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Nish said Spence-Chapin espouses the principle of self-determination in working with birth mothers on their hopes for post-adoption arrangements. But he said the agency won't work with adoptive parents who insist on having no contact with the birth mother. "We try to educate them," he said. "If they're really set on it being closed, we tell them we don't do closed adoptions." For Dawne Era, a psychotherapist from Warwick, R.I., the decision to embrace an open adoption evolved step by step 23 years ago when she and her husband decided to adopt after unsuccessful attempts to conceive on their own. They made contact with a pregnant 18-year-old from Nebraska who'd decided to place her baby up for adoption, then got to know her as the young woman spent her pregnancy in nearby Boston. After the birth and adoption of a baby boy named Grady, the birth mother and the adoptive parents agreed to remain in contact. It was an informal pact, yet it led a mutually satisfying relationship that has continued throughout Grady's life
-- occasional phone conversations, a handful of face-to-face visits and, more recently, ongoing contact via Facebook between Grady and his birth mother and his younger half sister. For Era, there was a stressful moment when she and her husband got divorced while Grady was a toddler, and she had to inform the birth mother. "That was very difficult," Era said. "We had promised to take Grady in and raise him in a two-parent family. I thought she would be very disappointed in me, but she took it well." Overall, said Era, the open adoption "has been very positive for all of us." Pertman of the Donaldson institute has a daughter adopted 14 yeasrs ago. He said challenges can sometimes arise even after adoptive parents and birth parents grow comfortable with the rhythms of an open adoption. He recalled how many members of his daughter's birth family -- including her birth mother, grandparents, a brother and an uncle
-- came to her bat mitzvah. "For us and them it was normal, but not for everybody else in the room," Pertman said. "They got some looks, like
'What's this all about?'" ___ Online: Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute:
http://www.adoptioninstitute.org/index.php
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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