Solomon’s
Choice
by
Shelah Mastny Miner
“Then spake the woman whose the living
child was unto the king, for her bowels yearned upon her son, and she said, O
my lord, give her the living child, and in no wise slay it.” 1 Kings 3:26
During my first pregnancy I repeated a single line almost
every day: “I don’t care if it’s a boy or a girl, as long as it’s healthy.” But
secretly, I knew what I wanted—I’m the oldest daughter of an oldest daughter of
an oldest daughter and couldn’t picture myself with anything other than a girl
first. But our baby’s gender was something I had no control over, so I lied
through my teeth. Saying I wanted a healthy baby was the only acceptable
answer, right? Although I knew what I wanted in a baby, I also knew I was still
basically a kid myself—I had enthusiasm and intelligence to be a mother, but I
didn’t have wisdom. In the place of wisdom, I had faith that God would be both
just and merciful; He’d send us the right baby for our family.
Twelve years and four kids later, we’re expecting a baby
again. But this time the wait involves no ovulation predictors, pregnancy
tests, fear of miscarriage, doctor’s appointments, ultrasounds, or well-meaning
strangers patting my stomach. This time around, I’m not pregnant.
It’s hard to say why we decided to adopt, other than it felt
like the right thing to do for our family. I could say I strong-armed us all
into adoption because I wasn’t ready to be done having babies yet. I could say
it’s because I’m crazy when I’m pregnant and I didn’t want to put my husband,
Ed, through that again. I could say it’s because we’ve been feeling that we’ve
been given much and saw this as an opportunity to share. I could say we hoped
that adopting internationally would give our other kids a chance to experience
a new culture and see that people in most of the world do not live lives of ease
and privilege like they do. All those reasons were part of the decision, but
mostly it was just a feeling we had.
There are several dozen countries that allow Americans to
adopt their orphaned and abandoned children, and after much pondering and discussion,
we decided to adopt from China. The variables of uncertainty are different in
international adoption than they are in conceiving and bearing a biological
child. At first it seemed that through adoption we’d have more control than we
did with our other children. While I couldn’t request a specific gender for any
of our biological children, we have stated a preference for our adoptive child
to be a daughter. And while I remember freaking out and crying whenever a home
pregnancy test came back negative because I really wanted to have a baby in
October, not November or December, this time around we requested a specific
age.
We signed up with an adoption agency and started receiving
pamphlets in the mail showing smiling couples with adorable Asian babies in
their arms:
Chinese children of all ages are in
need of loving homes, and in this program most families are able to choose the
child that’s just right for them. Our personal adoption guides will get to know
your family and help you find your son or daughter. You can adopt an infant or
young child with minor to more serious medical needs that are typically
manageable and correctable, or an older child with no identified health
concerns.
As we started to fill out our paperwork, another vision of a
baby girl coalesced in my mind: she’d be tiny, with thick, straight, dark hair.
She’d be shy, but I’d be able to coax a smile from her. The six of us sat
around the kitchen table one night and decided to name her Rose.
****
The adoption forms looked overwhelming, but started out
straightforward enough: name, birth date, social security number, employer
information. Then they got down to the hard questions: How will you respond
to strangers who ask if your child feels lucky to be adopted? What are some
techniques you plan to use if your child has a hard time attaching to you? How
will you discipline your child? After we’d filled out the forms and paid
the application fees, a social worker showed up at our front door one day last
March to interview us and observe our family.
She got right down to business: “Kids who are adopted from
China often have developmental delays from being institutionalized. How do you
think you’ll adapt to having a child with delays?”
I mumbled an answer and she said she’d email a list of
websites I should check out on education for adoptive parents.
“Since most children adopted from China have special needs,
an important step in the home study process is deciding which special needs
you’re comfortable with.”
She handed us a list. It was one I’d seen before, but had
tried my best to avoid studying:
Please give careful thought to your own
personal resources and indicate below whether you are open to considering
children who have been diagnosed with any of the following conditions:
Albinism
ADHD
Autism Spectrum Disorders
Behavioral Issues
Blindness
Birthmarks
Blood Disorders
Bowel/Anal Issues
Burns
Cerebral Palsy
Cleft Lip/Palate
Club Foot
Cognitive Delays
Craniofacial Abnormalities
The list went on for three columns, filling the entire page.
Ed and I sat on our bed that night, checking and unchecking
boxes. I erased carefully, trying to make the square unblemished and white,
feeling guilty about excluding a child who could possibly be ours. But we have
four children. We’re busy with work and school and church callings and piano
lessons and ski trips and everything else that comes with having a life that’s
rich in happiness and material blessings.
Despite those blessings, we found ourselves trying to be
realistic. How much could we handle?
What kinds of special needs could we take on without
compromising the needs of our kids?
Yet, if we were adopting instead of conceiving a biological
child to do a good thing for someone who really needed it, didn’t it seem a
little bit disingenuous of us to only check the minor, correctable needs?
King Solomon wasn’t the parent of the baby he ordered cut in
half. Perhaps he could be such a good judge because the baby in question
wasn’t, and never would be, his. Since Rose wasn’t an actual, living,
breathing, tangible little person in our arms yet, we could be a little more
objective, weigh the pros and cons. Yet we felt the tug of compassion, the
yearnings of countless special needs babies to be held.
Having control over gender and age had seemed like
fun—Maren, our five-year-old, had even called it “ordering a baby”—but choosing
among special needs was no fun at all. It felt like playing God, and not in a
good way. Of course, the most merciful thing seemed to be to check every box,
to say we were open to whatever eventuality might come our way. Although we
didn’t recognize it at the time, that was what we did when we conceived our
biological children. But choosing Rose is an active, tangible choice, and what
may be the most merciful thing for a special needs baby might not be the most
just option for our family as a whole.
****
It wasn’t like we didn’t know a little bit about special
needs already.
That first child, the one who would be healthy, the one who
would be a girl, arrived on time—a boy who looked like a wizened little walnut.
I know all babies have an old man look, but at four pounds, twelve ounces,
Bryce looked more like he’d been born in a concentration camp than a suburban
hospital.
After a few frustrating days of force-feeding him around the
clock, the doctors proclaimed him healthy enough to go home. “We won’t be able
to tell if there’s any permanent damage from his malnourishment in utero until
he gets a little older,” they said.
For a while, things seemed fine. He grew quickly, tripling
his body weight in two months. He was fussy and asthmatic, but hit all of his
developmental milestones on or ahead of schedule. It wasn’t until Bryce started
school that his problems became evident—it was hard for him to make friends, to
sit, to participate in group activities, and his ability to hyperfocus on his
interests was a double-edged sword. At five he was diagnosed with ADHD; we
added anxiety at nine and Asperger’s at eleven. When Bryce was a year old, the
age I imagine Rose to be right now in China, we had no idea that our path with
Bryce would be paved with significant challenges alongside the joys.
Do I cheer for Bryce’s successes? Of course. It makes me
happier to have him say, “thank you” spontaneously, or bring in the newspaper
without being asked, or practice the piano from start to finish without
guidance than it does to see my name in print. Do I love him just the way he
is? Absolutely. But if I had a magic wand, I’d take away his challenges to make
all of our lives easier.
And then there’s Isaac, who lived a charmed life his first
three years. Sunny and social, he followed his big brother and sister around
the house, making everyone laugh. Then one morning he woke up with a fever and
couldn’t walk. In the four years since, he’s endured multiple hospital stays,
physical therapy, two full-body casts, and five surgeries. Once again, his
challenges weren’t visible in his toddler years, and they’ve made him the boy
he is today, but when I listen to him crying in pain or help him hobble to the
bathroom after surgery, I wish I’d been able to prevent the bacteria that made
him sick from ever entering his body.
Annie, at nine, is the daughter I wanted when I dreamed of
my daughter—she’s responsible and helpful, beautiful and intelligent. Maren, my
little shadow, loves me so much that she wants to sleep with me at night and
leaves me love notes around the house. Both girls have been free from the
health problems their brothers have faced. Twelve years into parenting, I know
enough to know that we had no more control over getting our comparatively
“easy” daughters than we have had over the more “difficult” challenges we’ve
had with our sons. I also know that all children are an act of mercy from God:
sometimes the act of mercy is that we get a child who doesn’t challenge us;
sometimes the mercy is that they do.
Still, I don't have God's wisdom, or Solomon’s. With my
imperfect, myopic vision, I just want to make things right for my boys. I want
life to be easy for them, and easy for our family. I want them to do their
homework and play soccer and go to college and go on missions and get married.
But I also recognize that the easiest path might not be the best path for their
individual growth or for ours as a family.
And yet I can’t help but think that although, in our boys’
cases, we’ve accepted that the realities of life sometimes interfere with our
expectations—and that’s okay—with Rose, however, we’re going into the
arrangement knowing she’ll have challenges. Bottom line is, do I have any right
to make it harder for my family on purpose?
****
I had a vision of my first daughter, and when that daughter
turned out to be a son, it was okay, because we knew we would have more than
one child. When Bryce got older and struggled, it was easier for me to bear
because he had siblings who would love and accept him. In China, Rose’s birth
parents probably didn’t say, “The gender doesn’t matter as long as the baby is
healthy.” They, like most Chinese parents, likely felt pressure to produce a
healthy baby boy. And when their baby arrived, neither healthy nor male, I can
only imagine their devastation that this baby represented their only shot at
parenthood.
On the other side of the world, we can choose whether to
make the daughter they created a part of our family. When we get our match,
we’ll have seventy-two hours to consult with our doctor and decide if that
child will fit well in our family. Even after we’ve picked a child according to
our specifications, we still have the right of refusal, the right to say,
“Let’s try for a better match next time.” I choose to believe that Rose’s birth
parents decided she would live a better life and have better opportunities with
the possibilities for adoption, and that choosing to leave her in a park or a
marketplace was a heart-wrenching decision when there were no better
alternatives. But will we be able to provide her with a better life? Will we be
the best parents for her special needs? Will I know Rose as my daughter when I
see her picture in my email inbox?
Even though I’ve read a stack of books three feet tall about
China and international adoption, I don’t think I'll ever feel equipped to make
an informed judgment over whether or not to adopt the baby who may become ours.
That’s where I’ve come to understand that Solomon needed
less wisdom than God—Solomon only needed to decide which of the two women
before him had borne that baby, but God has to match up families, people who
will be together not just for fifty or seventy years, but forever. And
even though I would have readily accepted some control over that first baby I
was carrying, I don’t want that control any more—it’s too much responsibility.
Checking off the boxes on that special needs page was one of the hardest jobs
I’ve ever had as a parent, and I’m thankful that, up until now, I haven’t been
in a position to choose my children. It’s impossible to make the “right” choice
as far as children are concerned. As parents, we can never know what challenges
and issues will arrive in any child's life. Adding any child to the family,
either from adoption or conception, is simply a leap of faith.
If all I had was a label and a paragraph of my boys’ medical
histories, I know I would have been scared off by “asthma, ADHD, anxiety, and
Asperger’s” or “MRSA and complicated femoral fracture requiring multiple
surgeries,” but my boys have been two of the greatest joys of my life. I don’t
feel robbed as a parent because their needs have been more complicated than
those of their sisters. I’m glad I didn’t know the end from the beginning, glad
I never had the chance to turn away from being their mother. And when we choose
Rose, I hope we’ll have the wisdom to make the right choice, and the love
necessary to never look back.
5 comments:
This is a beautiful essay. Very thought-provoking. I know so little about the world of adoption I had never considered some of the choices that adoptive parents face.
I do have a question though - this essay and a YouTube video you posted on facebook mention people saying how "lucky" the baby is as though that is not a good thing to say. What is wrong with saying that? I know there are a lot of life circumstances where well-meaning people say things that are insensitive without realizing, and I just want some insight here.
Katie,
That's a good question. It's something I'm sure I would have said before we started this process. I think the answer has several parts, but I think they all relate back to respecting how my kids might feel about being adopted. First of all, they might not feel lucky that they were born with disabilities and then abandoned within the first few hours of life. I want them to be able to feel upset and resentful about that as they grow up. They might not feel lucky that they were removed from their home and culture and adopted into a family where they look different and may act different from everyone else. Also, I think a large part of it is that I don't want my adopted kids to feel any more beholden to me. I don't want them to feel like I "saved" them and they owe me some kind of debt. I may not be expressing that well, but I hope it makes sense. As a result, I think a lot of adoptive parents try to turn the "she's so lucky" comments into "we're so lucky to have her." Does that make sense?
* That should say "any more beholden to me than my biological kids do." Typing with a baby on the lap-- you know how it goes. :)
Thanks for answering my questions! Makes sense.
I loved this essay...hadn't read it before.
My sister has adopted a daughter and a son, and I've heard many people say that kind of thing. I've also heard people make the same "lucky" comment about non-adopted kids. Typically, they're trying to compliment the parent in an indirect way, instead of saying "you're a fantastic parent" they'll say "he/she is so lucky to have you for a parent".
But that always kind of bugged me...because of all the randomness of the whole thing. Some kids aren't so "lucky", and some parents aren't that fantastic but they ended up with great kids. At the end of the day, we mostly just get who we get, and some matches are better than others. In both cases there seems to be quite a lot of divine help along the way. And THAT isn't a matter of luck. ♥
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