Questions from Teenage Adoptees

Here’s a helpful list of common questions that adolescent adoptees may have, but may not verbalize to their adoptive parents, about their birth parents.

istock_000015731499xsmall question sign-2Adoption STAR clients receive an Adoptive Parent Education Manual as a part of their home study process, and as clients can attest to, it’s a BIG manual. The sheer size and weight of the manual alone can cause clients to take a nervous gulp as it’s handed over to them by their Adoption STAR Family Advocate. However, the manual is full of pertinent, practical information that’s well worth the read.

One such example of useful piece of information that’s incorporated into our Adoptive Parent Education Manual is written by Laurie Elliott, and entitled Thirty Things Adolescent Adoptees Wish They Knew About their Birthparents But Often Are Afraid To Ask.

“Through working as a court-appointed agent with adoptees in search, I have learned that many older adoptees have nagging questions about their adoptions. They lacked some very basic information about themselves during their growing years, and this lack affected their sense of identity.

To help other adoptees avoid the same adoption-related identity issues, I made a list of the things that adoptees I worked with most wanted to know about themselves, their birth parents, and their adoption circumstances. I recommend that adoptive parents try to gather as many answers to these questions as they can when their children are young and the information is easier to find.

I have been busy gathering information to share with my own nine children, and it has offered them a piece of who they are.

I also encourage parents to share this information with their child before adolescence to promote a stronger sense of identity and to avoid issues later on. Information that would be matter-of-fact to children at a young age becomes a crisis if they’re older and don’t know.

  1. What are my birth parents’ first and middle names?
  2. Where was I born (hospital and city)?
  3. What time was I born?
  4. Were there any complications at the time of my birth?
  5. Did my birth mother see me or hold me?
  6. Who else was present at my birth?
  7. What were the circumstances surrounding my placement?
  8. Did my birth mother pick my adoptive family?
  9. Did my birth mother know anything about my adoptive family (did she meet my adoptive parents)?
  10. What did my birth mother name me
  11. Does anyone else in my birth mother’s family know about me?
  12. Who knows what?
  13. How old were my birth parents when I was born?
  14. Were my birth parents married when I was born?
  15. Where did my birth parents go to high school? College?
  16. What kind of students were they?
  17. What religious backgrounds to my birth parents have?
  18. What is my ethnic/racial background?
  19. Did my birth parents marry each other or anyone else after I was born? Do I have any biological siblings? Do they know me?
  20. Did I go to a foster home after leaving the hospital?
  21. What was my foster family’s name? How long was I there?
  22. What do my birth mother and father look like? May I have a picture of them? Are my birth parents still alive?
  23. Do my birth parents love me?
  24. Do my birth parents think about me? Did they ever regret their decisions?
  25. Do my birth parents have any special talents, hobbies, or interests?
  26. What traits did I inherit from my birth parents? Personality? Looks? Talents?
  27. Did my birth parents write to me over the years (journal/letters in a file)?
  28. Are there any medical concerns I should know about?
  29. If I called my birth parents or wanted to meet them someday, what would they do?
  30. What should I call my birth parents?”