FamilySource (TM) This is our cache of http://www.open-adoptions.net/.
our cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web.
The page may have changed since that time. Click here for the current page without highlighting.
 
We are neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its content.
Open Adoption. Pros and Cons of Open Adoptions
Adoption Network Law Center Adoption Network Law Center
Located in California?
We can help you
adopt HERE!
Adoption Network Law Center
Unplanned Pregnancy
in California?
Click here for
more INFO!
Adoption Network Law Center
  123Adoption.com adopt open adoption español  
Hoping to Adopt
Adopt
 

Open Adoption

– open-adoptions.net –

Jump to the Adopt A Child menu

In 1982, Kathleen Silber and Phyllis Speedlin wrote a groundbreaking book about open adoptions, "Dear Birthmother, Thank You For Our Baby," a book that opened an ongoing dialog that has increased in volume over the years.

Silber and Speedlin present open adoptions as being about love, honesty, trust, and communication. They are child-centered. They are about making a lifelong commitment - and it isn't easy. No lifetime commitment is easy and this one, that brings to the fore our roles as parents - whether by adoption or biology - is one of the most sensitive and complex.

Open adoption is frequently touted as the perfect solution, but although it's often a good thing, it can be difficult. Open adoption should not be marketed to pregnant women as a way to avoid all pain and loss - it doesn't do that. It's still adoption and it still hurts the parents. It may be the best possible solution but that doesn't mean there isn't sadness. And adoptive parents - after the adoption - may feel confused and ambivalent about their roles and how to treat their child's birthmother until they reach a sort of equilibrium.

Love, honesty, trust, and communication - Silber and Speedlin's original premise. The love comes naturally; honesty is a promise we make to our children; trust builds over time. But communication is something each of us can and needs to pursue aggressively. It isn't a passive thing. It isn't going to happen unless we make it happen. And it's the key to the work that needs to be done to keep an adoption open and doing what we hope it will do... bring our children a secure sense of who they are and who they can become.

Learn more about open adoptions.

Adopt A Child menu:
Adopt a Child | Adopt a Baby | Adopters | Adopting Children | Adoption Exchanges | Adoption Financing | Adoption Grants | Adoption Home Study | Adoption Letter | Adoption Photolistings | Adoption Photos | Adoption Pictures | Adoption Process | Adoption Profiles | Adoption Subsidies | Adoptive | Child Adoptions | Closed Adoption | Domestic Adoption | Embryo Adoptions | Infant Adoption | Legal Guardianship | Open Adoption | Photolistings | Private Adoptions | Single Parent Adoption | United States Adoption |
additional resources:
 
What is Open Adoption?

Buy it now: $5.95
The Spirit of Open Adoption

Buy it now: $9.95
  Popular Sites: Adoption.com | Adoption.org | Adoption Search | Parent Profiles | Adoption Information | Adopting.org |
Copyright ©2005 123adoption.com
JRun Server Name: nutch1 pageload time: 16ms