A Memoir by Patricia Knight Meyer
Published by Unsolicited Press
Some adoptees spend their lives wondering about their origins. Patricia Knight Meyer spent hers wondering if she was a stolen child.
A Memoir by Patricia Knight Meyer
Published by Unsolicited Press
Some adoptees spend their lives wondering about their origins. Patricia Knight Meyer spent hers wondering if she was a stolen child.
How far would you go to know who you are? Handed over along a Texas hospital curb in 1970—no judge, no paperwork, no questions asked—Patricia grew up celebrating a made-up birthday, haunted by nightmares of "The Dark Man." Her parents, blackmailed by the attorney they hired to skirt the adoption system, faced an impossible choice: go to the police or pay up. They paid $30,000 to keep their paperless baby.
Navigating her mother's violent alcoholism and caring for her disabled and depressed 600-pound father, Patricia spent her childhood trying to save her saviors—unaware of the lifelong threat that haunted them: at any moment, someone could come back for their child.
At eighteen, pregnant and standing in her birth mother's shoes, Patricia discovers a shattering secret that launches a lifetime search for answers. But it takes decades—and her adoptive mother's death—before Patricia realizes the secret-keepers won't live forever. Guided by her mother's ghost, she races to uncover the truth.
A tumble down the rabbit hole of America’s baby trade, part detective story, part searing family portrait, Wonderland exposes what happens when adoption’s house of cards finally falls—when falsified documents and dark family secrets can no longer sustain one woman’s relentless search for truth.
Patricia delivers a haunting reckoning with Baby Scoop Era exploitation that asks: as reproductive rights disappear, are we ready for Baby Scoop 2.0?
The story of one bartered baby who refused to be erased.
“Was I abandoned, relinquished, stolen? I didn’t know then, but I was for sure sold, like a puppy, or a car, or a second-hand wedding ring.”
“My birth box sits on a high shelf in our hallway closet, stowed away like loot from a real-life bank robbery. It’s lived there my whole life, right in the same place where Mommy hides my Christmas presents, but it’s no big secret. Sometimes, on days like today, I take out our stepladder, crawl up, and pull it down. Each time hoping to find something new. Maybe something I’ve missed, a clue that can tell me a tiny bit of truth about you-know-who.”
Though it feels sneaky, I don’t try to hide what I’m up to. I bring it into the living room and spread everything across the coffee table for examination. “Not again, Peep,” my mother groans, knowing she’ll be the one to put it back in its hiding place and that before she does, I’ll have more questions than she can or wants to answer.
Like a junior detective, I pull off the white cardboard lid and inspect what’s inside: baby shower napkins, notes of congratulations, diaper pins, an old rubber pacifier, a pair of booties. A card with my height and weight—6 lbs. 4 oz., 19 inches—shows no date. A tiny plastic hospital bracelet with a number shows no name.
Copies of Life and Vogue, both dated January 1970, live in there too. A picture of a fuzzy green blob titled “A Living Human Egg” sits on one cover while a pretty model with long dark hair, light skin, and big eyes looks back at me from the other. Is this Vogue model the lady who had me? Was I once a green blob in her belly? I wonder if she knows where I am. And, if so, why in the world she chose this family?
* * *
At only eight years old, I was already searching. For her? I’m not sure. For truth? Definitely. Though I feigned interest in the “cool old magazines,” I longed for answers to my mystery identity. If only that white hat box could have been black, an in-flight data recorder, capturing the suspicious turn of events the day my fate careened into a foreign land.
Our first family picture, dated as developed in February 1970, also lived in that box. It confirmed the start of my timeline and proved parts of the story. Snapped in my Aunt Tweeter’s driveway, it captures the day she drove her brother and sister-in-law—my new parents—to the pickup point for their promised baby. In it, my second mother, a thirty-two-year-old, freckled, one-hundred-and-twenty-pound beauty, stands beside her thirty-four-year-old, three-hundred-pound tan Hispanic husband. Both beam from ear to ear. My new mother holds a billowy white receiving blanket that one can only assume I am swaddled inside, due to the tight clutch of her arms around it.
Mommy described my first being placed in her arms as “a moment of unparalleled joy,” and her words rang sweetly in my ears. “There in the van, when we pulled back all the bunting, we found you’d arrived with scratches on your little face and a full head of hair, except for the bald spots where your tiny fingers had pulled it out.”
Did it not occur to her that a well-cared-for baby shouldn’t have had so many scratches? That a properly swaddled infant couldn’t pull her hair or claw her face? That the child should have come with papers? That you don’t buy babies off the street? At least she never said it did . . .
Short-listed for Blair Publishers Bakwin Award 2024
Short-listed for the C&R Press 2025 Prose Award
Finalist in the 2024 University of New Orleans Press annual novel contest
Excerpt “Infant Of” shortlisted in The Letter Review Spring 2025 non-fiction contest
Excerpt “Infant Of” runner-up in nonfiction for Magpie Zine's inaugural Clark Closser Memorial Literature Contest 2026
Adoptee, Author, and Adoption Reform Advocate
Patricia Knight Meyer is an adoptee, author, and advocate whose beginning started with an illegal black-market adoption. Born sometime in December 1969, she was handed over along a Texas hospital curb in January 1970—no judge, agency, or paperwork involved.
Her forthcoming memoir, WONDERLAND, lays bare the emotional and legal wreckage of black-market adoption and chronicles how she unearthed the extortion and child trafficking that placed her into the unvetted hands of an abusive, alcoholic mother and passive 600-pound father, found her biological parents, tracked down the dirty attorney responsible for it all, and obtained her first legal birth certificate at 47 years old.
A journalism graduate of the University of Texas, book publicist, and digital marketer, Patricia reunited against all odds with her birth mother and birth father in 2010 and 2011, and today writes about the complexities of reconciling multiple families and selves at MyAdoptedLife.com. She is the founder of YAYDNA Genetic Greeting Cards and her reunion story, viewed over 280,000 times on YouTube, continues to inspire others to seek truth and connection.
A tumble down the rabbit hole of America's baby trade.
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