Making the
Decision to Search
Part 1 of:
Shea's Search Series: The Definitive Guide to
Self-Empowered Adoptee Search
Reprinted by permission
A discussion on making the decision to search
wouldn't be complete without some background
information about who searches in general, and
why. Studies are being conducted every year,
and certainly yesterday's data does not apply
to today in the ever-changing world of adoption
search, but a careful look at the available
data does reveal some patterns and can lead
to some general basic conclusions.
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How Many Search?
The answer to this question is bound to be
different depending on who you ask, and what
is meant by 'search'. Because of the sealed
nature of records, the expense involved in searching,
the emotional ramifications of a search, and
the underlying systemic attitude that searching
adoptees are ungrateful children with emotional
problems, the number of adoptees who search
to completion is probably very low. As far as
those who start a search, researchers Brodzinsky,
Schechter, and Henig, in their work "Being Adopted,
The Lifelong Search for Self", assert that 100%
of adoptees search in some fashion, sometimes
simply an "intrapsychic" search, which they
describe as fantasies and inner contemplation.
Those who take the search through to the next
step appear to number between 15 and 40%. For
those of you interested in taking a closer look
at the studies that report these disparate figures,
I recommend the Scottish studies detailed in
J. Triseliotis' "In Search of Origins: The Experience
of Adopted People", available through London,
Routledge and Kegan Paul. You may also contact
ALMA (Adoptee's Liberation Movement Association),Adoptees
in Search, Adoption Circle, Orphan Voyage, AAC
(American Adoption Congress), and the National
Council for Adoption (NCFA) for sometimes
biased, but interesting reading, as all of these
organizations make it a practice to keep figures
on the number of adoptees who search.
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Who Searches and Why?
Demographic studies on searching adoptees such
as those detailed in Brodzinsky and Bertocci's
article "The Meaning of the Search", published
in "The
Psychology of Adoption" (New York, Oxford
University Press, 1990, Brodzinsky and Schechter,
eds.) indicate that the average age of a searching
adoptee is 29, and that up to 80% of searchers
are female. The 'typical' searcher is married,
middle-class, with stable employment. In "Being
Adopted", Brodzinksy et al, comment that
"The typical searcher is looking for information,
not hoping to replace the family that raised
and loved him." (p.140), and "The compulsion
to search usually says little about the adoptee's
satisfaction or dissatisfaction with the adoptive
family" (p. 141).
William Reynolds completed a study of adoptees
in the mid-70's and presented his findings in
a paper "Personality Factors Differentiating
Searching and Nonsearching Adoptees", at the
84th Annual Convention of the American
Psychological Association in Washington,
D.C. His conclusions matched those of the Brodzinsky
team to the extent that Reynolds did not see
any correlation between searching and being
unhappy or happy in one's adoptive home. Reynolds
did comment, however, that it appeared that
those who were happy in their adoptive homes
might search because of a strong sense of self-confidence,
while those who were not so happy might refrain
from searching because of a sense of guilt and/or
anger.
Beyond that, it appears that the decision to
search is often triggered by a major event,
such as marriage, the death of an adoptive parent,
graduation from college, leaving home, or the
birth of a child. This particular phenomenon
has lead to some studies surrounding the deeper
meaning of 'the search'. The Brodzinsky team
studied 94 adult adoptees in search and concluded
that the search process "helps them come to
grips with at least six universal themes in
human development: loss and mourning, envy,sexual
identity, consolidation of identity, cognitive
dissonance, and body image." (p. 142) Therefore,
the loss of an adoptive parent may trigger a
need to search for the 'other' parents who might
have existed as shadowy figures or ghosts in
the subconscious or conscious fantasies of an
adoptee. An impending birth of a child might
spark a search as the adoptee becomes focused
on body image and the thought of seeing a genetic
relative for the first time in his newborn child.
Margaret Lawrence, an adoptee, presented a
paper entitled "Inside, Looking Out of Adoption",
at the same psychological association convention
as Reynolds in 1976. She also concluded that
'the search' has nothing to do with the adoptive
relationship, but rather is the need to seize
the power of choice, to take control in a situation
that was out of the adoptee's control, and thus,
to become free. This was certainly true in my
own decision to search, which I approached as
a matter of my birthright being mine, and I
was, to put it blunty, pissed off that anyone
had ever decided otherwise, let alone without
bothering to consult me.
Medical history is also an oft-cited and compelling
reason for the search, not only because of the
genuine and ever-increasing importance of knowing
about familial medical problems in order to
combat your own (and avoid future ones), but
because it's a less emotional, and readily understandable
reason to hand out to friends, family, and strangers.
Searching 'for medical history only' allows
an adoptee to justify completing a search, since
updated medical histories are seldom available
through the agency, while at the same time gets
around a lot of those sticky questions of 'loyalty',
plus an adoptee can avoid facing the possibility
of rejection if he sees his birthfamily as merely
a file cabinet from which he can take what he
needs. This is not to say that every adoptee
who says he is only searching for medical history
is deluding himself, but everyone who holds
this up as their primary reasoning would do
well to look deeply not only at his own motivations,
but of the possible consequences. What is on
the other side of a search is NOT a file cabinet
or completed medical questionnaire, but real
live people who will have their own ideas about
what they want out of contact and 'reunion'.
By far, however, the most common reason given
for searching is the desire to see what one's
birthparents look like, what their talents are,
and what their personalities are like. In other
words, the curiousity of many searchers is rooted
in genetics. While many critics of searching
adoptees express an apparent lack of understanding
for why it would matter, 'blood ties', in every
community, in every society, are emphasized
in a variety of ways. From folkloric sentiments
such as 'blood is thicker than water' to the
phenomenon of Alex Haley's "Roots", which spawned
a renewed interest among Americans in genealogy,
to the seemingly benign comments of blood relations
about inheriting 'Grandpa's Joe's ears', or
'Aunt Eve's temper', society and its members
have always found genetics and genealogy compelling.
It should not, therefore, surprise anyone that
a group of individuals cut off from their genetic
history and consanguineous relatives, would
want to know about them.
In an email to me, Leigh, (longo@earthlink.net),
writes:
"It was not knowing, for one. I spent countless
hours in front of the mirror wondering...wondering
what...you name it...where did my nose come
from....
I hated when my afamily sat around and looked
at their hands and compared them to one anothers..and
said things like..oh my those are grandma
Mary's hands. Or my amom and her sis would
talk about the types of cancer that run in
their family and tell my sister (who is my
aparents natural daughter) that she will have
to go through the same horrid pre-screening
tests that they do, when she got older. "
Of course, there are other, far less flattering
or even neutral, theories about searching adoptees,
many of which those who search will be confronted
with at one time or another. Few of these theories
have been detailed in peer reviewed studies,
papers, or journals, not lending them much credibility,
but they are typified by an article published
in the March 1977 edition of Woman's Day, entitled
"Should Adoptees Search for their 'Real' Parents?".
Written by family therapist Eda LeShan, an adoptive
mother, the article compared an adoptee searching
to a crook giving in to the impulse to steal.
"Maturity comes when we learn to control such
impulses" concludes LeShan.
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The Nonsearcher
The attitude of those who don't search is sometimes
explained as a lack of curiousity.These nonsearchers
often maintain that they simply don't think
about searching, and don't need to. They are
seldom critical of others who do search, and
in general have a 'live and let live' philosophy
surrounding the decision. These are sometimes
adoptees who do in fact search later in life,
but often remain noncommital or outright ambivalent
about the prospect throughout their lifetimes.
Other nonsearchers are what BJ Lifton, in her
work "Lost
and Found: The Adoption Experience" (Harper
and Row, first copyrighted in 1979,quoting from
updated and revised 1988 copy) , refer to as
'militant nonsearchers'. These nonsearchers
are, unlike the first group, generally very
critical of those who do search, and are belligerent
about their own status. BJ Lifton quotes an
anonymous letter writer in "Lost and Found";
"Spare me, then, the histrionics! I feel
sorry for those who are beset by imaginary
monsters;please, however don't try to set
them on those of us who are busy with the
reality of living in the present." (p.75)
Those sentiments are probably very familiar
to many of alt.adoption's citizens, as we've
heard them many times. Other phrases that might
ring bells are 'why disrupt all those lives?',
'why open up a can of worms?' 'why rock the
boat?', or another quote from "Lost and Found",
"I don't think there could be a more selfish
quest than this." (p.75)
Kimberly Stone, (kimberly_stone@usa.pipeline.com)
in an email to me, writes:
"I am frankly disgruntled with the dogmatic
idea that all adoptees must search. I have
delved deep in my heart, at both high and
low times of my life, and tried to listen
to whatever it is that feels something, good
or bad, about adoption. The best understanding
that I have of my own feelings is that I am
at peace with who and what I am, and have
no emotional needs to serve by searching for
my birthparents....It simply is not something
I need to do at this time in my life."
Just as there are theories about the reasons
for searching, there are those about NOT searching.
Lifton writes: "Nonsearchers, for all their
sense of righteousness and loyalty, have always
seemed to me self-denigrating. There is the
implication that they don't have the right to
rock their own boat, to open their own can of
worms. They seem to accept that they don't have
a right to their own heritage. We see such internalized
guilt in them that even if their adoptive parents
should sanction a search, it would be hard for
them to follow through. It is as if they have
a will not to know." (p. 75).
The Brodzinsky team is even more blunt. "A
good many adoptees consider the stress of adoption
to be something they cannot change and would
be better off ignoring so they can get on with
their lives. These people reveal little inner
turmoil about being adopted; they have either
suppressed or denied or minimized the significance
of adoption in their own lives." And further,
"Denial or avoidance....can be a highly adaptive
strategy when an individual is faced with a
stressor she cannot change, such as being adopted.
In this view, an adoptee who can suppress, avoid,
minimize, or deny the significance of being
adopted....is able to compartmentalize this
aspect of her identity and get on with her life."
And finally, "This is simply a coping style,
and for may people it works...at least until
a phone call from a birth mother or the uncovering
of a genetic illness makes denial no longer
possible." (p.151)
Just as an explicit condemnation exists in
LeShan's 'analysis' of searchers, Lifton and
the Brodzinsky team seem to start with the assumption
that there is a psychological reason or excuse
for the gap between those who search and those
who don't. (of course, that is their field)
Implicit in the Brodzinsky conclusions is that
nonsearchers are in denial, but at least they
are 'getting on with their lives', unlike those
who search. I submit that somewhere inbetween
lies something that is closer to the truth,
that the decision to search or not to search
can be the result of several different factors,
including several unknowns, and the influence
of one's personality. Some searchers might be
immature and grasping and some nonsearchers
might be belligerent,in denial,and lacking in
self-confidence, but the majority of us are
none of these things. Of course, it is incumbent
upon anyone looking at the issue of searching
to recognize the impact that sealed records,
secrecy, and the 'gratitude' factor have had
in creating the swirling controversy, insults,
doubts, and fears that are associated with 'the
Search'.
[back to top]
The Adoptive Parents Factor
One of the main factors in making the decision
to search is often the perception one has about
how one's adoptive parents might react. Kimberly
Stone writes further about her decision not
to search:
"I also feel it would hurt my adoptive parents,
whom I adore and am very close to, and who
adore me."
Leigh writes in her email:
"My aparents have always been willing to
talk about it and answer my questions as best
they could....although it was a closed adoption
and they didn't have very much info. But they
were willing to talk about adoption in general
and feelings I might have because of it. I
was not afraid to say that I was adopted to
anyone, including reminding members of my
afamily when they talked about genes and family
trees. I was not angry then nor am I angry
today
So, with that you might think that it was
an easy thing to tell my parents that I was
going to search...It was not. When I was 16
I made the announcement once in from of my
agrandma that I planned to search when I turned
18. She asked "Why, we are your family, you
don't need to go anywhere else."
So, I freaked. I was afraid to bring it up
again. I did not want to replace my family.
I spent a lot of time feeling guilty. I was
worried about hurting them. At the time I
did not have words to express the feelings
I had and nor did I truly understand my own
need to search. "
BJ Lifton quotes an unnamed woman in "Lost
and Found";
"For years I couldn't decide whether to search
or not because I wanted to wait until my adoptive
parents died."
Quoting 'Trudy' in "Lost and Found"; "I am
willing to sacrifice finding my biological mother
rather than risk hurting my parents."(p.180)
Underlying these sentiments is a fear of appearing
ungrateful, and this is where the status of
adoptee as a 'chosen' or 'saved' child can come
back to haunt the entire family. Society at
large has picked up on this gratitude theme
and often uses it to beat unsuspecting adoptees
over the head. I am sure that many of us have
seen, or perhaps even written or said, some
variation on this theme: "Who held you when
you were sick, changed your diapers, kissed
your boo-boos, fed you, clothed you....???"
Of course, most of us bear some measure of gratitude
towards our parents, but for the adoptee, the
expectation hangs heaviest over the decision
to search, as if that decision is in itself,
a choosing, a taking of sides, a question of
loyalty.
In "Being Adopted", Brodzinsky et al write:
"We know of searchers whose relationships
with their adoptive parents have been poisoned
because of the parents' resentment, anger
and sense of betrayal. Bitter reactions from
aparents usually don't stop adoptees from
searching, they simply send the search underground,
to be carried on without the knowledge of
the individuals to whom the adoptee feels
closest, his mother and father." (p.141)
But these instances of bitter feuding seem
to be increasingly in the minority. Many searchers
who were afraid to confront their adoptive parents
with their search, find that often their parents
react in very positive ways. Trudy, who Lifton
earlier quoted as willing to sacrifice her search
for the sake of her adoptive parents, continues:
"I had always discussed problems with my
mother, so why not this problem? And my mother
was delighted with the idea of my search.
She called the agency to get background information
for me, and even petitioned the court." (p.
181)
Leigh's experience also concludes on an up
note:
"So with tear filled eyes I asked my aparents
to sit down and talk with me. So serious.
I can only image what was going through my
poor amom's head. I said that I loved them
and that I had something to tell them. I said
that this is no way means that I do not love
them or think that they are great parents...I
still hadn't said what it was...I spit it
out...I want to find my bfamily.
My amom looked at me and smiled and said.."We
always knew you would. How can we help? We
love you baby. We could never deny you this..it
is part of you." We all cried. I get really
choked up when I think about it today. My
aparents are truly capable of unconditional
love. My amom has never been threatened by
my search. And she and my adad have been part
of my reunion. They have welcomed my bmom
and sisters like members of the family. And
likewise my bmom has embraced them.
I am not the only one who has gained from
this experience. Everyone has new family in
their lives."
As a search and support group leader, it has
been my experience that most adoptive parents
react much differently than the adoptee expects.
Many are open to the idea of searching, and
have been waiting for the adoptee to mention
it. Others are hostile to the idea, but it is
usually out of an initial fear or insecurity
and a lack of information about what it means
for an adoptee to search. Many adoptive parents
still believe that adoptees will not need to
search if they are brought up in a loving home.
This is particularly true of adoptive parents
who are themselves adoptees who did not search.
Faced with a searching child may therefore bring
up feelings of inadequacy on their part, as
if they weren't 'enough'. They may feel rejected.
To this end, it can be very positive for an
adoptee, regardless of how his parents react,
to present his aparents with reading material
that explains the search (please see previous
posts for detailed information on the FAQ's,
recommended books and other sources), or to
even write a letter detailing his own feelings.
These should not be presented as a substitute
for a heart-to-heart, but rather a supplement,
or even a lead-in, depending on which makes
the adoptee more comfortable. It is a good idea
to remember that, as with any sensitive issue,
you should be considerate of the other person,
and try to understand their point of view.
At the same time, there is only so much that
you can do to make your adoptive parents comfortable
with your decision. You cannot be held responsible,
or 'to blame' for their ultimate acceptance
or rejection of your decision to search, but
there are things that you can do to make it
easier for them to understand, and thus make
the process easier on you.
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The Right to Know
At many stages of a search, including the decision-making
stage, you will likely encounter people who
will tell you that you have no right to search.
Sometimes, these people are ill-informed clerks
on power trips who will go so far as to say
that searching is illegal, or that searching
without an intermediary is illegal. In no state,
county, province, or country, to my knowledge,
has searching for one's birthparents been made
illegal. It pays to be familiar with your particular
locale's adoption laws in order to counteract
the attempts of the uninformed, or downright
malicious, to derail your efforts, or your decisionmaking
process.
You might also encounter people who will question
your right to 'disrupt' your birthparents lives,
or your right to 'betray' your adoptive parents
by searching. Usually these people have little
understanding of adoption or searchers, but
these questions might be something that you
yourself have struggled with, and it pays to
have answers, if for no other reason than to
feel comfortable with whatever decision you
make. The facts are that the 'right' of adoptees
to know and to search is a hotly contested issue.
I personally believe that sealed records violate
the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses
of the American Constitution. There are a number
of interesting places to learn more about all
sides of the 'right' to know. Two fascinating
case law studies can be found in the lawsuits
of Yesterday's Children, an adoptee activist
group who filed a class action law suit in U.S
District Court in 1975, and appealed their loss
all the way to the U.S Supreme Court, who declined
to hear the case in June of 1978. ALMA
filed in the U.S District Court for the Southern
District of New York in 1977, and lost. A concise
and lucid analysis of sealed records and the
law can be found in an article by Stephen A
Gorman entitled, "Recognizing the Needs of Adopted
Persons, A Proposal to Amend the Illinois Adoption
Act", published in the Loyola University Law
Journal 6 in 1975.
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Other Fears
Either before the decision to search is made,
or at some point during the search, it is likely
that the fear of what comes 'after' will rear
its ugly head. The fear of rejection from one's
birthfamily is very common, and not entirely
unfounded. While the number of birthmothers
who reject contact is something that is difficult
to pin down, most agree that it is less than
1/4, and the number of birthmothers who favor
open records is consistently in the majority
(See Arthur Sorosky, Annette Baran, and Reuben
Pannor in "The Adoption Triangle:The
Effects of the Sealed Record on Adoptees
Birth Parents, and Adoptive Parents" New York;
Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1978, as well as "The
Changing Face of Adoption", a report research
project from Children's Home Society of California,
and contact Children's Home Society of Washington
State for their newest survey). In addition,
in New Zealand, which just over 10 years ago
instituted a 'reverse registry' which opened
records except in the case of a birthparent
or adoptee filing a veto, only a small percetage
of birthparents and an even smaller percentage
of adoptees did so, and even fewer were expected
to renew the veto. Nonetheless birthfathers
are far less likely to be welcoming, and the
actual reaction from a birthmother who may support
contact in theory, is seldom predictable. It
would behoove any adoptee who is in search to
educate themselves about the experience of birthmothers
in order to better understand how they might
be received, and what the best way to approach
contact might be.
The fear of losing whatever identity one has
crafted for oneself is also a common theme among
the undecided. Just as there are those who have
a need to find out 'who they are' through a
search, and who see race and culture as being
missing elements, others, in the absence of
information, created their own identities and
don't want to be hampered or confused by the
actuality. Other adoptees may see the possible
addition of a birthfamily in their life as being
an unwelcome complication. One family is often
quite enough. Add to that, inlaws and friends,
and suddenly another group of people with their
own history, feuds, and dysfunctions, don't
seem particularly appealing. The possibility
of finding poverty or addiction in one's birthfamily
can also be a pressing fear.
Education about adoption issues can go a long
way towards putting these fears in perspective,
but it is always a good idea to temper one's
enthusiasm for the search with a hard sense
of reality as well as a will to adapt to whatever
situation you might find yourself in. Keep an
open mind. It is also important to carefully
look at the motivations that you have and/or
that you name for searching, and consider what
they mean in the event of a possible reunion.
In the event that you decide to search, you
might experience an emotional rollercoaster
(which will be discussed in depth in future
posts), you might alienate your family, friends,
or significant other. You might encounter something
totally unexpected and wonderful, or unexpected
and devastating. Search is never something to
be entered into lightly, as Lifton says in "Lost
and Found", "Although one is never *totally*
prepared, one should not tamper with the Search
until one cannot do otherwise." (p.77). Heed
this warning well.
[back to top]
Recommended Reading:
"Being Adopted: The Lifelong Search for Self",
Brodzinsky, Schechter, and Henig. 213p. 1992
"Lost & Found: The Adoption Experience",
B J Lifton. 320p. 1988. Har-Row
"Adoption Triangle, The: Sealed or Opened Records:
How They Affect Adoptees, Birthparents &
Adoptive Parents", Sorosky, Pannor &
Baran 2nd ed. 237p. 1989. Corona Pub.
J. Triseliotis'
"In Search of Origins: The Experience of Adopted
People", available through London, Routledge
and Kegan Paul
Brodzinsky and Bertocci's article "The Meaning
of the Search", published in
"The Psychology of Adoption" (New York,
Oxford University Press, 1990,
This post was authored by Shea Grimm, sheag@oz.net,
except where otherwise indicated. It may be
copied and distributed freely, in whole or in
part, as long as it is not sold, and as long
as this notice is kept intact.
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