Contact Information

100-850 Blanshard St.
Victoria, BC V8W 2H2
Tel: (250) 479-9811 Fax: (250) 479-9850
Toll Free: 1-888-479-9811
email: choices@choicesadoption.ca

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

The Best Way To Manage Waiting For Your Adopted Child

By Holly Allen

The title of this article is comical as there is no best way to manage the wait for your adopted child. One thing is for sure there are lots of things you can do to help prepare your child and yourself for your adoption journey. Adoption is the most important thing that will ever happen in your life. It is the moment a child becomes part of your family, morally, legally and unconditionally forever. An adopted child will have experienced some kind of trauma and you need to be ready when they arrive. Newborns and older children will have trauma simply by the fact that they are not living with their birth family; and some children may have experienced poverty, abuse or neglect. Children who are adopted locally and internationally have come to their new family with a story. Their story.

We can help our children to transition into their adoptive family by doing a few key things:
  • The most important part of adoption transition is giving your child time to grieve. We are often so excited to see our child (as most of us have been waiting for a long time) that we forget that our child is traumatized. Children need to be able to cry and we need to give them the space to do that.
  • We expect our children not to be afraid and not to worry but they do. They are missing their loved ones and all the things that were familiar to them. Take lots of pictures of birth family, orphanage caregivers, foster family, extended family or anything that will give your child comfort. It is always recommended that you bring a piece of clothing, blanket or sheet home with your child from their birth family, orphanage, foster family or hospital.
  • We can respect and honour our child’s birth family whether we have information about them or not. If your child’s family has passed away you can connect your child to their birth family through food, customs and language. Sometimes you may know the village, the orphanage, or the foster family where your child lived enabling you to gather information about times in your child’s life. You may adopt a child locally and find out their birth family was Scottish and loved to travel. This is sacred information and part of your child’s history. Any information about your child will assist you in the transition of bringing your adopted child home. Find out their routine and their favourite things to help them adapt to their new environment. Learn how to bond and play with your child so that they can become attached to you and begin to heal and grow.
A child is joining your family, so like all parents you start fixing your baby room, you buy a crib and learn about diapers and baby bottles. If you are adopting an older child, like I am, than you get their room ready or buy bunk beds and think about what toys they might like. If you do not know how old your child will be you may not be getting anything ready as you don’t know whether to buy a crib or a bed. Regardless, you are thinking about what your child may need. You may be asking yourself what does any of this stuff have to do with managing the wait, as my child is not here yet? All of the above is part of the wait. More than getting your child’s room ready you need to be educated about adoption. Attend seminars, read books, watch videos and read articles on-line about adoption. Subscribe to NACAC and learn about global perspectives on adoption. Contact your local hospital and child development centres so that you are prepared for your child’s arrival. Attend local waiting parent’s groups with other adoptive families or start your own. Be proactive and ask your adoption agency for resources in your area. Start a life book for your child. Take pictures of where your child will sit at the table and what park they will play at when you take them there. Also remember that you need to take care of you, so exercise, join a book club, play tennis or engage in activities that make you happy. Adoption can take days or years and waiting is hard. Having a sense of humour can help you before and after your child arrives. Talk to your friends and family and build a support network that you can rely on long after your child is home. After all adopting a child is just the beginning; you have a whole life to live with your child.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Top 10 Reasons To Keep Your Adopted Child Connected To Their Culture

By Holly Allen
  • It is important that your child joins your family with a good sense of self.
  • Honouring your adopted child’s culture will help your child grow into a happy adult.
  • Research has shown that children are more successful integrating into an adoptive family if their adoptive family is open and honest about their child’s birth family; each birth family is unique and has their own cultural norms and beliefs.
  • In school children are taught genealogy; it is important that they know their birth family and their adoptive family’s history.
  • Celebrating your child’s culture with them is sending the message to your child that it is alright to embrace all their family.
  • Sometimes children will not know who their birth family is and it is our job as adoptive parents to connect our children to their culture through food, customs and language.
  • Children need to believe in themselves and it helps if they know that you accept their whole self, the birth child and the adopted child.
  • Culture is a part of every family locally or internationally and helps shape who we are as people.
  • You can always add more love and more culture to a child but it is so important to make a space for the history and traditions your child was born with so that they can tell their own story.
  • Culture in adoption is a triangle of love that connects the adoptive family, the birth family and the child.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Book List



Loving and living with traumatized children; Reflections by adoptive parents 
by Megan Hirst

Transracial Adoption and Foster Care
Joseph Crumbley

Parenting the Hurt Child: Helping Adoptive Families Heal and Grow
by Gregory Keck and
Regina Kupecky

The Best Single Mom in the World: How I Was Adopted
Zisk. Albert Whitman

Toddler Adoption
by Mary Hopkins Best

Adopting After Infertility
Johnston, Patricia Irwin

Seeds of Love: For Brothers and Sisters of International Adoption
Petertyl, Mary and Chambers, Jill

Brothers and Sisters In Adoption
by Arletta James

The Family Book: A Book About Adoption and Families
Parr, Todd


Adopted Teens Only
Danea Gorbett

Post-Adoption Blues: Overcoming the Unforseen Challenges of Adoption
Foli, Karen and Thompson, John

Beyond Good Intentions
Cheri Register

Open Adoption Experience
Sharon Kaplan Roszia

Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
Sherrie Eldridge

The Lesbian Parenting Book: A Guide to Creating Families and Raising Children
Clunis, Merilee and Green, Dorsey

Raising Adopted Children
Lois Ruskai Melina

Attaching in Adoption: Practical Tools for Today’s Parents
Deborah Gray

Adoption and the Schools
by Lansing Wood & Nancy Ng

Being Adopted:The Lifelong Search For Self
Mary Watkins

The Family of Adoption
Joyce Maguire Pavao

The Primal Wound: understanding the Adopted Child
Nancy Verrier

Child's Journey Through Placement, A
by Vera Fahlberg

Lesbian and Gay Fostering and Adoption: Extraordinary yet Ordinary
Hicks, Stephen and McDermott, Janet

Dear Birthmother, Thank You for Our Baby
by Kathleen Silber

Ghost At Heart's Edge: Stories & Poems of Adoption
Ed. by Susan Ito and Tina Cervin

Healing Parents: Helping Wounded Children Learn to Trust & Love
by Michael Orlans, Terry M. Levy

How To Open An Adoption
by Patricia Martinez Dorner

How My Family Came to Be: Daddy, Papa and Me
Aldrich, Andrew

Learning the Dance of Attachment
by Holly van Gulden & Charlotte Vick

Making Sense of Adoption
by Lois Melina

Nurturing Attachments
Deborah D. Gray

Parenting Adopted Adolescents: Understanding & Appreciating Their Journeys
By Gregory Keck, Edited by Lynda Mansfield

Parenting the Hurt Child: Helping Adoptive Families Heal and Grow
by Gregory Keck and
Regina Kupecky

Talking With Young Children About Adoption
by Mary Watkins & Susan Fischer

The Adoption Decision: 15 Things You Want to Know Before Adopting
Christianson, Laura

Cross Cultural Adoption: How to Answer Questions from Family, Friends & Community
Abramowitz, Caryn and Coughlin


Books For Extended Family

Adoption is a Family Affair
by Patricia Johnston

Labours of Love: Canadians Talk About Adoption
Brennan, Deborah

Adopting: Sound Choices, Strong Families
Johnston, Patricia Irwin

Truly Yours: Thoughts on the Miracle of Adoption
Dail, Laura