Chapter 20
1st Birthday
August 1, 2001
That night Tara was on top of the world and she didn’t know why. But she felt this tremendous surge of energy and happiness unlike she’d known in her life, she was pretty sure.
Maybe it was just the full moon, which always affected her. But she felt actually thrilled about the adoption. She put up new pix of Mackenzie and her apartment looked great. She could actually watch a show about adoption and be unemotional.
She wrote a poem for Mackenzie and sent it to her for her 1st birthday with a card:
Number One
Your laughter
they just ache to hear
your skin like silk
a baby’s breath.
Your smile a whisper
to our hearts
awakening us
to your sweet spirit.
Your soul
a flower
opening up
Each day a grand
experience.
Your birthday wishes
wrapped in pink
blowing kisses
waving goodbye
I visited the playground today
and smiling, remembered
our time together.
The way your tiny arms
flailed about
my arms against yours,
the sun’s bright hue.
Not long ago you were
so tiny,
growing inside me
waiting to sprout.
And now you crawl,
you stand, you play,
each day’s your own
amusement park.
For the first time in a long time, Tara didn’t want to go to bed because of happiness and an excitement she couldn’t name. This time it wasn’t because of insomnia or fear of nightmares. She just wanted to play all night.
It was as if Mackenzie’s spirit was right there. And it was, really.
It didn’t matter at that moment that Tara and Chelsea couldn’t agree on Tara not continuing to send Chelsea emails from her APs.
For this moment Tara was at peace no matter how long it lasted.
August 2, 2001
Tara was up at 6:00 a.m., an hour and a half early. She went and emailed the scanned new pix of Mackenzie to friends and family. She always got great responses.
Tara’s old boss and the birth mom, who had lived at Gladney with her, posted her story on the online birth mom support group:
“I picked my APs as her parents and because I had private health insurance was able to call most of the shots in regard to how I wanted the adoption to go,” she wrote. “Ellen (my daughter) was never placed in Transitional Care and left the hospital with her parents two days
after I gave birth to her. I signed my final paperwork exactly 48 hours after she was born. Her birthday is June 10, 2000. Like Tara, I had a face-to-face (visit) in December. It was the most incredible experience. Honestly, I was terrified before I did it. My daughter was so beautiful and it was a wonderful chance to see how my APs are growing as parents.
I would definitely recommend having the six months face-to-face to every birth mother that’s given the opportunity. For Ellen’s first birthday I planted a tree for her instead of sending her a “present.” I wanted it to be in a special place where when and if we’re reunited we can visit it together. I plan on returning to visit each year as I celebrate my daughter’s birthday and thank God for the life that He has blessed both of us with!”
Tara got an email from her online support buddy for her addiction:
“That’s a really good point about when you were true to your feelings that you didn’t act out!” she wrote. “I’ve found the same thing. Sometimes I even find the opposite to be true - when I don’t act out I find a lot more feelings come up that I am pushing away when I do act out. Does that make sense? About your grandmother, I think it’s only natural to feel some guilt when someone we love dies. I don’t know why that is but it seems to be human response. For months after my boyfriend was killed I felt horribly guilty over something that had happened before he died and I was convinced if I had done things
differently that he would still be alive. I’m sure that even though you didn’t get to visit your grandmother often or go to her funeral that she knew how much you cared for her.”
Tara was in a good mood at work, though tired, until lunch when a co-worker brought her newborn baby girl in to work for the first time. She was still on maternity leave until October.
Walking down the hallway at work, Tara spotted the baby car seat sitting in the hall and a couple of her co-workers gathered around it, ooohhing and ahhhing. Tara looked at the baby out of the corner of her eye and said, “Excuse me” more than once before anyone noticed her as she tried to wedge her way past the women in the doorway back to her desk.
As sudden as a dark cloud, she got emotional and though she didn’t display it, she was overcome with sudden sadness and loss.
Then she got angry with herself. She thought she was doing so well.
Luckily it was time for her to go to lunch and it helped to get away. As she drove to pick up her paycheck she cursed at the situation and herself for her response. It wasn’t the first or last time she’d see a baby since Mackenzie’s birth.
But this emotion came out of nowhere after the great night she’d had the night before.
Busying herself with errands, the emotion left her and by the time she got back to work, she was back to “normal.” She noticed it didn’t last as long as it would’ve a month ago or even longer than that.
This was a good thing.
This was progress.
She and Chelsea made up more or less over email and Tara still planned to visit. She knew she would always have to take care of Chelsea’s feelings but she loved her too much to do anything less.
August 6, 2001
Tara dreamed about her grandma the night before who had just died but didn’t remember much about it, only that she was sick. In the same dream Tara was having an asthma attack and no one would listen to her or help her.
Tara’s old boss heard from a resident who had been with them at Gladney and who was now there again but didn’t know what to say to her. It was clear she didn’t want help or see the need for it.
Another co-worker brought in her newborn baby only this time Tara didn’t get upset about it.
Go figure. And it was a girl.
Tara had been feeling the need to hang out at the playground where she placed Mackenzie. She knew it was because her birthday was
coming up on the 15th. Her friend had gone into a coma on that same day and her uncle died that day, too.
Tara had a session with her counselor and vented some feelings about her anger and general feeling of being fed up with everyone seeing her as pathetic. She fought self-destructing all weekend.
She slept her bad mood away after dinner and didn’t want to get up but forced herself to.
The “Creating Futures” Gladney birth mom newsletter came out. The cover story called “To Tell or Not to Tell” regarding adoption was pretty good. It stressed the importance of a confident attitude when discussing adoption with others.
Not feeling safe in telling one’s story makes for a hard road. Roadblocks like Chelsea not wanting any more emails from the APs can occur. Negative responses shouldn’t be taken personally but that was hard, too. Birth moms are in control of the situation, according to the article. But it’s important to make a decision one way or the other as to if a birth mom is going to disclose her adoption story or not.
“My response to the negative is always ‘Yes, I carried her for nine months and yes, I loved her enough to give her the life she deserves,” Stacy always said. “We’re heroes to many families.”
That day Tara left a message regarding an ad for egg donors because she was desperate for money. It also called for surrogate moms but not only was that illegal in Tara’s state, but she couldn’t go through placing another child again.
The only thing about egg donation was that if she ever got back with Mark, her ex-husband, he wanted kids and that would rule that out. Still, she desperately needed money and $1,000 to $2,000 would really help.
One of the requirements to be a donor included passing a psych test, which Tara knew she wouldn’t pass. She’d faked her way through a few but she doubted she’d get by. Still, she left the message anyway.
August 7, 2001
Tara got an email from Veronica:
“I asked Ben what he wants to get Mackenzie and his dad for their birthdays,” she wrote. “He thought and thought and just knows his dad would like a really big kite to ‘fly with me.’ And Mackenzie gets a ‘really soft teddy bear.’ Not bad ideas! Thus far we got her a baby doll and some dishes to go with the kitchen she got a few weeks ago. We also got her a playhouse which Ben says is his.”
August 8, 2001
James was supposed to call but she forgot to wait by the phone after she went to the ER with chest pains. She didn’t rush home like she usually did when remembering his call.
That was progress that she no longer put her health in jeopardy for a guy.
Tara’s sex buddy called later than night and tried to get her to come over but when she told him it was that time of the month (which it was), he backed off quickly.
August 8, 2001
Tara got an email from Stacy, who had placed her daughter seven years ago, that the Post Adoption Department at Gladney was requesting some testimonials from Gladney birth moms:
“I’m writing to you to share with you a very exciting opportunity,” the email from the Department began. “As you are probably aware, one of the most exciting features of the new campus will be the Visitor’s Center - this building will constitute the centerpiece of the facility and the one first entered as guests arrive on campus. Designed to tell the stories of Gladney and adoption, the Visitor Center will provide continuous opportunities to expose prospective adoptive parents, birth parents, and others to the miracle of adoption and to the work done by The Gladney Center.
Featured in this very center of the exhibit area will be a display that is expected to be the most inspirational of all - a collection of brief testimonials by adoptees, birth parents, and adoptive parents describing what adoption and/or Gladney have meant to their lives. In
order to give added meaning and credibility to the testimonials, each will be accompanied by the author’s first name.
We are in the process of collecting these testimonials so that they can be professionally recreated for the exhibit, and hoping you might be willing to provide one for us. It need only be a brief statement, two to five sentences long, describing the difference adoption and/or Gladney has made to you, or perhaps simply expressing your feelings about adoption and/or Gladney.
Your quote could be selected for inclusion in the initial display or possibly archived for use at a later date. If so, please reply. Visitors Center Committee members will be most grateful for your help and you will have the satisfaction of knowing that it might just be your words that, at the very least educate, possibly inspire, or maybe even change opinions about adoption.”
Tara submitted hers:
“Adoption enabled me to break the chain of abuse in my family by giving my daughter a new family tree with fresh roots,” she wrote. “It had made a difference in my life by allowing me to see her happy and thriving, something she wouldn’t be if I had raised her. I thank God every day that she has non-abusive parents, a two-parent home, a big brother who thinks she’s ‘his baby,’ and a loving, safe, stable household. In her I see my own childhood spirit and I have hope for the future. She gives me reason to live and to keep moving.”
She sent the entry to Veronica who responded:
“Wow, what a powerful message in just a few short sentences,” she wrote. “You are such a fabulous writer. I hope they pick your entry. We love you.”
August 9, 2001
Tara had stayed out of work that day after her trip to the ER the night before.
She thought of a name for her journal - “Mackenzie’s Hope” - a play on Mackenzie’s first and middle name.
After running around doing errands, Tara laid back down, realizing she had overdone it. On the news they told everyone with respiratory problems like Tara to stay inside, but someone had to pay the bills. Tara had thought about her ex-husband, Mark all that day.
She forced herself to exercise even though she didn’t feel like it and probably shouldn’t have. She hadn’t been pushing herself enough but she hadn’t been taking care of herself either.
That night she dreamed about Mark, that they were getting remarried; only someone ruined the wedding. She was back at their apartment in Florida and as she walked around the place, she cried, realizing what she had lost. She knew he was out there somewhere but couldn’t reach him, kind of like reality. In the dream another wedding took place of someone else’s instead of her own.
In the dream she told someone “He told me I’d keep pushing him away until he was gone.”
Then in another scene she saw herself walking down the aisle and he had a big smile on his face.
When she woke up, she was sad.
She still didn’t know what all these dreams meant. Was she supposed to mail those letters she’d been hanging on to or was all this just coincidence because she’d been thinking about him?
She didn’t know what the answer was. She kept praying for the answer but the ‘yes’ she was feeling felt like it might be her own wishful thinking and not what should really be.
She remembered in the dream asking herself, “Can I be faithful now? Do I want to be?”
August 10, 2001
Tara got a long email from Veronica after asking if Mackenzie had any new feats:
“Working aggressively with Early Childhood Intervention (ECI) on eating,” she wrote. “She is still liking peaches. She’s trying to get another tooth and is chewing on everything - including some dog food she got her hands into. She loves the dogs’ food. Kinda gross, huh? I guess as its little pellets that she can grasp in her hands. She sees it and makes a beeline for it and crawling she’s very very fast. Anyway,
she doesn’t actually get it into her mouth, just likes the way it feels in her hands. And the look on her face if she ‘beats’ us to it is gleeful! She’s still trying to walk - will hold on to the couch, coffee table; etc. to get around or ‘cruise.’ She also will walk holding onto our hands and is very proud of herself.
We want to send you something on the 15th (her birthday). I’m looking for the time and energy to go get Mackenzie’s pic taken for you. My sister and brother-in-law are reconfirming their wedding vows on Saturday on their anniversary. I think that’s so sweet. She’s doing really well with her pregnancy - 22 weeks now and it’s another boy. He’ll be called Chase.”
August 13, 2001
Tara’s old boss invited her over for dinner for the 15th, Mackenzie’s first birthday. Tara planned on working during the day then maybe taking off early.
Tara met with her counselor that night and they talked about her recent dreams about Mark, her ex-husband and what they could mean. Her counselor thought she should pursue him but Tara just thought she was just being obsessive.
Tara and Chelsea were trying to plan her trip to see her and her mom. Though Tara couldn’t even pay her rent or bills, she knew her mom needed her.
She didn’t know what to do.
August 14, 2001
Tara finally figured out a way to celebrate Mackenzie’s birthday. She planned on going to the park where Placement had been held and releasing a balloon. Every year she would increase the amount of balloons depending on Mackenzie’s age.
She was in a deep depression that day, just thinking about Mackenzie’s birthday, which she knew was normal. She just wanted to escape her grief.
The resident who had been at Gladney emailed that she was going crazy there for the third time.
August 15, 2001
Tara got a slew of emails on Mackenzie’s birthday:
“Hope your balloon releasing holds special comfort for you,” Chelsea wrote. “I’m sending Mackenzie birthday energy and love and prayers for a happy, healthy life.”
“Please don’t self-destruct - you did the best you could by giving your daughter parents that could provide the things you are unable to at this point in your life,” one of the birth moms emailed Tara. “I know that the first birthday is hard but at least you know where she is and that she’s being given a better life than you could provide at this time. Write in a
journal how you feel and give Post Adoption a call at Gladney - that’s why they’re there. I know how very hard it hurts. I agonized every year until my child was 28 and then we were reunited! Can you imagine how it was back then - we didn’t even know if they were dead or alive! I just had to keep the faith that my child was in God’s hands and that gave me some solace. Please know that I’m supporting you - as the rest of this list does.”
Another birth mom wrote:
“I too am thinking of you today. Can you just see Mackenzie digging into a birthday cake? What a precious image! Have and good day and remember you did the right thing. And just remember only 17 to go!”
“Happy Birthday to your daughter!” another birth mom posted. “Remember to take time for yourself today to grieve your loss and enjoy your memories with her! You will be in my thoughts and prayers.”
August 16, 2001
When Tara got home there was a box with a blue teddy bear, letter and poem from Veronica waiting for her. Veronica didn’t know that the specific bear was one she’d been eyeing for months but couldn’t afford to buy. And it was her favorite color - blue.
“I remembered this (poem) being in one of the books you prepared for Mackenzie,” Veronica wrote. “Eventually I’ll type it on nice paper with a border and frame for her room but I just scanned this in. I’m shedding a few tears today (the 15th) - tears of thankfulness for an unselfish mother who placed her precious infant daughter in our arms. We are always so thankful to you but especially on this first birthday.
Wanted to send you flowers but afraid the delivery person would miss you so we went shopping and Mackenzie literally reached out and grabbed this Teddy. So it’s straight from her arms to yours. I know you can squeeze and squeeze him and still feel empty arms but please know what loving thoughts are with you today and every day. We love you.”
With the package was a copy of the “A Birthday Poem,” something Tara had put in Mackenzie’s scrapbook when she was making it. Veronica had highlighted these words at the end:
“I have a prayer: Oh God, that I may never forget that “someone” who suffered so much to give life to my child. That she loved my child so very much that she gave him the right to Live. May I never forget for a moment and especially now, today, to offer a prayer of thanks for that “someone” and that you, dear God, will always be there beside her, to help her through the pain she will have when she stops to think that “Today is my child’s birthday.”
Tara wrote Veronica and Frank:
“You have the biggest hearts,” she said. “When I got home yesterday and opened my package, finding that bear I always wanted along with the amazing letter and poem, it made my day. I am the luckiest birth mom in the world and I know it. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I’m so glad Mackenzie is so well taken care of and happy. I’m very glad I made the decision I did and will never regret it.
My other teddy bear I’d had for ten years and my dog wanted to play with it! Thank you as always for your prayers. They mean a lot to me.
There’s another birth mom who was with me at Gladney and had her baby August 18th last year. This is her third trip and none of us know what to say to her. She was drunk and got raped this time.
Anyway, I also met a birth mom who’s due in two weeks and living at Gladney from Colorado. She’ll return there a few days after the birth.
I feel like I can help other birth moms now and that is a blessing. I gave her lots of encouragement and we exchanged emails, etc.
P.S. A birth mom who went with me to release the balloon the other day (who was with me at Gladney/my old boss) told me that after her little girl turned one in June she felt like a big burden had been lifted and she could have closure; that the pain was gone. Not the burden of the child, but the burden of the grief.”
Veronica wrote back:
“I’m so glad you liked the Teddy Bear,” she said. “That poem was in your scrapbook for Mackenzie and has always meant a lot to me. Frank had a great birthday. I surprised him with a massage, which
was his favorite present. We have another party tomorrow for him, Mackenzie and my nice Ariel at my mom’s. I took pics of all “our kids” – youth as well as toddlers and infants in the pool. It gave me a really warm feeling to see all the kids Mackenzie and Ben will grow up with. I know your trip is just around the corner. I hope you get to visit with your sister and your mother also.”
The birth mom’s online support group was growing and more posts were added all day:
“What got me through my pregnancy was knowing that my mistake would be a blessing for a family,” Candice, the birth mom Tara had met with after her placement, posted on the birth mom support group. “For me knowing that Gladney looked into the backgrounds of their couples made me feel better about my decision to place my daughter through them.”
A birth mom had posted a suggestion that all birth moms at Gladney be matched with a birth mom who had placed long ago. Tara had suggested this also while living there.
“I think that’s a great idea!” a birth mom wrote. “Having Post Adoption talk with birth moms right before they transfer over to Post Adoption and tell them what will happen next. I just wish that it were an easier transition. With the situation I had things were hard anyway.”
August 19, 2001
Tara slept the rest of the day away till about 5 when she forced herself to get up. She was at the end of her rope financially again. She had no money, no gas, no money to do laundry, and no food in the house. Luckily her neighbor let her use her washer and dryer which was a lifesaver.
It took Tara all day to do laundry.
She walked to see some friends later and ran into Jamie, her ex-girlfriend. Unfortunately, Tara was caught off-guard and made eye contact with her. But they didn’t speak as usual although she could feel Jamie’s eyes following her every move.
A male friend was going to take her home later but he seemed pre-occupied with a hot chick in the corner so Tara asked someone else, a female friend.
She used to be the hot young thing in the corner but those days were gone.
Tara forced herself to go to bed later and had nightmares about her Dad abusing her. In the dream he was marrying his second wife, who in reality, he was divorced from.
Tara lay in bed motionless and grew sad that when all was said and done she was just a 35-year-old former foster child who didn’t have a clue as to how to live.
The only thing she had done right was giving her daughter a new chance.
August 20, 2001
Tara’s co-worker gave her more food and some toiletries, two bags full. This woman had to be an angel sent by God, Tara thought to herself.
She had such a good heart. She told her how to make food stretch and some other things and offered to visit with her more at her home.
She and her husband could be like the parents Tara never had. But she was embarrassed and ashamed that she was the finished product of the foster care system and had nothing to show for it.
She used to think she was this happy ending but this day she saw herself for who she really was - someone who never learned about money, budgeting, living - only surviving in illegal and immoral ways.
And she felt totally worthless.
She worked through lunch since she had a job interview that afternoon and the co-worker loaned her gas money as well.
She had been helping her out the past two months in little ways, without Tara having to say much of anything.
Tara guessed that when a person lost all hope it showed on their face on a daily basis.
She was grateful for the gifts and thanked God for them.
She had been too ashamed that morning to tell her boss that she might run out of gas on the way to work so she just told her it was car trouble and if she broke down, she’d call.
She had spent her whole life trying to be someone she wasn’t, namely someone that knew how to live.
Everything inside her didn’t want to face what was the truth. Her ego told her to go back and not look at it and to maintain some pride, for God’s sake.
She didn’t know what she would finally do.
She went to the interview and decided she wasn’t qualified for the job then picked up some more food and things another friend had for her who had already called earlier.
She hugged her and they went their separate ways - her friend home to a verbally abusive husband and Tara back to her job.
Tara told her boss when she got back that she wasn’t qualified for the job and it wasn’t what she thought it was. Then she told one of the temps that she should call because she was really cut out for it.
On the way back to her desk it struck her that she was always doing that - giving someone else a chance instead of herself.
Tonight she had counseling. Maybe she could get this sorted out.
She was too tired to go to counseling that night and wound up rescheduling. She knew better than to sit down on the couch even for
a minute after work.
She felt guilty for not going but ironically not guilty for spending money on therapy she didn’t have.
That night she dreamed she was part of an acting troupe exposed to radiation and she couldn’t get it out of her eyes.
Whenever she told anyone of her active dream life, they always thought she was dropping acid or something.
August 21, 2001
Tara was in a bad mood most of the day and was completely unmotivated. She was right where she was two years ago – bouncing checks, unable to pay her rent and bills, and living in fear. She didn’t know how she got here, just that she had.
It was becoming clear to her that she had to stop pretending to be someone she wasn’t – someone who didn’t have to use oatmeal to stretch a pound of hamburger further, someone who didn’t have to get tips on spending money wisely from her 65-year-old co-worker who had raised two kids, one with a disability, someone who didn’t have to write down simple things like – “Don’t leave at lunch so you can save money on gas.”
Lying in bed she was angry that she had never been taught these simple things from her parents. And she was glad that Mackenzie wouldn’t have this fate.
How ironic that Tara’s one-year-old daughter had more money than she did?
But she was happy for her. She deserved the most happiness.
Tara’s co-worker said she would pray for her and gave her tips on budgeting her money like bringing her lunch (something she already did), ignoring expiration dates on meat as long as you cooked it really good like boiling it, only selling items she wouldn’t later need (something she hadn’t heeded in the past), and taking care of herself so she could take care of her pets.
These are things Tara was never told or thought of. Many people would say it was common sense but if you’re never taught it, how are you supposed to know?
Tara never thought anything of leaving on her lunch hour to run errands, like donating things to shelters. But her co-worker taught her that by doing that, she was using gas money she didn’t have.
It was a new way of looking at things and she felt a tremendous sense of relief.
Tara’s dad was a spendthrift, but only spent money, like herself, on other people. Tara’s mom was a tightwad and never wanted to spend a penny.
No wonder she grew up confused.
She looked around at her friends and most of them had the same problem. Her neighbor was addicted to lawn equipment and had to
buy the newest toys from weed eaters to lawn mowers. Her other neighbor was familiar with the pawnshops. And her old friend, David, lived with his mom. Another friend of Tara’s was always late on her bills and her husband was often out of work.
It was amazing how many people didn’t know how to manage their money either.
It was like a secret everyone had but no one talked about.
A birth mom, who placed her son a year ago, posted a distraught message on the board of the birth mom support group. Her APs recently told her they decided to cease contact now that her son was a year old:
“I talked to my adoptive family yesterday and I’m not doing so well today,” she wrote. “I know that I should be happy for them, for my son but I am so torn. I have to smile while talking to them or I will feel like screaming. They want to disconnect the 800 number. Why do I feel so betrayed by that? I don’t want to feel like that? Help!”
The birth mom Tara had met with after Placement, for support, posted a message to the birth moms’ online group:
“If the APs have never received a letter from you, they might not know that you have received their letters,” she wrote in response the distraught birth mom. “I placed almost seven years ago and Gladney had just started having correspondence between APs and birth parents. I feel lucky that my APs wanted to exchange letters before it
was considered normal. When I placed, there were several birth moms that didn’t want to stay in contact with the APs. I don’t know if any of them changed their minds by now. It is up to both sides if information is exchanged.”
That night Tara met another woman from Gladney, a 21-year-old who had a two-year-old daughter living with her at the dorm. She worked as a paralegal for a prominent attorney and was going to stay in Fort Worth after delivery. She planned to move into her new apartment soon.
Ironically she had Tara’s old room.
They talked about how some of the teenagers at the center thought they were mean because they had the room where you could hear all the noise coming from the living room and they complained when trying to sleep.
“Oh, I thought it was just me they were mad at,” Tara told the birth mom.
They talked about the resident who was at Gladney for the third time and what a hard time she was having.
“I think over the weekend she said it finally sunk in and hit her that she was at Gladney the third time,” the 21-year-old birth mom said. “You should come by and see her.”
“I’ve left her messages. Today I woke her up,” Tara said.
“I wake her up all the time,” the other birth mom said.
“Yeah, I forgot she sleeps till noon,” Tara said.
Driving home, Tara was glad she’d met another birth mom who was also due in two weeks like the 21-year-old. The birth mom and the 21-year-old birth mom hung out together and supported one another.
That was so important.
They all agreed that living in the dorm was very stressful especially when you worked full-time.
The birth mom had the age advantage over Tara, though. At 21 she had way more energy.
Tara tossed and turned that night and had a nightmare about her dad. She wondered why she was having so many lately and when they would end.
She wound up talking to her neighbor outside at midnight when taking her dog out to the bathroom since she couldn’t sleep. Her neighbor was upset that her daughter, who just turned 18, had been drinking a lot and taking anti-depressants on top of it. Over the weekend her daughter had gotten in a wreck and had bruises all over her.
“I’m exhausted,” the neighbor said.
August 22, 2001
In a week Tara would be in Florida, basking in the sun, meditating on the beach, relaxing, and really unwinding for the first time in probably a
year.
The pet sitter was going to cost a small fortune but her friend offered to let her throw some things into a garage sale she was having that weekend to turn a small profit.
She could use all the help she could get.
She could hear her co-worker’s advice echoing in her head – “Don’t sell anything you’ll need later.”
She talked to the young birth mom from the other night briefly that morning and she sounded positive as always. She wasn’t feeling well but that was to be expected the last two weeks of pregnancy.
Tara was very grateful that she didn’t have to deal with dorm life now.
That night Tara ran into a friend of hers who was talking to some friends of Tara’s about how she forgave her mom after years of hating her.
Tara asked her about Tara’s dad and how she could get past her pain with him.
“Just because you forgive him doesn’t mean you let him back in your life,” she told Tara.
That night Tara had more dreams about her dad and woke up fatigued, like she’d been in a coma.
A friend of hers had called earlier and told her she’d had another stroke. She’d had one the day Mackenzie was born, too. It was so eerie that she’d have another one a year and a week later.
August 23, 2001
That morning Tara got her first mammogram since there was breast cancer in her family. She was going to wait till she was 40 but she read that if there was breast cancer in the family that she shouldn’t wait. It didn’t hurt at all like so many women told her it would. She wasn’t really worried about it, or at least that’s what she told herself.
A co-worker asked Tara where her little girl lived that day.
“She’s an hour and a half away,” Tara said, nonchalantly. “That’s all I’m allowed to know because of confidentiality.”
“I don’t think that’s fair,” the co-worker said. “The mom should know. You’re the mom.”
“Yeah, but they have to do it because of some birth moms who try to kidnap the kid and get them back, so I understand. It’s cool,” Tara said and meant it.
“Still, I don’t think it’s fair,” the co-worker said and Tara went back to her desk, unaffected.
One of the birth moms from the online support group sent everyone a link to read a birth parent grief poem and an article on birth parent grief:
The article stated that losing a child to adoption is one of the most significant losses that birthparents will ever have to face and that today open adoption is often presented to birthparents as a way to lessen the grief of losing a child to adoption. The article said that one
of the first steps in dealing with any loss is knowing how grief may manifest itself.
The phases of grief include shock and denial, the former of which is often confounded by the miracle of birth, which Tara could recognize, especially since she was heavily medicated before and after. Tara knew from past experiences with loss that shock was the first reaction to the impact of loss. As the shock wears off and more intense feelings of sadness and pain begin, many will enter a period of denial, according to the article. Other birthparents may deny the loss by directly avoiding it, as evidenced by some birth moms Tara had known.
Although painful, shock and denial are two very normal coping mechanisms, the article explained.
But denial that goes on too long can be a form of repressing emotions; something Tara had done all her life.
Sorrow and depression was another phase of grief. This happens usually when the shock wears off and the birthparent begins to understand the extent of their loss. For some birthparents, sorrow over the actual physical separation may be expressed in tangible sensations of loss like when Tara kept hearing a baby cry after going back to the dorm following Mackenzie’s birth.
Depression is often accompanied by physical symptoms as well, as Tara recognized. Some of the emotional aspects of depression can
be as debilitating as the physical symptoms (Tara’s manic-depression, depression, suicidal thoughts, isolation, and rebellion).
Anger is another phase and is a natural part of the grieving experience, according to the author of the article. Unexpressed or expressed anger often festers, as Tara’s did.
Guilt is another aspect of grief often accompanied by the “if onlys,” something Tara had heard her post adoption counselor speak of. There are two types of guilt - legitimate and illegitimate. Both affect how Tara saw herself and her situation (a screw-up, damaged goods, a “bad’ mom). The article stated that it was important to remember that we, as humans try to do the best we can with what we have, something Tara had her in her support group over and over.
Acceptance is supposed to be the final stage of grief. While things may never be the same again, Tara could come out the other side. Acceptance was said to bring renewed energy and strength. Tara hadn’t felt the energy yet but did feel the strength.
Tara knew, as the article stated, that one of the most important factors affecting the way a birthparent grieved the loss of their child through adoption would depend on the support and assistance they get from those around them. Fully experiencing grief is hard work, as Tara could attest.
Sometimes people get stuck in one phase of grieving, which for Tara had always seems to be the “if onlys.” The article’s author went on to
say that occasionally it’s a matter of finding the support in a professional that the birthparent’s family and friends are unable or unwilling to give.
Birthfathers often grieve the loss differently than birth moms, although Tara just thought Alex didn’t care.
The article concluded by saying that grieving is often a process of two steps forward, one step back, which was bad news to Tara, who wanted this “hell” year to be over with.
That night Tara bought Chelsea’s birthday presents to be given to her the next week when she visited. She got her Mad Libs, a game that used to play when they were kids and a Winnie the Pooh cookie cutter set since she loved Pooh.
She wanted to buy something for Mackenzie to commemorate tomorrow’s one-year anniversary of Placement Day.
Then she decided to write her and her family a letter instead.
She was reflecting back on a year ago when she and another birth mom had cried together the eve before Placement and how gut wrenching it was.
She was so grateful she wasn’t back there now. She remembered she dreamed she was at Gladney six months before she was ever pregnant and how weird that was that she would wind up there. It wasn’t the first time she’d had dreams that later came true.
She often wondered if she had psychic abilities or had lived in another time although she didn’t really believe this.
That night she dreamed about Mackenzie but couldn’t remember what it was about. She woke up again feeling fatigued and stumbled out of bed to get ready early.
August 24, 2001
Placement Day 1st Anniversary
Tara told herself she didn’t feel sad this day. It wasn’t as hard as Mackenzie’s birthday and she didn’t want to use it as an excuse to leave work early again like she had that day.
She had gotten things ready for a garage sale with her friend in hopes she could make enough to pay the rent or at least some bills. She still didn’t have rent money but her old boss who she’d done some freelance writing for before, emailed her and told her he had some part-time temporary work for her so that made her day.
Good, she thought, maybe things were turning around.
She told her co-workers who had always known about Mackenzie about how special today was and why. She also told them about the new occupational therapy Mackenzie was going through and how the APs got it for free and that it was a $93,000 program.
“I don’t know how they got it for free. Maybe because they’re nurses or because she’s adopted,” Tara said.
“They probably got it under the Crippled Children’s’ Act,” one of her co-workers who had a grown son with Spina Bifida said.
Her husband was also suffering from Prostate Cancer, some of which now may have spread to his lymph nodes.
Tara talked to the young birth mom from the other night that was still sick and had two more weeks to go before her baby was due.
Tara told her that today was her Placement Day anniversary of one year.
“How are you feeling today?” the young birth mom asked her.
“I’m okay, just tired,” Tara said, although she did feel sad, it wasn’t unbearable.
“Was that day (of Placement) hard for you?” the birth mom asked.
“Not really because I was so doped up on painkillers from my C-section. So I was pretty out of it,” she said. “But my APs videotaped it and I have a copy of the tape.”
They didn’t talk long and Tara gave her some hope, she prayed.
Tara figured this young birth mom would be a lot better off than she would, namely because she was going home to her family not long after delivery and they would support her emotionally. Tara knew that made all the difference.
Tara feared today that she wouldn’t hear from Veronica and Frank for a long time. Their agreement only required them to send information every six months now until Mackenzie was 18 but Tara hoped and
thought that Veronica would continue sending her info sooner. And Veronica had told her that she’d send her a birthday tape.
When Tara got back to her desk at work that day she heard that a co-worker had had her baby at 11:50 the night before, a girl. And a co-worker’s daughter was undergoing surgery she might not live through with her second pregnancy because the baby was growing outside the womb on the abdomen and on to some other organs.
The baby would be taken and wouldn’t live through the surgery but the mother’s life was at risk, too. She had a little boy already and they didn’t know the sex of this one.
The women in Tara’s office got on the phone to their church congregation and asked for prayers for mother and child.
One of Tara’s co-workers was crying about it - the one who had been so good to Tara.
She was now like a mother figure to Tara, who thought she didn’t need a mom at the age of 35 and that it was too late. She figured her spirit had been killed and she wouldn’t let anyone else in.
But in Mackenzie she now had hope; saw the light in her own daughter’s eyes reflecting her light back to her.
And Tara was finally at peace.
1st Birthday
August 1, 2001
That night Tara was on top of the world and she didn’t know why. But she felt this tremendous surge of energy and happiness unlike she’d known in her life, she was pretty sure.
Maybe it was just the full moon, which always affected her. But she felt actually thrilled about the adoption. She put up new pix of Mackenzie and her apartment looked great. She could actually watch a show about adoption and be unemotional.
She wrote a poem for Mackenzie and sent it to her for her 1st birthday with a card:
Number One
Your laughter
they just ache to hear
your skin like silk
a baby’s breath.
Your smile a whisper
to our hearts
awakening us
to your sweet spirit.
Your soul
a flower
opening up
Each day a grand
experience.
Your birthday wishes
wrapped in pink
blowing kisses
waving goodbye
I visited the playground today
and smiling, remembered
our time together.
The way your tiny arms
flailed about
my arms against yours,
the sun’s bright hue.
Not long ago you were
so tiny,
growing inside me
waiting to sprout.
And now you crawl,
you stand, you play,
each day’s your own
amusement park.
For the first time in a long time, Tara didn’t want to go to bed because of happiness and an excitement she couldn’t name. This time it wasn’t because of insomnia or fear of nightmares. She just wanted to play all night.
It was as if Mackenzie’s spirit was right there. And it was, really.
It didn’t matter at that moment that Tara and Chelsea couldn’t agree on Tara not continuing to send Chelsea emails from her APs.
For this moment Tara was at peace no matter how long it lasted.
August 2, 2001
Tara was up at 6:00 a.m., an hour and a half early. She went and emailed the scanned new pix of Mackenzie to friends and family. She always got great responses.
Tara’s old boss and the birth mom, who had lived at Gladney with her, posted her story on the online birth mom support group:
“I picked my APs as her parents and because I had private health insurance was able to call most of the shots in regard to how I wanted the adoption to go,” she wrote. “Ellen (my daughter) was never placed in Transitional Care and left the hospital with her parents two days
after I gave birth to her. I signed my final paperwork exactly 48 hours after she was born. Her birthday is June 10, 2000. Like Tara, I had a face-to-face (visit) in December. It was the most incredible experience. Honestly, I was terrified before I did it. My daughter was so beautiful and it was a wonderful chance to see how my APs are growing as parents.
I would definitely recommend having the six months face-to-face to every birth mother that’s given the opportunity. For Ellen’s first birthday I planted a tree for her instead of sending her a “present.” I wanted it to be in a special place where when and if we’re reunited we can visit it together. I plan on returning to visit each year as I celebrate my daughter’s birthday and thank God for the life that He has blessed both of us with!”
Tara got an email from her online support buddy for her addiction:
“That’s a really good point about when you were true to your feelings that you didn’t act out!” she wrote. “I’ve found the same thing. Sometimes I even find the opposite to be true - when I don’t act out I find a lot more feelings come up that I am pushing away when I do act out. Does that make sense? About your grandmother, I think it’s only natural to feel some guilt when someone we love dies. I don’t know why that is but it seems to be human response. For months after my boyfriend was killed I felt horribly guilty over something that had happened before he died and I was convinced if I had done things
differently that he would still be alive. I’m sure that even though you didn’t get to visit your grandmother often or go to her funeral that she knew how much you cared for her.”
Tara was in a good mood at work, though tired, until lunch when a co-worker brought her newborn baby girl in to work for the first time. She was still on maternity leave until October.
Walking down the hallway at work, Tara spotted the baby car seat sitting in the hall and a couple of her co-workers gathered around it, ooohhing and ahhhing. Tara looked at the baby out of the corner of her eye and said, “Excuse me” more than once before anyone noticed her as she tried to wedge her way past the women in the doorway back to her desk.
As sudden as a dark cloud, she got emotional and though she didn’t display it, she was overcome with sudden sadness and loss.
Then she got angry with herself. She thought she was doing so well.
Luckily it was time for her to go to lunch and it helped to get away. As she drove to pick up her paycheck she cursed at the situation and herself for her response. It wasn’t the first or last time she’d see a baby since Mackenzie’s birth.
But this emotion came out of nowhere after the great night she’d had the night before.
Busying herself with errands, the emotion left her and by the time she got back to work, she was back to “normal.” She noticed it didn’t last as long as it would’ve a month ago or even longer than that.
This was a good thing.
This was progress.
She and Chelsea made up more or less over email and Tara still planned to visit. She knew she would always have to take care of Chelsea’s feelings but she loved her too much to do anything less.
August 6, 2001
Tara dreamed about her grandma the night before who had just died but didn’t remember much about it, only that she was sick. In the same dream Tara was having an asthma attack and no one would listen to her or help her.
Tara’s old boss heard from a resident who had been with them at Gladney and who was now there again but didn’t know what to say to her. It was clear she didn’t want help or see the need for it.
Another co-worker brought in her newborn baby only this time Tara didn’t get upset about it.
Go figure. And it was a girl.
Tara had been feeling the need to hang out at the playground where she placed Mackenzie. She knew it was because her birthday was
coming up on the 15th. Her friend had gone into a coma on that same day and her uncle died that day, too.
Tara had a session with her counselor and vented some feelings about her anger and general feeling of being fed up with everyone seeing her as pathetic. She fought self-destructing all weekend.
She slept her bad mood away after dinner and didn’t want to get up but forced herself to.
The “Creating Futures” Gladney birth mom newsletter came out. The cover story called “To Tell or Not to Tell” regarding adoption was pretty good. It stressed the importance of a confident attitude when discussing adoption with others.
Not feeling safe in telling one’s story makes for a hard road. Roadblocks like Chelsea not wanting any more emails from the APs can occur. Negative responses shouldn’t be taken personally but that was hard, too. Birth moms are in control of the situation, according to the article. But it’s important to make a decision one way or the other as to if a birth mom is going to disclose her adoption story or not.
“My response to the negative is always ‘Yes, I carried her for nine months and yes, I loved her enough to give her the life she deserves,” Stacy always said. “We’re heroes to many families.”
That day Tara left a message regarding an ad for egg donors because she was desperate for money. It also called for surrogate moms but not only was that illegal in Tara’s state, but she couldn’t go through placing another child again.
The only thing about egg donation was that if she ever got back with Mark, her ex-husband, he wanted kids and that would rule that out. Still, she desperately needed money and $1,000 to $2,000 would really help.
One of the requirements to be a donor included passing a psych test, which Tara knew she wouldn’t pass. She’d faked her way through a few but she doubted she’d get by. Still, she left the message anyway.
August 7, 2001
Tara got an email from Veronica:
“I asked Ben what he wants to get Mackenzie and his dad for their birthdays,” she wrote. “He thought and thought and just knows his dad would like a really big kite to ‘fly with me.’ And Mackenzie gets a ‘really soft teddy bear.’ Not bad ideas! Thus far we got her a baby doll and some dishes to go with the kitchen she got a few weeks ago. We also got her a playhouse which Ben says is his.”
August 8, 2001
James was supposed to call but she forgot to wait by the phone after she went to the ER with chest pains. She didn’t rush home like she usually did when remembering his call.
That was progress that she no longer put her health in jeopardy for a guy.
Tara’s sex buddy called later than night and tried to get her to come over but when she told him it was that time of the month (which it was), he backed off quickly.
August 8, 2001
Tara got an email from Stacy, who had placed her daughter seven years ago, that the Post Adoption Department at Gladney was requesting some testimonials from Gladney birth moms:
“I’m writing to you to share with you a very exciting opportunity,” the email from the Department began. “As you are probably aware, one of the most exciting features of the new campus will be the Visitor’s Center - this building will constitute the centerpiece of the facility and the one first entered as guests arrive on campus. Designed to tell the stories of Gladney and adoption, the Visitor Center will provide continuous opportunities to expose prospective adoptive parents, birth parents, and others to the miracle of adoption and to the work done by The Gladney Center.
Featured in this very center of the exhibit area will be a display that is expected to be the most inspirational of all - a collection of brief testimonials by adoptees, birth parents, and adoptive parents describing what adoption and/or Gladney have meant to their lives. In
order to give added meaning and credibility to the testimonials, each will be accompanied by the author’s first name.
We are in the process of collecting these testimonials so that they can be professionally recreated for the exhibit, and hoping you might be willing to provide one for us. It need only be a brief statement, two to five sentences long, describing the difference adoption and/or Gladney has made to you, or perhaps simply expressing your feelings about adoption and/or Gladney.
Your quote could be selected for inclusion in the initial display or possibly archived for use at a later date. If so, please reply. Visitors Center Committee members will be most grateful for your help and you will have the satisfaction of knowing that it might just be your words that, at the very least educate, possibly inspire, or maybe even change opinions about adoption.”
Tara submitted hers:
“Adoption enabled me to break the chain of abuse in my family by giving my daughter a new family tree with fresh roots,” she wrote. “It had made a difference in my life by allowing me to see her happy and thriving, something she wouldn’t be if I had raised her. I thank God every day that she has non-abusive parents, a two-parent home, a big brother who thinks she’s ‘his baby,’ and a loving, safe, stable household. In her I see my own childhood spirit and I have hope for the future. She gives me reason to live and to keep moving.”
She sent the entry to Veronica who responded:
“Wow, what a powerful message in just a few short sentences,” she wrote. “You are such a fabulous writer. I hope they pick your entry. We love you.”
August 9, 2001
Tara had stayed out of work that day after her trip to the ER the night before.
She thought of a name for her journal - “Mackenzie’s Hope” - a play on Mackenzie’s first and middle name.
After running around doing errands, Tara laid back down, realizing she had overdone it. On the news they told everyone with respiratory problems like Tara to stay inside, but someone had to pay the bills. Tara had thought about her ex-husband, Mark all that day.
She forced herself to exercise even though she didn’t feel like it and probably shouldn’t have. She hadn’t been pushing herself enough but she hadn’t been taking care of herself either.
That night she dreamed about Mark, that they were getting remarried; only someone ruined the wedding. She was back at their apartment in Florida and as she walked around the place, she cried, realizing what she had lost. She knew he was out there somewhere but couldn’t reach him, kind of like reality. In the dream another wedding took place of someone else’s instead of her own.
In the dream she told someone “He told me I’d keep pushing him away until he was gone.”
Then in another scene she saw herself walking down the aisle and he had a big smile on his face.
When she woke up, she was sad.
She still didn’t know what all these dreams meant. Was she supposed to mail those letters she’d been hanging on to or was all this just coincidence because she’d been thinking about him?
She didn’t know what the answer was. She kept praying for the answer but the ‘yes’ she was feeling felt like it might be her own wishful thinking and not what should really be.
She remembered in the dream asking herself, “Can I be faithful now? Do I want to be?”
August 10, 2001
Tara got a long email from Veronica after asking if Mackenzie had any new feats:
“Working aggressively with Early Childhood Intervention (ECI) on eating,” she wrote. “She is still liking peaches. She’s trying to get another tooth and is chewing on everything - including some dog food she got her hands into. She loves the dogs’ food. Kinda gross, huh? I guess as its little pellets that she can grasp in her hands. She sees it and makes a beeline for it and crawling she’s very very fast. Anyway,
she doesn’t actually get it into her mouth, just likes the way it feels in her hands. And the look on her face if she ‘beats’ us to it is gleeful! She’s still trying to walk - will hold on to the couch, coffee table; etc. to get around or ‘cruise.’ She also will walk holding onto our hands and is very proud of herself.
We want to send you something on the 15th (her birthday). I’m looking for the time and energy to go get Mackenzie’s pic taken for you. My sister and brother-in-law are reconfirming their wedding vows on Saturday on their anniversary. I think that’s so sweet. She’s doing really well with her pregnancy - 22 weeks now and it’s another boy. He’ll be called Chase.”
August 13, 2001
Tara’s old boss invited her over for dinner for the 15th, Mackenzie’s first birthday. Tara planned on working during the day then maybe taking off early.
Tara met with her counselor that night and they talked about her recent dreams about Mark, her ex-husband and what they could mean. Her counselor thought she should pursue him but Tara just thought she was just being obsessive.
Tara and Chelsea were trying to plan her trip to see her and her mom. Though Tara couldn’t even pay her rent or bills, she knew her mom needed her.
She didn’t know what to do.
August 14, 2001
Tara finally figured out a way to celebrate Mackenzie’s birthday. She planned on going to the park where Placement had been held and releasing a balloon. Every year she would increase the amount of balloons depending on Mackenzie’s age.
She was in a deep depression that day, just thinking about Mackenzie’s birthday, which she knew was normal. She just wanted to escape her grief.
The resident who had been at Gladney emailed that she was going crazy there for the third time.
August 15, 2001
Tara got a slew of emails on Mackenzie’s birthday:
“Hope your balloon releasing holds special comfort for you,” Chelsea wrote. “I’m sending Mackenzie birthday energy and love and prayers for a happy, healthy life.”
“Please don’t self-destruct - you did the best you could by giving your daughter parents that could provide the things you are unable to at this point in your life,” one of the birth moms emailed Tara. “I know that the first birthday is hard but at least you know where she is and that she’s being given a better life than you could provide at this time. Write in a
journal how you feel and give Post Adoption a call at Gladney - that’s why they’re there. I know how very hard it hurts. I agonized every year until my child was 28 and then we were reunited! Can you imagine how it was back then - we didn’t even know if they were dead or alive! I just had to keep the faith that my child was in God’s hands and that gave me some solace. Please know that I’m supporting you - as the rest of this list does.”
Another birth mom wrote:
“I too am thinking of you today. Can you just see Mackenzie digging into a birthday cake? What a precious image! Have and good day and remember you did the right thing. And just remember only 17 to go!”
“Happy Birthday to your daughter!” another birth mom posted. “Remember to take time for yourself today to grieve your loss and enjoy your memories with her! You will be in my thoughts and prayers.”
August 16, 2001
When Tara got home there was a box with a blue teddy bear, letter and poem from Veronica waiting for her. Veronica didn’t know that the specific bear was one she’d been eyeing for months but couldn’t afford to buy. And it was her favorite color - blue.
“I remembered this (poem) being in one of the books you prepared for Mackenzie,” Veronica wrote. “Eventually I’ll type it on nice paper with a border and frame for her room but I just scanned this in. I’m shedding a few tears today (the 15th) - tears of thankfulness for an unselfish mother who placed her precious infant daughter in our arms. We are always so thankful to you but especially on this first birthday.
Wanted to send you flowers but afraid the delivery person would miss you so we went shopping and Mackenzie literally reached out and grabbed this Teddy. So it’s straight from her arms to yours. I know you can squeeze and squeeze him and still feel empty arms but please know what loving thoughts are with you today and every day. We love you.”
With the package was a copy of the “A Birthday Poem,” something Tara had put in Mackenzie’s scrapbook when she was making it. Veronica had highlighted these words at the end:
“I have a prayer: Oh God, that I may never forget that “someone” who suffered so much to give life to my child. That she loved my child so very much that she gave him the right to Live. May I never forget for a moment and especially now, today, to offer a prayer of thanks for that “someone” and that you, dear God, will always be there beside her, to help her through the pain she will have when she stops to think that “Today is my child’s birthday.”
Tara wrote Veronica and Frank:
“You have the biggest hearts,” she said. “When I got home yesterday and opened my package, finding that bear I always wanted along with the amazing letter and poem, it made my day. I am the luckiest birth mom in the world and I know it. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I’m so glad Mackenzie is so well taken care of and happy. I’m very glad I made the decision I did and will never regret it.
My other teddy bear I’d had for ten years and my dog wanted to play with it! Thank you as always for your prayers. They mean a lot to me.
There’s another birth mom who was with me at Gladney and had her baby August 18th last year. This is her third trip and none of us know what to say to her. She was drunk and got raped this time.
Anyway, I also met a birth mom who’s due in two weeks and living at Gladney from Colorado. She’ll return there a few days after the birth.
I feel like I can help other birth moms now and that is a blessing. I gave her lots of encouragement and we exchanged emails, etc.
P.S. A birth mom who went with me to release the balloon the other day (who was with me at Gladney/my old boss) told me that after her little girl turned one in June she felt like a big burden had been lifted and she could have closure; that the pain was gone. Not the burden of the child, but the burden of the grief.”
Veronica wrote back:
“I’m so glad you liked the Teddy Bear,” she said. “That poem was in your scrapbook for Mackenzie and has always meant a lot to me. Frank had a great birthday. I surprised him with a massage, which
was his favorite present. We have another party tomorrow for him, Mackenzie and my nice Ariel at my mom’s. I took pics of all “our kids” – youth as well as toddlers and infants in the pool. It gave me a really warm feeling to see all the kids Mackenzie and Ben will grow up with. I know your trip is just around the corner. I hope you get to visit with your sister and your mother also.”
The birth mom’s online support group was growing and more posts were added all day:
“What got me through my pregnancy was knowing that my mistake would be a blessing for a family,” Candice, the birth mom Tara had met with after her placement, posted on the birth mom support group. “For me knowing that Gladney looked into the backgrounds of their couples made me feel better about my decision to place my daughter through them.”
A birth mom had posted a suggestion that all birth moms at Gladney be matched with a birth mom who had placed long ago. Tara had suggested this also while living there.
“I think that’s a great idea!” a birth mom wrote. “Having Post Adoption talk with birth moms right before they transfer over to Post Adoption and tell them what will happen next. I just wish that it were an easier transition. With the situation I had things were hard anyway.”
August 19, 2001
Tara slept the rest of the day away till about 5 when she forced herself to get up. She was at the end of her rope financially again. She had no money, no gas, no money to do laundry, and no food in the house. Luckily her neighbor let her use her washer and dryer which was a lifesaver.
It took Tara all day to do laundry.
She walked to see some friends later and ran into Jamie, her ex-girlfriend. Unfortunately, Tara was caught off-guard and made eye contact with her. But they didn’t speak as usual although she could feel Jamie’s eyes following her every move.
A male friend was going to take her home later but he seemed pre-occupied with a hot chick in the corner so Tara asked someone else, a female friend.
She used to be the hot young thing in the corner but those days were gone.
Tara forced herself to go to bed later and had nightmares about her Dad abusing her. In the dream he was marrying his second wife, who in reality, he was divorced from.
Tara lay in bed motionless and grew sad that when all was said and done she was just a 35-year-old former foster child who didn’t have a clue as to how to live.
The only thing she had done right was giving her daughter a new chance.
August 20, 2001
Tara’s co-worker gave her more food and some toiletries, two bags full. This woman had to be an angel sent by God, Tara thought to herself.
She had such a good heart. She told her how to make food stretch and some other things and offered to visit with her more at her home.
She and her husband could be like the parents Tara never had. But she was embarrassed and ashamed that she was the finished product of the foster care system and had nothing to show for it.
She used to think she was this happy ending but this day she saw herself for who she really was - someone who never learned about money, budgeting, living - only surviving in illegal and immoral ways.
And she felt totally worthless.
She worked through lunch since she had a job interview that afternoon and the co-worker loaned her gas money as well.
She had been helping her out the past two months in little ways, without Tara having to say much of anything.
Tara guessed that when a person lost all hope it showed on their face on a daily basis.
She was grateful for the gifts and thanked God for them.
She had been too ashamed that morning to tell her boss that she might run out of gas on the way to work so she just told her it was car trouble and if she broke down, she’d call.
She had spent her whole life trying to be someone she wasn’t, namely someone that knew how to live.
Everything inside her didn’t want to face what was the truth. Her ego told her to go back and not look at it and to maintain some pride, for God’s sake.
She didn’t know what she would finally do.
She went to the interview and decided she wasn’t qualified for the job then picked up some more food and things another friend had for her who had already called earlier.
She hugged her and they went their separate ways - her friend home to a verbally abusive husband and Tara back to her job.
Tara told her boss when she got back that she wasn’t qualified for the job and it wasn’t what she thought it was. Then she told one of the temps that she should call because she was really cut out for it.
On the way back to her desk it struck her that she was always doing that - giving someone else a chance instead of herself.
Tonight she had counseling. Maybe she could get this sorted out.
She was too tired to go to counseling that night and wound up rescheduling. She knew better than to sit down on the couch even for
a minute after work.
She felt guilty for not going but ironically not guilty for spending money on therapy she didn’t have.
That night she dreamed she was part of an acting troupe exposed to radiation and she couldn’t get it out of her eyes.
Whenever she told anyone of her active dream life, they always thought she was dropping acid or something.
August 21, 2001
Tara was in a bad mood most of the day and was completely unmotivated. She was right where she was two years ago – bouncing checks, unable to pay her rent and bills, and living in fear. She didn’t know how she got here, just that she had.
It was becoming clear to her that she had to stop pretending to be someone she wasn’t – someone who didn’t have to use oatmeal to stretch a pound of hamburger further, someone who didn’t have to get tips on spending money wisely from her 65-year-old co-worker who had raised two kids, one with a disability, someone who didn’t have to write down simple things like – “Don’t leave at lunch so you can save money on gas.”
Lying in bed she was angry that she had never been taught these simple things from her parents. And she was glad that Mackenzie wouldn’t have this fate.
How ironic that Tara’s one-year-old daughter had more money than she did?
But she was happy for her. She deserved the most happiness.
Tara’s co-worker said she would pray for her and gave her tips on budgeting her money like bringing her lunch (something she already did), ignoring expiration dates on meat as long as you cooked it really good like boiling it, only selling items she wouldn’t later need (something she hadn’t heeded in the past), and taking care of herself so she could take care of her pets.
These are things Tara was never told or thought of. Many people would say it was common sense but if you’re never taught it, how are you supposed to know?
Tara never thought anything of leaving on her lunch hour to run errands, like donating things to shelters. But her co-worker taught her that by doing that, she was using gas money she didn’t have.
It was a new way of looking at things and she felt a tremendous sense of relief.
Tara’s dad was a spendthrift, but only spent money, like herself, on other people. Tara’s mom was a tightwad and never wanted to spend a penny.
No wonder she grew up confused.
She looked around at her friends and most of them had the same problem. Her neighbor was addicted to lawn equipment and had to
buy the newest toys from weed eaters to lawn mowers. Her other neighbor was familiar with the pawnshops. And her old friend, David, lived with his mom. Another friend of Tara’s was always late on her bills and her husband was often out of work.
It was amazing how many people didn’t know how to manage their money either.
It was like a secret everyone had but no one talked about.
A birth mom, who placed her son a year ago, posted a distraught message on the board of the birth mom support group. Her APs recently told her they decided to cease contact now that her son was a year old:
“I talked to my adoptive family yesterday and I’m not doing so well today,” she wrote. “I know that I should be happy for them, for my son but I am so torn. I have to smile while talking to them or I will feel like screaming. They want to disconnect the 800 number. Why do I feel so betrayed by that? I don’t want to feel like that? Help!”
The birth mom Tara had met with after Placement, for support, posted a message to the birth moms’ online group:
“If the APs have never received a letter from you, they might not know that you have received their letters,” she wrote in response the distraught birth mom. “I placed almost seven years ago and Gladney had just started having correspondence between APs and birth parents. I feel lucky that my APs wanted to exchange letters before it
was considered normal. When I placed, there were several birth moms that didn’t want to stay in contact with the APs. I don’t know if any of them changed their minds by now. It is up to both sides if information is exchanged.”
That night Tara met another woman from Gladney, a 21-year-old who had a two-year-old daughter living with her at the dorm. She worked as a paralegal for a prominent attorney and was going to stay in Fort Worth after delivery. She planned to move into her new apartment soon.
Ironically she had Tara’s old room.
They talked about how some of the teenagers at the center thought they were mean because they had the room where you could hear all the noise coming from the living room and they complained when trying to sleep.
“Oh, I thought it was just me they were mad at,” Tara told the birth mom.
They talked about the resident who was at Gladney for the third time and what a hard time she was having.
“I think over the weekend she said it finally sunk in and hit her that she was at Gladney the third time,” the 21-year-old birth mom said. “You should come by and see her.”
“I’ve left her messages. Today I woke her up,” Tara said.
“I wake her up all the time,” the other birth mom said.
“Yeah, I forgot she sleeps till noon,” Tara said.
Driving home, Tara was glad she’d met another birth mom who was also due in two weeks like the 21-year-old. The birth mom and the 21-year-old birth mom hung out together and supported one another.
That was so important.
They all agreed that living in the dorm was very stressful especially when you worked full-time.
The birth mom had the age advantage over Tara, though. At 21 she had way more energy.
Tara tossed and turned that night and had a nightmare about her dad. She wondered why she was having so many lately and when they would end.
She wound up talking to her neighbor outside at midnight when taking her dog out to the bathroom since she couldn’t sleep. Her neighbor was upset that her daughter, who just turned 18, had been drinking a lot and taking anti-depressants on top of it. Over the weekend her daughter had gotten in a wreck and had bruises all over her.
“I’m exhausted,” the neighbor said.
August 22, 2001
In a week Tara would be in Florida, basking in the sun, meditating on the beach, relaxing, and really unwinding for the first time in probably a
year.
The pet sitter was going to cost a small fortune but her friend offered to let her throw some things into a garage sale she was having that weekend to turn a small profit.
She could use all the help she could get.
She could hear her co-worker’s advice echoing in her head – “Don’t sell anything you’ll need later.”
She talked to the young birth mom from the other night briefly that morning and she sounded positive as always. She wasn’t feeling well but that was to be expected the last two weeks of pregnancy.
Tara was very grateful that she didn’t have to deal with dorm life now.
That night Tara ran into a friend of hers who was talking to some friends of Tara’s about how she forgave her mom after years of hating her.
Tara asked her about Tara’s dad and how she could get past her pain with him.
“Just because you forgive him doesn’t mean you let him back in your life,” she told Tara.
That night Tara had more dreams about her dad and woke up fatigued, like she’d been in a coma.
A friend of hers had called earlier and told her she’d had another stroke. She’d had one the day Mackenzie was born, too. It was so eerie that she’d have another one a year and a week later.
August 23, 2001
That morning Tara got her first mammogram since there was breast cancer in her family. She was going to wait till she was 40 but she read that if there was breast cancer in the family that she shouldn’t wait. It didn’t hurt at all like so many women told her it would. She wasn’t really worried about it, or at least that’s what she told herself.
A co-worker asked Tara where her little girl lived that day.
“She’s an hour and a half away,” Tara said, nonchalantly. “That’s all I’m allowed to know because of confidentiality.”
“I don’t think that’s fair,” the co-worker said. “The mom should know. You’re the mom.”
“Yeah, but they have to do it because of some birth moms who try to kidnap the kid and get them back, so I understand. It’s cool,” Tara said and meant it.
“Still, I don’t think it’s fair,” the co-worker said and Tara went back to her desk, unaffected.
One of the birth moms from the online support group sent everyone a link to read a birth parent grief poem and an article on birth parent grief:
The article stated that losing a child to adoption is one of the most significant losses that birthparents will ever have to face and that today open adoption is often presented to birthparents as a way to lessen the grief of losing a child to adoption. The article said that one
of the first steps in dealing with any loss is knowing how grief may manifest itself.
The phases of grief include shock and denial, the former of which is often confounded by the miracle of birth, which Tara could recognize, especially since she was heavily medicated before and after. Tara knew from past experiences with loss that shock was the first reaction to the impact of loss. As the shock wears off and more intense feelings of sadness and pain begin, many will enter a period of denial, according to the article. Other birthparents may deny the loss by directly avoiding it, as evidenced by some birth moms Tara had known.
Although painful, shock and denial are two very normal coping mechanisms, the article explained.
But denial that goes on too long can be a form of repressing emotions; something Tara had done all her life.
Sorrow and depression was another phase of grief. This happens usually when the shock wears off and the birthparent begins to understand the extent of their loss. For some birthparents, sorrow over the actual physical separation may be expressed in tangible sensations of loss like when Tara kept hearing a baby cry after going back to the dorm following Mackenzie’s birth.
Depression is often accompanied by physical symptoms as well, as Tara recognized. Some of the emotional aspects of depression can
be as debilitating as the physical symptoms (Tara’s manic-depression, depression, suicidal thoughts, isolation, and rebellion).
Anger is another phase and is a natural part of the grieving experience, according to the author of the article. Unexpressed or expressed anger often festers, as Tara’s did.
Guilt is another aspect of grief often accompanied by the “if onlys,” something Tara had heard her post adoption counselor speak of. There are two types of guilt - legitimate and illegitimate. Both affect how Tara saw herself and her situation (a screw-up, damaged goods, a “bad’ mom). The article stated that it was important to remember that we, as humans try to do the best we can with what we have, something Tara had her in her support group over and over.
Acceptance is supposed to be the final stage of grief. While things may never be the same again, Tara could come out the other side. Acceptance was said to bring renewed energy and strength. Tara hadn’t felt the energy yet but did feel the strength.
Tara knew, as the article stated, that one of the most important factors affecting the way a birthparent grieved the loss of their child through adoption would depend on the support and assistance they get from those around them. Fully experiencing grief is hard work, as Tara could attest.
Sometimes people get stuck in one phase of grieving, which for Tara had always seems to be the “if onlys.” The article’s author went on to
say that occasionally it’s a matter of finding the support in a professional that the birthparent’s family and friends are unable or unwilling to give.
Birthfathers often grieve the loss differently than birth moms, although Tara just thought Alex didn’t care.
The article concluded by saying that grieving is often a process of two steps forward, one step back, which was bad news to Tara, who wanted this “hell” year to be over with.
That night Tara bought Chelsea’s birthday presents to be given to her the next week when she visited. She got her Mad Libs, a game that used to play when they were kids and a Winnie the Pooh cookie cutter set since she loved Pooh.
She wanted to buy something for Mackenzie to commemorate tomorrow’s one-year anniversary of Placement Day.
Then she decided to write her and her family a letter instead.
She was reflecting back on a year ago when she and another birth mom had cried together the eve before Placement and how gut wrenching it was.
She was so grateful she wasn’t back there now. She remembered she dreamed she was at Gladney six months before she was ever pregnant and how weird that was that she would wind up there. It wasn’t the first time she’d had dreams that later came true.
She often wondered if she had psychic abilities or had lived in another time although she didn’t really believe this.
That night she dreamed about Mackenzie but couldn’t remember what it was about. She woke up again feeling fatigued and stumbled out of bed to get ready early.
August 24, 2001
Placement Day 1st Anniversary
Tara told herself she didn’t feel sad this day. It wasn’t as hard as Mackenzie’s birthday and she didn’t want to use it as an excuse to leave work early again like she had that day.
She had gotten things ready for a garage sale with her friend in hopes she could make enough to pay the rent or at least some bills. She still didn’t have rent money but her old boss who she’d done some freelance writing for before, emailed her and told her he had some part-time temporary work for her so that made her day.
Good, she thought, maybe things were turning around.
She told her co-workers who had always known about Mackenzie about how special today was and why. She also told them about the new occupational therapy Mackenzie was going through and how the APs got it for free and that it was a $93,000 program.
“I don’t know how they got it for free. Maybe because they’re nurses or because she’s adopted,” Tara said.
“They probably got it under the Crippled Children’s’ Act,” one of her co-workers who had a grown son with Spina Bifida said.
Her husband was also suffering from Prostate Cancer, some of which now may have spread to his lymph nodes.
Tara talked to the young birth mom from the other night that was still sick and had two more weeks to go before her baby was due.
Tara told her that today was her Placement Day anniversary of one year.
“How are you feeling today?” the young birth mom asked her.
“I’m okay, just tired,” Tara said, although she did feel sad, it wasn’t unbearable.
“Was that day (of Placement) hard for you?” the birth mom asked.
“Not really because I was so doped up on painkillers from my C-section. So I was pretty out of it,” she said. “But my APs videotaped it and I have a copy of the tape.”
They didn’t talk long and Tara gave her some hope, she prayed.
Tara figured this young birth mom would be a lot better off than she would, namely because she was going home to her family not long after delivery and they would support her emotionally. Tara knew that made all the difference.
Tara feared today that she wouldn’t hear from Veronica and Frank for a long time. Their agreement only required them to send information every six months now until Mackenzie was 18 but Tara hoped and
thought that Veronica would continue sending her info sooner. And Veronica had told her that she’d send her a birthday tape.
When Tara got back to her desk at work that day she heard that a co-worker had had her baby at 11:50 the night before, a girl. And a co-worker’s daughter was undergoing surgery she might not live through with her second pregnancy because the baby was growing outside the womb on the abdomen and on to some other organs.
The baby would be taken and wouldn’t live through the surgery but the mother’s life was at risk, too. She had a little boy already and they didn’t know the sex of this one.
The women in Tara’s office got on the phone to their church congregation and asked for prayers for mother and child.
One of Tara’s co-workers was crying about it - the one who had been so good to Tara.
She was now like a mother figure to Tara, who thought she didn’t need a mom at the age of 35 and that it was too late. She figured her spirit had been killed and she wouldn’t let anyone else in.
But in Mackenzie she now had hope; saw the light in her own daughter’s eyes reflecting her light back to her.
And Tara was finally at peace.