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04/15/08

Requested Advice Regarding a Failed Adoption

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 01:56 pm , 813 words, 467 views  
Categories: Adoption Disruption, Heritage, Birthparents

Recently a reader sent me an email asking for advice regarding a failed adoption in which the reader still has physical custody of the child. May I first make it clear that I am not an adoption professional neither do have legal training. I do have 14 years of foster care experience, have adopted seven children, and mentored new foster and adoptive parents for many years. While I have strong feelings about adoption issues and freely share my advice, it probably isn’t what the reader or most adoptive families would expect to hear. A family involved in a failed adoption is hoping... more


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04/07/08

Does the Adoption Tax Credit Apply to Self-Employment Tax?

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 12:16 pm , 621 words, 312 views  
Categories: Resources, Terminology, Adoption-related Issues

A reader recently posted a question on one of my blogs as a comment. She asked me if the adoption tax credit could help to eliminate a person’s self-employment tax. This reader was understandably confused when she was told that the adoption tax credit did not apply to the self-employment tax. Surprisingly, I can answer this question. In my previous life, before adoption, I was an accountant. In addition, Super Dad and I completed two adoptions in 2007 and I earned money from self-employment (blogging) in 2007. Therefore, our tax return may be very similar to this reader’s tax... more

04/05/08

They Shouldn’t Allow Blacks in Here

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 06:53 pm , 490 words, 503 views  
Categories: Transracial, Unsupportive People, Parenting Challenges

It was bound to happen. We can all pretend that racism is a thing of the past, yet we know in our hearts that it isn’t. We were told during transracial adoption training that it would happen and that we needed to prepare our children for it. Of course, we didn’t think it would really happen to us. It may be especially difficult for those of us raised in Midwest, middleclass, suburbia to accept. We were never exposed to racism growing up because we weren’t exposed to people of other races enough to say so. My high school had three blacks in attendance and two of them were actually... more

04/02/08

Our Semi-Annual Dear Birthmother Letter

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 06:21 pm , 418 words, 503 views  
Categories: Responsibility, Birthparents, Adoption-related Issues

It is that time of year again already. The months seem to fly by and six months comes so quickly. Our adoption agency has requested that we send an update semi-annually for the first five years, then once a year. It is hard to believe that our beautiful daughter is one and a half already. I want to tell her birthmother so much about her in each update letter because we are so proud of her. It is tempting to send many photos because she is so cute and photogenic. What holds me back from doing it then? We currently have a closed adoption because that was her birthmother’s choice.... more

03/31/08

When Adoptees Search For Birth Parents

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 01:50 am , 451 words, 312 views  
Categories: Birthparents, Reunions, Adoptees

Many adoptees wished they had waited until they were more mature before searching for their birth parents. Comments like, I would have handled it so much better if I had waited were common. However, as individuals, we all do what we feel we must, when we feel we must. If a teenager is so obsessed with meeting birthparents that he or she cannot concentrate on anything else then it might not be possible to wait. If thoughts of birthparents are becoming so constant that, they are beginning to disrupt your other relationships, then searching immediately... more

03/26/08

What Do Adoptive Parents and Adopted Teenagers Have in Common

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 05:16 pm , 513 words, 251 views  
Categories: Insecurities, Celebrating Adoption, Bonding

Many teenagers were adopted as infants and might be the only adopted child in the family. Therefore, they wouldn’t have a clue what their parents went through so many years ago to adopt. Danea explains it quite well. “From the time your parents decided to adopt you, their lives have been scrutinized, analyzed, and picked apart by total strangers. Their destiny, and yours, was at the mercy of these strangers who searched for flaws in their personalities, abilities, intellect, and potential parenting skills.” That is pretty much what our adoptive family has gone through... more


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03/23/08

Am I Normal? A Guide for Teenagers

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 03:58 am , 468 words, 218 views  
Categories: Book Reviews, Adoptees, Rejection

Chapter one covers an adoptee’s fantasies and curiosity about their birth family. Throughout the book, Danea reinforces the normalcy of a teenager’s feelings, emotions, and curiosity. She makes it very plain that everyone experiences these feelings, fantasies, and emotions at some time in their lives. She validates a teenager’s rights to feelings, whatever those feelings might be, and rights to information. She encourages journaling to help teenagers work through their feelings and track their progress.

Danea states in the book that it is natural for... more

01/18/08

Adoption: "I Want to Be Called By My Birth Name"

Posted by : Faith Allen in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 05:26 am , 446 words, 481 views  
Categories: Adoption-related Issues

One of my adult adoptee friends was always curious about her birth name. She was not a newborn when she was adopted, but she was a baby, so I guess she suspected that she might have a different name on her original birth certificate. Her adoptive mother did not want to share that information with her, and this turned into a difficult situation. Ultimately, my friend did learn what her birth name was but never asked to be called that name.

I wonder if the reason the adoptive mother was so opposed to letting her child know her birth name was because she feared... more

01/17/08

Recognizing and Helping Heal Adoption Loss

Posted by : Faith Allen in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 05:48 am , 482 words, 244 views  
Categories: Adoption-related Issues

On my post, Which Behaviors are Adoption-Related and Which are Not?, Lisa, our Guatemala Adoption blogger, left the following comment:

Sensitivity in humans varies of course, but I truly believe that the separation from their birth mother, and later from their foster mother (as in children from Guatemala) is a trauma our children never get over. Our love and consistency will help them learn... more

01/16/08

Assumptions About Birthmothers and Maintaining Adoption Privacy

Posted by : Faith Allen in Adoptive Parenting Blog at 05:13 am , 402 words, 275 views  
Categories: Privacy

Unfortunately, society has a stereotype about birthmothers, and that stereotype can be passed along to the adoptee. Because I adopted my son, most people assume that his birthmother had unmarried sex in her teens and was too poor to raise him herself. While this stereotype might apply to some birthmothers, there are numerous others who do not fit this profile. As a result, some people assume that all adopted children were a "product of sin" by being conceived out of the marital bed. This is not necessarily the case, and I do not want my son feeling tainted... more

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