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  • Mother to three beautiful children. Oldest child surrendered to adoption. Reunited in 2005.Writer, designer, jewelry maker, reader, searcher, friend, sister, deep thinker, INFJ, chronic hair colorer, considered EMO, pierced, tattooed, a gemini, and a recovering catholic. Love travel, languages, books, fonts, pens, cool paper, color, solitude, and oh yeah, coffee.


    For more information on me, consult my About Me page.
    “...lukewarm acceptance is far more bewildering than outright rejection” - Martin Luther King

    "I am the horizon
    you ride towards, the thing you can never lasso
    I am also what surrounds you:
    my brain
    scattered with your
    tincans, bones, empty shells,
    the litter of your invasions.
    I am the space you desecrate
    as you pass through.
    - Margaret Atwood

    It costs so much to be a full human being that there are few who have the love and courage to pay the price. One has to abandon altogether the search for security and reach out to the risk of living with both arms. One has to embrace life like a lover. One has to accept pain as a condition of existence. One has to court doubt and darkness as the cost of knowing. One needs a will stubborn in conflict, but apt always to total acceptance of every consequence of living and dying.- From the play, Courting Darkness, by M. Longley
    “Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.” –Kahlil Gibran

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  • "Regrettably, in many cases, the emphasis has changed from the desire to provide a needy child with a home, to that of providing a needy parent with a child. As a result, a whole industry has grown, generating millions of dollars of revenue each year..." - Commission on Human Rights, resolution 2002/92; E/CN/2002/79; page 25
  • "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
  • "Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without feminine upheaval. Social progress can be measured exactly by the social position of the fair sex, the ugly ones included." - Karl Marx
  • "The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself."- Friedrich Nietzsche

  • "Adoption is a violent act, a political act of aggression towards a woman who has supposedly offended the sexual mores by committing the unforgivable act of not suppressing her sexuality, and therefore not keeping it for trading purposes through traditional marriage. The crime is a grave one, for she threatens the very fabric of our society. The penalty is severe. She is stripped of her child by a variety of subtle and not so subtle manoeuvres and then brutally abandoned." - Joss Shawyer, Death by Adoption, Cicada Press (1979)

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June 22, 2008

And If It Does?

"The hottest seats in hell are reserved for those who, in time of great moral crises, choose to do nothing". -- Dante Alighieri

"I wonder if your advocacy might scare her a bit...just a thought. " Dan wrote.

My reaction in reading that?

"And what if it does?"

Is there something extra implied there (by Dan and/or others who have said this, for Dan is not the only one)?

What if my daughter is "scared" or uncomfortable by my advocacy or activism or whatever you want to call it?

Am I supposed to do something about that? Change to make her less scared? Filter myself? My words? My actions?

Important to note I am shooting in the dark here.

If she were indeed bothered by it, if she could articulate, speak, discuss her feelings with me, I would be more than happy to discuss them and even perhaps modify my approach. If she could engage in two way dialog (versus throwing stuff over the fence at me and then retreating), we might get somewhere. However, given the limited information I have been provided, I will continue to do what I do. Is she really going to say "I am embarrassed that you fight for adoption reform and the rights of mothers"? Maybe. Maybe not.

But I will continue. This is important to me not only for me but for my daughter.

Again, I feel, indirectly or not, I am some sort of role model for my daughter. If I go silent on my feelings, on who I am, I may inadvertently give her some sort of direction that she should do the same.I know what it is like, all too well, to be disregarded, denied, avoided, banished. I don't ever want my daughter to feel I have done that to her. More importantly, I want her to stand up for herself in the world. It has taken me far too long to believe I had value. My hope for my daughter is that she learns earlier than I did that she is wonderful and amazing and valued and human and entitled to feel what she feels and be who she is.

I don't want to lead my daughter (but I suppose in some way I do or am supposed to as the parent/mother/whatever) nor do I want to follow her.

What I really ache for? Is a level field. Open, honest discussion. A conversation where she says how much this situation confuses and pains her and I acknowledge that. One where she sees my situation and can acknowledge that. One where there is not a demand for power and control and pain game playing (as in who hurts more). One where there is just acceptance of our human condition and that we just for lack of a better word (and at the risk of being corny), love each other.

Folly?

Perhaps.

But I wont give up on me, not on her, not on us and not on mothers and children of the future.

I just can't.

June 13, 2008

Abrazo?

"Compassion alone stands apart from the continuous traffic between good and evil proceeding within us.” - Eric Hoffer

I got a ton of traffic from the Abrazo Adoption Agency message forum.

Whats the interest? MTV on the prowl for "expectant birthmothers" or something else?

I tried to join their forum just so I could see what was generating all the traffic but you have to register and be approved. I did register although I dont intend to be a member. I just wanted to see whatever was driving me traffic. I am nosy like that.

The only thing I know of Abrazo is their involvement in the Adoptee Rights/BN drama. I am not quaiflied to comment on any of it and so I wont. What little knowledge I have comes from reading the discord in various blogs.

So, what is the scoop? Why are adoption agency people reading me? A mother who thinks adoption should always be a last resort and even then it should be kindship care or guardianship?

Hmmmm?

June 11, 2008

How True is True?

"Believe those who are seeking the truth; doubt those who find it."  - Andre Gide

I urge everyone separated by adoption to consider writing MTV to request they provide a BALANCED view of adoption. My fear is that with the NCFA lending a "helping hand", this True Life Documentary will be largely skewed towards the typical adoption myths - its wonderful for all concerned, mothers get over it, kids love being abandoned and adopted, closed records are good things, young single women make great breeders for older infertile woman, etc.

If you are familiar with the NCFA "training" program titled "Birthmother, Good Mother " you should know what I refer to .  (The title of that material alone implies that only a mother who gives away her child is considered  a "good mother").

Write to MTV, share your stories and experiences and perhaps they will show a truly balanced view versus the typical NCFA kool-aid.

The text below was received via email from NCFA.

NCFA Lends a Helping Hand to MTV’s True Life Adoption Documentary

The National Council For Adoption is lending a helping hand to the producers of an adoption documentary for the successful and popular MTV’s True Life series. Previous True Life documentaries have dealt with substantial subjects such as autism, schizophrenia, and war-weary veterans returning from Iraq.

The adoption documentary will follow three or four young unwed birthmothers on video as they go through difficult and emotional decisions in developing adoption plans for their babies.

According to the show’s producers, the goals of the True Life adoption documentary are "to help de-stigmatize the adoption process and to show that adoption is a choice that loving, responsible mothers make when they believe it’s best for their child. We also hope to express the range of emotions birthmothers feel as they go through this process."

These goals coincide with the mission of NCFA’s new iChooseAdoption public awareness campaign to "create a more pro-adoption culture in which everyone, including women facing unplanned pregnancies, can consider adoption freely without fear, bias, or misunderstanding" and to "promote a culture that respects and appreciates birthmothers, honors their decision-making process, and supports their choice of adoption."

MTV is conducting a nationwide search for prospective birthmothers for the True Life adoption documentary.

If you know of any expectant birthmother who you feel would make a good candidate for this documentary, please contact the producers directly at adoption@mtvstaff.com, or by calling 718-422-0705.

We expect the True Life show to bring the adoption process more into the public limelight and provide a viable and important link to the target audience we are trying to reach with our iChooseAdoption message, namely young unwed expectant birthmothers who are facing difficult decisions concerning the future of their babies.

Thank you.

Chuck Johnson

February 22, 2008

Yeah, what if indeed.

Pregdoll_2 What If?
©2008 Celeste Billhartz
www.themothersproject.com

I used to be for adopting. That’s what happened to me. My single mother gave birth to me and I was adopted. Just like millions of other kids. Most of us went to good homes and had good lives.

Many of us think otherwise, now. I guess the biggest reason is this: our mothers never got over losing their babies.

Why is it still socially acceptable to take babies from young mothers when we know, now, they will never get over the loss?

Think back to your first pregnancy. What if you were constantly badgered and told you had no business keeping your baby because you were single, and too young, and too poor to provide for him/her, that a married couple is waiting to provide him/her a much better life, and you are selfish for wanting to keep your baby?

What if, in that 9 months of psychological duress and brain-washing, you began to doubt your natural instincts to be a good mother? What if you believed that all the adults in your life knew best -- so, you signed an agreement to surrender your baby?

Remember how you felt about your baby, after giving birth? Would you have wanted to keep him/her – no matter what agreement you signed months, or weeks, or days before?

Today, as in our mothers’ day, most girl/mothers change their minds, after giving birth, but everyone around them demands that they honor that agreement. The young mothers want to keep their babies! Nobody listens, nobody cares, because adopters -- checks in hand and names picked out -- are waiting for their babies.

I urge single young women to keep their babies. DON’T SIGN ANY AGREEMENTS, and read everything you do sign at every agency, health center or religious organization.

I urge /grandmothers/aunts/cousins to help young mothers keep their babies within their families. If your daughter, niece or cousin is very young -- or irresponsible, step in and file for Kinship Care or Legal Guardianship. Don’t give her baby away! Please, don’t do that to her. She won’t be young and poor, forever.

I urge mature women to form support groups to help mothers and babies get a good start in life, together. Don’t hurt young mothers by separating them from their babies.

Finally, I urge women to NOT adopt, no matter how much you want a baby of your own. Adopting is legal, of course, and it is immensely profitable for brokers and agencies -- but it is terribly unfair to young mothers at the most vulnerable time in their lives.

Please, don’t be part of that treachery and covert theft.

November 02, 2007

Tortoise and The Hare

It is not by muscle, speed, or physical dexterity that great things are achieved, but by reflection, force of character, and judgment” - Marcus Telius Cicero

Got into a bit of a row with a coworker today.

Not surprisingly this coworker is an older adoptive parent. Through the grapevine of the corporate office, he had heard that I was involved in adoption reform and they came to discuss it with me.

He did not really want to discuss it. He wanted to tell me how stupid I was and that there is no need for reform. He believes adoption is a wonderful “Christian” thing to do for "unwanted" children. Its “gods plan “ after all.

I caught onto his position pretty quickly and realized I wasn’t going to be very successful in our discussion. I am pretty good at reading those that have an open mind and are willing to consider other points of view and those that just want to shove theirs down your throat.

This gent was a shover.

But alas, I shoved back.

The end of conversation:

Him: “I find your attitude to be disturbing. For you to suggest we should not adopt unwanted children is horrible”

Me: “You clearly misunderstood me. I support adoption as a last resort. I prefer all avenues be explored for family preservation. I also believe in open records, kinship adoption or legal guardianship.”

Him: “Oh, but that would take too long and cost too much money. The quickest solution is to have the children adopted. Why bother with all the work when you can easily place children with an infertile couple?”.

Me: “Quickest and cheapest?  Is that how you parent your adopted children? Quick and cheap? That is such a uniquely lazy American perspective. Instant gratification at the lowest cost possible, right? And if we can so easily place children why do we have so many children in foster care?”

Him : “That’s not what I was suggesting but I can understand why you heard that”

Me: “You know this war we have going in the Middle East?  Why are we bothering? So expensive, it’s taking so long. I think we should have saved our money and just dropped a bomb on Iraq, don’t you think? That would have been quicker and saved us lots of money. And if we got lucky maybe we could kill Osama at the same time?”

At this point he gives me a quizzical, almost frightened look, and walks away.

I was glad he did.

October 23, 2007

Silence is not golden.

"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter" - Martin Luther King

“I will assume that silence indicates agreement” stated the instructor.

I chuckled and mused about this statement.  She could be very wrong. 

Working in an IT department largely populated with introverts, I have learned that silence should NEVER be construed as agreement. Additionally, having worked over seas with our friends in Tokyo, I also know that cultural norms often dictate that silence is appropriate – even when you disagree.  It is quite common for certain individuals to nod in what appears to be in agreement or to utter the Japanese “Hai”.  This does not mean I agree. It often simply means “I heard what you said”.

The silence in the room concerned me and for some odd reason I was brought back to the Ethics conference. There was only a handful of first mothers in attendance. As at previous conferences, Claud and I asked ourselves “Where is everyone?”

We know we are not the only first mothers. Between the two of us we must know hundreds of them. Why are we consistently one of the few that come out of the woodwork? Is it shame? Embarrassment? Fear? Lack of funds to attend? Lack of knowledge? What can we do to get more of us to speak out, appear and share our stories? We know there are many of us online but online does not have quite the same affect as coming out face to face. You can make a connection in person that you simply cannot make in cyberspace. We need more of us. How can we help our sisters to come out and help make that connection?

I have told my story of promissory notes and threats of lawsuits many times online and in email.  At the ethics conference, I mentioned it and people literally gasped. Several put their hands to their chest in that “OMG” gesture.  They were shocked. Someone asked me afterwards “That really happens?”

Yes, it’s true. It really does happen. It happened to me.  Will they remember me? Will they remember that chunky red head?  Did I make an impression? When someone wants proof or experience of what is wrong with adoption, will they call on me? I hope they do. 

We must come out. We must speak out. We must put real faces and real pain and real anguish in front of those that hope to make change (and even those who don’t!).  Unless they see it, touch it, feel it with us, they can easily – too easily – disregard it – disregard US and the pain of the children we bear. For many, ignorance is indeed bliss.  Out of sight, out of mind as the saying goes.

Sure, there were other moms there (Mirah, Bernadette, Jacqueline and others) but as is often the case we were clearly outnumbered by the adoptive parents.  I highly doubt that the ovaries of the few of us in attendance have been feeding this billion dollar industry.

I urge my sisters that are working towards reform to consider trying to attend a local conference. Write your congressman. Offer to speak at a conference. Record a video and put it on youtube. If you are frightened or nervous, I am sure Claud or I or many others would be willing to help. Don’t allow what was done to you in the years past dictate what is done to you and your daughters going forward.

We need to be the change we hope to see in the world. If our voices are not heard, if we don’t object, LOUDLY, to what is being done to our sisters and our children, we can be confident that it will continue. 

Silence is assumed to be agreement.

It most definitely is NOT.

October 11, 2007

Between the Lions

"There is nothing so likely to produce peace as to be well prepared to meet the enemy." - George Washington

It is consistently disheartening to me when my sisters turn on me. When I am alienated and ostracized because I choose to sleep with the enemy. Yeah, the enemy, you know, those evil adopters.

During a conversation yesterday with a long time friend and fellow natural mom, I was informed that she had a “real problem” with me attending the adoption ethics conference. She felt that I was a traitor to our “cause” by fraternizing with the enemies.

Slightly hurt and definitely perplexed, I asked her what she thought I was going to do there? Did she think I was going there to help people acquire the children of others? Maybe I was going to raffle off a baby? Sell an egg of my own?  Did she think I was going to say adoption was such a good thing? Exactly WHAT did she think my position was? I asked her.

She stated she clearly knew my position as a pro-reform, family preservationist. She knows I sponsor single unwed moms. She knows I tell my story so others can learn from it. She knows I work hard to help those separated by Kurtz. She knows I regret my decision to surrender my daughter. She knows my daughter’s adoption was unethical. She doesn’t doubt my will or my position but she does question how I can be in the same room with those that took our children and more importantly those that continue to take our children.

How can I not? I responded.

I paused for a bit and then I asked her, a woman of Jewish faith, how she expected Israel and Palestine to come to peace if one party disregards the other?

She looked at me like I was nuts. (Maybe I am? I am not Jewish so perhaps that was a bad analogy?)

“What the hell does Israel and Palestine have to do with adoption?” she asked.

I tried to explain my analogy to her using the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and their fight over their rightful homeland.  I used this analogy as I knew it was something she could relate to.

She kind of “got it”.

I further went on to tell her that while I am absolutely pro-reform and family preservation I feel there are many facets to what is wrong with adoption.  In my world, there are two  key groups that are affected daily by the horrors of adoption and it those groups that I pledge my allegiance and support to.   Note that adoptive parents are not one of them.

Group # 1 - Current Adoptees
These individuals have a right to their records, their names, their family, whatever the frick they want.   Hence, I support open records.  Additionally, I believe that we need to come to terms with adopters, those that acquired and raised our children – FOR OUR CHILDRENS SAKES.  I am not suggesting we enable additional adoptions or have tea and crumpets with the adoptive families, but can we talk about the divided loyalties our children feel? Can we acknowledge their pain and do whatever we can to minimize it?  I have no desire to caress the infertile boo boos. I do have a desire to treat our traumatized children with some respect. To do so requires treating the only parents they have ever known with some degree of civility. Would it HELP my daughter if I bash her aparents? If I hate them?  Will that make her love me more or less? Will that make her feel more bonded to me? I am going to guess the answer is NO.

So, I told my friend, when I am “sleeping with the enemy” I am not doing it for them or their benefit, I am doing it for our children.

My friend asked “Well, what about those adopters who bash you?  What if your daughters adoptive parents bash you?”

I have no doubt in my mind that happens or will.  But you know, I view that as a reflection of "those people". Furthermore, if my daughter’s parents bash me (I have no idea if they do), they are affecting their relationship with her – not me personally. They hurt her.

Additionally, befriending an open minded adoptive parent is an opportunity to educate them and help the children they are raising and maybe, just maybe, prevent them from harvesting more children from others. I never encourage adoption as it is today. If someone else must take care of a child (and those situations will always exist in my opinion) then I advocate kinship adoption and guardianship.

Group #2 – Mothers and their Unborn Children
I believe we owe future generations improvements to the world they will inherit. That means, we need to work today to insure that future mothers and their unborn children are not subjected to the adoption horrors that happen today. That means we must work towards improved social programs, awareness and education. We must educate the public, the masses on the damage of adoption. We must focus, strongly, on young girls and our daughters. They and their unborn children are being preyed upon. Their low self esteem, their lack of familial support makes them prime targets for those who wish to buy and sell babies.  While we work toward saving those mothers and children from the machine, we must simultaneously work with legislators to make adoption more human and truly, ultimately, in the best interest of the children and not in the interest of the infertiles or the baby brokers.

How can you effect any of this change if you don’t sleep with the enemy? I asked my friend.  If you stand in a room of your supporters, people who think just like you do, how are you making any change? You aren’t. You are merely talking to yourself.

So yeah, my mother friend, I will indeed talk with adopters, past, present and future. Doing so doesn’t mean I believe adoption is right or good or needed. Doing so doesn’t mean I am a traitor to the “cause”.

Doing so means I am willing to throw myself into the lions den in support of the cause.

As I have said many times, if ONE child is saved from the machine by me sharing my experiences, I have saved not just that child but all future descendents of that child.

Adoption damages not only a mother a child but an entire family constellation - forever.

September 20, 2007

Jayni Anderson

Press release, Sept. 2007

OriginsUSA advocates family preservation, and provides justice, emotional support for families separated by adoption and public education on issues related to adoption.

As such, OriginsUSA is proud to have been in part responsible for the recent reunion between a Salt Lake City mother and her two sons separated for three decades.

Jayni Anderson surrendered a daughter and two sons for adoption. She worried about their well-being and returned to LDS Family Services who placed them in order to update her contact information.

On her most recent visit to the agency, Anderson was told that her daughter died at six months of age of SIDS. She was not told whether the adoption had been finalized, or where her daughter was buried.

OriginsUSA read about Anderson’s plight and on September 13, 2007 publicly declared support for her efforts to sue the agency to open the records in regards to her daughter.

The press release produced by OriginsUSA was seen by a man who believed he was Anderson’s oldest son. Many of the facts fit what he had been told: that his mother was herself adopted and was part Native American. He contacted OriginsUSA who in turn contacted Anderson.

That very day Anderson met her eldest son whom she had named Joshua, now 30 years old, married and expecting his first child very shortly. Placed for adoption when he was three, he is the department manager of a security systems company, and is a military intelligence officer with the Utah Army National Guard.

Anderson, shedding tears of joy, was also quickly reunited with his brother who had been placed with the same adoptive family shortly after his birth, though their adoptive parents were not the attorney and physician Anderson had been told they were. Anderson’s middle son is 26 years old. He is currently married and is a successful electrician who works throughout several western states.

All three had been living in the Salt Lake City area.

Anderon’s sons will be assisting her in her efforts to uncover the truth of their sister. Anderson reports that her youngest son, who she raised, is thrilled to have two big bothers.

Joshua, who had been searching since he was sixteen, and has the support of his adoptive parents said: “I inherited her persistence….I have to tell you that I am very grateful for organizations like yours, for if this story had never occurred, I would never have met her. Thank you so much.”

Contact: OriginsUSA at www.Origins-USA.org
PR@Origins-usa.org