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Respectful Adoption Language

Honest and Accurate, but Probably Not What You'd Expect

By Jessica DelBalzo, published May 30, 2005
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“Language shapes the way we think, and determines what we can think about.” – Benjamin Lee Whorf We all know how powerful words can be. We may comfort our children with the old saying, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never harm me,” but the truth is that offensive language can bruise the psyche of its target. Currently, the words used by the media to describe adoption range from dishonest and inaccurate to hurtful and discriminatory. Many of these labels are tantamount to the racial slurs used against African Americans prior to the abolition of slavery and the advent of the civil rights movement. Just as journalists (and all members of polite society) steer clear of using names like “nigger” and “colored person,” degrading adoption terms need to be removed from our collective vocabulary. The same is true for adoption-related words that disguise reality or perpetuate the myths that the $1.4 billion adoption industry would have us believe. First, let’s examine the discriminatory labels that have been applied to parents who have lost their children to adoption. “Birth” and “Biological” are common prefixes that the media and others apply to parents, grandparents, and extended family members of adopted children. Often, adoption agencies and would-be adopters refer to “birth” mothers and fathers whose children have yet to be born. These labels are an attempt to degrade the importance of a child’s true family, reducing them to a single function in their children’s lives. In the case of pre-birth labeling, the users of this offensive language are clearly aiming to convince parents that they are dispensable even before their children have come into the world. Rather than perpetuating the unbelievable and degrading notion that one’s family can be “switched at birth” (or even later, in the case of older children’s adoptions), we need to take care to use respectful and honest language. It is not necessary to separate parents who have lost children to the adoption industry from any other parents in our society. Mother, father, grandparents, aunt, uncle, and cousin are all perfectly descriptive words on their own. Knowing that a child has only one true family makes it unnecessary to use discriminatory words to mark the difference between relatives and adopters. When one needs to convey the fact that a parent has lost a child to the adoption industry, it is more appropriate to describe them as a “natural mother/father,” “parent exiled by adoption,” or “mother/father of adoption loss.” These terms are accurate in relaying the experience of losing a child to adoption, but they don’t reduce a parent’s role to that of an incubator or sperm donor. The second set of offensive adoption words is degrading to children and their true families, as well as dishonest and deceptive. These words – “adoptive mother/father/family” – describe something that simply doesn’t exist. Families are not created on paper, upon payment of the necessary legal fees. Families are created by nature, through the unbreakable bond that ties together past and future generations. Despite being separated over many years or many miles, family members still manage to share their traits with one another, and it is only natural for them to do so. It is a fallacy to suggest that strangers can step in to replace a child’s true family in any situation. Pretending that adopters are the parents of another family’s child is incredibly disrespectful to that child, his or her heritage, and the real family that he was given by nature. It implies that children can be passed around and sold to the highest bidder as slaves were sold in the 17th century. In the interest of honesty, it is far better to describe the people who adopt children as “adopters,” “caregivers,” or “guardians.” Adoptees shouldn’t be expected to play make-believe when it comes to something as serious as their families, and the rest of us shouldn’t perpetuate the lies created by the adoption industry as a means of peddling children to wealthy, infertile couples. In the end, the most important thing is respect for children and the families that nature has given them. Growing up, we’ve all been taught that honesty is the best policy. What are we teaching today’s children if we force them to accept strangers as parents and to deny their true families? What message are they being sent about themselves, if their own mothers and fathers are constantly being degraded and abused by our society’s adoption vocabulary? Whether they’re adopted as infants, toddlers, or older, children deserve better than the lies the adoption industry offers them.

Takeaways
  • 1. Women who have lost children to adoption are not mere objects of birth.
  • 2. Even the most loving substitute caregivers cannot replace a child's true family.
  • 3. Masking these truths cannot be done without consequences.
Did You Know?
There were 127,441 children adopted in the United States in 1992
Resources
  • Adoption: Legalized LiesProtect Yourself from Adoption ExploitationAdoption Resources
Comments
Comments 1 - 12 of 12
 
 
You know what? You are right. My children's drug-and-alcohol addicted birthmother, murdered birthfather (in a drug-deal gone wrong), criminal grandparents and jailed uncles and aunts would be much better parents than I. I'll give them back right now... obviously I'm doing them a terrible wrong by keeping them.

Posted on 09/23/2008 at 8:09:43 AM

 
If, as you say, "we need to take care to use... honest language," then why CAN'T i call someone a nigger? They're as much a nigger as i am a cracker, and i don't take offence at that: it's the truth. Also, a parent is not "exiled by adoption": a parebnt CHOOSES adoption, usually because they don't want the child; in suck cases, "sperm donor" would be an almost PERFECTLY accurate description of that "parent's" role. A parent, as you've said, is not someone who simply gives birth: it's someone who raises a child. Therefore an adoptive "caregiver" can be a better parent than the "biological" ones ever were.

Posted on 11/09/2007 at 2:11:00 PM

 
clearly written by an ignorant girl with only a high-school education ... why not become passionate about making a POSITIVE difference in this world?! Get an education, CONTRIBUTE to the world, become who you were meant to be, love.

Posted on 07/09/2007 at 7:07:00 PM

 
Many infertile couples who adopt are far from wealthy. They find ways to cover the costs because they want to love a child, even if it means a second mortgage on their home.

Posted on 05/23/2007 at 10:05:00 PM

 
I find it puzzling that some individuals who have commented make assumptions about the author being "messed up" because of her views on adoption. Clearly her views represent a minority opinion on this topic, but it's important not to deny the fact that many lives are actually torn apart by adoption.

Posted on 03/23/2007 at 10:03:00 PM

 
My goodness! Someone obviously scared you to death at some point. Changing the words around to suit yourself won't mask the fact that you seem deeply worried about your own ability to hold on to your child. My wife and I adopted a 2mo old son and she was a child of adoption as well. She knows her birth parents well (and they were truly nothing more until she reached her thirties) but her heart, mannerisms and accent lie with her "real" parents- the parents that would move heaven and earth to keep her safe and warm. Her bio parents did give her a history of early heart disease and an allergy to alcohol, so yea, there's a life-long "bond". I suppose your work has fueled your intolerence for the virtures of adoption. I have known many grown children of adoption and only one had an intense interest of finding their bio-parents - and we concluded it stemmed largely from the media's classic portrayal of adopted people obsessed with the quest. I truly hope you get the help you need. Oh ye

Posted on 02/24/2007 at 9:02:00 PM

 
So clearly you are anti-adoption. I don't know if you had some bad experience, or are just plain screwed up, or bott. I think I just plain feel sorry for you.

Posted on 02/08/2007 at 11:02:00 PM

 
First of all, families ARE created by legal bonds. Marriage is a legal institution which brings together two people who are usually NOT related by "blood". Into this non-biological union comes the children...biologically or other...legally. SO the family begins with "strangers" and then becomes a family. A family is people who live together....love and care for each other....all this nonsnese about biology and genetics...you need to rethink your position and see whom you are trying to defend...children need advocacy...and protection from harm...not empty statements of who is "real" or not real....

Posted on 12/06/2006 at 8:12:00 PM

 
Your ignorance is remarkable! I can't believe you are comparing the use of the "N' word with words like birthmother and adoptive parents. I think you really could use some counseling to work through your issues and realize that there are good people in this world and MANY, MANY, MANY wonderful adoption scenarios. I'm sorry to say this but if you want to talk about abuse then look in a mirror...you are abusing innocent adoptive children and families through your vile mis-use of articles.

Posted on 12/01/2006 at 2:12:00 PM

 
If the parents are the true parnts WHY didn't they TRY harded to raise the child? I hear soo much about "lost to adoption" the bparents CHOoSE adoption for the child. Be it lack of money or laziness

Posted on 10/29/2006 at 3:10:00 AM

 
You are so right! I was from a closed adoption and forced to make believe I was the real daughter of my adopters. It was identity theft to me. It took me25 years to uncover my authentic identity and reclaim my birthright, my natural name,heritage,and medical and psychological information. My artificial identity left me lost, dazed and confused. When I finally found out the truth about who I was, only then was I healed and able to get on with my life! I am an advocate of open records for all adoptees! The truth shall set you free!

Posted on 08/25/2006 at 8:08:00 AM

 
I'm deeply hurt by this article, and by the stance of the anti-adoption movement. The only way that I will ever be able to have a family is to adopt a child. I'm not rich, I was born with a genetic disorder which means that I'm infertile. Why should the fact that I didn't carry that child and I'm not their parents mean that I should be degraded to "Caregiver" even if a child thinks of me as a parent. A friend of mine who was adopted at Birth has always referred to his adopters as "mum" and "Dad" of his own volition. To him they are parents, no matter who gave birth to him. There are other feelings to consider than purely those of natural parents here.

Posted on 09/22/2005 at 4:09:00 AM

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