I love this essay. It perfectly captures the feelings I had when we adopted
Isaac. At first, I felt like a fake. Like an outsider. Like an observer. I felt
like I was playing house. It didn't feel real. And then, all of a sudden, one
day, I had that mother bear feeling. I knew I would protect this child with my
life and I loved him like no other. Whoever said blood is thicker than water,
never adopted.
By: Clair Houston
Somewhere along the
way, between "gotcha" and today, I became her mother. It's hard to say when. The
day I first saw her, I was an independent, 44-year-old woman, and she was a
cute, 10-month-old, baby girl. Now, when I look at her, I know that I am her
mother, and she is my daughter.
After a year-and-a-half and mountains of
paperwork, a child was placed in my arms. We were strangers. She was leaving the
known world of her foster home, and my husband and I were taking on this unknown
baby from an unfamiliar land where Caucasians are rare.
We retreated to
our hotel room and began to play house. It felt that strange. We knew four
things about her needs: food, diapers, stimulation, and sleep. We began to go
through the motions of all four, and, several hours later, collapsed into bed,
laughing quietly. She was sound asleep as we remembered the Talking Heads'
lyrics, "My God, what have we done!" We weren't confident about our parenting
skills, but, somehow, it all worked.
More days of meticulous paperwork
ensued—interviews, signatures, passports—to prove that we were who we said we
were. My husband and I tag-teamed very well, but still, we felt we were
spectators to this little girl.
During the adoption process, you spend a
lot of time saying over and over to officials that you want this baby, that you
will treat her like gold, and you promise never to abandon her. Then, you
finally get the baby, and all the hoops disappear. The reality of this being's
presence begins to come into focus. Yet I continued to feel more like a curious
observer than a mom.
A loving homecoming at the airport brought friends
and family out to celebrate our return to American soil. We entered our house to
find balloons, gifts, meals in the fridge, and plenty of good wishes. The baby
girl looked around, then smiled. She liked the house that she would soon learn
was her new home.
Jet-lagged and sick, I had trouble feeling like I was
myself, let alone feeling like a mother. But, slowly, new routines began to
emerge at home. My husband and I marveled at her intelligence, at how fast she
learned and applied her learning. She laughed. She laughed a lot. We could see
that she was a happy girl.
It was delightful to engage with her and get
the reward of a baby's belly laugh. She liked to see that she could make us
laugh. Days slipped by, and our souls were secretly being woven
together.
I saw the first glimpse of this elusive bond about a month
after her arrival. Acquaintances stopped by to give her a gift, yet they seemed
more attentive to each other than to her. She handed them her favorite toys, and
they absently took them and put them down. She played peek-a-boo with them, and
they vaguely participated. She looked somber. At first, I didn't think much of
it, but, after a while, I noticed a dulling of her eyes.
I swept her up
and announced that we had to make dinner. Our guests departed, and I turned my
full attention to her. We looked at her toys and our cats, and played peek-a-boo
in earnest. We laughed together. Her light quickly returned.
A similar
encounter happened the next day, and I felt, deep in my gut, a vow emerging. "I
see you, dear girl. I see your light, and you see mine. I will guard and steward
that light. Fear not, I won't let them swallow it up."
I was surprised by
the fierceness of these feelings. And then I understood: I had become Mom to
Evie.
A definitive peacefulness has followed that realization. I am clear
about my purpose with this little girl. And I recognize the mother lionness in
me. The mysterious bonding thread has formed, and although we are not
genetically formed, one from the other, genetic programming has kicked in. I am
genetically programmed to take care of this baby human, and she is genetically
programmed to bond with me, her mother. All is well with the world, and working
perfectly.
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