Adoptees & Divorce

Adoptees & Divorce: Had I known my adoption reunion would lead to my divorce, would I have done it anyway? To quote Anne Sexton, I sit here “on the spike of truth,” and I say ‘Yes, I would have.'

Marriage photo taken prior to my adoption reunion.
Marriage photo taken prior to my adoption reunion.

I can confirm that yes, there are significant divorce risks in adoption reunions and many hurdles for the married adoptee – this is a bitter truth. Reunions don’t kill marriages, but any weak spot in the marital bed will be tested under the weight of it. The swells of emotions that rise from reunion can wash away the foundation of your marriage like a high tide. Adoptees and divorce is a topic that needs more attention. Adoption reunions change the adoptee’s relationship to self and that can lead to a change in the dynamic of the marriage. 

Perhaps those who have walked the reunion road are wary to share these truths, because we understand the importance our search and reunion played in the journey to our true, genuine, magnificent selves. I have heard it said, “It is not what you find, but that you find.” But perhaps we journeyed adoptees avoid discussing the harsher consequences of search and reunion, for fear we might scare adoptees away from their truth – a discovery most of us say we would take on again and again. Yet, adoptees & divorce is a real concern.

“I fear if I keep looking for my family my husband and I will end up divorced,” she whispers over the phone with the most confused, scared, conflicted sound in her tender voice. “He asks me, ‘Why can’t you just be happy?’” She sighs as though she has tried at “just being happy” and failed a million times.

I sit on the line frozen, the words I want to find drip off my tongue and hang like icicles on my teeth. What to say?

It has only been weeks since that day. The day I sat with my iPhone in hand watching my husband’s iPhone move about the Travis County Court House on a mission to divorce me. We had downloaded the Find My Phone app, so if either of us ever lost our phones the other’s phone would show us right where it was. That had only been a few months ago, but today 150 miles away from home, this Find My Phone feature was my only window into his world. It was nothing more than intuition that said, “Wonder where he is right now?”

He had asked me to leave home three weeks before, a trial separation. I had asked for the truth about this sudden disengagement. The truth I was told was that I was “unhappy, insecure, and untrusting,” and that my husband needed a break from me. It was during this sudden bizarre separation that I watched him travel about his day without me, and then he was THERE, at the courthouse.

Maybe I was acting like an insecure, untrusting wife. Common character traits any good adoption book will tell you most adoptees possess, but I had other reasons to worry. I had felt him distance himself since my birth father had entered the picture. I had been consumed in the happy haze of reunion road, but when the fog lifted, I found my husband’s heart had traveled away, down a dark path – one that perhaps led to the comfort and attention of another? I did not know where he had gone.

After witnessing the courthouse visit, I rushed home the next day, all 150 miles from my little Fourth of July forced solo-vacation, through our front door, into our empty bedroom. Surely he had been at the courthouse doing something regarding his child support decree with his first wife, but then I saw it, his wedding ring burning a hole atop his dresser. Backing out of the bedroom, I turned to find a poisonous buffet of legalese spread across the kitchen table: D I V O R C E petition, a will I was written out of, and a passport application. Only a month before had we not been out looking to buy a new couch? Planning our wedding anniversary?

And I fell. I fell forty-two years back into that cold as stone cradle, the one with silent nurses and bribed doctors making rounds about me. The one where the man in the dark suit stood above and judged, ‘yes she can go’ – the man who made plans for me, pulled together the papers of my life, determined my fate, signed the deal and filed the papers that would mandate my destiny – again I have no voice? No say? No choice? Unheard? Signed, sealed, and delivered out alone into the world again. Who gives a shit about what you wanted … or thought or felt … the lawyers are in charge and off you go! This news of the divorce seared my soul, a branding iron upon this adoptee’s heart.

Not again! Why am I not good enough? Why am I being disposed of? Why do I have no say over this? Do my voice and feelings count for nothing? Nothing? And again, here I sat ‘on the spike of truth.’ Rejection and abandonment burst and spiraled like fireworks and I fell back into the cradle — a long child’s cry goodbye.

“I can’t get him to read the books,” she sighs, and I imagine her holding herself with her arms, hands at opposite elbows pulling herself in close, embracing her core, comforting that fearful child who longs to seek and fears repercussion. “Even in search I feel myself becoming more like me,” she says as a faint smile spreads across her teeth. I hope she continues her search, and I remind her she is the only one who can make that choice.

There are repercussions to searching, they tell you. Not in such stern words. They are constructed to sound kinder and more supportive, “You never know what you might find; Are you prepared to deal with rejection? What if you find they are dead or don’t want to meet you? Have you considered how your adoptive family might feel about this?” Well-meaning, fear-inspiring, to keep your expectations in check.

But there are also other repercussions. I must not tell her, or should I, that as an adoptee, finding her true self will by nature lead her away from her false self. It will make her ask for things she needs, wants, deserves — and can shatter who and what she thought/thinks she was/is/needs. Should I tell her this discovery can help you see even the small lies in the life you have weaved – the worn threads in the apron you wear as you dance about the kitchen being what everyone expects of you, the codependent chameleon role you so happily clung to your whole life.

That the man you love may not change with you or understand your needs.

“I could not get my husband to read the books either,” I say, and an icy dagger falls from my mouth and melts on the tension in the line, “he never understood me and now he is leaving.”

I rage in my head! If spouses and family would read the books, they would know that we must go on this journey, that we are naturally less trustful of a world in which the most important people have left, that we must feel in control of our destiny, and that can equal even what kind of tea we drink or the movie we see.

If family and spouses would read the books perhaps they would understand that we love deeply, that we attach profoundly, that we fear abandonment like death; and that what we love it seems can be taken by a thief in the night in a heartbeat — so we cling perhaps a tad too deep. Our loved ones should know these things.

The books explain that we are faithful and dedicated, and we desire above all family and a sense of belonging. That when we fear abandonment or rejection, we will crawl up into a ball until we are coaxed out and reassured again and again that we are worthy. But we will never leave, we commit deeply and devoutly.

I reassure her, “Reunions don’t necessarily destroy relationships, but they shed light on what is already weak. They demand the best of you both.” It’s because most adoptees will start asking for what they need, and then conflict ensues. Who is this new person? What do they need? “If the marriage has the strength to work through the conflict, if the spouse reads and goes to adoption-related therapy, it can be a difficult, but wonderful and bonding thing.”

I won’t tell her about the many adoption-reunion-touched marriages I am watching pulled at the seams, the spousal jealousy, the adoptive and birth families’ inability to relate and their insecurities, the fraying of family ties with the constant weathering reunion brings.

I said I would have lost my marriage, rather than never find myself, that is true; but I will never say it was even slightly an easy thing to do, nor do I think I have yet to fully feel my self-worth, but I sense I am on the correct path. Even though it is a path I did not choose, I can see it is mine to walk now, and I have great hope for where it will lead.

I wish there was more study of, articles about, and support around divorce and adoptees. I look online and find many stories about how the divorce of adoptive parents affects adopted children, but what about how adoptees cope with the rejection and abandonment, self-esteem, and attachment issues that divorce brings up for us? How do we fight the feelings of being discarded, rejected, and abandoned once again?

I believe for those who are brave enough to find their answers on their adoption journey there is a healing and strength of self that will eventually carry us through. I wonder what it must be like to meet and marry once you know your truest self, your whole truth, your you-est you!

My first marriage in many ways constructed a place for my adoptee self to fit in. It promised that fantasy family, it offered the illusion of everlasting love and acceptance. But although I lost my adoptive mother to death during my marriage, my daughter to adulthood, and my husband and my role as step-mom to divorce, I have begun to attain a truer sense of belonging than I have ever experienced before; I am coming away with a stronger understanding of what family should mean and be and is.

My reunion gave me a more profound bond to my adoptive family, two new birth families and a deeper understanding and patience with who I see in the mirror.  But still, only eight months separated and not even divorced yet, I struggle daily with the pain of rejection, abandonment, isolation, and self-worth — the slicing open of the adoptee’s wounds inherent in divorce.

I hope we see and read more about this topic in the future. Please share your experiences; I would love to hear them.

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4 Responses

  1. As an adopted person I have felt like I always had to put the feelings of other people first. I think it is a matter of survival that begins way early…I have no way of knowing. In wanting to know my first mother and my first father I agonized over what it might do to the other people in my life…my adoptive parents, my first parents, their spouses, brothers and sisters I may or may not have, grandparents I did not know, my husband, my children. Both times after years and years of agonizing and soul searching I contacted them seemingly on whim without a word to anyone. It was the only way. Ultimately I could not give anyone the chance to say to me “don’t do it.” I found out my mother’s name in 1986 and did not contact her until 1993. I found out my father’s name in ’93 and did not contact him til 2012 (that’s 19 years, people). When I met him in the first minute I knew he was my father…I felt it. There is no effective way to put it into words. I would assume Pam felt the same way about Pop.

    I have been extremely lucky to have a spouse who wants to get it, who reads the articles and books. There are not many books for spouses. It has been the hardest and yet most satisfying months in our marriage. We have struggled and come out on the high side, better than ever I think. I like to say that this whole process looks like pure joy colliding with unbearable pain.

    After a while I think he just started to think about how much love he has for our daughters. I lost my dad before I was born and he did not even know about me until I was 13. It’s a big switch…usually it’s the father that has to share his daughter with her new husband…let some other man love the girl he has loved for so long. My husband had to share me with my dad and let him love me and let me love him. The complexities seem daunting at times, and at other times it seems SO SIMPLE.

    I never doubted that God was here on earth but I also never REALLY believed in Him I don’t think, not 100 percent anyway. I don’t know why my father and I have this great connection…it is just something that IS. He is a real father and friend to his now 46- year old daughter. There is just NO WAY that it has happened without God. Even if His hand did not guide any of it, He is here in the world and has taken care of me when I thought my problems were too small for God.

    But every day I wake up I am still adopted with all that brings. I understand that most non-adopted people will never understand all this…they don’t need to understand. I just wish that they would BELIEVE that what I say is true, that for many, many adopted people it hurts to high heaven to be adopted no matter how good we are able to make ourselves look on the outside, no matter how nice or rich our adoptive parents are or how much they “wanted a baby” or even wanted us. This is my story anyway. I have been a MASTER of making myself look good…for 45 years and 364 days anyway…an absolute master. Now all that is falling away.

    I am so glad, Pam, that you are back to writing and that I get to know you and Pop, and that Bill gets to know you. I hope we have lifted each other up…even our “friendship” has been a hard one. I think you would agree. I wish that your husband had believed you and stuck with you….I feel sorry for him that he did not. I am sad for you but will never feel sorry for you. You don’t need me to!

  2. I would love to get a chance to speak with you. I am adopted and just reunited with my birth mother. I can def relate to your feelings and could really use someone to talk to about it. I hope we can connect!

  3. I believe as you do… We absolutely need more discussion on this topic! I found my BMom 24 years ago but she would not tell my 5 full biological siblings. [I respected her choice and waited 20 years until she died] I believed I was prepared for any outcome. My spouse suported my contact with them. They welcomed me with open arms. Took her headstone off and engraved my name with theirs! My harmonious marriage of 30 years was on autopilot… It hung by a thread in the aftermath. We survived but this topic is a passion of mine! I have been doing research for a book about it… nothing came up but your blog and a few others. I’m off to get the book written! Fellow adoptees need to be aware this can happen! It was a curveball that I never knew was a possible issue!
    Adoptees are wonderful beautiful Warrior’s… We fight for Love everyday! Big Hug with Love for having the courage to speak about this! I am so proud of you! Kendra

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