Throughout my Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series, I have been talking about the reasons why it is important to keep your child’s adoption information private. After reading that series, you might be struggling with what you should or should not tell others about your child’s adoption information. This post is to provide you with some tools for making this decision.
Is the information an emotional time bomb?
When... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
10. Maintaining your adopted child's privacy shows that you respect that it is the child’s story to tell.
The bottom line for why you should maintain your adopted child’s privacy is out of respect for your child. The child’s history is his – not yours, your friends’, or your family’s. Your adopted child should be the one to decide who knows this very... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
9. Your child should not be the only person “out of the loop.”
It is human nature not to want to be left out, particularly from information about ourselves. When I was in high school, I took an IQ test, but I was not allowed to find out the results. It really bothered me that school personnel knew something that I did not know about myself.... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
8. Privacy reserves the opportunity to tell the history in a better way.
If you tell others about your child’s history, then they have the power to present that history to your child with their own spin on the story. Maintaining your child’s privacy enables you to share the truth in a much more positive and comforting light.
Let’s... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
7. Privacy maintains the ability to reveal information in stages.
Some of your child’s history might be sensitive information, so you will want to control what he is told when. There may be aspects about his history that you do not want him to know until he is an adult, if ever. If you tell other people any of this information, then you... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
6. Revealed history plants emotional time bombs.
No child is ready to hear all of the truths about life from the day he is born. For example, we do not talk to six-year-old children about birth control. As parents, we wait for the right time to discuss different life issues with our children. Children are ready to learn about different aspects of life... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
5. Shared information can influence how others view the birthfamily, which can influence the child’s feelings.
Unfortunately, friends and family of hopeful adoptive couples do not go through the home study process along with the couple. While the hopeful adoptive couple is becoming educated about how adoption affects the birthfamily, their family and... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
4. Shared information can influence how others view your child.
Whenever you share information about why your child was placed for adoption, you run the risk of tainting how some people view your child. Many people buy into the old adage of “the apple never falls far from the tree.” Some people might label your child even before he is born, always... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
3. Gossip often spreads inaccurate information.
Unfortunately, if you allow people to talk about your child’s history, the story that gets around will probably not closely resemble the truth. This can cause issues for your child when he hears a different version of his history from Aunt Marge than he does from you. How will he know which version to believe?... more
From Protecting Adopted Child’s Privacy Series:
2. You cannot control who knows what.
Whenever you choose to share your child’s history with another person, you cede control over who knows what about your child’s history. All it takes is one set of loose lips for private information to become public. Be very selective in who you tell what.
Once you share a piece of personal information about... more
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