I find it interesting that dates play such an important role
in our lives. We celebrate Birthdays, Anniversaries,
Mothers day, Fathers day, Grandparents day and even important milestones. I know there are symbolic reasons for those
celebrations that have simply become traditions.
January 26 is Happy Family day for my son Cameron, a day
equally as important as his Birthday. I
say equally important because the world was made so much brighter by his
presence but it is actually more important.
Prior to celebrating Family day Cameron was not legally mine. Yes I brought him home from the hospital at
the time of his birth, however it would take over 2 years before he was forever
mine. During those two years there was the
possibility that he could be removed from me.
My days were filled with what if’s…..

What if the mother he was removed from was given another
chance?
What if she wanted visitation?
What if a family member came forward?
What if this little child who was mine in every other way
would be taken from my heart?
The years were filled with hope yes but not without
turbulence as well.
A mother who never saw him after birth, still had a say in
his life. Imagine the frustrations when
this child , to you , is yours however you need her permission to cut his hair,
to get him circumcised, to take him on a trip even out of the county! No that
is not a typo I did say County not Country.
I finally fought to get a waiver because imagine living on the county
line and you turn left and you are in one county and you turn right and you are
in another.
Yes Family day means so much more. It was a day of emotion and happy tears. It was a day in court, my little guy dressed
in a little tux because this is a BIG deal would leave that room knowing he
will FOREVER be mine. It was a day I
couldn’t be prepared for. A day I
promised my love and commitment to raising this child of another race. Why is that even a statement I would
make? Because the ONLY thing that was
addressed was the obvious differences in our skin color.
Are you prepared you teach him about his culture?
Are you prepared as a single Caucasian female to raise an
African American boy? Excuse me did you
just ask me that? Do people come this
far NOT realizing they are about to adopt someone who may not look like them?
When you give birth no one walks in the delivery room and
questions your capabilities or questions what you have done to prepare for this
child. They are yours and the multiple security
measures in place assure you that no one else will leave with your child. Multiple
family members and friends comment on how much the baby may look like you. With adopting outside of your race there is
no question this child is adopted.
With Adoption up
until the judge lifts that gavel and declares the adoption final that child
does not legally belong to you. It
matters not that the first time you laid eyes on that child they became yours
in your heart.
I have said this before and it likely will sound just as
strange to some as it has in the past.
When I look at Cameron I truly do not see that he is a different color
than me. How can that be? Because when you love a child or love anyone you
see their heart, their qualities, who they are not what they look like. I just see my son.
I have been Blessed to experience having birth children and
an adopted child and while the process is significantly different the end
results are identical. A child who is
100% mine. A brother to his siblings, a
brother in law, Grandson, a nephew, an Uncle.
And most importantly a Son. He is
not just mine he has multiple relationship roles in our family.
So Happy Family days are so much more than a Birthday it is
a day that marks “Forever” in the life of a child who was not born into a
family, and “forever” into a family that wanted him.
And to Cameron who I know loves his forever family but questions who he looks like. Yes my little duckling, I am your mother.
Not Flesh of my Flesh
nor bone of my bone but still miraculously my own
Never forget for a
single minute, you didn’t grow under my heart but in it.