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My Infertility & Adoption Story
Episode 20020th November 2025 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
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As I prepared for our 200th(!!!) episode of the podcast, I realized that I hadn't completely shared a huge part of my story with you. You may already know that I’m an adoptive mom. Today, I’m going deeper and sharing my infertility and adoption story.

I sometimes talk about my journey as arriving through the back door of motherhood. In this episode, I’m talking about how I experienced infertility, why we chose adoption, and how that informed me as a mom, ultimately becoming a trauma-informed parent. 

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My hope is that if you have experienced infertility, this episode gives a voice to your pain and a place for you to feel supported and loved. If you have not experienced infertility, I hope that hearing my story might help you have more understanding and compassion for your girlfriends or family members that are going through it.

 

My Infertility Story

After a few years of marriage (I married young at 22), it became clear to me that I really wanted to become a mom. Sometime in 2001 or 2002, my husband and I started trying to get pregnant. For the first few months, I didn’t think much of it when my period kept coming. 

Six or seven months in, I wasn’t super concerned but thought it was a bit strange that I wasn’t pregnant yet. So I started the ovulation strips, the basal thermometer, and all those little at-home hacks to increase our chances. 

A year went by, and I still wasn’t pregnant. During this time, I was pretty sad. In the beginning, I was so excited for my friends when they got pregnant. But as time went on and it became more evident that maybe it wasn't going to happen for us, I started to feel jealous, scared, and less than. It triggered insecurities and feelings from my childhood of not belonging.

At the one-year mark, we decided to go to the doctor and have some testing done. Our results showed that we would need some interventions if we wanted to get pregnant. The obvious answer at the time was IVF. 

I knew a few people who were going through IVF, and I was hearing about how much it cost and how devastating it was if it didn’t work. So, we decided to consider ALL of our options. 

After getting our test results, we weren’t closed off to the idea of adoption. In fact, I think there was a part of us that always sort of wanted to adopt. We just thought it would be in addition to our own biological kids.

The options were laid out to us in two paths: the medical route or the adoption route. At first, I told my husband that I wanted to pursue both at the same time.

 

Our Adoption Journey

As we started to look at adoption, I was clear on one thing. I did not want to adopt through foster care. I was so desperate for this child, and I wanted a baby that could be mine. While I now know that this isn’t the risk factor I thought it was, I was so afraid that our relationship would be insecure, that a birth mother could come back and take my child away. 

So we decided on inter-country adoption. At the time, our main options were Russia, China, and Guatemala. We attended an adoption seminar and learned about the process, costs, and wait times. Russia seemed the most aligned for us in that we could have a baby in about nine months. It felt like the most natural timeline to me.

We realized pretty quickly that both IVF and adoption required a lot of time, money, and energy. We had to choose one. 

When I have a big decision to make or I'm in a lot of emotional pain, I often end up on the shore, by the ocean. So after the seminar, my husband and I drove to Santa Monica, sat on the beach, and talked about it. 

We both wanted to pursue adoption for different reasons. Kevin wasn’t super invested in having a biological child. And I wanted a sure thing. I didn’t want to go through round after round of IVF. We decided to adopt. 

Adoption requires a lot from the parents. If you get pregnant and have a baby, you take it home and that’s that. With adoption, you’re evaluated on:

  • Your home
  • Psychological testing
  • Financial stability
  • Your fitness as a parent
  • Your marriage, religion, and values
  • Whether you believe in spanking or time outs

They call it a paper pregnancy, and you essentially have about 100 pages of documents describing everything about your life, home, finances, etc.

It’s so intimate, like having someone look under the hood of your life and then decide whether you're good enough or not. You have to prove that you are worthy of adopting a baby. It was really hard. I knew that I was a good person, but it also brought up a lot of information, insecurity, and pain.

I felt very alone during that time. I didn't really have anyone else in my life who was going through it. And I also didn't know how to deal with the pain of watching my friends have baby showers, give birth, and have newborns. They were afraid to share their joy with me because they knew I was in so much pain. 

Once our dossier was complete (and translated into Russian), we sent it over there and were added to the list to be matched with a baby. The youngest a baby could be adopted at that time was five months old, so we thought we’d get a baby around five or six months old. While we were waiting, Russia changed the rule to eight months old. We got stuck in this transition, and it took much longer to get matched than we expected.

When I was waiting and so, so sad, wanting to be a mom so bad, our social worker said to me, “You know, Darlynn, you are gonna be matched with the right kid for you. No one ever thinks, ‘Oh, this is the wrong kid for me. I should have gotten the kid three months ago or three months from now.’” And I knew she was right.

But I still had to wait. The best way I can describe it is that a piece of me was missing. I felt so much despair. And I could not wait for this baby to come into our life.

In February of 2005, we got matched with our son, Lincoln. It was a really amazing experience. We got a photo of him and knew that he was ours. We flew to Russia and went to court to file for adoption. We went to his orphanage, met him in person, and signed off that we agreed to adopt this baby. 

And then we had to leave again. It was so painful to see him and then leave to wait for a court date. It’s like meeting your child and then leaving them at the hospital and not being able to go visit. We also knew that we were leaving him in poverty, neglect, and malnutrition. I couldn’t do anything about it. We had to get on an airplane, fly back home, and wait the two weeks until our court date. But two weeks went by, and we were still waiting. Eight weeks passed between the time we met Lincoln and our court date. Then another 10-day waiting period. It took four months from being matched to taking him home with us. 

Finally, he was ours. We went through the visa process, flew home, and I was a new mom to a one-year-old. Feeling like I missed out on the baby stage and that first year of his life has always been a bit hard and painful for me. But we bonded with him immediately. We loved him to pieces. He fit right into our family.

We started to go to mommy groups and play groups. I met a bunch of friends that I still have to this day. It was such a beautiful time of my life because I finally was a mom. I got there, and it was incredible and wonderful.

Within a year, we decided to do it again. The process was a little bit easier because we’d been through it before and knew what to expect. We thought it would take eight weeks for us to get matched with a baby again, but it happened almost immediately (like, within 3 days!). When we finally came home with Sawyer, he was also 12 months old. 

 

The Early Years

Now, we have two kids. They’re 22 months apart and were adopted two years apart. 

The transition with Sawyer was a bit harder. First of all, I already had a three-year-old at home, too. And we brought Sawyer home within just a couple months of deciding to have another kid. 

It’s probably no surprise to you that having two little kids is intense. We now know that Lincoln has ADHD, but at the time, it was coming out as lots of energy, aggressive behavior, meltdowns, impulse control, and anger. 

Around the time Lincoln was 4, I realized that his behavior was a little outside of normal, and I started to get support. I went to parenting classes, and I met Jeanette Yoffe, who changed the trajectory of my parenting forever. You’ll actually meet her on the podcast in a couple of weeks! 

Through meeting her, I started to learn about trauma-informed parenting, to understand that feelings drive behavior, and to not take behavior so personally. I learned about emotional dysregulation, stress response, and how the nervous system works. My brain exploded in so many amazing ways because I could see a pathway for my family to heal.

 

Trauma-Informed Parenting 

I realized that things were so outside the norm with my kids because Lincoln had ADDA, Sawyer had sensory processing disorders, and they both experienced a year of neglect living in Russian orphanages.  

Nowhere in my education or preparation for becoming an adoptive mom was I taught the words trauma or trauma-informed or insecure attachment. There was no education about what I might experience by adopting a kid from a Russian orphanage. 

I became a Calm Mama because I became a mom of kids who had experienced real trauma. 

All of my training and everything I have learned has been because I wanted to parent these kids well and do right by them. 

And everything I learn I share with you, because I believe that if we can practice compassionate parenting, if we can learn self regulation tools for ourselves and teach those skills to our kids, that any kid can benefit from that.

 

Where We Are Now

Now, both of my kids have a different relationship to adoption and to their story. We talk about it openly. 

For the most part, they are both really adjusted to their stories. I make space for their loss when it comes up. I think as they grow, they'll discover more parts of themselves that may feel wounded or abandoned by the loss of their birth mother, birth father, and their birth country. 

For me, having kids who don't look like me and don't look like each other has always been kind of interesting. I have grief. I have sadness over my own loss of the ability to have biological children, but I don't have any shame about being an adoptive parent. I’m grateful. And I hold both grief and gratitude tenderly. 

I'm really grateful that I have these specific children that I have. I know that would only have happened through this infertility and adoption story. 

I feel grateful for you for listening, for caring about me, for allowing me to tell my story and share some tender things with you. 

And if you experienced infertility or you are going through infertility right now and you just want some support, please feel free to reach out.

I want to leave you with this bit of encouragement: Whatever happens in your life, whatever pain you go through - even when it feels unbearable, like it's going to sweep you under and drown you - you are really strong. You can handle it. You can pivot. You can always find a new normal and a new place of peace.

Lots of love to you, Mama. 

 

Resources:

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Transcripts

Speaker:

Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host. I'm Darlin Childress.

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I'm a life and parenting coach. And this is episode 200.

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I can't quite believe that we're celebrating 200

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episodes, 200 weeks of this podcast. That

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means that I've been airing and hosting this podcast for almost four

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years, which is really amazing to me and

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exciting and. And I wanted to take a chance to

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make this episode a little bit special by telling you

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about my infertility and adoption story. I

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realized that I hadn't completely shared that part of me

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and my story with you. I've mentioned it, that I'm an adoptive

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mom. I've brought that up before, but I wanted to have a

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chance to really narrate and really describe sort of

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how I experience infertility and, and why we chose adoption

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and how that informed me as a parent and becoming a

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trauma informed parent. On episode 100,

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I walked you through my ACE score, which is the Adverse

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Childhood Experience Survey. I talked about the traumatic

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background and traumatic childhood I experienced and shared

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with you how I overcame a lot of those traumas

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and how that has informed me now as a coach.

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And this is also true of experiencing

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infertility and choosing a different path

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towards motherhood. That meant that I did not birth children.

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And I think as a coach, having so many different

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experiences and backgrounds and painful moments in my

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life, it helps me become more empathetic, more compassionate, more

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understanding, and help you as you grow.

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Now, my hope for this episode is even if you did not experience

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infertility, that maybe hearing me share my story

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might help you have more compassion for your girlfriends that are going through

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it, or a family member or something like that. Or

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maybe you experienced infertility and you have felt

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alone and sort of lost in all of that. Either

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primary infertility, which means the first time you try to get pregnant,

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or or secondary infertility the second time you try to

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get pregnant. So I wanted to kind of give you

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voice to the pain and a place for you to feel

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supported and loved on and yeah, just an

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opportunity for you also to get to know me as well and a little bit

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more about my story. So

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my kids are 21 and 19. So this is going back 20

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plus years ago. And I was pretty young,

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actually. I was like 29. And my husband and I decided

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to have children. I got married really young. That's like another episode.

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I could talk about how religion informed my marriage decision.

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But anyway, I got married at 22 and we

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spent several years Just traveling and building our

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careers and buying a house and all of those things that

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were really important to us at the time. And then it became

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really clear to me that I really wanted to become a mom. I was a

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middle school teacher. I wasn't very satisfied as a teacher

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and I was ready for parenting and becoming a mom. A lot of my

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friends were having kids and I just really, really, really wanted

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to be a mom. Now, not everybody has that

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feeling before they become a mom. Some people, it just happens to you, it surprises

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you, you're not ready for it and you pivot and you become a parent

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and you make the best of it. But for me, I was on the

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pill and. And so we decided to go off the pill

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and see what happened. So that was around 2001,

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maybe 2002. I'm trying to remember, to be honest,

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what year. But anyway, it was around that time and

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we went off the pill and started to try, as they

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say, to get pregnant. And the first few

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months I wasn't really thinking anything of it. Kind of didn't

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get pregnant, you know, kept having my period, no problem.

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And then, you know, six months, seven months in, I was like, huh, this is

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kind of, you know, not concerning, but strange. My sisters all had children

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really easily and you know, kind of like you breathe near them and they got

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pregnant. So I was like, I don't know what's going on with me. So I

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started to do like ovulation test strips to try to time it right, did

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the basal thermometer right, all those little at home

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hacks that you can do to increase your chances.

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And a year goes by and we don't become

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pregnant. During this time I was

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pretty sad, to be honest. And my

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friends were becoming pregnant and in the beginning when I first started trying,

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I was excited for them and I'd be like, oh my God, that's so cool

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and maybe we'll have babies together. And I was just really thrilled

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and nervous and happy and all of those things. And then as time kept going

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on and it became more evident that maybe it wasn't going to

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happen for us, I started to feel jealous and

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scared and less than

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a lot of different emotions that were really

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triggered a lot in my childhood as well because kind of always feeling like

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I was odd, didn't belong, you know, no one liked me,

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whatever. I had all those like insecurities and then not

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being able to get pregnant kind of really brought all those up

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again. And my husband was super supportive and he just like,

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it'll happen, it'll happen. And then it didn't happen. So at the

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year Mark, we decided to go to the doctor

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to figure out what was wrong. I don't know if you've ever done that, but

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it takes a little bit of time to get those tests done

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because of the cycle. They need to check at different points in the

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woman's cycle, and then they also need to test the man as well.

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So it took a little bit of time. And then we got our results. And

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it turns out that my husband was having trouble

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conceiving, and that meant that we were going to

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need some sort of interventions. So we

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sat together at that time and

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really we were not sure what to do. The obvious

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answer at that time was in vitro or

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even iui, which is insemination, but that

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would probably not work. So it would be IVF. And like I said,

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this was 20 plus years ago. And I had friends who were going

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through ivf. Not that many because most were young.

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And really, actually infertility. 95% of

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couples can conceive within the first year. And then of

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that 5% that don't, typically, only, only 1%

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are truly infertile. So it's actually pretty rare. You know, as you

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get older, the chances go, chances change and things like that.

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So this was. We're all pretty young. So anyway, I didn't know that many people,

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but I did know some. And I was hearing just how much it cost and

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how devastating it was to think you were going to get pregnant

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and do all the shots and all the tests and all the stuff, and then

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it not happen. And we

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decided to consider all of our options. At that time, we were

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not closed to becoming adoptive parents. In fact, I

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think there was a part of us that always sort of wanted to be at

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some point, like kind of have our own and then adopt some sort of

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thought. And so when it was laid out for us

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like, okay, you can start the medical route or you can

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pursue adoption, I said to my husband that I wanted to

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pursue both at the same time. That was my thought at the beginning. I thought,

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let's just make doctor's appointments and also look

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into adoption as well. So I kind of

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think I had appointments on the books to talk to in vitro

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specialist and pursue that. And then we also started to look

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at adoption. And I knew I didn't want to

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adopt through the foster care system. I felt a little

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bit overwhelmed by that idea. I also did really wanted adoption,

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a baby that was mine that I adopted. And it was final. Like, I didn't

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Want this kind of court, middle ground. I just was so desperate for

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this child, and I didn't really want it to be an insecure

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relationship. I was scared. I know now that that's not necessarily a

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risk factor, but I was scared that what if the birth mother came

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back and took my child away? That's what I was afraid of. So I

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wanted to do out of country. It's called inter country adoption. I wanted

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to adopt out of, of the country. And at that time, we

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had a couple of options. We could adopt from Russia, from China,

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from Guatemala. Those were the main places that people were

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adopting from at that time. And when we

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sat in our adoption seminar

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and learned about the process and the

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costs and the wait times and things like that,

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the Russia choice seemed the most aligned for us in that you

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would have a baby in nine months. And I was like, well, that feels about

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right, because that's how long it takes to have a baby naturally. The

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other was like, it could take two, three years. One was like, you

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could have a baby tomorrow. That felt scary. So not really tomorrow, but

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like, pretty quick. And I was like, let's just do the Russia thing. Like

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that felt the most aligned. And then we started to realize pretty

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quickly that we had to pick one path over the other.

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Because if we were going to go the infertility

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route and the medical route, that was going to cost a lot of time and

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money and energy. And if we were going to do the adoption route, that was

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also going to cost a lot of time, money, and energy. And so I

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remember my husband and I, after the adoption seminar. We live

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in Los Angeles, so we drove to Santa Monica. I often

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find myself at the ocean when I have a big decision or I'm in

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a lot of emotional pain, I end up on the shore. So we

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sat on the beach and we talked about it, and we both kind of

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felt like, why not, why not just pursue adoption

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from Kevin? It was great. It aligned with his values.

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He wasn't really that inclined to have a bio kid. You know, he

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wasn't that important to him, to be honest, which is unusual sometimes for men.

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But he just wasn't like that invested in his genetic pool. Like,

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he didn't really care. And I wanted. I wanted a sure

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thing. That's what I was about. I didn't want to go through

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round and round and round of in vitro and losses and in

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vitro and like, I just could not handle the pain anymore.

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So we said, let's just. Let's just adopt. And we did.

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Adoption requires a Lot of what they

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call a home study. So it requires a lot of, like,

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psychological testing and evaluating your fitness

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as a parent and your home and whether you can provide for a child

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and financial proof. And it's like this

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very intimate process and intimate details about

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our life. And when you get pregnant, right? If you

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are just a person, you get pregnant, you just have a baby. Like, no one

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asks you, are you qualified? Are you ready? Are you

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gonna be a good parent? We had to answer so

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many questions about our marriage, our religion, our

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values, whether we were gonna spank, whether we were believed in.

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Time out. And I was, like, 29 years old.

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I didn't really know that much about parenting. So I'm reading

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parenting books, and I'm trying to figure out all this stuff, like, before

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I even have a baby. And anyway,

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it was really intimate. It was like

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having someone look under the hood of your life and then decide

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whether you're good enough or not. And this was really

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hard for me, to be honest. They call it a paper pregnancy, which,

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when you are adopting and what isn't really

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accounted for is just how you are evaluated and

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determined whether you should be good or not. And

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it was painful, that whole experience of

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finding out we had infertility

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pivoting to adoption, having all of those

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invasive questions and all of the intimate details

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of our life exposed into paper. I

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felt very alone during that time. I didn't really have anyone

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who was going through it at all. And I also

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didn't know how to deal with the pain of watching my friends have babies

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and give birth and have baby showers and have

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newborns. And I have these beautiful friends. I'm

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still very close to all these mamas, and they were in so

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much pain for me and felt tender around me and a little bit

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like eggshelly because they didn't want to share their joy with me

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and because they didn't want to hurt me. And I felt so terrible to

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not be so present. I remember my brother sitting us

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down on Easter or something, and he's like, guess what?

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My wife's pregnant. And because it was my brother and I felt

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safe, I just started crying so hard, I had to run out of

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the room. I was just kind of a mess at this time.

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Meanwhile, I'm over on my desk getting

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so many papers ready, because when you adopt internationally,

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you have to have. It's called a dossier. It's probably

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about a hundred pages of documents describing your

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financials, your house, your health. I mean, clearing you

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on all these different psychologically, all these different levels so that

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you prove that you are worthy of adopting a

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baby. And I appreciate the process because it's good, right? We

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don't want to put kids in dangerous situations. And at the same

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time, I'm like, I'm a good person, I promise. Anyway, it just brought up a

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lot of information, insecurity and pain. And

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also with the process, when we were waiting, we were told that

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it would take a certain amount of time once we turned in this

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giant dossier, which by the way, had to be like

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notarized, certified by the state of California, certified by the

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United States government, then translated all into Russian, and

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then certified by the Russian government. I mean, this document just

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grew like, I think it was like 300 pages by the end. And

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that's your dossier. You send that over. Once you do that, you get on the

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list in this other country, Parenthetically, Russia has

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been closed for inter country adoption for a very long time.

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I think the last one was like 2009,

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so this was around 2004, and maybe it

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was even 2008 that it closed. So you can't do this anymore there.

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And in general, most countries, there's not a lot of inter country adoption

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at this point in time anyway. Back then you would get on the list

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and then you would, you know, be matched with a baby that

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was also ready to be adopted. And that was the

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lowest age, could be five months old. So we thought we would

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get a baby around five or six months old, which felt pretty young.

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And while we were waiting, once we turned in our paperwork,

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the country of Russia changed the rule that said that the

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children must be at least eight months old. So all these little

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babies that were ready for adoption at five months, and all these

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parents who were matched and ready had to wait three additional

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months in order for the children to be the right age to be

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adopted. That meant that we were stuck in this transition time where

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we thought it was going to take a couple of months to get matched, and

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it took much longer during that time. I felt so,

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so sad. I just wanted to be a mom so bad. And my friends were

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having babies and I just was like, why is this not

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happening? How is this happening to me? Our social worker at the

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time did say to me, she said, you know, darlin,

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you are gonna be matched with the right kid for you.

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No one ever thinks, oh, this is the wrong kid for me. I

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should have got the kid three months ago or three months from now.

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And it did soothe me a little bit to realize that, yeah, I'm

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gonna be matched with the right kid for me. And I just have to wait

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for him to be ready. And I spent a lot of time crying

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and being alone and being pretty desperate for this baby.

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I don't know if I can capture it just by talking about it,

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but it was as if a piece of me was missing. I

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just felt so much despair. And I could not wait for this

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baby to come into our life. And then

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In February of 05, we got matched with

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our son Lincoln. It was a really amazing

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experience. You get a small photo of

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him and that's your baby. It's

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totally bizarre. It's like at the time of the photo, he was five

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months old. And we just had one picture of him and it was

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super cute. And it's like, okay, this is your baby now. You need

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to go to court in Russia and file

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for adoption. So the way it worked back then was that we

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had to fly to where the baby was, go to his

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orphanage, meet him in person, and sign off

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on a decree that said that we agreed to adopt this

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baby. They didn't want people to get there and change their minds. They wanted you

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to see the baby. You would then get a court date. So that was

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extremely painful because we got to meet our baby

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and then we had to leave. And you can hear the tears in my voice

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because it was like meeting your child and then leaving

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them at a hospital that you can't go visit anymore. It

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was so painful to leave that

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orphanage and also leave my child in hands,

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not great hands, right? In poverty, in

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neglect, in malnutrition, in,

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you know, just a very bad place. And

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knowing that I couldn't do anything about it and get on an

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airplane and fly back to my life, it was really

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hard. I cried a lot at the airport and they

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said, okay, well, your court date will be in two weeks. So, you

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know, it's like, okay, get home. You can do anything for two weeks kind of

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thing. And we waited

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and we waited and we waited and two weeks went by and we're calling

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our coordinator and. And they're like, we don't know what's going on. The

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judge is out of town. There's been some holidays.

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We're like, okay, we're just waiting. And then

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finally we get a court date. And it's eight weeks passes between the time

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we meet Lincoln till we can go to court. So we do,

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we fly, we go to court, we

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get approved. And then there's a 10 day waiting period that

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you have your baby while

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you are waiting for the Court decree to be final. So

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we do the paperwork, we see him, and

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then we have to wait again. And so we wait a couple more weeks,

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and then he's ours, which is amazing. We go

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through a visa process, and we

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fly home, and he's our baby, and he's

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1 years old. So all that time

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it took from match to home, it was four months,

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and I was a new mom to a one

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year old. And that loss has

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always been a little bit hard, a little bit painful

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for me because I do feel like I missed out on the

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little baby stage and nursing

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and all of those things. But, yeah,

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we bonded immediately with him. We

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loved him to pieces. He fit right into our family.

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He definitely had separation anxiety. He definitely had

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attachment disruption. So we were working on bonding and trust

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and all of that. But in general, Lincoln slipped right into our life.

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And we started to go to mommy groups and play groups and

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meeting a bunch of my friends and that I now have still

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to this day. And it just was such a beautiful time

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of my life because I finally was a mom. I

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was finally at that place in my life that I wanted

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to be. Even though I got there, I always say I arrived through the

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back door of motherhood. In some ways, I got there,

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and it was incredible and wonderful. And

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within a year, we decided to do it again.

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So. So the second time, it was like, let's

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adopt again. Let's adopt from Russia,

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and let's adopt a brother for Lincoln. So

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we did. We did the process. This time it was a little bit easier because

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we had done a home study before. We knew what to expect. We knew how

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to answer the questions. We already had a kid, so that

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helped a lot because we were a little bit more qualified or

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whatever. We had more information, filled out our paperwork, we

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dropped it off. We were expecting it to take eight weeks, like it did with

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Lincoln, to get matched. And no, we get matched almost

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immediately, like, within three days, which was insane.

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And then we flew to Russia, like, almost

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immediately, not with Lincoln. We met Sawyer,

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and then we turned around, we flew home. We waited the 10 days, we went

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to court. We didn't even see him on that trip because his baby

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orphanage was far away from the courthouse. A couple hours. He

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was in a very rural part of outside Moscow. And so we went to

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court, turned around really fast, came home, and then 10

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days later went back and adopted

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Sawyer. And he came home with us. And now then we had two

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kids. They're 22 months apart, and they were adopted

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two years apart. And Sawyer, we brought him home at 12 months as

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well. And with Sawyer, he also was

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slipped right into life. The sad part for him,

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which we didn't realize, is that he was one of those kids who had a

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lovey and, you know, sucked his thumb and rubbed like a little

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blankie. And they don't care. The orphanage doesn't see

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things as belonging to one child. So they didn't give me his

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lovey. And so there was a lot of crying and a lot

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of drama on the flight home with him. It was really

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chaotic. I always think of it like Lincoln's birth was

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easy. Like his pregnancy was hard, but his birth was easy. And

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Sawyer's pregnancy was easy, but his birth was

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hard. And I'm saying that like the paperwork part for Lincoln in the

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process was so hard, but then getting him was so easy. Once

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we, like, once we slipped in with him and Sawyer, that transition was

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harder. And then of course, I had another son. So, you know, he's three.

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I have a three year old and a one year old, like kind of within

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a couple of months of deciding to have another

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baby. Now we have two kids, three and one. And

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it was great. It was great. Really intense. As you all

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know, when you have two little kids, just cuckoo pants. Lincoln was cuckoo pants. He

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had so much energy. Now we know it's adhd. It was

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pretty easy going for the first year or so. And

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then I've shared this many times. It was round when Lincoln turned 4

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that his behavior really escalated quite a bit. He became

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aggressive with his brother. He became, you

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know, difficult at preschool. Really major

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meltdowns, just a lot of dysregulation,

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impulse control, anger, just,

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you know, all the classic ADHD

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behaviors that when you see him in a 4 year old boy, you're like, well,

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that's normal. But you also know it's a little outside of normal.

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And it's because of his behavior that

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I started to get support. And what I did was

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I started to go to parenting classes that were offered

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through the organization that did our home study.

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And I started to do parenting classes, take parenting

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classes through that organization. And

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that's where I met Jeanette Yoff, who

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became my darlin, who became

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the person who saved my family, who changed the

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trajectory of my parenting forever. And she's actually a guest

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next, not next week, but the week after on the podcast, because

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next week is Thanksgiving, but the week after that I have Jeanette coming on

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and you get to meet her and learn from her and

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just our rapport is really beautiful. But it was

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meeting her and starting to learn about trauma,

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informed parenting, starting to understand feelings, drive

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behavior, learning to not take behavior so personally.

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Learning about the word emotional dysregulation in

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2006, 2007, like no one was talking about

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it back then. Well, I guess this was like 2008. But yeah, like learning

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about these phrases and like how the brain works,

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discovering Dan Siegel reading parenting from the inside out,

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learning about the amygdala, the nervous system, stress response,

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cortisol, I mean all of that was just new

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to me and also new in parent education. And so my

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brain just exploded in so many

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amazing ways because I could see a pathway for my family

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to heal. And the reason

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why everything was just outside of norm

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with my kids is a. Because Lincoln had ADHD and

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Sawyer had sensory processing disorders. They had disorders,

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but also because they experienced a year of neglect being in

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Russian orphanages. And all that time

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when I was preparing to become an adoptive mom,

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nowhere in my education was I taught the

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words trauma or trauma informed or

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attachment, insecure, attachment. There was

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no education about what I might experience

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by adopting a kid from a Russian

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orphanage. All of my training and everything I have

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learned has been because I wanted to parent these kids well and

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do right by them. And everything I learn I share with you, with

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you, with the people I work with, because I believe that

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if we can practice compassionate parenting, we can

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learn self regulation tools for ourselves and teach

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those skills to our kids that our kids,

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any kid, can benefit from that. So if it works with

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kids with neurodivergence, if the processes that I teach

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work with kids who have experienced trauma,

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and if these practices work with kids who have

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more extreme behavior, then wow, are they gonna, you

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all are gonna benefit from them as well. Yeah. That

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is how I became a mom, and then that's how I became a calm mama,

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is because I became a mom of kids who

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really had experienced trauma as children. And

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that had nothing to do with me, you know, it's just the way it

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was. And they were for a variety of reasons,

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different reasons, they became available for adoption.

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Their birth mothers relinquished their parental rights for

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different reasons for each of them. And because of that

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loss that that birth mother had, I became an adoptive

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parent. And I'm always very tender about my

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kids loss. We're open with them, we talk about adoption

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very openly. They, they each have a different

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relationship to adoption and to their story. And I've

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learned a lot about trauma and how to process grief and

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loss and feel feelings.

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And for the most part the boys are really adjusted to Their

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story. I think as they grow, they'll discover more and

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more parts of them that maybe feel wounded or abandoned by

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their loss of their birth mother and their birth country

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and their birth mother, birth father. You know, we've seen some of it, like, in

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terms of curiosity around their biology, you know, their genetics.

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They both did 23andMe, before it was a

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defunct company. Just to learn about themselves and learn about

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their genetic history and their genetic connection. And

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then for me, being an adoptive mom, having kids who don't

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look like me and don't look like each other, you know, it's always

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kind of been interesting. I remember one of my very good friends. It

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was, the boys were little, like, in kindergarten, and she and I had just

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met, but we weren't really friends yet. And she looks

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at me and she says, wow, it's so weird. Your kids look nothing alike, and

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they look nothing like you. And I was like, yeah, that's because they were

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adopted. And then she's like, oh, I'm so sorry. I was like, there's nothing to

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apologize for. I don't have any shame about this. I have

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grief. I have sadness over my own loss

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of the ability to have biological children, But I don't have any

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shame about being an adoptive parent. I don't have any

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shame for my children. I'm just grateful personally,

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that, you know, their loss was my gain.

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And I hold both of those things quite tenderly and make

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space for their loss. But, you know, they're pretty well

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adjusted. You know, it doesn't come up that much, but it does sometimes, and we

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talk about it, and, yeah, they're really comfortable

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with their stories. I was gonna add one last

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thing is that, you know, I couldn't get

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pregnant for, like, 10 years. Stopped trying

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with the pill in 2002, and then in

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2012, became pregnant out

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of nowhere. It was super crazy. I had no idea I was

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pregnant because I had never been before. I

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did not know what was happening to me. And I just thought, like,

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I was, like, tired. I don't know. I lost that baby at

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11 weeks without knowing that I was pregnant.

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And so I passed the embryo,

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which was really painful and sad and terrifying because I

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did not know what came out of my body. Maybe that's tmi. But

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anyway, that was a shock. And then I had two

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more miscarriages, one in 2013 and one in 2015.

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So those losses are painful. I do think about those three

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little ones that I've lost and the missed

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opportunity to maybe become a bio mom. But at the same time.

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I'm grateful for our family, for our life,

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the fact that I'm 50 years old and I'm empty nest

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and able to build my life and have this

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decade for me. It's really cool. So I'm grateful that

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for how things played out. I'm actually really grateful that I have these

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children, the ones I specifically have. And

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I know that would only have happened through this infertility and adoption

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story. And I just feel grateful. I feel grateful for you for listening,

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for caring about me, for allowing me to tell my

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story and share some

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tender things with you. And if you

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experienced infertility or you are going through

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infertility right now and you just want some support, you

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can feel free to reach out. I'm here. I also just want to leave you

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with this encouraging note that whatever

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happens in your life, whatever pain you go

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through, even in when it feels unbearable, like it's going

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to sweep you under and drown you, and

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it won't. You are really strong and you can handle

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it and you can pivot and you can always find a

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new normal and a new place of peace. And that is

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forever available to you and to me and to anyone you

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know. So giving you a message of hope

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as we head into the holiday season and just lots and

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lots of love. Thanks for listening.

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