This was never what I would call a healthy pattern, but it was me. It was my way of making sure I didn't miss anything until I could afford the downtime. Lots of my friends did similar, but I tended to crash a little harder than they did. Sometimes I even crashed mid-semester, in March. Freshman year I had a knee fixed in March, sophomore year it was appendicitis...you get the picture.
I thought I was done with that.
Apparently not. Because I'm crashing today. I'm home form work, sick, after too much GoGoGo.
I plied seven skeins of three-ply worsted and spun 3 novelty singles for the knitting shop.
I delivered them to said shop (Miles and Miles of Yarn, Wyandotte, MI) and took the obligatory pic of a new project by a shop patron whose name I couldn't remember if you tortured me.
Thing is, she lied. More than once.
And I didn't know until last Friday at the big "child placement" meeting where I found out all kinds of stuff that had been withheld from me, and I left four hours (!) later feeling more betrayed and humiliated than ever before in my life. So many people, one hapless child, three years unsettled, and all because of a social worker trying to avoid paperwork.
There's only so far I can go. I can stretch myself only so thin before I break.
And now I'm crashing.
I still have only one child.
I used to proclaim to anyone who would talk about it that if more people would pursue domestic adoptions we'd have fewer kids in foster care, fewer abortions, fewer abandoned babies, and less of a stigma on giving children up for adoption when the parents are unfit/unable to care for them. It's a basic function of supply and demand, complicated by human emotions. I've wanted to adopt since I was in high school; it was always a part of my life plan and goals, and I wanted to adopt American kids, not go overseas and bring more kids back here when there are so many kids here in need...
I'm not sure I can do that anymore. I've been burned pretty deep. All of a sudden I understand why American parents avoid domestic adoptions, and I completely sympathize with their desire to import children.
Somebody please give me a reality check if I ever fall down this rabbit hole again, k?
3 comments:
I'm sorry the adoption didn't come through. You're very brave to have tried -- I could never bring myself to that point. I think it's ok to have a small crash, just to recouperate. Not too much, tho!
On the plus side, you've got your boy. And a nice guest room suitable for visitors.
Argh. Sounds like you need an afghan and some hugs.
(((hug)))
I am so sorry. (((hugs)))
I was adopted back in the sixties when the system kind of worked. The current state of things leaves me with a low-grade feeling of rage, thinking of all those poor children in foster care, and all these poor parents, wanting children.
More hugs.
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