Top Ten List for Transracial Adoptive Parents
Adoption is not like purchasing a Prada bag. It is not hip and trendy. You are not cool for adopting. You are becoming a parent. This is a child - a human being. This child is an enormous blessing that should not be taken for granted or used to fulfill your need to feel good about yourself. If this about āsaving the child,ā you are adopting for the wrong reasons. You are not the childās superhero. You are, for all practical purposes, stripping this child fromĀ their country of origin, family, culture, and everything else that matters. Regardless of how difficultĀ their life may be in the country of origin, this is still the reality. I hope you are ready to deal with issues related to this reality.
I have engaged in numerous conversations with transracial adoptees who feel their adoptive families and parents do not understand them. They feel invalidated regarding issues related to loss and abandonment and discounted for their experiences with racism. Many believe their parents adopted them so they could show others how sacrificial they are - the ultimate points on a parenting scorecard. Some speak of parents who expect them to be thankful for āsaving them from a life of destitute.ā It doesnāt matter that the adopted child has questions aboutĀ their country or culture of origin, biological parents, details about the adoption, etc. It only matters to the parents that they rescued them. Every story, at some level, resonates with me. We have more information regarding how to support transracial adoptees now ā this means parents are even more accountable. I never blame people for ignorance. You donāt know what you donāt know. But once you are aware, you are responsible for that information. You can no longer say, āI didnāt know.ā
After conducting over 4 years of research in this area and continuous conversations with many transracial adoptees, I think it is time for adoptive parents to hear our perspective. I hope that this list encourages dialogue between you and your adopted child, compassion and empathy forĀ their life experiences, and an open mind to truly listen and support.
For White parents adopting non-White childrenā¦
1. Before adopting, educate yourself on racial dynamics in the U.S. - your child WILL experience racism and how you respond will be pivotal to how they perceive you as a support person or just another White person who chooses to believe race is no longer an issue.
2. Do NOT raise your child to be color blind. Color is beautiful. When you say, āI donāt see color,ā you are saying you donāt see your beautiful child. Talk about race. Do not make race a taboo topic; that sends the message to your child that race/color is bad, and therefore there must be something wrong with them.
3. Do not let the first person to show support be a peer or teacher. Your child should be getting emotional and psychological support at home. When your child comes home crying and tells you that a kid teased him/her about their skin color, facial features, hair texture, etc. PLEASE DO NOT respond with, āJust ignore themā or āItās okay, Jesus loves you.ā Call it what it is. VALIDATE your childās experience. Itās called racism and it is unacceptable. Then discuss appropriate ways to respond to ignorant people.
4. Encourage your child to explore their identity. My research (2011 showed that ethnic/racial, White, and adoptee identity are all salient identities for transracial adoptees. This means that (Korean adoptees as an example), many transracial KAAs identify with being a racial and ethnic being, may āfeel white,ā and have a strong connection to being adopted. Transracial adoptees experience life in a unique way because they are being raised by families and in communities that do not look like them. This is not a bad thing, but you must be open to the uniqueness of their experience and validate their feelings in times of identity crisis.
5. If they decide to seek out their birth parents, do not make this about you. Guilt-tripping a child for wanting answers is sick and wrong, and thatās a reflection of your own insecurities. As a parent, you should WANT your child to be healthy and whole.
6. Introduce them (if they are open) to their culture of origin so they have an appreciation of and connection to their heritage. My research showed that adoptees felt they were āmissingā something because they could not speak their language of origin and/or knew nothing or little about Korean culture. They didnāt feel Korean or Asian enough around other Koreans and Asians, and they werenāt white, either. āMissing piecesā also included lack of medical records or an incomplete story regarding their adoption. Adoptees live in āthe in-between.ā If your child is not interested in finding answers (which may be the case because they are not emotionally or developmentally ready), this is fine - but at least offer the opportunities. Make it their decision. Empower them.
7. Connect them to other adoptees. Shared experiences are powerful.
8. Just be open. Open to dialogue, open to tough conversations, open to their exploration. The best gift you can give is support. Again, DO NOT make this about you. That is a reflection of your own insecurities.
9. Your children are NOT White. They may have a strong connection to White culture, but they do not benefit from White privilege. The sooner you accept them as racial beings and understand how your racial experiences are different because you are not brown, the more supportive you can be.
10. If you do not believe in White privilege, you should not be adopting a non-White child. If you are willing to pour hours into parenting books, you should be open to learning about how your childās life experiences will differ from yours, simply because they have brown skin.
Ā© Joy Lynn Song Hoffman, 2013
Adopted through Holt International, 1968