately hung around for a few hours patiently awaiting their return. Nope, she was back, but it gave me a glimmer of hope.

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6 comments: to “ By Joe, She's Almost Got It.

  • Pennagal
    Monday, June 1, 2009 at 1:17:00 PM PDT  

    Maybe mom does "get it" or, at least, part of it.

    I am grateful that I had good parents. I would be just as grateful for good biological parents as I was for good adoptive parents. So many kids have less-than-adequate, much less "good" parents.

    But people so often have difficulty telling the people they love how they feel or what they mean. And sometimes they cannot understand how we feel, even if we are able to articulate it.

  • Lori A
    Monday, June 1, 2009 at 2:12:00 PM PDT  

    Pennagal: I understand that part. But I don't feel that my daughter should be MORE grateful than her sister who was their biological. She was never asked to be more grateful by her parents, she was told by others she should be. My daughter loves her parents, adores them, respects them, and will live close enough to them to care for them as long as they are still of this earth. But some of the comments made to her and others who are adopted, have been down right unbelievable, those comments are what I am referring to. If a family wants to adopt and take a child in as one of their own, why should they expected to be more grateful than anyone else?

    As I get older I am more grateful to my own mother for not staying with my father any longer than she did, or becoming a day drinker like lots of the other mom's on my block.

    And you are right so many have trouble telling the ones they love how they feel. That includes me, but I have had restrictions put on me by other family members as to what I am allowed to talk to my own mother about. There are so many conversations I would love to have with her, but I am not allowed. She brought up the foster care conversation which made it fair game to have. I find it very sad that at my age I am limited to so few topics of conversation, by people who have no idea what they are doing. But if I want a relationship with her at all, I play by the rules.

  • rachael
    Monday, June 1, 2009 at 3:44:00 PM PDT  

    i am grateful i had good parents too, VERY much so. but no one has EVER told my sister (their bio daughter) that she should be grateful. she is, just like me, but no one has ever felt that need to 'drive it home' to her. she has never had to feel the sting of being accused be horrible person because she doesnt express her gratefulness in heartfelt teary eyed prose. or be told they should be devoting their lives to the partents that raised them-so much so that my own child should be 'kicked to the curb' so i have more time to tend to my parents ever need.

    i am grateful-i'll say it. but i am no MORE grateful than my sister. i am grateful for the same reasons as her. we had a great life. both of us.
    i AM NOT GRATEFUL FOR BEING ADOPTED. i didnt ask for it. i didnt have a voice in it. it was not my doing. i wont be grateful for it.

    lori-so is she any closer to admitting i am her grandaughter?? LMAO....you dont have to answer-i already know.
    and i am shocked at her openess and insight she showed.

  • Lori A
    Monday, June 1, 2009 at 5:11:00 PM PDT  

    Rach: I think she is actually tossing around the idea that you have a place in the grandchild chain. It's wierd. With my luck its Alzheimers and she had a spark in the brain that gave me just a taste of who she could have been. It was quite refreshing to hear her say she would want to rip someone's throat out. I can't even explain how proud it made me to hear those words come out of her mouth. Most people would be embarrassed, but I thought it was great. Better late than never I supose.

  • rachael
    Tuesday, June 2, 2009 at 7:56:00 PM PDT  

    to be honest lori-im not upset that i dont hold a place there. i find it annoying but more out of principal than out of pain.

    and i know i will never ever meet any other of your family members. i knew all that coming into it all. you made that clear to me. its no surprise.

    meh-whatever. i have you and the boys. who needs them?

  • Unknown
    Sunday, June 14, 2009 at 6:09:00 AM PDT  

    Screw Dr. Phil! So he did a little something for these cases on tv. What about the rest of the adoptee population??? Like I said, F*** the government and their programs! Our govermental system sucks big time! Time for a change!

 

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