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#18monthlabor
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My 18-Month Labor
On this, my sixth Mother’s Day, I am reminded of the journey I took to become a mother. Of all the times I cringed when I read something about the joys of motherhood that focused on the pregnancy as much as (if not more than) the precious first few days, weeks, and months.
It was as if you had to actually give birth to a child to be a “real” mother.
Now, as anyone who has adopted will tell you, screw that. No... fuck that.
And if I were to have (or when I have had) this conversation with someone, they naturally say, “Oh, of course! Being a mom is about parenting and love” ... and blah blah blah.
Yet the vast majority of endearing blogs and articles on motherhood stress the pregnancy part. The feeling of the baby kick, the months of waiting, the fear and anticipation when your water breaks.
So, for all my fellow mothers who had a baby through adoption, here’s OUR story.  Here’s our kicks, our months (and years!) of waiting, our anticipation when the day arrives that you finally become a mother, and most importantly, our testament to the determination to takes to have a baby.
Happy Mother’s Day fellow adoptive moms! Here’s our blog...
Poking and Prodding. The joy and anticipation of holding that bundle of joy is preceded by the most invasive list of conditions known to man. First there are the exams…physical, mental/emotional, and even financial. Next comes the fingerprints (local, state, and federal) and FBI background checks. After that comes the home visits from the social worker, then child services—who wants to check that you have (of all things) the right kind of locks on your doors—and finally the fire department, who wants to see your fire escape plan from every room in the house, as well as the 50,000 fire extinguishers and escape ladder that are mandatory.
A Picture is Worth... As you present your life story in one 20-page picture book, all you can do is hope you picked the right pictures, the right vacation photo, the right snappy caption for every snapshot. Then the worry sets in—do we seem fun? Do we seem like too much fun? Do we seem excited or desperate? Does our house and lifestyle seem comfortable or do we come across of pretentious and trying too hard? Does my hair look funny in that picture? Oh crap, she will hate my hair!
Excitement and Devastation. Once you finally let go of the profile and it is sent around to agencies and birth mothers across the country, you get phone call after phone call with opportunities…which are then followed by phone call after phone call that they chose someone else or that the adoption fell through. And suddenly you are right back where you were when you were trying to conceive, with loss after loss and failure after failure. All you can do is try, hope, and cry.
Sheer Joy. The Day. The day you learned you were going to be a mother. (Mine was July 12.) You got the call that they chose you. YOU! Of all the profiles in all the world, they chose yours. And, in three, five, seven months, you are going to be a mother. Once again, all you can do is hope and cry.
Holy Shit! Oh…My…God! I’m going to be a mother…in three months. All that prep. All that planning and prodding and poking and here it is. In just three short months, your child will be in your arms. Crap! Do I tell anyone? Do I have a shower? What if it falls through? Do I not have a shower, and just buy the essentials myself—the crib and car seat? What if something goes wrong and I have to walk by that crib day after day. Okay, car seat yes, crib no.
The Call. Of all the moments in my life, be it having my husband propose, getting married, being offered my dream job, or even getting the call my dad died suddenly, nothing will ever compare to our birth mom calling me to tell me Kennedy was here. Please come to Philly. From one simple picture, I was in love like never before.
The First Kiss. The nervousness of walking into that hospital room after a frantic 2 hour drive, preceded by an even more insane packing session (what does one wear to meet their daughter!) when you have no idea how long you will be gone and what the weather is like where you are going! Then the conflicted emotions of meeting your birth mother for the first time (unbelievable gratitude and heartache for her all at the same time), which is quickly overwhelmed by tears that simply will not stop streaming down your face as you hold your daughter in your arms and kiss her sweet face.
And you know, for the first time, why you didn’t get pregnant. Because your child hadn’t been born yet. She just needed you to be a little bit patient because, after all, perfection takes time.
Thank you, Kennedy, for making me a mom. You were so so worth the wait.
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