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240 pages, Hardcover
First published September 10, 2020
I do not know what it is like to grow up without a mother. But I know exactly what it is like to grow up with a mother who didn’t have a mother.
But then to some degree we are all predacious. I guess that’s why class matters, old school ties, the right neighbourhood, house, clothes, car or accent. We are always assessing each other. Are you one of us?
Adopted people grow up knowing the answer. You come from nowhere. You are strange fruit of obscure origin. The lack of a bloodline marks you. Just ask a mother-in-law. I’ve had three. For years I wondered why tow of them, women from different worlds, treated me with an instinctual distrust. No matter how hard I tried to please them. Now I understand. I was without pedigree, something even a lap dog has. Deep down, they did not want grandchildren without lineage or origin.
Jim arrived after lunch. I’d been expecting a doctor’s bag, a box, anything that might contain his magic. But he strode into the living room swinging his well thumbed Bible. I’d always detested him. The way he parted his hair, slick and precise. And the way he washed the dishes after our shred meals, scrubbing them in a brisk and joyless way as though they were our souls.
But then I found her and made a terrible mistake by writing to her. My letter had caused her death.
So instead I began to write about the life I imagined she had. I invented her lovers and friends. I described her elegant home…
Over the years the stories changed. When I had a relationship with a disingenuous writer, I processed the fallout as if it had happened to my mother. When it was all over, he sent me a file of letter he’d written, one or more a day for all the months. They began with pleasure. I was the shiny new thing in his life. I was better than his wife. I was all the mysteries rolled into one. Soon enough my contradictions were my downfall. By the end he had transformed me into his own shadow self and I became every lover who had failed him.
As I read his wounding words, I pretended he was my mother’s lover, not mine. Because this is one of the things a mother does. She absorbs the blows for her child. Not all of them, and not forever. But she is there for her child of any age. When your children are small, protecting them is your overriding obsession. As mine grew up, I understood that this natural response does not change. Their danger is always my danger. Any threat to them is a threat to me.
It took a long time to realise that Mavis appeared to have no such capacity. Her parenting was competent and practical. Food, water, clothing, shelter. The mysterious and strange works of the heart were missing in our relationship. Or was it inappropriate to share them with a stranger’s child?
I understand I had divided them. Before me, they were an average family. I was the antapex, the point from which the solar system of their lives was always moving away. After me, Jesse died (grandmother). After me Pamela stopped speaking to her father. And now, on her way to meet me and see him, she was dead and there would be no redemption.
Mirah Riben calls it the ‘duality of adoption’. ‘You might have had a happy childhood. But every adoption begins with a tragedy of loss and separation. Adoption is a traumatic, lifelong and often unrecognised experience.’ She describes how society clings to the preconceived, romanticised notions of adoption. The problem, she says, is when adoptees do not assume their role as grateful orphans.
Writer Matthew Salesses talks about being in debt to someone’s love. “For adoptees, gratitude and luck can be trigger words. Society tells us we are lucky to be adopted. If we do not appear grateful, they tell us to know our place. We are reminded to be thankful for being taken from the mothers who bore us. We are called “angry” as a dismissal.”
Many adopted people have catastrophic thinking. But we are so accustomed to living on red alert we do not recognise the formless dread as a condition. We fear abandonment above all else. Many of us have a heightened sensitivity to criticism. We suffer from depression, hypervigilance and addiction to adrenaline.
Whether or not we are good citizens, adoption unmoors us from our history and forces us to stand alone in the world. Dr David Kirschner says we live with sealed original birth records, and a childhood of secrets, lies and frustrated searches for birth parents. He says untreated, festering adoption issues of loss, rejection, abandonment, identity, and dissociated rage are all normal reactions to adoption. No matter how well we have integrated into our new families, we remain ‘other’. We are cuckoos in the nest.