How Adoption Became
My Life’s Work
I remember when we decided to adopt. My personality
was and is “I’ve made the decision so let’s do it – NOW!” In
my life, if I wanted something, I could pick up the phone and
call in an order, sign a check or ask my secretary to have it
on my desk by noon. So here I sat with this overwhelming desire
to be a mother and all this love to share with a child asking, “How
do I complete this ‘task’ of parenthood by my deadline?”
The first week I drove myself crazy spending
hours per day researching the process of adoption. The door
was often slammed shut because
we were too old; my husband was 40 and I was 30! Agencies turned
us down because we were overweight, not married long enough,
because I owned my own business and wouldn’t be a “stay
at home Mom”. Sometimes it was; our income wasn’t
high enough, we were not the right religion, we lived in the
wrong county and the list went on. Nothing seemed to work. I
had never had so many rejections in one week. I decided that
if conventional methods wouldn’t help me adopt, I would
network and do it myself. Through my persistence, I found and
contacted sources that led me to other sources until I found
my precious son.
During my quest, I kept a spiral notebook of the doctors, attorneys,
counselors and other professionals that helped me. I even recorded
every step I took to reach my goal. Along the way, I met dozens
of others trying to adopt who also met with roadblocks put up
for seemingly ridiculous reasons. As I held my son in my arms,
calls poured in from other couples striving for parenthood. Soon,
I became an adoption facilitator by default! Many of my early
adoptions were made while I was cooking dinner!
I sold my manufacturing/wholesale company and went full steam
ahead as an adoption facilitator. I applied my marketing background
and the same research techniques I had used for my own adoption
in 1986. I opened A Lifetime Adoption Facilitation Center and
became a Certified and Bonded Open Adoption Practitioner/Facilitator
through the National Federation for Open Adoption Education and
a member of the Better Business Bureau.
As a facilitator, I’ve found that each morning could find
me in a sudden flight to pick up a baby or on the telephone handling
a birth mother in crisis. It has been an eventful and rewarding
career and I wouldn’t change it for the world.
At Lifetime we have had adoptive families
who have welcomed with open arms babies born to drug-addicted
mothers and even
a family who adopted their child from an HIV positive birth mother.
We facilitate bi-racial adoptions and now single women are adoptive
mothers. We have one birth mother who chose adoption for her
baby then wrote a book to share her story with the world. We
have an attorney who, after adopting a child through us, became
an adoption attorney – and the list goes on!
A number of adoptive families have found
their children via our Internet website. The Internet helps
put people in direct
contact; birth mothers with adoptive parents and visa versa.
All the legal steps, the home study background check and necessary
paperwork still must be done, but the task of finding a child
or an adoptive family has become much easier by using the Internet.
Birth parents and adoptive parents can take an active part in
pursuing their goals. A birth mother has the opportunity to look
at photos and resumes of available adoptive families in privacy.
Families can search for a child with a similar heritage, physical
appearance, religious background, etc. This information posted
on the Internet speeds up the selection process. The term “waiting
list” just about disappears and waiting in obscurity has
become a th ing of the past.
To date, Lifetime facilitates over 120 adoptions
per year. We have in-house, 24 hour phone lines and receive over
300 calls
a day. We love what we do. The joy and contentment on the faces
of the families and birth parents we work with keeps us going
through the ups and downs of working in a very emotional profession.
We cry every day and laugh every day. It is our intention to
answer each of your adoption questions straightforwardly and
honestly. I have been there and I know it can be done.
By Mardie Caldwell, COAP, founder of Lifetime
Adoption.
Adoptive mother, author, and radio talk show host at
Let's
Talk Adoption
For more information on adoption please contact
Lifetime Adoption,
or
call 530. 432.7373.
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