Sunday, May 24, 2009

Three

Today marks the three month mark since we have submitted our dossier and have been awaiting our referral. 

Three months that we have dreamed of the child who we will one day 
            hold in our arms,
                                                               share bedtime stories with, 
fill our camera with photos of, 
                                               remind us of the simple joys and discoveries in life, 
and 
               fill our rooms with their sweet sound of laughter

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Positive Talk

The way we talk—and the words we choose—say a lot about what we think and value.  When we use positive adoption language, we say that adoption is a way to build a family just as birth is.  Both are important, but one is not more important than the other. 

Choose the following positive adoption language instead of the negative talk that helps perpetuate the myth that adoption is second best.  By using positive adoption language, you’ll reflect the true nature of adoption, free of innuendo.

Positive Language

Negative Language

Birthparent

Real Parent

Biological parent

Natural parent

Birth child

Own child

My child

Adopted child; Own child

Born to unmarried parents

Illegitimate

Terminate parental rights

Give up

Make an adoption plan

Give away

To parent

To keep

Waiting child

Adoptable child; available child

Biological or birthfather

Real father

Making contact with

Reunion

Parent

Adoptive parent

Intercountry adoption

Foreign adoption

Adoption triad

Adoption triangle

Permission to sign a release

Disclosure

Search

Track down parents

Child placed for adoption

An unwanted child

Court termination

Child taken away

Child with special needs

Handicapped child

Child from abroad

Foreign child

Was adopted

Is adopted

Words not only convey facts, they also evoke feelings.  When a TV movie talks about a "custody battle" between "real parents" and "other parents," society gets the wrong impression that only birthparents are real parents and that adoptive parents aren’t real parents.  Members of society may also wrongly conclude that all adoptions are "battles."

Positive adoption language can stop the spread of misconceptions such as these.  By using positive adoption language, we educate others about adoption.  We choose emotionally "correct" words over emotionally-laden words.  We speak and write in positive adoption language with the hopes of impacting others so that this language will someday become the norm.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Life Books

I received an e-mail from a great website, Adoption Learning Partners, offering adoption information for parents. They are offering a free course on Life Books for a limited time. 

An Adoption Life Book is a record of a foster/adoptee’s life that uses words, photos, graphics, the child’s artwork, and memorabilia. An Adoption Life Book includes information about the child’s birth parents and reason for leaving them. It always starts at the child’s birth.  Plus the fun part of when the adopted child first joined the family.

An Adoption Life Book is more than a life story. It is a unique opportunity for parents to honor every minute of their children’s lives. It is the single most meaningful piece of "paperwork" that any person can complete for an adoptee/foster child providing them a sweet childhood memory.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Moving Up!


So after we received the update e-mail from our agency we were curious to find out where we were at in line for waiting families. 
We sent out an e-mail to our agency and received this reply back:

Dear Herrboldt Family-
 
You are currently # 13 in line to receive a referral.

We were definitely not expecting to be number 13! We thought that maybe if we were lucky we would be somewhere in the twenties. Wow! How exciting!!! This puts us in a position of most likely receiving our referral sometime this summer. Wow! Wow!! Wow!!!

Friday, May 1, 2009

Tax Credit


The Adoption Tax Credit which has been beneficial to thousands of adoptive families is due to expire in December 2010unless Congress votes to continue it. Many adoptive parents would not have been able to bring their children home without the support of this credit. 

If you are an adoptive parent or have any interest in supporting adoption, please get involved by writing a letter, making a phone call, or emailing your congress person to support the Adoption Tax Relief Guarantee Act of 2009, H.R. 213 which will keep the adoption tax credit from being repealed by making it permanent!

 

Read Articles explaining the benefits of this bill and the need for all of us to support it:

http://www.rainbowkids.com/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=639

http://www.adoptivefamilies.com/pdf/taxcredit.pdf

 

Read about the bill and track its progress through the legislative process:

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-213

 

Email a Congressional Representative:

https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml

 

Email Your State Senators:

http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm