BulgingButtons

Not bad for a fat girl


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Crashed

The house is quiet except for the sound of rain against the windows and roof, and the soft snoring coming from both the couch and the love seat. I couldn’t be happier.

We’re in transition, this little family of mine. There are four of us, three humans and a dog. My sixteen-year-old son stretches his lanky body across the long couch, breathing in and out rhythmically to the sound of the rain. My fiancé is on the love seat, one leg bent across the arm, the other on the floor, occasionally letting out a noise to let me know he’s still alive and asleep. They have both fallen asleep without meaning to, victims of their own exhaustion.

a_sleeping_dad_on_the_couch_0515-1005-1302-0329_SMUThey are missing the summer storm, with its steady rain and gently rumbling thunder. The dog has settled at my feet, more out of comfort than any sort of alarm. We are all at peace tonight.

I was a little worried. We are in the midst of a move, and we’re in temporary quarters. We had a 1,765 square foot, four-bedroom house that we sold. We’re moving into a 2,200 square foot, four-bedroom house, but it’s not ready yet. Right now we’re in a space that is about 750 square feet and has two bedrooms. Oh, and it was completely full when we got here.

There is not a single empty drawer or even two inches of closet space available in this house. There is no room in the medicine cabinet, the kitchen cupboards, or even on the counters. We have items in suitcases on the floor, items stashed under the one bed, and items under the kitchen table. We have a laundry hamper in the living room, next to a filing cabinet, behind the couch. You might say it’s a little cramped. Still, it’s a roof over our heads, and it’s rent-free at that. I can’t complain. I won’t complain. The air-conditioning works, there is a fridge and two functioning bathrooms, there’s a washer and dryer, and there’s a lovely swimming pool a short walk away. We’re set. Crowded, but set.

Tonight I’m feeling gratitude, not just that we have this place to stay, but that we are together. My son and my fiancé are the two most important people in my life, and the fact that they’re both snoring away on the couches just a few feet from where I’m writing makes me incredibly happy. They could have each retreated to their separate corners, but they didn’t. They could have been self-conscious about letting their guard down, but that wasn’t the case. They are both totally at home here, even amongst all the stuff that I feel is choking us. They aren’t craving solitude, they are embracing togetherness.

I was worried about the lack of space. I was worried that we would begin to get on each other’s nerves and argue, but that hasn’t happened. We’ve adjusted. They’ve adjusted, and they’ve taught me that I can adjust too.


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Daily Prompt: Happy Birthmother’s Day

If you could dedicate a holiday to a more distant relative, who would it be — and why?

In the United States, and possibly in other countries too, there is something of an obsession with genealogy. People spend hours in dusty old libraries and pay for online services designed to help them piece together the stories of their past. A scrap of information about Great Grandmother Edna or a shred of detail about long-lost cousin Ernesto is a treasure to these personal history hunters. People take a great deal of pride in announcing that they can trace their roots to 1834 or 1793 or even further back in time. There is satisfaction in knowing where one comes from.

Question-mark-2-300x200We imagine that we share some traits with these long ago people, traits that may go beyond eye color and hair color. We would like to think that we’re brave and clever and independent, so we look for stories of our ancestors and hope to find some that embody these desirable character traits. Maybe they were just regular, hardworking people. That’s okay too. Few people can look down upon someone who had a good work ethic. Even people who find rogues and renegades in their family history take a certain amount of pride in that knowledge; it sets them apart from ordinary people somehow to have a long gone relative who was on the wrong side of the law. All of these people and personality types make up the patchwork of our personal history, and it’s natural for a person to want to know as much about it as possible, in order to get a sense of his history and a sense of his place in the world.

For adoptees, however, the story is different. Depending on an adoptee’s age, he or she may know nothing, or virtually nothing, about the circumstances of his or her own birth, let alone any type of family history that goes before that moment. While my neighbor beams with pride about his knowledge of his ancestors dating back to 1603, I know absolutely nothing about mine before the minute of my birth. I can trace my roots to exactly the date of my birth in 1966 and not a day before.


“It’s for the best.”

“You don’t need to know.”

“Why are you so ungrateful?”

“You’ll only get hurt.”

“What if the circumstances were awful?”

“That chapter has closed.”

“It’s not your business.”

“It would only hurt your parents.”

“Why open old wounds?”

These are things adoptees hear when they talk about wanting to know more about their own personal histories. Not even the stories of generations past, mind you, but the story of how they came to be on this Earth and who the mother and father that conceived them were. The drive to know where you come from is not selfish, it is human. We admire it in everyone but adoptees. Adoptees, especially older adoptees, are supposed to be happy that they were placed in (hopefully) good homes and not thrown away in dumpsters or aborted. Ok, thank you, I’m grateful. The fact that I’ve had a wonderful life does not negate the need to know from where I came.

Think about not knowing if your ancestry is German or Irish or French. Think about not knowing whether you come from a family of artists or musicians or auto mechanics. Think about not knowing if heart disease or cancer or diabetes runs in your family. Think about never seeing anyone to whom you bear any physical resemblance until you actually give birth to your own child. Now think about people telling your that it’s wrong to want to have answers to some of those questions. It’s not wrong. It’s not selfish. It’s normal and we have to stop shaming everyone involved in adoption.

Granted, adoption has come a long way since the 1960’s when I was adopted, but not always for the better. Every now and then I hear stories of birth relatives who come out of the woodwork and want to raise children who don’t even know them. Children who have been with their adoptive families for years. These stories make my blood run cold. Talk about selfish. These are the exceptions, though. Most domestic adoptions in the modern era provide information for families and adoptees as they age, whether they know their birth parents or not. I don’t know about international adoptions, though. I think those run the gamut from full disclosure to little information at all, but I can’t be sure. I do know one young lady who was abandoned in Chile when she was a toddler and found her way to Maryland at the age of three. She will never know anything of her birth circumstances or the situation that caused her mother to give her up. “It’s for the best.”

I propose that we allow adult adoptees to know about the circumstances surrounding their own births and surrenders. Yes, some of us were conceived as a result of rape. Yes, many of us were just plain unwanted. Yes, many (most) of us were conceived out of wedlock. So what? We can’t help that. It doesn’t mean that we aren’t entitled to know even the most basic scraps about our existence. Why do people assume that we’re stalkers bent on ruining our birthmother’s lives? We’re not. We’re ordinary people, and most of our birthmothers are too.

If we were to have a day to honor a distant relative, I would honor birthmothers. It seems strange to think of the person who carried you and delivered you as a distant relative, but for most adoptees that’s who she is, if we consider her to be a relative at all. She doesn’t get to celebrate mother’s day, unless she has other children that she raised, but she’s not supposed to think about us. People tell her the things they tell us.

“It’s for the best.”

“You don’t need to know.”

“Why are you so ungrateful?”

“You’ll only get hurt.”

“What if the circumstances were awful?”

“That chapter has closed.”

“It’s not your business.”

“It would only hurt your family.”

“Why open old wounds?”

She has a right to know what happened to us. She has a right to know whether she made the right decision. In most cases, she probably did. She has a right to know how we turned out. Did we marry? Have children of our own? Those children are related to her too. Let’s stop marginalizing people and allow us to make connections with one another. We are not looking to replace our adoptive families, we’re just looking to piece together our own stories.


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An Empathy Boost and Reminder

628x471Way back when, I started this blog with a post about an inspirational young man named Ryan, whose story I watched on Extreme Weight Loss.  In a nutshell, he was in an accident and lost an arm. He lost confidence, gained weight, and ended up working with Chris Powell on the show to get healthy and fit. It’s a great, uplifting story.

The take away for me was if he can do it, so can I. Great message, but I still haven’t done it. Then again I don’t exactly have Chris Powell as my roommate, but that’s another post for another day (or maybe not).

Fast forward to my recent vacation in Hawai’i. On our cruise there was a couple that we bumped into several times. They were at least a decade older than me, and they got married in Maui on the second day of the cruise. They were a friendly, outgoing couple clearly in love with life. They did have to do some things a little differently though, because, as he said, in a match of motorcycle vs. semi, the motorcycle seldom wins. One of his legs was prosthetic and the other was horribly damaged. It was clear where large areas of tissue had been removed. Hawai’i is warm this time of year, and, like most everyone else, this gentleman wore shorts.

We went on several excursions and these folks were there with us. He used a scooter for long distances, but could walk short distances and up and down the steps of busses and vans. Yes, it took a little longer, and I imagine that there was a fair amount of frustration and even pain involved to get and out of vehicles and around to different sights, but there was always a smile and a joke.

I think the universe is trying to remind me. I saw it before. I got the message. I just haven’t acted on it. I have all my parts in reasonably good working order. These men that I admire do not. Do they let that stop them from being active and achieving goals? No. I shouldn’t either. Thanks, universe, I needed that reminder.