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September 5, 2019

I Adopted An Adult

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Laura Lee, 53, with invisible wounds and scars. I've learned to embrace PTSD and depression because if I don't own them, they'll own me.  I don't want to simply survive, but to thrive.  I hope you'll join me on my journey.  It's sure to be a bumpy road.

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I HAVE FOUR

 

Do you have three children or four?  The answer is – I have four.  I have one son and three daughters.   But it is a question that almost always needs an explanation.  I imagine that it must be similar to how a mother whose child has died must explain herself.  And, yet, my daughter hasn’t died.  I adopted an adult.

 

AND THEN COME THE QUESTIONS

 

How old are your children?  32, 28, 28, and 25.  No, I don’t have twins, but they are only a few weeks apart in age.

More questions.

One of the girls is adopted.

Oh, well it was like having twins.

No.  Actually, it wasn’t.

More questions.

How I dread these questions and oh how I dread feeling that I have to explain why one of my daughters is estranged from the family – as if the estrangement is somehow a personal flaw that I must erase.  Scrub away.  Permanently remove.

ADOPTION

The truth is we adopted our daughter when she was 21 years old.

And, when I say that, the floodgates open!

Bewilderment, confusion, skepticism, usually followed, by some version of, “I didn’t know you could adopt an adult.”  Really, though it’s more of a question than it is a statement.  The person on the other end is now quite intrigued and wanting to know more.

And, I just want to say, “Yep, you can!”

And, leave it at that.

However, the need to explain myself still lingers.

I have a daughter.  Legally she’s mine.

I love her.  I don’t like her.

 

WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN

 

Shannon was placed into foster care from the time she was born – addicted and going through withdrawals along with her identical twin sister whom, by the way, we did not adopt.

Together they were adopted by their foster parents.  Parents who already had, I believe 10 other children – 3 of whom were also adopted.  Another biological child followed Shannon and her twin sister  making the total 8 bio and 5 adopted.

The biological children were given opportunities – most thrived and received good educations.  Many are professionals – nurses, police officers, schoolteachers, and more.   Many of them don’t however, act like professionals.  The police officer once helped Shannon break into our home, but that’s another story.

 

SHANNON’S SIDE OF THE STORY

Shannon first came to us when she was 18.  She was a friend of our daughter, Carianne.  Shannon is older by 24 days.  Shannon needed a place to stay and she needed it right away.  As in, her things were packed, and she had no place to go.  Scott and I had mere minutes to hear the story, say a silent prayer, and do what we felt we were being led to do.  We were confused, but time was of the essence.

Shannon and her twin sister were yanked out of middle school in the middle of 6th grade under the guise that they would be homeschooled.  Their “mama’ as they refer to her, claims it was because Shannon was ‘boy crazy.’  How many preteen girls aren’t, I wonder?

Instead of being homeschooled however, they were put to work in the family resale/thrift shop.  Mama would later make claims  to a therapist that Shannon learned all the math and reading she needed to know by learning how to sew.

Shannon wanted to be in school.  She craved it.  She craved the education and she craved the interaction with her peers.  She craved learning to drive, going to school dances, going to the movies, cell phones.  She craved normalcy.

Interestingly, her younger brother – one of mama and daddy’s biological children, was permitted to continue his high school education.  In fact, he would get up in the morning, drive the twins to the store, and then continue on his way to the school…in his own car.  I’d later find out that not one of the adopted children completed high school.  Not one.  Yet, all of the biological children, did.

Some of the adopted children had special needs.  I believe all children in the foster care system and those adopted from the system have special needs of some sort, but these needs were above and beyond that.  It didn’t however, mean they couldn’t have completed school on IEPs or 504 plans.  They could have received modified diplomas.

Could have.

Should have.

Didn’t.

 

A NEW BEGINNING

 

Here was Shannon, at the age of 18, mouthing off to mama about how she wanted to go to school and mama told her she could follow the rules or leave.  The rules were to work at the store all day – open to close, and then work at home, too, doing all the chores.  No phones.  No computer.  Sometimes no food.  I corroborated this with the owners of the store next to the family’s resale store.  One time the owner provided the girls with pizza for lunch.  Mama found out and locked them outside in the cold.

It was easy for mama to let Shannon go.  Oregon pays a stipend to adoptive parents through the adoptee’s 18th birthday.  Mama was no longer receiving payments for her or her twin sister.  If Shannon wasn’t going to work – mama had no use for her.

Now, it was the beginning of the school year – October.  And, Shannon got brave enough to stand up to mama.

Carianne relayed to Shannon that she could move in with us under one condition – she would not lie around the house all day.  She must attend school.  We could hear Shannon crying through the phone.  Not only were we allowing her to go to school.  Permitting it.  We were demanding it.  She was overcome with emotion.  With joy.

I drove the car with Carianne, and Scott followed in a truck so that we could get all of Shannon’s things at once.  The less interaction I had with mama, the better.  I knew I wasn’t going to like this woman and yet I only knew Shannon’s side of the story.

MAMA WAS WAITING

 

Shannon was waiting….outside with all of her things packed in cardboard boxes.  She wasn’t permitted in the house.  I walked in the house with her. It was my first-time meeting Shannon.  Although she and Carianne tried to keep in touch as much as possible, I had never heard of this girl up until an hour prior the meeting.

When we walked in, mama was also there – in the kitchen.

Waiting.

Cooking.

I attempted to reassure this woman, “mama,” never having met her before and not yet fully understanding the situation, that we’d take good care of Shannon.  She was hard and cold and snapped at me.  Told me all the ‘horrible’ things that Shannon was capable of.  It was her house – I surmised that it was best to just leave rather than to argue with a woman I’d never met, about the importance of an education and the opportunities that were being thrown away regardless of the child’s behavior.  And at 18, she was still a child.

 

THE MOVE

 

Shannon moved into the spare room.  She and Carianne were as thick as thieves.  I called the high school to get her enrolled.  They refused.  They said that she had been out of school for too long and they couldn’t accommodate her.  I called the local alternative school – they specialize in helping homeless students, students with addictions, teen parents, etc.,  to complete their education.  They couldn’t help her either.  Wouldn’t help her.

I went to the school district office.  Since she was pulled out of school in the middle of 6th grade, supposedly to be homeschooled, they would have records.  They had none.  Absolutely NONE.  It didn’t surprise me.  I didn’t actually expect them to, knowing what I had found out after Shannon moved in with us.  However, it did allow me to make a point.

Legally the district was supposed to follow up every year to assess Shannon and her sister’s academic progress.  The high school stated that they assumed that the family had moved.

I’m known to be a really, really, and I mean REALLY tough mama bear.  I don’t back down.  Like EVER.  I actually have a reputation.  The look in the administrator’s eyes spoke volumes.  I told her I wanted to speak to the superintendent.  I didn’t even have to make a demand.  Simply stating the fact got me into the office within minutes.

I told him very matter-of-factly that they knew the family didn’t move away because the store was a well-known resale store in our small town AND the youngest biological child was still in attendance, and if they didn’t admit Shannon I would see to it that she saw an attorney and legal action would be started right away to address their negligence.

She started school the very next day.

 

 

Shannon’s senior picture

 

ABUSE AND NEGLECT

 

We knew that she wouldn’t graduate.  We knew she wouldn’t have the credits.  But she could be normal.

We knew it was going to be hard.  As someone who was supposed to be a senior, she was enrolled in freshman level classes, PE class, and art classes.  Art was her escape.  Her art was amazing and yet she had never taken a formal art class.  She was smiling, but deep down this young girl was a wounded bird.  She wanted to fly, but her wings were broken.

She was cutting.

I was able to find her an amazing therapist.  Shannon signed a HIPAA release so that the therapist and I could discuss her progress.  The therapist, Jesse, was appalled at the things Shannon told her.  At the things I told her.  At the things that some of Shannon’s adoptive siblings told me, and yet said they would never admit to if questioned by authorities.  In fact, one sister, who was in a position to take Shannon herself, refused because she was afraid of mama.  This was a grown woman with children of her own.

As a child, Shannon was tied to her bed at night so she wouldn’t get up to steal food.  She was tied to her chair at the kitchen table until she finished her food.  She was losing her teeth – hadn’t seen a dentist since she was a little girl.  The glasses she wore were a pair of her youngest brother’s old glasses because mama wouldn’t take her to see an eye doctor.  She’s legally blind without glasses that are prescribed to her.

Shannon was living with depression, PTSD, and anxiety.

 

Shannon’s drawing of a baby

BECAUSE WE LOVED HER

 

We took her to see doctors, dentists, therapists.

She got glasses and contacts.

She joined school clubs, activities, sports teams.

She had a boyfriend.

She had a curfew.

She had chores.

She had rules.

She went to senior prom.

She had senior photos taken.

She had a nightly body scan – I checked for new cuts.

I made sure she wasn’t cutting near the femoral artery.

After her ‘senior year’ we enrolled her in GED classes through the local community college.

We helped her get her permit.  We were giving her driving lessons.

 

AND THEN SHE RAN

Every single time life started to get normal for her, she ran.  And, she ran to mama because mama still had her twin sister.  Then, things would go wrong with mama and she’d come home to us.

In 2011, she came back to us again for the 3rd or 4th time – I honestly lost count, and we told her that we loved her, and we wanted to give her the same opportunities that our other children have and had.

We wanted her to continue to have access to healthcare and an education.  As a disabled veteran, my children get free tuition through the public university system, plus a healthy monthly stipend.

And, we loved her.

We wanted her to stop running.  We wanted her to know she belonged.

She was happy and she cried.

The adoption was finalized on December 21st , 2011 and Shannon ran again in July 2012.

 

Shannon and Carianne before prom

A WHISPER FROM GOD

 

I didn’t hear from her for 4 years.

One night.  In the middle of the night.  Literally, at 3:00 AM in the fall of 2016, I woke up – wide eyed.  I had it on my heart to reach out to her.  I hadn’t even been thinking about her…I had spent years trying not to think about her,  and yet this was on my heart.  I truly believed God woke me up in that moment and was speaking to me.  He was whispering to me.  I don’t know why, especially knowing how things ended.  But it’s not my place to question Him.  He had a reason.

Shannon had me blocked on Facebook for years, but I had been able to find out that she had moved out of state, was estranged from mama and had gotten married.

Scott was snoring beside me as I looked up her profile and realized I was no longer blocked.  God’s timing is perfect.

I sent her a friend request along with a long message – telling her that what happened is the past.  It hurt, but I’m ready to move on if she is.  Then I sent her husband a friend request, too.  I rolled over, facing Scott and closed my eyes.

My phone pinged.

Her husband accepted my friend request.

Oh my gosh!  What did he know about us?

Within months, they left the state they had been living in and moved in with us.  Shannon was pregnant.

Her husband found a job.

They got enrolled in food stamps, WIC, and healthcare.

They found a church.

I drove her to doctor’s appointments and dentist appointments.  Just like before.

She needed to have all her teeth pulled.  Malnutrition as a child coupled with bulimia.

Mama had moved to another state and took Shannon’s twin sister with her.  We thought we were safe.  We thought mama wouldn’t have any influence over Shannon.

 

WHAT SHE REALLY CRAVED

 

Then.  Drama.

Drama with her twin and with mama.

She ran again in 2017.

This time, not only leaving us, but her husband behind as well – taking his only child, my youngest grandson, with her.

Shannon’s therapist told us that her relationship with mama was akin to battered wife syndrome and on average a woman leaves 7 times before the relationship ends.  And, ‘ends’ doesn’t always mean that she willingly leaves.

I learned that of all the things Shannon craved, the thing she craved the most was the love and attention of this woman.

Mama.

Shane, Carianne, Cassy – three of my four children

 

 

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comments   | 

  1. Matt Epley says:

    Bumpy roads can still lead us to amazing destinations, and smooth paths can sometimes lead us straight into trouble. Thank you for sharing this. I have a couple family members with whom I’ll share your story.

  2. jen says:

    Not really sure what is an appropriate comment here. You have some deep stories that are very heavy but above all, They are human. It is my sincere hope that your stories can reach someone who need to hear them and hear that there is life on the other side. I don’t think you would open yourself up to such hurt if your heart wasn’t so big…and clearly it is. I hope you are all showered with love and kindness and that love is reciprocated.

  3. Jody says:

    I love the story it’s amazing all kids are amazing.

  4. Tricia Snow says:

    You were the people G-d chose for this girl. I feel it. What a touching story. I look forward to the outcome being a positive one.

  5. Kendra says:

    You have such a big heart. Keep loving her, even if it has to be from afar. Much peace and love to you!

  6. Robin says:

    Wow! What an incredible story. Having battled addiction for many years- I was a runner too. I hope everything works out for your family as you obviously are good people. Thank you for sharing, I imagine it’s not easy.

  7. Thank you for sharing your journey. It is always heartbreaking when the ones we love choose such destructive paths. I pray that she can eventually step into the love you have for her.

  8. Haley Kelley says:

    I thank you for sharing the things you do. My husband and I recently took in 3 foster children of a family member that we are planning on adopting in the near future. The obstacles with these things are much more complicated than we ever predicted and most people don’t understand it. The kids have been through so much that they really struggle socially and we are doing the best we can but they don’t understand everything. Its much harder than it sounds and reading things like this really help me. Thank you

  9. Amy says:

    Parents are the most powerful people in our past (and present, often). We crave their approval and love, no matter what. Thank you for sharing this piece of your life.

  10. Lisa Manderino says:

    Wow that is hard and and such a roller coaster, I hope she figures out that she needs help and seeks it!

  11. jduean says:

    Wow – this story is so well written and I felt you as I read through. Just wow. I have no words.

  12. Ramae Hamrin says:

    It’s hard to know how to comment on this. Child trauma can be so difficult to overcome. Bless you for your huge heart and courage to write about such personal, intimate things.

  13. Jen says:

    Wow. Shannon is blessed to have you in her life…

  14. What a great story to share. It’s so hard to raise and love a child that is not your own, espeically when they continually run back to parents that don’t treat them well. Thank you for sharing.

  15. Suzan says:

    The power that a “parent” has over their children always amaze. Thank you for sharing.

  16. Wow (in a good way), that’s all I can say.

  17. Heather says:

    Wow, I am at a lost. I hope someday she is back and can find happiness and love herself enough to let go of her past. Thinking of all of you.

  18. Wow, what an amazing story. You are an amazing person who has a heart of gold. Can’t wait for updates.

  19. Malia says:

    I cannot imagine the pain both you and Shannon have experienced over the years. I hope your therapist is right, and there is a “lucky #7” in your future! (not making light of the situation at all, just trying for optimism)

  20. All of your posts capture me so deeply. Shannon is so lucky to have had you in her life. I know it seems like she uses you, your love, and your home when it suits her, but most likely, because of the trauma she has endured, she returns when she feels earnestly is ready to change, but finds it too hard. I wish her peace to allow herself to move past her mama and finally accept the love and safety you provide.

  21. Oh, how it hurts! The joy and the pain. What you invest is never wasted. Sending love.

  22. Cindy says:

    Well bless her heart. I hope she knows how loved she is, by you and the rest of the family. And I hope she finds her way back to you. Never give up on her. She will recognize someday that you didn’t.

  23. Lisa says:

    What a beautiful story!! She is so lucky to have you!!

  24. Lina Thao says:

    The power of a parent’s love. I enjoy reading all your posts! Every word in all your post clings on to me. I never want to stop reading. It is very well written and captivating. Keep on sharing!

  25. Pauline says:

    Ha! If you ask my dad this question, he’ll tell you he has 12 daughters, but one who is estranged. Mom and dad “collect” kids. Most of us were adopted as adults because we needed them at the time for whatever reason. They are actually my sister in laws parents, but Vicky and Sheldon were who I needed when I moved back to the States. Shannon reminds me of their daughter Reila in so many ways, but like you, they hold the hope.

  26. T.M. says:

    Wow! That’s quite a story to tell. Here’s hoping that Shannon finds what her heart needs.

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