Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew

WP Greet Box icon
Hello there! If you are new here, you might want to subscribe to the RSS feed for updates on this topic.

  • ISBN13: 9780440508380
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

“Birthdays may be difficult for me.”

“I want you to take the initiative in opening conversations about my birth family.”

“When I act out my fears in obnoxious ways, please hang in there with me.”

“I am afraid you will abandon me.

Rating: (out of 193 reviews)

List Price: $ 15.00

Price: $ 6.42

Find More Adoption Products

Adoption Information and Laws

Comments

5 Responses to “Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew”

  1. A. E Rothert on May 19th, 2010 3:58 am

    Review by A. E Rothert for Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
    Rating:
    I am now an adult. I was adopted as an infant. This is the first time I have seen in print many of the feelings of loss and abandonment being given up created in me. These are really feelings that should be experienced, experiences that should be grieved. The author advocates for openness about adoption, which I think is the solution: Don’t pretend there wasn’t an abandonment (even if it was for good reasons) and don’t hide adoption like it is something to be ashamed of or over-do the opposite by labelling the adoptee “special.”

    The weakness of this book, as others have written, is that it dwells on the negative. There is a lot of good that comes out of adoption. It is probably the most important good thing that has happened to me to help make me who I am today. And most adoptees are like me in that they are accepted into loving families who are open about the adoption and do the best they can to make it day by day.

    The author at times seems to be overly dramatizing the loss that adopted children feel. But this is likely intentional. This is, afterall, a book about what adopted children wish their adoptive parents knew. I *do* wish my adoptive parents had known that the feelings of loss and abandonment would be there… I wish I could have put words to what I was feeling earlier and to have known that I was not the only person to have such feelings, that I was, oddly enough, normal. We all dealt with it, but it would have been easier for me (and I would have been a more pleasant child) had we known to expect this issue instead of waiting for me to discover it myself while exploring my anger and seeming unwillingness to get too close emotionally to anyone.

    So I recommend this book for adoptive parents and those considering adoption. That said, it should not be read or considered in isolation. Adoption is a positive thing that can change a child’s life much for the better. Listening to the author’s explanation of what an adopted child feels should not make anyone afraid of adopting; rather, it should help them recognize what their child is experiencing. For, as the author says so nicely, the child is going to experience the loss whether the adoptive parent knows it will happen, believes it will happen, wants it to happen, or not. Like so many other painful things in life, understanding and coping with being given away by one’s mother at birth can make the adopted child a stronger, more empathic individual. Failing to do so can make him or her angry, unhappy, and generally disgruntled. Much better to deal with the issues than pretend they don’t exist.

  2. Kristina Sander on May 19th, 2010 4:53 am

    Review by Kristina Sander for Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
    Rating:
    As a prospective adoptive parent AND adoptee, I found this book to be helpful in emphasizing some of the communication issues in adoption. This book emphasizes regret and loss on the part of the adoptee — feelings that as an adoptee, I do not feel strongly about. I believe reading this book as an adoptive parent may give good insight into concerns and feelings, but as an ADOPTEE, I want prospective parents to know that my experience has been positive and happy — therefore do not let this book discourage you. I found some interesting parallels to my life in this book, including hating birthdays and some of my actions growing up. I believe adoption can be more positive than the portrait the author paints. Readers can, however, use some of the communication suggestions the author makes.

  3. James J. Hutton on May 19th, 2010 5:13 am

    Review by James J. Hutton for Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
    Rating:
    I am a 38 year old adoptee and adoptive parent. I was adopted as an infant, as was my own adopted daughter. As others have pointed out, this book is clearly both overly negative and overly dramatic. I would like to add that following the advice of the author could even be very harmful to your adopted child. In particular, I was taken aback by the author’s suggestion that you should essentially tell your child that he or she must have unresolved grief issues and help him or her uncover them. That is just plain wrong. Please understand that it is entirely likely that your child, especially if he or she was adpoted as an infant, will never have any significant feelings of loss or grief. DO NOT CREATE THOSE FEELINGS OUT OF SOME MISGUIDED EFFORT TO HELP YOUR CHILD “UNCOVER” SUPPOSEDLY SUPPRESSED FEELINGS. In my own experience, I have always known that I was adopted and that I have been loved by my parents. I simply have no negative feelings regarding my own adoption. None. However, if my parents had read this book when I was a child and decided that they needed to tell me that I must have those feelings and we had to find them and focus on them, I undoubtedly would have needed years and years of therapy.

    The advice in this book might have some helpful relevance to those who are adopted as older childen. However, for those adopted a infants, what you should do is tell them early and often that they are adopted and loved. Let them know that you are always available to talk with them about any feelings or questions they might have. If they have questions, answer them matter of factly. Do not burden them with negative feelings that they probably do not have and will never develop.

  4. David A. Guberman on May 19th, 2010 5:24 am

    Review by David A. Guberman for Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
    Rating:
    Sherrie Eldridge means well: she wants to help adoptive parents do a better job of parenting their adoptive children. But Eldridge has written a deeply-flawed book that cannot be relied upon regarding either its descriptions or prescriptions.

    The first problem is that Eldridge makes sweeping statements about how adoptees feel and what adoptees need from their adoptive parents without, however, supporting her claims with any scientific research, either her own or others. On reading the many claims Eldridge makes in her book, I kept wanting to ask: how do you know this? She never tells us.

    At most, Eldridge offers annecdotes from her own experience and that of other adoptees. But we have no way of knowing whether these experiences fairly represent the experiences of most adoptees; whether they were selected because they support Eldridge’s views; or whether, in talking with other adoptees, Eldridge “found” just what she was looking for.

    Another problem is the absence of any serious comparative perspective: how, for example, do non-adopted children experience and cope with the loss of a parent? Or, let’s consider a major theme in Eldridge’s writing: the idea that all adoptees suffer a loss that must be grieved because, having lived for nine months in her birth mother’s womb, adoption removes the infant from the only environment she has known. Well, birth does that to all of us: we all are expelled from the Eden of our mothers’ wombs; all of us are cut off from our pre-natal environment.

    If the pre-natal experience is as important as Eldridge wants us to believe, then the “loss” involved in being born should be universal. It thus becomes essential to understand the effects of that experience and to distinguish them from the effects of adoption as such. Eldridge fails to address this issue.

    I’ll conclude with a much smaller example. One that, however, illustrates the problem I had trusting Eldridge’s judgment and reliability. One of the works included in her bibliography is “The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales” by Bruno Bettleheim, whom Eldridge identifies as “German author Bruno Bettelheim” (p. 75), and, subsequently, as “renowned psychologist and author Bruno Bettelheim” (p. 77).

    What’s wrong with this? First, Bettelheim was born and educated in Austria, not Germany. Second, he did all his work in the United States (and so might be described as American), to which he came in 1939 as a Jewish refugee from Nazism (so that simply calling him “German,” even if he had been born there, would have been misleading). Third, Bettelheim’s reputation as a psychologist was exploded at least two years before Eldridge published her book: a widely-reviewed biography by Richard Pollak (“The Creation of Dr. B: A Biography of Bruno Bettelheim”), exposed him as a fraud.

    That Eldridge cannot properly identify Bettelheim and that she relies on someone so discredited substantially undermines my confidence in her knowledge and judgment.

  5. N. Amirzafari on May 19th, 2010 5:45 am

    Review by N. Amirzafari for Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew
    Rating:
    I would have given this book a ZERO star rating if it was possible. I am an adoptee (very happy to be one–I love my parents!) and am in the middle of the adoption process myself. I found this book to be absolutely awful. I agree w/ the other 1 stars reviews that say this book is overly dramatic and overly negative. I will be speaking out often to tell any social worker or adoption agency to be very careful when they recommend this book to prospective adoptive parents. If this book is suggested to anyone—-it should be with the clear message that SOME adoptees might feel some of these feelings….. but this book, in my opinion, is more of a ‘worst case scenario’ in how adoptees feel. It is the ‘extreme’ and not the norm. I kept thinking: PLEASE speak for yourself! DO NOT speak for “all adopted children”. Another adoptee reviewer went as far as to say she kept wanting to tell this author to ’shut up’ and as awful as that sounds….I have to agree. I felt the exact same way. And I kept reading w/ an open mind and tried and tried to ‘hear her out” so to speak. I am opposed to the title because it implies all adoptees feel this way. It would be more appropriate to call the book something like “20 things some adoptive children MAY feel and would like you to know” but that is much less catchy.

    It would be wrong to invalidate another adoptees feelings—they are his or hers alone. But they SHOULD NOT be applied to ALL adoptees! And this book does that. It is important for all adoptive parents to be aware of the (possible) struggles or issues that an adoptee may face. Key word is “may” face. Not everyone has such a painful adoptive experience. I certainly didn’t. If you are thinking about adopting—and you choose to read this book (honnestly—I would STRONGLY advise against it) just know this is not how ALL adoptees feel. The adoptees I know do not feel this way. And I second another adoptee reviewer who said “your parents are the people who raised you”!!! I couldn’t STAND this book. This is my first and only book review—I felt compelled to write this review in support of potential adoptive parents who are reading this book and getting a very inaccurate and depressing picture of adoptive families! I think there should be more books about positive adoption experiences….but the thing is….people who are happy to be adopted (like me) are too busy living their life like any other person. We don’t “feel” adopted. We just feel “normal’ so it would not occur to many of us to write a book about adoption!

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!





Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes