The R Word
Joe Soll, LCSW, Adoptee, psychotherapist and author of, “Adoption
Healing... a path to recovery” and co-author of “Evil Exchange”
When facilitating my support groups or nightly
chat or in a session with one of my clients, I often hear someone say
that they are afraid of getting “rejected” again. This is
referring to what might happen if one searches and gets turned down, or
if a reunion goes awry.
As adoptees, what we need to understand is that we
were not ”rejected” when we lost our mothers. We need to
understand that all babies are lovable, without exception and
therefore, no matter what happened it was not rejection. For me
to be rejected there has to be something about me that is not likeable,
not lovable. Since all babies are lovable then I could not have
been rejected. If a mother, for some reason does not love
her baby that is about the mom. It cannot be about her baby, so
it cannot be rejection. The pain of adoption loss is just as
profound for a mom as it is for an adoptee. We all survive our
losses by pushing them away. When a mom is contacted the hidden
feelings of pain, anger and sadness start knocking at her
consciousness. If she cannot face her hidden feelings because
they are so terrifying then she may not be able agree to contact.
When someone is truly terrified they usually do not have the ability to
confront their fears. This works both ways and we need to
respect the feelings of someone who is truly terrified that their
feelings will destroy them.
If I choose to search and when I make contact, I am
turned down by my mother (or in the case of a mom searching turned down
by the child she lost to adoption) that is not rejection of me but an
unwillingness of the person found to face her pain. It cannot be
about the searcher because the searcher is unknown to the person
found. Aside from the terror of facing her pain, a mom might
fear severe consequences from her family members who may not know
her secret.
Now comes the inner child work. What we think
affects how we feel. The words I say about myself, the words I
think about myself greatly affect my emotions. If I can stop
thinking the R word. If I can remove the word “Rejection” from my
vocabulary, I can do what I want with impunity because I know that: #1
I was not rejected at birth, #2, I cannot get rejected if I should
choose to search for my family. I can get told “No” and that would be
sad but it would not be devastating because it would not be
“rejection” of me.
No matter what we do, being told no will be horribly
sad and hurt like hell. However, if I’ve done my inner child work, in
the end, knowing that it's not a 'rejection' of me, that it's not about
me at all, it's about the other party's own experience and feelings is
what makes the difference. Part of the preparation for search is
to be aware of all the things that can happen, both good and
bad. If we do this preparation along with the inner child
work, , no matter what happens, we will be ok. Yes, we may hurt
like hell but we will be ok.
For us to do the above, the first step is to
intellectually know that all babies are lovable and then make sure our
inner child owns this fact.
Next we have to do the intellectual work of knowing
that we were not rejected at the beginning and then make sure that our
inner child knows that he/she was not rejected at the beginning.
Next we have to intellectually understand that we
cannot get rejected if we search and then make sure our inner child
knows that. The inner child work I refer to consists of our
“talking” out loud in our head to our seven year old self (for an
adoptee) and telling her/him the intellectual truth that it was not
rejection in the past and cannot be rejection now. To do this, we
have to have previously done the work of helping our inner child know
that she/he was lovable and still is.
If we do this, we will be at a place to never fear
losing a relationship ever again. Sure, it is sad to lose
relationships, but when one knows it cannot be a 2nd rejection, one is
free of one of the biggest adoption issues we all face. I’m not
saying this is easy. It takes a lot time and a lot of work but the
payoff is a wonderful reward.
Please do me a favor. Throw out the “R” word. It
will change your life.