The Scotsman

To meet or not to meet? The hard question for adopted children – and birth parents

Dr Gary Clapton reports on a study of contact between ‘relative strangers’

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Most adopted people at some time in their lives will want to know more about their families of origin.

Many will try to find their birth parents, invariably their mother, at first. Curiosity as to resemblanc­es, medical informatio­n and reasons for being adopted all may loom large.

A large majority of the parents of children given up for adoption, particular­ly birth mothers, but also many birth fathers, want to know how their child has got on in life, perhaps meet them and explain the reasons for their adoption.

There is no trouble-free way of making these aspiration­s happen. Despite supportive legislatio­n and policy, adopted people can be frustrated by red tape, missing records, and costs. A crucial considerat­ion, should they trace a birth relative, is ‘how will I be received?’ Despite recent supportive legislatio­n, birth parents face similar obstacles but also wonder if they have the right to do so, to trace and meet their son or daughter, ‘to barge into their lives’.

These anxieties have not stopped people contacting each other. In the past private detectives have been used at great cost. Today people use social media. In a few clicks you can find a birth mother in ten minutes. The risks of doing this on your own without a go-between are obvious.

For a birth parent or relative, the search is much more demanding with much fewer prospects of uncovering an adopted person’s name or an up-to-date address. Whoever makes the first move, the searcher knows what they are doing and has built up to deciding to make contact, thinking it over, perhaps talking it over with a trusted friend or loved one, whereas the searched-for party knows nothing. A meeting can be a gamble.

What happens after that first flush of anticipati­on and excitement? When ‘relative strangers’, separated by adoption meet after decades of being apart, how do they make a start at a relationsh­ip?

We are nearing the end of a yearlong study of 200 adoption reunions that have taken place between 1996 and 2006, which set out to answer these questions. It has not always been smooth sailing, with families reunited without trouble. But the experience is generally positive, with nearly all being glad that they did make the decision to search, go on to meet and have a relationsh­ip with their birth mother or adopted son or daughter.

Writing years after reunion, adopted people said that they were attending their birth families’ events such as weddings, described contact as regular, and spoke, contentedl­y, of “being in each other’s lives”. For others, the contact had “eventually fizzled out”.

However, for all of the adopted people who spoke with us, whether they described their current relationsh­ip with birth family as flourishin­g or lapsed, the decision to seek out and meet birth parents was not regretted.

Birth mothers’ accounts were more varied. For one, “original contact was by letter, and then email which dried

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