168 [Estrangement Series] Kirsten Weatherford

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/168


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This show is listener supported. You can join us and help our show grow to support more adoptees by going to adopteeson.com/partner.

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is Episode 168, Kirsten. I'm your host, Haley Radke.

We are starting a short series on the topic of estrangement. I think some of you know that I'm experiencing this myself and it's something I've wanted to talk about and learn about, but it's just been too close to home. So I want to acknowledge that just as many of our conversations here on the podcast are deeply personal, emotion-filled, could be activating or challenging for both you and me to hear, this again will be hard. It's really interesting to me that even after this conversation with Kirsten, I felt heavy and sad with my own grief and also the knowledge that there are so many of us who have dealt with the same and way worse, way worse. [00:01:00] This series isn't meant to be a how to undo estrangement or how to break up with your family. It's once again in the space of hoping to let you know you aren't alone. I see you. I acknowledge how hard and lonely this can be. With that, let me share what you're going to hear from our guest, Kirsten Weatherford.

We talk about how a memorable trip, a pilgrimage, helped Kirsten come out of the fog, how reunion with her first mother likely accelerated her estrangement from her adoptive parents. And we also wrestle with what it would take to even broach the subject of reunification if that was ever on the table. We wrap up with some recommended resources, and, as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website adopteeson.com. [00:02:00]

Let's listen in.

I'm so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Kirsten Weatherford. Welcome, Kirsten.

Kirsten Weatherford: Thank you. I'm happy to be here.

Haley Radke: I would love it if you would start and share your story with us.

Kirsten Weatherford: All right. I was born in Pennsylvania to a single mother and immediately relinquished in January of 1971. I spent three months in a private foster home before being placed with my adoptive parents. I was raised an only child, center of the world at all times.

Haley Radke: Me too. You just said “center of the world” and already I was like, oh my goodness, I hear you.

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah. It's a thing, isn't it? It's a big deal. We moved across the country from Pennsylvania to Oregon when I was four. We moved again from Oregon [00:03:00] to Colorado when I was five. I spent most of my childhood in Colorado and I kind of grew up there. We moved to Montana when I was a freshman in high school. And other than one year of college back in Colorado. I have been here ever since then. I have been married for 30 years. My husband and I have five children together, ranging in age from 10 to nearly 30.

As far as my adoption journey, I started coming out of the fog in January of 2010. I took a pilgrimage trip with my husband and some other folks from our church in April of 2013. That was a big deal. That's where I found the pit of my soul and my journey really took off from there. I came home from Scotland knowing I had to search and try and find my birth mom. [00:04:00] We found each other. I found her. It took until February of 2017. And we started communicating. She was actually located about six months prior to that, but it took us until February of 2017 to start communicating. I traveled to Pennsylvania that summer, July of 2017. We met for the first time in person. Six weeks later they came to Montana to visit my family on our turf, and we have been in reunion, continue to be ever since then. My last exchange with my adoptive parents was about a year after the reunion with my first mom. In June of 2018 there were some letters exchanged between us. And the last face-to-face conversation was in August of 2018 when I walked out of their home for the last [00:05:00] time.

Haley Radke: Thank you for sharing that. There's a lot of different ways we could go. So you've been in reunion with your first mother for a few years. And you lit up when you were talking about her and so I get the sense that is going well. I'll let you say.

Kirsten Weatherford: It is more than I ever expected. I have a very large first family on my maternal side and I was welcomed home by all of them with open arms, and they are amazing and incredible and gracious, wonderful people that helped me find my way back home to myself, not just to them, but to the center of myself as well.

Haley Radke: That's profound. Oh my goodness, I got goosebumps. Okay, so I asked you to come on because we're going to have this really hard conversation talking about estrangement [00:06:00] and so I'm sad that we're not going to dive into your beautiful reunion and how you did it and all those things. But I think you mentioned this before we got on and I've experienced the same. I've heard from so many people, so many adoptees who are estranged from their adoptive families. And it's wild. It's wild. It's something I never thought was going to happen to me either, and I'm experiencing that with you as well. So I'm curious, as you've talked to other adoptees and as you look at your own situation, yours happened during the beginning of your reunion, and do you think that had an impact or what have you unpacked there?

Kirsten Weatherford: I think if you asked my adoptive parents, they would lay blame on the reunion as a defining event that broke our relationship. [00:07:00] In all honesty, it had been probably 30 years in the making. We really struggled as I became an adult and tried to establish some independence as my own person with my own family; those boundaries were not honored. It took me a long time to even place any boundaries with them. I received unsolicited advice, not really advice, meddling and directives as to how we were raising our family and choices we were making. There was little to no autonomy in our relationship but, as I mentioned, I think they would blame the reunion. I would credit the reunion with giving me enough strength in myself to place those boundaries. [00:08:00] I had spoken to you about that. That allowed me to say, “No.”

I even placed some boundaries as I was in reunion. I didn't even tell them that I was searching. When I was actively searching for my first mom, I didn't even tell them because, for me, it felt like it was my story and my journey, and I didn't want them to invade that–that was mine. It was something I had ownership over and I suspected they would twist things to make it about them and how violated and hurt they were. Which eventually is what it came around to, was that I had hurt them and I was no longer grateful for all they had done for me.

Haley Radke: Oh dear. Okay, so I want to frame these questions and just say, we are not just going to bash our parents the whole time. [00:09:00] That's not what this conversation is about. I'm not saying that to you, I'm talking to our listeners so you guys know, we're not just going to complain about all the things our parents had wrong. But I'm curious for you, when you talk about this was 30 years in the making, and you had tried to become your own autonomous person as an adult and build your own family and make your own decisions, do you remember some things along the way? Things that they did or a certain event or anything like that, that you were like, “Whoa, like you are really stepping over the line.” Or is it more like you're looking back on it now and seeing that, “Oh, that was really over the line.”

Kirsten Weatherford: I think that there was some ability at the time to recognize it. Certainly now in a more reflective state I see it much more clearly. [00:10:00] In preparation for recording this, I went back and read those last letters that were exchanged between us and I'm seeing them even differently now than at the time I received them. So yeah, there were definitely moments where, specifically – and this doesn't necessarily speak to a gun/non-gun issue. I am in Montana. We hunt here; we're outdoors people. My husband grew up hunting. I was raised around guns just as a target practice–those types of things–but I did know how to use firearms. I'm not an anti-gun person by any means, but I'm also not gun-toting; I try and walk in the middle. I guess that is where I'm at. But my parents had asked if they could give our oldest son, who was six at the time, a .22 and we said, no. [00:11:00]

Haley Radke: For those people that don't know what a .22 is, can you just explain it to us like we're six?

Kirsten Weatherford: It's kind of the initiation into a small rifle. It's easy to handle, a first gun for a kid, so to speak, beyond a BB gun, a step into a first actual firearm. They asked if they could get him one. We said no and assumed that would be honored. It was not. Our son received a .22 from my parents with a gleam in their eyes and almost a “Ha, ha, now what are you gonna do?” kind of attitude, which left especially my husband in a position to take away something that had been gifted by grandparents. [00:12:00] It left us to be the bad guys, which is often how it felt, like we were put in the us versus them, what are you gonna do about it now? kind of situation.

Haley Radke: Oh boy. You don't want to be the bad guy but, yikes, that's total overstepping: to ask ahead of time and then completely not respect that. That's shocking to me.

Kirsten Weatherford: It happened a lot.

Haley Radke: So okay, when those things happened, did you have conversations with them about it after? Were there fights?

Kirsten Weatherford: No. I wasn't in a place to have those conversations at the time. Again, a lot of what I can talk about now was not what I could talk about in that time and in that space. I was not comfortable enough in myself that I could say, “Absolutely not.” Especially in the moment I couldn't stand up and say, “No.” We said no, you can take this back.” It just wasn't possible. [00:13:00]

Haley Radke: I understand so much because just having the conflict and having to try and stand up for yourself. And especially in the moment – goodness, yikes. I don't think I would be able to do that.

Kirsten Weatherford: Especially when it involves your kids.

Haley Radke: Oh yeah.

Kirsten Weatherford: That just made it feel exceptionally violating.

Haley Radke: So did there come a time prior to the reunion and just the last few years where this all kind of came to a head? Did there come a time earlier than that where you were like, “Okay, I'm seeing some bad patterns of me not being listened to. I really have to start doing X, Y, Z with them to make sure my family and my feelings are respected.” Like where you set out some boundaries whether or not you told them but just had them in your mind. Did there come a time like that?

Kirsten Weatherford: Oh, absolutely. It was probably mid 2013-ish. So I was back from our trip to Scotland. [00:14:00]

Haley Radke: And you would call that a pilgrimage?

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah, definitely. The island of Iona, Scotland, is often regarded as a holy place. It's a very small island in the Outer Hebrides. It's credited with being the birthplace of Christianity for Scotland. It's this incredible, quiet, small place that really gives you the opportunity to do some reflection. And yeah, it was honestly an experience I still, this many years later, can't appropriately give words to. It's where I found the pit of my soul. It's where I really began to understand what being a child of adoption meant for me. I broke down. [00:15:00] I just recently was able to put some phrasing to it and say that I tried to call, crawl into the loneliest part of myself while I was there, and, like I said, came home.

So we had been home from Scotland, not even actively searching really yet. 2013, we would've still had four kids at home. We had gone out to dinner with my parents and as had often taken place when we would go out to dinner something would go wrong. Somebody's food wouldn't be right, or the service wasn't appropriate, or something of that nature. And that night in particular, my dad unleashed a personal assault on the server who really had no control over the situation and he was doing the best he could. They were quite busy. He was the only guy on that side that was working. [00:16:00] Things were taking a while but, you know, we try and be understanding people. However, my father was not understanding and just verbally assaulted this poor waiter. And I was seated there. It was a large table because it was my husband, myself, our four kids: at least one plus one, and my parents. So it was a pretty big table and my husband and I were at opposite ends of the table. And I know I physically slumped over and I just had this sickening feeling in my gut. My husband at the other end, I think we were telepathically communicating with each other. Had we been able to make eye contact or had I chosen to do that, I believe in that moment we would've gotten up and left. It was embarrassing. I did not want to ever, I never did. That was a defining moment. I never subjected my kids to going out to dinner with them again. I don't believe that service workers [00:17:00] are at all deserving of the treatment they often get. And that was such a personal attack on a stranger who was just trying to do his job. That was a pretty defining moment though. So that was a big boundary; we decided then and there that we would never go out to dinner again with them.

Haley Radke: So what happened the next time they asked you? Did you just say no? Did you always just put it off and say no, or did you tell them?

Kirsten Weatherford: I think they knew. That was so bad. There was very little conversation the rest of that meal. And as was the typical pattern after my dad would blow up and make a scene, the following day my mother called and wanted to apologize and gloss things over and smooth the waters in the hopes that we would forgive and forget, and there just was not any going back from it that time. We were done. [00:18:00]

Haley Radke: Oh my goodness. So going back to this experience you had in Scotland, which sounds incredibly profound to repeat the word I said before, but then you decide to search and things but you said you were keeping that to yourself because it wasn't maybe safe to share with them. Probably wasn't safe to share with them.

Kirsten Weatherford: No, it was not something I even considered mentioning to them. I had no hope that they would understand that it was something that I needed. It was no reflection on the difficulties of my relationship with them. It was very much about me and what I needed, and what I felt very deeply as something I needed to try and solve. Maybe not solve, but find peace with and find answers to. It was just this deep longing [00:19:00] for the unknown. And, I also came to a place where I really wanted to know and have a different story that maybe I could tell myself versus what I had believed to be true fundamentally about myself. I wanted to be able to get to a place where I could understand myself and accept myself as a more positive entity in the world versus something somebody had discarded.

Haley Radke: Oh, I feel that too. Okay so, I don't know, are you okay with this? Do you want to walk us through what happened? Did you try and set up some boundaries and they weren't respected? What were the last kind of things that happened before it was like, “Hey, the letters and we're done.”

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah. One of the last defining moments: My husband and oldest [00:20:00] son and son-in-law were coaching the youngest son's baseball team. So, you know, these are little kids–they're like six, seven years old at the time. So it's an entertaining free-for-all for the spectators to be watching these kids. It's a happy environment. My oldest son had brought his dog with him, as he often did, and the dog was sitting near my father-in-law and was perfectly content. She was a real sweet, gentle dog. And, my mother came up and made a comment and coddled over the dog about how she couldn't get anywhere and everybody was being mean, and she very much believes that she's the only one that treats animals well enough. Nobody else does it [00:21:00] well enough. She's the only one that cares for them enough. And so the comment of “Oh poor Jazz, you just aren't being taken care of.” My oldest son was there and he said, “Why don't you just take care of it? Nobody else ever does it right.” And that made her angry. That made my father angry. My father-in-law, the poor guy, just sat there dumbfounded, didn't say anything. I also didn't say anything. I let it happen. It was a boundary that was put up via my oldest son, who at that point is an independent adult himself as well. So I let it happen, and they went and watched the rest of the youngest son's baseball game from their car and didn't talk to anybody else after that. They stopped coming to the games. [00:22:00] They didn't interact with us near as much after that. There was one phone call about what had taken place. I was put in a position to maybe defend myself and my lack of reaction And I wasn't willing to give in. I wasn't willing to back down into the sheepish role of still being their small child.

And that was the last defining thing that then led to the letters that were exchanged. After the baseball thing probably took place in like April or May, I had placed a phone call to them to invite them to the Mother's Day brunch that we were going to be going to with husband and I and our five kids and my in-laws, we all live in the same town. [00:23:00] We're all here. It's all very local, and I called to invite them to that as well. And I received, I think, what I've called a verbal assault and a go-to-hell message from my dad on that phone call. And it's really the last time I've spoken to him directly. There was never any other conversation between the two of us after that.

Haley Radke: First of all, I'm sorry that happened. That sounds really painful. And just when you're describing it, just the event, at the baseball field or whatever, it doesn't feel like that kind of big of a deal. And yet from the stories I've heard from other people, and something from me too, it's: that's the last straw, you know?

Kirsten Weatherford: Oh, for sure. Yeah. The event with the [00:24:00] dog was in the grand scheme of things minor, but it was like the last time we wanted to be diminished.

Haley Radke: Can you talk about having your son be the one to be giving his grandma a little sass? What did that feel like for you as a parent because you know he's grown up with her?

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah. And I was actually proud of him. Honestly. He grew up with the most influence from them for the longest period of time of all of our children. He has spent time in therapy as well, and he created those hard boundaries before I could. And so I really have to say that I was proud and I learned a lesson from him in that healthy boundaries are [00:25:00] necessary and need to be respected. And when they're not, when those boundaries are violated, that's a clear message.

Haley Radke: Yeah, it definitely sounded like, especially just his words, he was just like really calling her out on something

Kirsten Weatherford: I cleaned it up for broadcast here, there were some choice words, some colorful words that were exchanged. It was pretty clear.

Haley Radke: Oh, that's too bad. My editor loves beeping things.

Okay, I wonder how you're feeling now. You just said you reread the letters that you exchanged, and you even have a different perspective on it now, and you're a few years out from these events and having contact with them. What does it feel like for you?

Kirsten Weatherford: I don't miss them. I don't miss them. I don't miss the constant [00:26:00] turmoil that it caused in my own household. I miss the idea of them, but them specifically, I don't miss. I'm saddened by the fact that for them it became an either/or they couldn't do both/and. They met my first mom the first time she came here and it was cordial. My dad was able to have some conversation with my stepdad. Everybody's from this small little community back in Pennsylvania and so there are common people they know, some of the same people, and those conversations were good. And what could have bonded my adoptive dad and I in a deeper way because [00:27:00] once I had visited, we could have conversation about these locations and it's where he had grown up as well. And so we could have had this deeper connection over place that we were both from. And instead of that we now have basically no connection. It didn't have to be an either/or. That was their choice, and I think it was their inability to see it from my perspective and see it as what I needed that had little to no reflection on them at the time.

Haley Radke: As an adopted person, how hard has it been to even know what you needed?

Kirsten Weatherford: [00:28:00] Well, let's see. I started coming out of the fog in 2010, and I have much clearer vision now. But at the same time, things will catch me off guard in a moment. It's right below the surface. Being an adopted person is always brewing right below the surface, and sometimes it catches me off guard. And so yeah, to know what I needed or what I wanted or even being able to communicate maybe what that was for me was something I struggled for a long time. And I'm still a work in progress. I think I always will be.

Haley Radke: You said, “I don't miss them.” And when you hear me say that back to you, what is that? Do you feel anything inside? Are you like, “Oh boy, what if they hear that?” Do you have [00:29:00] any of that stuff, or can you confidently say, “No, you know what, I know what I feel now and I don't miss them and I've reflected on this.”

Kirsten Weatherford: I can confidently say that I don't miss them. I don't miss the constant – yeah, it's a repeat of what I said earlier. It was just such a constant state of turmoil for my own household that it's much more peaceful without them in our lives. And, as I said, they live less than two miles away from me. I had somebody asking me the other day like, “Aren't you worried you're gonna see them at the store?” And I used to be. I haven't seen them out and about, which is okay. I did probably two weeks ago. I am pretty sure I saw my dad in Walmart, but he didn't see me. I kept on walking. He was in line checking out and [00:30:00] I just kept on a walkin’ because I'm not willing to go there.

Haley Radke: So correct me if I'm wrong, it seems like you both are just like, “Yeah, I'm not gonna reach out.” Seems like they're very angry, too. It was like a big blow up. You're nodding your head. Okay. So, where am I going with this? As I said, this is my first conversation about estrangement and we're going to do a little series on it, but what are your thoughts on reconnection and reconciliation and if that's even something you would want? What would need to happen for you to even consider that? Or is that something that you're like, “Nope, I'm not even gonna go down that road. I don't even wanna talk about it.” And even just asking the question, I feel a little bit like I don't want to bring it up like we're having this conversation and the point of it is, at some point, we all just want to be reconnected and fix the relationship and that's the goal. I'm not saying that. I'm curious about your thoughts. [00:31:00]

Kirsten Weatherford: I am not willing to reengage with them unless and until they're willing to do some work on their part. I would like them to have some ownership of how we got to where we are today instead of it being a bunch of finger-pointing. I would love to see them have some openness, an ability to see their part in how things ended up. Realistically, we're talking about people who are in their late seventies, early eighties, and my 50 years of experience tell me that they're not going to do anything differently. It's not in their makeup of who they are. [00:32:00] So I think I've gotten to a place, for me, where I can say it wasn't about me personally. Whoever landed in their home as the kid who won the lottery and ended up placed with them, it would've been the same. It was about who they were. It wasn't about who I was. It was who they wanted or needed or expected me to be. When I tried to live out my own person as my own person, instead of the reflection of who they hoped I could be for their sake, that's when things fell apart. And so I just don't know that they have it in them to see it any other way. They have no other lens other than their own.

Haley Radke: I think. I don't know. [00:33:00] Here's my two cents, and it's just the same as what this podcast cost you to listen to: it's free. I love how you express that so beautifully. So many of us work to discover who we are. A lot of you that are listening especially, we have been going through therapy and finding our identity and just becoming. A lot of the times that includes just becoming a better human. And what I see just in the grand scheme of things in the world, when you have a human who's going through therapy and improving themselves and you're moving further and further away from the people that are just staying stagnant and aren't willing to change and improve, the tension just keeps building as you find more of yourself.

So I'm really happy for you, Kirsten, that you are able to see things that way. [00:34:00] I feel like it sounds like you're coming from such an empowered place in that decision, in that you don't have to feel like, “Oh shoot, what if I would've said this, but this would've held us on a little longer.” Or those kinds of little regrets that some of us have.

Kirsten Weatherford: Sure, yeah. Of course, leading up to this, my husband and I had been talking about defining events in that relationship and he reminded me of the first and last time he saw me really stand up and defend my position as a mother and our position as parents in relation to our middle daughter who we struggled with tremendously. But we worked through a really difficult situation, not just in our relationship with her. We were trying to help our own kids navigate their relationships with each other, but we tried to do it in a [00:35:00] respectful way and allowed them to navigate that space, and we wanted to have our ability to navigate that space, and everything's good now. At the time that I stood up, my mother was insistent that I should do this and I should do that, saying “you should make him talk to her and here's what you need to do.” And I just said, “No, let us do this. Let us figure this out. If we're not doing it the same way you are, that doesn't mean it's wrong. Respect us enough.” I don't know. I'd like to say at this point that we weren't navigating things wrong because it's all come back together and we're all in good space with each other. But her interference was unwelcomed, unnecessary, and it was damaging at the time. Keith looked at me and he said, “Wow, she might wish that she was dealing with her husband instead of dealing with me.” [00:36:00] Because it was the first time that I really stood up to her. And he had corked off a few times before with her as well. But it was really the first time that I unleashed and opened the file and verbally vomited all over.

Haley Radke: I don't know. How does it feel? Like even thinking back you look like you sat up a little bit, like you just looked empowered and it's like, “I'm an adult now.” Because I think so many of us are still stuck in powerlessness because of our adoption. We had no choice in it. And then we didn't get to pick the people who took us and all that. It's like, “Okay, I'm an adult now, so what are you going to do?”

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah. It was about no longer being that kid who was afraid in the corner and standing on my own two feet as [00:37:00] an independent autonomous adult and making choices for myself and for my own family. Right or wrong, give me the space to do it and figure it out. I don't know if it was like this preventive mode, that she was going to protect us from everything or try and prevent bad things from happening. Let me figure that out. And we've tried really hard to do that with our kids, too. Respect, respect each other enough to allow autonomy and space.

Haley Radke: Thank you. Okay. Before we do recommended resources, I just want to give you a little space to give us advice or say what you'd like to say to other people who might be in a similar situation. And I don't know what that looks like. Do you want to talk about it? You had mentioned to me, I don't know if it was in the recording or in a different conversation we had, but you said, “It was a long time coming, maybe this should have happened sooner.” [00:38:00] Is there something like warning signs of things like “If I had set up these boundaries earlier,” or “If I had done this or that.” I mean hindsight, whatever. I'm not exactly sure what I'm trying to ask, but I want to help other adoptees stand up for themselves, but I don't want to have things break down either. It's like this really confusing kind of space talking about estrangement.

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah, I wish I'd had the ability to create those boundaries sooner. Truth be told, it couldn't have happened any sooner. I can say that, in reflection, I wish it had happened sooner. I can say that because of where I'm at today, but there's no way it could have happened any sooner because I was not confident enough in myself and my space and the ownership of who I am to be able to do it any sooner. [00:39:00] I know it's a huge balance. There's this whole societal messaging of being the good adoptee or the ungrateful adoptee–one I hate even more–or that the only adoptees who search are those who have had a bad experience with their adoptive parents. I don't think that's fair messaging, but it's the reality of the world we live in as adopted people. We're usually the last ones thought of.

As I said, I don't miss them. I have no regrets other than I wish it could have happened sooner. I wish I could have come into myself sooner and had more time to live into this person I feel like I am now. I wish it could have happened sooner, but, you know, midlife is what it is. And I had a friend tell me that 40 was a magical number and I thought [00:40:00] she was talking crazy talk, but now at 50, I can tell her, “Oh man, you were so spot on.” There were so many things that happened in my forties that really brought me to where I am now. And I just don't think I had the strength or the ability to do it any sooner. It's not an easy space to walk, but for me, it's been so worth it.

Haley Radke: I am so happy for you.

Kirsten Weatherford: Thank you.

Haley Radke: I want to just interject a little thing before we do recommended resources. So, Kristen and I said the word “boundaries” like 30 times, and I could have asked her what she meant by that or her specific things, but I didn't on purpose because boundaries can be any sort of line that is personal to you. Maybe we don't want input on [00:41:00] how we parent or on my personal appearance or physical health or any of those kinds of things. I don't want any input or conversations on my search or reunion or lack thereof, et cetera. It can be anything that's not safe for you to engage with them about. So insert as needed as you look at your own relationship and think about boundaries, not just with your adoptive parents, but with anybody in your life. They're so personal to you and what's safe for Kirsten might not be for me, et cetera. So anyway, that's my little insertion.

Do you have thoughts on that before we do recommendations?

Kirsten Weatherford: Boundaries are important, and creating and establishing those boundaries, for me, was empowering and it helped me believe that I have value. [00:42:00]

Haley Radke: Yes, that's so good. So good. Okay, we're going to do recommended resources. And I told Kirsten ahead of time that I was going to make fun of her because when we do this guest application process and all the things, I'm like, “OK, make sure you pick something new.” And she didn't. So she's going to talk about something she loves and she wants to talk about it so much. We've talked about it before on the show, but now you're going to hear why Kirsten thinks that you should check this out. Okay. Go ahead.

Kirsten Weatherford: Well, shout-out to my now friend Anne Heffron and her book You Don't Look Adopted. I had her book for quite a while and was honestly afraid to pick it up. I wasn't sure. What I was going to find.

Haley Radke: Really?

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah. I had it and it sat on my shelf because I just wasn't sure what was going to be in there. I was trying to do some of my own writing at the time, and [00:43:00] I didn't want somebody else's voice to come through in what I was working on, and I just had to get to a space where I felt comfortable picking it up. It was one of the best windows into my own soul as well that I could have read. I would sit there and just shake my head and, “Oh man, me too.” And I was in awe of finding words that I had struggled to find. They were right there on those pages. So, very recommended. I know a lot of people do that, but for me that book is self-love.

Haley Radke: Oh, that's so good. That's so good. I love Anne. I talk about her a lot too, so that's okay. I'm so glad you did that. The other thing I'll plug is Anne and Pam Cordano–who's a therapist who's been on the show before as well–they are doing some weekly classes called “Flourish” and they're live. [00:44:00] You might see Kirsten in there, I don't know. They're live; they're not recorded, so you have to be there. And they do some writing prompts. There's some discussion. I was able to attend one. I really enjoyed it. And if you follow Anne or Pam on Instagram or Facebook, you can find out how to sign up for those. But I am going to take us in a totally different direction because like last year was a whole thing and we're not going to go down that rabbit trail. But I very much enjoyed on Off Script, which is the Adoptees On Patreon podcast. And Kirsten's been a supporter for a long time. Thank you. So many of you listening are and I really appreciate it. That's how the show continues and. My co-host on that, Carrie Cahill Mulligan, and I were reading all these adoptee-authored books last year and I really tried to find [00:45:00] more books from people that aren't like me so that I can learn, especially from people of color, because I really wanted to learn more about racial injustice and how I can be an ally and I was very challenged and it's good. It's really good for me to be challenged.

So I want to just recommend to you an author that I loved reading. Oh my goodness, you have to follow her on Twitter. Her name is Shannon Gibney. Her Twitter handle is (at)gibneyshannon. I read two of her books. The first one is See No Color, and it is about a transracial adoptee and it's a YA novel. I really loved it. It's got baseball and race and there's siblings and it's not your typical adoptee reunion kind of a story. I really loved it. It's so good. And I also love Shannon's novel that has nothing to [00:46:00] do with adoption: Dream Country.

I don't know if you've read either of these, Kirsten, but when I read Dream Country, I learned so much about Liberia. I had no idea. I'm Canadian so I don't really know a lot about United States history. I know Canada. But I learned so much. It's this huge epic story of different families, different time periods, and she just weaves everything together so beautifully. I loved it. So Shannon Gibney. She's a fellow adoptee and a wonderful author and I really recommend you follow her. And gosh, this book, it's not about adoption, but it's great. The title is Dream Country. Check out that cover! It's so beautiful.

Kirsten Weatherford: That is beautiful. We have a “book problem” in our house, so I'm going to add, well, some people would say it's a problem. We have books all the time and they're coming in almost daily sometimes. So I will add those to my list for sure.

Haley Radke: Yeah. [00:47:00] I'm describing the cover for the audiobook, that's great. But if you color code your bookshelf and you need more red books, it’s got a red spine with some blue on it. That's very, I don't know, that felt like a 2020 reference, like when you were bored in quarantine, you color code your bookshelf, I dunno.

Kirsten Weatherford: Yeah.

Haley Radke: Anyway, where can we connect with you online, Kirsten?

Kirsten Weatherford: I am on Facebook as Kirsten Weatherford. I'm also on Instagram as No More Misfit, that is from my blog page by the same name, No More Misfit. There is one blog entry entitled “Misfit” that kind of explains where the no more misfit handle came from. So yeah, I would love to have people reach out, connect with me wherever they're comfortable.

Haley Radke: I really enjoyed reading your blog. I especially like the one entry that's called “Claimed.” [00:48:00] And you wrote, and it was especially meaningful to me to read this before we talked about estrangement. There's a line in here: “Our adoptive families certainly made every attempt to claim us, make us 100% theirs. The problem with that is we adoptees know better.” And you go on from there. But yeah, if you want to hear more about Kirsten's story, I definitely recommend you check out her blog: nomoremisfit(dot)com.

All right. Thank you so much for sharing your story with us. I just had such a great time talking with you even about such hard things and thanks for being willing to talk about the hard stuff, the real stuff.

Kirsten Weatherford: Thank you, I really appreciate you giving adoptees the space to speak and have voice. It's been a lifesaver for me, so thank you. I appreciate you as well. [00:51:00]

Haley Radke: This is heavy stuff, you guys. It's just heavy, heavy stuff. So thanks for hanging in with me and listening to Kirsten's story. This is a first: I actually cried before we did the interview instead of during. So I was pretty proud of Kirsten and me for holding it together and just trying to talk facts. So just know, if you're like, “Oh, Haley wasn't super emotional.” I was very emotional before and after, but managed to hold it together for you during.

Anyway, I'm thankful that you're here. If you're experiencing estrangement or some other really challenging things, I hope that you are able to get connected into community–whatever that looks like, even if it's your in-real-life friends and not adoptee-specific. It's really important for us to be talking about this and getting support about it. I know from personal experience what stuffing all that stuff down does to you. So I'm really good at it. And that's not anything to brag about. Yeah, it's heavy. [00:50:00]

I want to thank Kristen again. She's one of my Patreon supporters, as I mentioned, and without her and my other supporters, I wouldn't be able to keep podcasting. So I'm so excited that I get to make the show for you every week and that it's free, you can listen wherever, whenever and feel like you're with other adoptees as you listen and feel supported in that way. But I can't do it without people like Kirsten that are willing to financially support the show.

So if you want to join Kirsten and some other really incredible people, you can go to adopteeson.com/partner to find details of what you get when you support the show. There is a weekly podcast that's called Adoptees Off Script, and we're in the middle of doing a Book Club. Middle? We're starting Book Club this year. We just had a really fantastic chat with one of our Book Club authors, which was really fun. [00:51:00] And so there'll be more of those throughout the year. If you want to join us, again: adopteeson.com/partner for the details. Thanks so much for listening. Let's talk again next Friday.

166 [Healing Series] Navigating the Holidays

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/166


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This show is listener supported. You can join us and help our show grow to support more adoptees by going to adopteeson.com/partner.

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I am your host, Haley Radke, and this is a special episode in our healing series where I interview therapists who are also adoptees themselves, so they know from personal experience what it feels like to be an adoptee. Today we are taking your questions all about navigating the holiday season. Let's listen in.

I'm so pleased to welcome back to Adoptees On, Lesli Johnson. Hi Lesli.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Hi Haley. How are you?

Haley Radke: Good. I feel like I should have a chart up on the wall and every time you come on, we'll just make another tick mark. I feel like you're our most requested adoptee therapist, so-

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Oh, that's [00:01:00] really nice to hear. I love being on the podcast and talking with you. And even though nobody else can see our faces, I can see yours and I always enjoy that.

Haley Radke: Me too. Sorry guys, it's not a video. I am so glad you're here. We are entering a holiday season again, and this has become a tradition that you answer some of our listener questions and steer us through some tricky conversations with boundaries and literally give us some language to bring to our hard conversations. But I'm going to start off with a general question for you because we are in unprecedented times, as they like to say. When we're recording this, we are almost a year into living this pandemic life. And what goes along with that is we have listeners who are all over the world who have different restrictions imposed on them, and it [00:02:00] follows that some of our listeners have family in different areas who may be taking this seriously or who may not be. Maybe their state has restrictions and some countries have none and so they're navigating those boundaries. And in holiday time we're talking a lot about visiting and do we travel there or not. So I'm curious how have you been advising some of your clients on how to navigate these things in pandemic times and do you have some conversation starters for us to say, Hey, we're not gonna be there for this holiday dinner this year because of COVID.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Right, we definitely are. And that phrase “unprecedented times,” it's definitely that. I'm talking a lot with my clients, and in the groups that I have, it seems to be the thing we're talking about right now. And in terms of [00:03:00] adoptees, I'm trying to help my clients gain their voice and try things differently and give themselves permission to do things differently. And I think that some of the restrictions that different states have and different countries have are helping reinforce that, helping reinforce boundaries if people are deciding that they don't want to travel, if they don't want to split their time between their adoptive family or their birth family. So I think in some ways, if people are struggling with that, the guidelines are offering kind of a cushion there.

Haley Radke: Wait a second. Wait a second. Are you saying we can blame the pandemic for the reason we don't want to go to our: insert whichever family there.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: I don't think I’d use the word blame, but it can offer a little bit more reinforcement around that decision. But then there's also people who are, I have a lot of clients who are new in reunion and were really planning to travel this year [00:04:00] and see birth relatives. And so this pandemic situation is really creating a lot of grief and loss for those plans and those visits and those connections.

Haley Radke: Yes. I have spoken to a couple of different listeners who had planned a reunion visit and that's been canceled and postponed and postponed, and the disappointment is so real. It's so real.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: It is.

Haley Radke: All right. We had a whole bunch of questions submitted. Here's a question from Lauren: “I'm in Reunion and realize that my biological family and my adoptive family have very different expectations around the holidays. I need help finding my way.”

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: That's a good question. I need help finding my way. Yeah, so again, the word conditioning comes to mind or just living with this belief that we have to go along, right? The adaptive adoptee, the good adoptee. [00:05:00] We can't disappoint people. And I think as adults and coming into our own, coming out of the fog and recognizing, wow we can actually make decisions that feel right to us. So finding that balance. So how does she make her way? I would ask Lauren, what do you want to do? What feels best for you and your family? And can you give yourself permission to maybe do something different this year? Create a new tradition that feels congruent with what she wants to do. And again, I said congruent, so creating something new that feels right for her. And that's not to say that's not going to feel uncomfortable, but just because something feels uncomfortable doesn't mean it's wrong. I think people mistake if they set a boundary and then they get some pushback from family, they might be quick to think, oh wow, this isn't right. But that's not necessarily true. Creating change and creating [00:06:00] healthy boundaries doesn't always feel comfortable. In fact, it rarely does, but that doesn't mean it's not healthy.

Haley Radke: It's so interesting that you were like what do you want? Because that sounds so simple, but Lesli, how many of us have literally never thought about that or have shoved it down and have just bent to the will of anyone around us to make them feel comfortable.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yep. That's so true. I was talking to someone yesterday and we were talking about that exact same thing. You know, what do you want? Like how the person is someone who just goes along and has a hard time even identifying what he wants to eat for dinner, right? So practicing finding small things. What do you want? I want this for dinner. And it sounds silly, but that's where we start. We start identifying what we like, what we don't like, and then expand on that.

Haley Radke: This question really goes along with it. It's from Chris: “We talk a lot about finding our authentic voice. [00:07:00] How can I begin to be more comfortable asking for what I need, especially during the holiday season?”

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah. And again, starting small, right? So really tapping into do I actually like this, or is it just something that I'm used to doing? Is this tradition something that I really enjoy? Or is it just something I'm used to doing because my family has done it our whole life? So questioning some of those things that have just been obligatory go-alongs and seeing if they still fit.

Haley Radke: I've seen a lot of families do this pandemic-wise. Towards the end of November, people were writing out okay, what do you really want to make sure we do this holiday season? Because many of our things that we rely on, maybe having that big family meal is not an option for us where we live right now. And I see the moms asking their kids like, okay, what's two or three things you really want to do? And that could be like, [00:08:00] oh, we really want to watch this movie and we really want to make this Christmas treat and we really want to go walk this street to see these Christmas lights or things. Are you suggesting that maybe adoptees could do that? Like it's pre-planning out to make sure you have your special holiday thing that actually is important to you and you maybe didn't realize it?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: I think that's a great idea. Why not? So again, if we use this, and you and I have talked about this on an earlier podcast, but this idea of coming out of the fog and recognizing what's working, what's not? How have I gone along or adapted into my adoptive family that isn't healthy or wise for me anymore, and how can I make these small changes that suit me? And a lot of times people say that sounds so selfish, or that I could never do that. Okay, but that's where the work is right? To stretch some of these things where you think, oh, I can't, I could never do that. I'm going to hurt my adoptive parents or [00:09:00] that's just not how we do it in our family. And I guess that's how I really work with my clients. Is that still working for you? So part of coming out of the fog is understanding and uncovering which adaptations or coping skills or coping behaviors were necessary during childhood and adolescence, but which ones are outdated, that are no longer serving the person and maybe they're actually interfering with relationships and them living their most healthy life.

Haley Radke: Okay. I have another question that's really a challenging one. Some of these are anonymous, just so you know. I wanted to honor people's privacy, especially when we're talking about really hard things-

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Of course-

Haley Radke: “As if 2020 weren't hard enough, I have fully stepped out of the fog this year. I'm 41 and it's been a long time coming. Along with the other issues we're all facing, I'm drowning in uncertainty it seems on every front. My anxiety is sky high all the [00:10:00] time. And now with the holidays here, all I want to do is hide from everyone and everything. Things I loved to do in years past hold no interest for me now. And I definitely don't want to plan or lead these family traditions. How do I take a step back but not withdraw completely?” And so that's the end of the question, but I just want to let you know that I did message this person a little bit just to make sure they had some supports in place. Some of the language in there, again, I'm not a psychologist, it sounded a little bit like depression, some of those kinds of things happening, which are really serious. And what I was really impressed by is that they recognized it and acknowledged it. Okay. I'm going to go ahead and let you share your thoughts and answer her question.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah, I agree with you and I appreciate you reaching out to this person and checking in. It shows your thoughtfulness and concern. And I think the holidays are often difficult for adoptees and non-adoptees too, right? So there are all these expectations of [00:11:00] how we should feel or what we should be doing and when that isn't our felt experience, that can even add to more despair. So I would say to this person, again, can you give yourself permission to, not necessarily, she or he says they don't want to withdraw completely, but can they lower their expectations of themselves? Can they give themselves permission to take a few steps back and let this year be different, right? It's already going to be different, likely anyway, but can they let it be different than years past as they're coming fully stepped out of the fog. And that's a difficult process in itself, right? Recognizing these both/ands of adoption, right? That grief and the loss that's inherent in separating a child from their biology and all the other things that come along with it. So I would say be gentle with yourself and give yourself permission to do something different and step away from those [00:12:00] things that are creating pain and anxiety,

Haley Radke: What advice would you give to someone who mentions she doesn't want to plan or lead these specific family traditions? It sounds like a heavy weight. Do you have advice about that? I know it often will fall on the mom or whatever traditional kind of family/gender-norm kind of things. And if that's just too much, how do you ask for help and what are the steps you could do to pass off some of this stuff?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah. Part of the question doesn't talk about this person's support system and does she have family and friends that she could be really honest with. I'm struggling. I've come out of the fog this year and I'm doing some really hard work and I just am not up to leading the holidays this year. And that could change, right? That could change as things settle, but I would encourage this [00:13:00] person to reach out to the support system that she has. And a lot of people, I'll mention this too, don't have a good support system, right? So I'm constantly encouraging people in our community to seek the support of our community. Adoptees On has a great support network around it. Adoptees Connect, other support groups, where they can really find people who are struggling as well, or it doesn't always have to be connecting around struggle. But in this case it sounds like that could be a really helpful support for this person.

Haley Radke: Yeah. And I think, I'm going back to the mom thing when Yeah, everything kind of lands on you. I think there's a lot of things we can do to be like, you know what? We're not doing it this year. And again, you mentioned there's a lot of things we're not doing this year. And so if you are asking the members of your family, like what's really the most important to you? There's some things that we do every year, Lesli, that nobody likes and nobody even [00:14:00] wants to keep doing. But we don't know that until we ask them. Like one of the things that's really changed in my family is holiday baking stuff. I used to make Christmas cookies. I used to do all kinds of things and believe me, the importance of sweet foods for my family has not changed. However, now I've diagnosed celiac and Christmas baking is not the same. It's a lot more challenging baking gluten-free. I'm still learning all that. And so I'm like, you know what? I'm just ordering from the gluten-free bakery and I'm not spending all that time and all that. And what is important to my kids is they love decorating something at some point. So if I buy a store-bought gluten gingerbread house kit, that's fine. They can make it in the basement with their dad and they can have that experience without me.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah. So then I would say to you, so that's exactly it, right? You gave yourself permission to do [00:15:00] something differently and then what do you get from that? Time to do something different, something else, something that fuels you or connects you with someone else. But I think that's exactly it. That giving yourself permission to do something differently.

Haley Radke: The other thing I wanted to say is gift giving will often fall on one family member to gather it up for everyone. And that really could do with a conversation about community support, I think.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Exactly. And it's just funny how we learn these things. So baking was also a huge deal in my family growing up and it's something I really enjoyed and something I still do enjoy, but I'm much more deliberate about what I'm making. It doesn't have to be the 17 different kinds of cookies and where it's not even enjoyable. It's like I would just be on autopilot. Oh, I have to get these done. I have to get these done. Why? For who? I think that another [00:16:00] suggestion is to maybe allow this season to be one where you allow yourself to come off autopilot and really be intentional about the things that you want to do, which is exactly what you're saying, intentional about what you're going to bake, what dishes you're going to make, what traditions you want to continue, which new traditions you want to implement, who you want to see.

Haley Radke: I love that. Come off autopilot. Yes. Yes. And again, the pandemic, I guess we can thank that to really make us make these choices.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Coming off autopilot and really slowing down. I think that the pandemic has definitely caused or created the opportunity to be more intentional and be more deliberate and slow down.

Haley Radke: All right, here's our next question: “I have a very difficult relationship with my adoptive mother. She's elderly and relies solely on me to remain [00:17:00] living independently. Yet I feel I've always been a disappointment to her and don't measure up to the biological daughter she should have had. So I often try to disassociate and perform the home healthcare worker role, but it hurts and I find myself not wanting to be around her. With the holidays coming, she will join just my immediate family for those days, and I'm dreading it. How do I make it through without ruining the holidays for me and my family?” Ooh, that's really heavy.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah, that is really heavy. And it sounds like this person has done a lot of work around recognizing the relationship with her adoptive mom. And she says she feels like she's always been a disappointment, doesn't measure up, and yet it sounds also like there's an obligation to have her mom come be there for the holidays with the family. So I guess my first thought is recognizing [00:18:00] there's going to be a beginning and a middle and an end to the visit, and what can she do during the visit to really take care of herself. Can she also enlist the support of her immediate family members, not her adoptive mom, but the other people in her family that maybe also recognize that she struggles here and how can they also be there to support her? But I would just really stress the importance of taking care of herself during this time.

Haley Radke: And there's another question that came in from Cindy that says, “I find myself sabotaging the holidays. Almost like I don't deserve to be joyful or happy. Why?” Woo. Self-sabotage. That's not a thing we do, is it? I don't-

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Again, if this was someone I was having a long conversation with, I would want to know, is this a theme in other parts of your life? But I think the self-sabotage or sabotaging the holidays, I wonder if that comes [00:19:00] from the core sense of self I think that some adoptees have, or many adoptees have, that just I don't deserve good, or there's something wrong with me. Again, those beliefs that develop from the early separation loss, early separation trauma of adoptees. Many adoptees share the core beliefs of I'm not lovable, I'm not worth it, good things can’t happen to me, it's not safe to trust. And how do those bleed into our lives, right? So if that's what's happening, if there's that core sense of I don't deserve to be happy, or I don't deserve to have fun over the holidays, that would be something to explore further if the sabotage is not just around the holidays, but around just life in general.

Haley Radke: Is there something that you do see adoptees doing or just people in general, around big moments like this? [00:20:00] For someone to recognize like, oh my gosh, you know what, I just always feel terrible at Christmas because everybody wants everything from me. And you go in having that attitude, and then it is awful and you just dread it. And every day sucks and it's all on you. And it's almost like the self-fulfilling prophecy kind of a situation. So how do you unhook that? How do you stop that from happening?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: I think that it's similar. If that's the lens that you're looking at something through, right? That it's just, ugh, the holidays suck, or, everyone wants something from me. If that is the lens that you're looking at the holidays through, Yeah, more likely your focus of attention is going to be on those things that don't go wrong. Are there also things that are more neutral or positive? And can you bring your attention to those things? That can work with the brain in creating new experiences, right? Noticing I have these beliefs, but are there any parts of the holidays that have a more [00:21:00] neutral or positive feel? And can I bring my attention to those? It's really hard for the brain to hold something really negative and something positive or neutral to the same degree at the same time. So it's not about playing the GLAD game, it's just about noticing that our brain has a negativity bias. That doesn't mean that a person is negative. It's just based on our ancestors who had to constantly remember which animals were predators, which berries were poisoned, and they had to have that stick in their mind. And we don't have to do that anymore, but our brains don't quite know that yet, so we have to really work hard to notice that there are also a lot of positive and neutral things in our environment as well and intentionally bring our focus to them.

Haley Radke: Can you do that ahead of time or is that more like an in the moment kind of thing? Like you're, in the day and you're like, oh man, and you notice oh no, I'm being negative. Or is it more a plan ahead of [00:22:00] time?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: I think there are ways to promote resilience in the brain ahead of time that allow for that flexible adaptive ability to notice when that negativity bias is present and then be able to shift attention. It's not about everything is rainbows and unicorns. It's just about working with our brains and so the thing that you could do ahead of time to promote resilience is, I'm a big fan of mindful awareness. Either formal practices or informal practices of intentional focused attention to promote the resilience and that flexible adaptive way of thinking and being.

Haley Radke: So could you plan ahead then either by setting a timer and being like, okay, when that timer goes off, I'm going to make sure to go out for a walk and have a recharge. Or if you're in the moment and you're like, oh I remember Lesli said something about focusing in on the moment and like [00:23:00] enjoying whatever. If you're at the meal and you're enjoying a certain food and you've coached us through some mindful things before. It sounds like there's a couple of different ways we can bring that in by planning ahead and maybe scheduling a couple of reminders or, oh yeah, I remember I listened to that podcast and Lesli said to do this-

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah. I think also going back to the coming off autopilot, so sometimes if I'm expecting that, oh, this holiday, it's going to be this and that. And our brain is just looping in that sort of mindset of looking at it through the lens of this is, ugh, people are going to expect things from me. It's not going to go well. We're too far ahead in the future, planning what might happen. Or thinking about past years, yeah, that happened and so we miss any opportunities in the present where things might be a little bit different. So recognizing when we're too far in the future, lamenting the past, and can we bring our [00:24:00] attention just to something that's maybe neutral, just right in the present. And it doesn't have to be super positive, it can just be, oh, right now I'm really enjoying this cup of coffee, but right now I'm really enjoying my conversation with Haley.

Haley Radke: I like that you said it could also be just neutral. Especially because sometimes we are talking about someone who is really experiencing depression and having a really hard time and sometimes that's what we can summon up in ourselves. Okay. So this one, it's a short question, but it is a big one, and I think we're just hitting the tip of the iceberg on this one. So this person is a late discovery adoptee, and they're asking, “How does a late discovery adoptee even begin to get over the anger of being a kept secret?”

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: That is a very big question. A very important question. [00:25:00] And I would go back to, I guess the first thing I would offer would be to find community. Find other late discovery adoptees that can validate your experience, that can validate and share how they've navigated their experience. There's so many themes for late discovery adoptees that are similar to other people who were adopted, who grew up knowing they were adopted. But there are so many different themes as well. So I would say work with a therapist and also find community. You just did a great interview with Bernie who discovered very late in life that he was adopted and I think that conversation is going to be helpful to a lot of late discovery adoptees.

Haley Radke: Yeah, that was episode 161 and I've had several late discovery adoptees really connect with that. And they're really finding themselves online, building a community of [00:26:00] LDAs who, I don't get it, right? Like as adoptees, we kinda get a piece of it, you and I, Lesli, but there's a whole other realm to that.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah, just the sense of betrayal and trust and yeah it's so multi-layered.

Haley Radke: And then, now this wasn’t asked, but I'm just going to make some inferences that a few late discovery adoptees I follow on Twitter especially have been talking about lately. Leading up to the holidays, and this has come out maybe a year, maybe a few years ago, and there's still this feeling of this kept secret and some anger underneath. And then there's probably still some expectations of connecting with family at the holidays where you may have some resentment of, rightfully so in my opinion, that they have kept this from you. So what do you think about that? Do you still go to those functions or do you still connect with people [00:27:00] out of obligation? I don't know, but I feel like navigating that is really challenging.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah, of course, with awareness comes clarity. As you connect the dots of your story and you start to have more awareness and this clarity, this coming out of the fog, then you can decide. This is going to be uncomfortable, right? I really don't want to go to this gathering. Weighing the pros and the cons and maybe sometimes people will say they'll make the decision, they'll give themselves permission to not attend. But other times people will go knowing, yeah, this is going to be uncomfortable, but I'm doing it intentionally. So I know why I am doing this. I know why I'm going. It is going to be uncomfortable, but I'm doing it off autopilot. I'm doing it. I don't necessarily want to go, but I'm going to do it. I know I may feel A, B, or C, but right now this is a decision [00:28:00] I'm making. So it's not always deciding I'm not going to go because sometimes we do have to do things that are uncomfortable. And I think that's life, but it's doing it in a way like, I know I'm doing this because I feel obligated. It doesn't feel right. I'm still working on this. I'm still a work in progress. But that's what I've decided to do this year. So it's not always not doing something, but it's just doing something with clarity and awareness.

Haley Radke: Alright, the next question I have is: “My question is about extended adoptive family members. I'm just not very close with any of them, and my adoptive, paternal grandma's health has been declining over the last couple of years. How do I explain to my adoptive parents that large family events, they are online right now, but in person when we're not in a Pandemic, the large family events are triggering for me and that I don't have much of a connection with my extended family in general, so I likely [00:29:00] won't be attending any events in the future post pandemic?”

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: So when you read that question, I was thinking that this person wants, almost is asking permission it sounds like. So how do I explain to my adoptive parents that these events are triggering and that I don't have much of a connection and I won't be attending events in the future? I think this person is saying it very clearly right there and this person doesn't need permission, right? This person doesn't need permission from their adoptive parents. And this may be an uncomfortable conversation. They may ask questions why, but this is very clear to me, this is a very clear stance.

Haley Radke: Can we do something a little bit unconventional?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Yeah, of course.

Haley Radke: Okay. So you pretend to be the letter writer and you're telling me, I'll be the matriarch who's not really impressed with what you're going to ask me, because I think the letter writer really [00:30:00] would love some language around this. And isn't the fear that the mom's going to come back and is going to say, What do you mean you're not coming to family events in the future? You can't just make this blanket statement like, you're not going to be coming. What? You can't do that.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: I don't know this family but that's why I said it sounds like this person wants permission that it's okay to say this to his or her adoptive family. And I'm saying of course it is. And again, we're talking about that setting a boundary isn't necessarily going to be comfortable, but doing something different sometimes means we have to sit with that discomfort. So there might not be an easier way to say this. And I think also what just came to my mind is oftentimes when we say things to, let's just say our adoptive family or our birth family, and we don't get the feedback or the validation [00:31:00] that we're hoping for, we think that we've said it wrong or we haven't said it clearly, or we need to say it differently. So it's because we're not getting that validation like, oh, okay, that makes sense. I understand that you feel you don't have much of a connection with your extended family, so that makes sense that you wouldn't want to continue. That would be soothing and reassuring, right? That we said this the right way? But when we don't get it, I think it's a mistake to believe that we need to say it a different way or we aren't being clear. That's something I hear so often. I must not have said it right, I must not have explained it right, or I need to figure out a different way to say it. And I don't think it's the message or the messenger. I just think that it's the person who's receiving the message doesn't want to hear that.

Haley Radke: So what would you say then in that moment? You've expressed your feelings, they are not having it, and then you [00:32:00] say, I appreciate that's how you feel. This is the decision I've made or what is the language? If we were role playing, what would you say to that? Just to stand firm and not go down some argument rabbit trail, but-

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: And again, I think that there's so much we don't know in terms of the family dynamic, but I think, I'm sorry you feel that way. I'm sorry that you feel that way, which is not an apology, by the way. It's, I'm sorry you feel that way, but this is the decision I've made. This is what is going to work for me moving forward. I can't keep going along with the expectations that don't feel right for me.

Haley Radke: Okay, that's good.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Again, I'm making this sound really easy and, believe me, I wholeheartedly know these conversations are really difficult.

Haley Radke: And then at some point during those, I'm assuming lots of these are happening by phone or I don't know, God forbid, another zoom [00:33:00] call, but you don't have to stay in the conversation. You've expressed yourself and especially if there's disrespectful things coming back or things that really are hurtful for you, you can be like, you know what, I'm all done now. You don't have to stay and keep having the fight when you've expressed what you need to. And I think there's a lot of fear in hanging up or saying, okay, I'm all done talking about this, but you are worth not being abused.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: And I always tell people there's no good information that's exchanged when people are at a 7, 8, 9, or 10. When they've flipped their lid, no good or positive information is going to be exchanged then. So yes, of course it's okay to say, I've said what I need to say and I'm going to go outside now, or I'm going to hang up now. And that's taking care of yourself. None of what we're talking about is easy or seamless or one size fits [00:34:00] all, but I think that the main theme is recognizing the places where adoptees, because of their early trauma, have just gone along and been conditioned to go along, to not create waves. And again, where there is that awareness of that tendency or that theme and the clarity around that and then being able to try things differently so that they're creating a different future for themselves.

Haley Radke: Well said. I really keep thinking about what you said, “With awareness comes clarity. The question to ask ourselves is, is that still working for you?” All of those things I think, answer a lot of the questions. And maybe you have some questions for Lesli, and they weren't necessarily represented here, but I think with some of the advice that she's given, you can really drill down to those questions and is that still working for you? And what do you want your holiday season to look like? I think it's okay for you to spend 10 minutes. It doesn't have to be [00:35:00] like this whole big thing and get out your journal. Just 10 minutes. What do I want to do this year? And then implement as you can during the pandemic year. Thank you so much for your wisdom, Lesli. I really appreciate it. And I know there's a lot of people going through challenging times in general and especially in our community right now. You have some really cool things coming up. So do you want to share with us a little bit about where we can connect with you and this really neat thing I'm taking part in starting in January?

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: Sure. And I just want to thank you for your wisdom and for your wonderful support and what you bring to our community. I think I've told you this before, but so many of my clients, the first thing they say is, oh, I heard you on Adoptees On, and Haley is so amazing and I've listened. I have someone I know that has listened to every single [00:36:00] podcast, and more than once, she's like on round three, which I think just speaks to what you're doing for our community. And I'm so grateful for you. And I always like talking to you. So I'm so excited that you're going to be part of, during the pandemic I was trying to think of ways that I could connect with more people than just one-on-one, and what I created was a virtual healing course for adults who are adopted, and it's called Come Out of the Fog: Rewiring Your Brain for Resilience and Joy. And it's a six week virtual course that is a combination of self-study with opportunities to meet on a weekly live Zoom call, and also connect in a private online, not Facebook, but a private online community. And I launched the first course in September and it was just a really incredible experience for me to see, primarily the community that was [00:37:00] formed. So that's a passion project for me right now. And our next course will begin Monday, January 18th, 2021. And you can find that information on my website, which is www.askadoption.com. So that's a great way to connect with me. Instagram: @askadoption and Facebook: Ask Adoption and Twitter: LesliAJohnson.

Haley Radke: Wonderful. I look forward to connecting there in January and thank you so much, Lesli. I get chill bumps sometimes when I talk to you because I'm like, wow, that is so smart. I’ve got to remember that forever.

Lesli A. Johnson, MFT: You don't have to remember it forever. You can just reach out.

Haley Radke: Perfect. Perfect. Thank you.

All right my friend. This is our very last episode for 2020. I want to thank you for [00:38:00] listening to adoptee voices along with me. It is a pleasure to do the show for you. I'm so honored that you want to hang out with me every Friday morning or whenever you're listening. I know I always say, Let's talk again next Friday, but I know you're listening on different days. But I have so many of you that do choose to hang out with me Friday morning. It's part of your routine and I'm so grateful for that. I want to let you know we are back with brand new episodes starting January 22nd, so we'll have about a month break and I am just honored that I get to do that and spend that time with my family. But in the meantime, if you are feeling like you might need a little more holiday support, I would encourage you to go and find the other couple of episodes I did with Lesli around the holidays. We have episode 126, and all the way back, you're gonna scroll back a long way to find episode 14, and both of those have some really helpful [00:39:00] tips for navigating the holidays. I especially love Episode 14, she gives us some very practical strategies of ways to take care of ourselves during some stressful situations, and so I'd really recommend that you check that out.

Okay. I want to let you know a couple ways you can continue to keep in touch with me. I am active in the Adoptees On Facebook group, which is accessible for Patreon supporters. So if you go to adopteeson.com/partner, there are details of which level gets the Off Script podcast and then the Facebook group and then a call with me. There's a bunch of different things you can access so you can check that out at adopteeson.com/partner. And I am on social media sometimes, and so if you look for me @Haley Radke or @adopteeson, you can find me there. Also, if you're holiday shopping, you can go to adopteeson.com/shop and find Adoptees On [00:40:00] merch, which is brand new and I'm really excited about it and proud of it. And I used a really amazing adoptee artist to make our winter graphic which has this beautiful bird on it, and I'm really pleased with how that turned out. So that's what I'll be drinking my coffee out of this holiday season. I again want to extend my thanks to all of you who have supported the show in many ways, whether it is by finances or by literally just telling one other person about the podcast. I appreciate that so much. It's a free way to help share the show. And if you want to give me a holiday gift this year, I would love it if you would leave a review for me in Apple Podcasts or wherever you like to listen. You can even leave a review for me on my Facebook page if that is helpful for you. That just helps other people find the show and yeah, it's a gift to me to read your words. I read all of them, nice or not. I read all of them and I appreciate so much your kind words. [00:41:00] Alright, so 2020 is a wrap. Thank you so much for connecting with me, listening to me, listening to my guests. I’m just honored to come into your ears and hang out with you. Thanks so much for listening. Let's talk again soon.

165 [DNA] The Search Maven - Janet Weinreich-Keall

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/165


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This show is listener supported. You can join us and help our show grow to support more adoptees by going to adopteeson.com/partner.

You're listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 165, The Search Maven. I'm your host, Haley Radke. I am so glad to share this interview with you today. My guest shared her notes with me ahead of time, and I asked, are you sure you wanna share this on my show? It's a gold mine of information. She could teach an entire class on this. Janet Weinreich-Keall is back and when you hear her story, you'll know exactly why she is a pro at searching. Janet walks us through how we should prepare to search. Then we dive into what DNA testing looks like and how far the tech has come, making it easy and accessible for us to do our own searches. [00:01:00] We also talk about the ramifications of having your DNA in a database. Is your information really kept private? We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always, links to everything we'll be talking about today are on the website, adopteeson.com. Let's listen in.

I'm so pleased to welcome back to Adoptees On, Janet Weinreich-Keall. Hi Janet.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Hi Haley. How are you?

Haley Radke: I'm doing well. I'm so thrilled that you're back and we'll talk a little bit more about your story, I'm sure, throughout. But for those listeners who maybe haven't heard your two episodes that you were on the show, would you give us a little taste of your story please?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: My name is Janet, and I was abandoned shortly after my birth on a doorstep in Prince Rupert, BC, in the fall of 1977. I began my search at the age of 18. Honestly, I would have to say it would be like any naive young [00:02:00] girl. I thought, okay, I'm doing traditional media, newspapers, radio, tv. Oh, she's gonna come forward. No problem. Clearly I had a lot to learn about my life. In the end, I uncovered that my biological mother is, and again, it's as far as I know today, the world's largest serial abandoner. I am one of five babies abandoned. Now, however, there might be an additional one, and I'm still currently searching for another possible half sibling. A great part of my search though, is that I have found my biological father. He lives down the street from me, and we're in year three of our reunion.

Haley Radke: And Emil was a guest on the show with you-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes. He was.

Haley Radke: That was such a really special conversation.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah. He, I would have to say he's quite a remarkable man. And my father, although he is quite understated, he has no problem, I would have to say, really telling it how it is. He's just got an [00:03:00] amazing, honest quality, very authentic. So that's certainly helped our reunion, a great deal.

Haley Radke: Absolutely. I was honored that I got the chance to speak to him for even such a short time. So it is clear that Janet is, I've dubbed you a search maven, okay. Because she tracked down so much information, and when you talk about a search, when you're thinking of a foundling who has literally no information, Janet has done it all. And so she has been so generous to offer us what she's learned to date. And so we're gonna talk about search, and especially through using DNA testing. And I'm really excited to learn from you because I've admitted this before to you and to others. I've never done DNA testing. I've never spit in a tube.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah. Yeah. And [00:04:00] the reality is even though I had searched for 21 years, and most of that was through traditional searching, which I have to say, in the end, piecing everything together, put probably a good 70% of my story together. The other 30% was by DNA, which one would argue would be also the largest piece, my biological mother, who abandoned me, yeah.

Haley Radke: You are saying that you got all of these different pieces of information. And then when you got DNA, was it confirming to you or were you putting those pieces both together? Like, okay, I have this piece of DNA and information and now, okay, I think then this leads me here.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: So through traditional searching which really was radio, TV, newspaper, I actually had already found two half siblings who were abandoned, one before me and [00:05:00] one right after me. And I'll go into how I confirmed those relationships. It was actually outside of a commercial DNA test. It was through private testing and then I would honestly say the biggest moment was being matched with a first cousin on a commercial DNA product. And then from there, that led me to find my biological mother. Yeah.

Haley Radke: Incredible. It's incredible to me how far the technology has come and accessibility. Okay, so let's start there. DNA tests. I already know there's more than just one.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes. Now I have to tell you just before our call today, because there's just so many popping up, there are clearly three major players. But I went on Amazon this morning and I just typed in DNA kit. There's DNA kits for dogs. There's DNA kits for everything. And quite honestly, I just very quickly counted about 40 that you can just buy [00:06:00] and figure out oh, hey, am I? And again, I don't recommend these, I think you need to get proper physician care, but it's everything from diabetes to cancer markers to, again, finding family or celiac. It's certainly a buyer beware, but for finding a family, there are three major players, and I think most people know them: 23andMe, Ancestry, and Family Tree DNA. Now, the growth of commercial DNA products, it's been explosive. I've been tracking numbers for years. I've been so intrigued by it all. For example, 23andMe in 2015 only had 900,000 registered kits. Today they have 10 million. So just do the math on that in five years. So Ancestry in 2015 had 2.2 million. Today they have 18 million. Now, Family Tree DNA, they had 700,000 and they have currently over 1 million. [00:07:00] So those are the three top: Family Tree DNA, Ancestry, 23andMe. Now, one of the biggest things that I always want people to really understand is that these are all private companies. So what are they in the business of? Profiting, right? So Ancestry to date has actually earned over 1 billion in revenue. Now, again you're gonna hear me say a lot of great things and then a lot of other things that might not sound so great, because yes, they do find family, but the biggest piece is you have to consider their messaging and how they market. Really interesting.

I read an article a few years ago written by Nicole Karlis, it’s on salon.com, and she was really diving into the correlation of loneliness and the uptick of these DNA kit purchases. All of a sudden she noticed that, wow, within these few years, there's all these people buying DNA kits. The interesting piece is really what this one psychologist states is she says that the rise in [00:08:00] popularity of genetic testing sites is a reflection of our collective sense of loneliness. As a society, our dependence on technology has deeply affected the quality of our relationships. Now, that's really ironic because really it's a way to combat loneliness, but then people are turning to technology that's the most major source of distress in the first place. But again, if you think of how we use technology in our lives: How people date, right? How people find family, how people order groceries. It's all technology. So clearly there are so many reasons why people are going to these three top major DNA sites and purchasing.

Haley Radke: And at the time we're recording this, we're almost a year into having this worldwide pandemic-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I know, I know-

Haley Radke: Which has increased our loneliness. So, yikes. Those numbers might skyrocket-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And zoom. Have you ever [00:09:00] heard of that word so much in your life? Oh my goodness.

Haley Radke: Yikes. Yikes. Yikes.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: But I always say to any person who's thinking about doing DNA kits, there's a lot of points that I like to cover with them. But one of the biggest pieces that I always like to say to them is, look at their marketing. And again, it's no different than assessing how other companies market their product, but what is it all about? When you look at their commercials, when you look at their channels, everything is happy, happy, joy, joy. And everybody looks so healthy and glowing and everybody's hugging. They are not sharing the real stories. Interesting to note, and I'm not gonna say which one, but I had gotten quite deep into one of these top 3 DNA companies on their marketing side. They wanted to share my story and have me be an ambassador and whatever. In the end, they went, oh, wait a minute, huh? We can't say that. Oh, wait a minute. [00:10:00] We can't say serial abandonment. Oh, wait a minute. We can't say that your mother wasn't well and this and that, and blah, blah, blah. Yeah. I just don't think we can do your story. And of course I'm thinking, but wait a minute it's not that I'm even showing up going, woe is me. I've done my work. I think I'm a very healthy, stable individual. But yes, I will certainly tell the good story that yes, if you want to find your family, you might find everything and anything. So certainly buyer beware, they have not shared that message, I feel, to date with any person's story in an accurate way. Simply said, it's a Pandora's box. So the minute you spit in that tube, you are responsible for uncovering family secrets, for hidden infidelities. You name it, you just don't know what you're going to find.

Haley Radke: And we're talking as adopted people. There's all these new [00:11:00] terms coming up because of those secrets being revealed. You get your kit for Christmas and you spit and then you find out you're a late discovery adoptee. Or not parented expected. So there's lots of people finding out the dad they grew up with their whole life is not their biological dad-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Or again, even donor conceived. So many of those are lies.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And all of a sudden, say Joe goes on there and he’s like what? I've got 30 half siblings. Hey, mom?

Haley Radke: Yeah. Talk about a Pandora's box. You're so right.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: It really is.

Haley Radke: Yeah. Okay. So I know you've talked to a lot of people before they start the search. Is there anything else that you want to make sure people know before we get into the nitty gritty of what it actually looks like?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: No, I don't think so, because I think I've got it all covered in my notes-

Haley Radke: All right, all right-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I'm organized.

Haley Radke: I know you are. You have to be in a search like yours.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And that's the whole thing. I feel like what I do in terms of a [00:12:00] profession, I'm already an organizer, but I also feel like when I was sitting down to put this out, on this talk with you today and to share with all the listeners, I'm like, oh my goodness. Like I can't leave that out. Oh. But then I can't leave that out. And it's just, I get very excited about this topic. So yeah-

Haley Radke: All right. Well, teach us. Teach us.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes. So the biggest thing that I always say to people, I get phone calls from people and I also help people in their searches. I'm very selective on who I help for lots of different reasons. The biggest thing I always say to people is, have you assessed your life? And people go to me, what does that mean? And I actually really mean it. I'm like, but are you ready? Are you in the throes of a divorce? Is this some kind of emotional response? Do you have an infant? Did you just move or are you moving? Do you have a new job? Like all those big life moments, are you getting married in two months? But you just have to know who your people are. Like it's just not the right timing because again, you do not know what you're going to find. [00:13:00] For some people, I have seen what they have found to be very short and sweet, and it's very simple, and for the most part it's just neutral or harmonious. And at the same time, those people may have done a lot of psychological work on themselves with their therapists, but then I've seen other people where all of a sudden these secrets that lay dormant for 30 years come to the surface. And then how does that impact these new families? So there's just so much that comes with it. Not only that, but if you are the person that is searching, I find that then you are the person that does all the work. You are the person that is making the phone calls and archiving, or creating a family tree for the first time ever. There's just so much data coming at you. Make sure you are in the right time of your life that you can actually do it well. So then if you have decided that, yes, I am. I always say this, make sure that you get [00:14:00] therapy before you spit in the tube. I always say it, and I have to say to you, in my family and community, most do not do it at all. They actually say, no, I'm good. I'm strong. And then about three months later they have a full mental breakdown. So it's just, it's incredibly important to do that. Unfortunately, the top DNA companies don't actually encourage that. Again, with that one company I had talked to years ago, I did say that to them. I said, “Why do you not provide some type of psychological guidance or support? You know this is what people are finding. Anything from a how-to or recommended this or anything.” And their response to me was very simple, “We are not in that business.” And I thought, really? Is this candid camera? Who's looking? I honestly was so shocked, right? But again, I come off as this, oh, troubled adoptee that kind of knows it all or whatever, and I'm [00:15:00] thinking, no. You need necessary resources because this is what you are doing to people in society. But hey, I tell you this, if someone listens to this in five years, it might be very different. So-

Haley Radke: What? Corporations taking social responsibility?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I know.

Haley Radke: Come on Janet. That seems outrageous.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Darn it. Darn it. No. Silly me. So once you have done all that work, you've done your therapy, you've got a good therapist behind you as well, you know you're ready in life. The process of getting the kit is super simple. You go online, you pay with your credit card, you create a user account, you wait for it to arrive. Honestly, it's gross. You spit all up in the tube, it can be a little messy, and then you send it back in the mail. Now, depending on the company, they turn results around anywhere from probably three to five weeks. And then essentially you get an email that says, yeah, your results are ready. Now, one thing I also always suggest is if you are [00:16:00] serious about searching, I always say, cast your net wide. Don't just buy 23andMe. Don't just buy Ancestry. Buy the top three because just trust me. You'll regret it when you get your 23andMe and you're like, huh, I've got 300 sixth cousins. Fantastic. I'll get into that later too, but I'm telling you, there's not a whole lot you can do with that. So then what I find people doing is going, oh geez, I regret I've wasted all this time and now I'm gonna buy Ancestry and now I'm gonna buy Family Tree. I will say as time goes on the kits do get more and more affordable, but there are also other societies out there that give them away for free. I know that I have some biological family that got theirs for free because they're in the low income bracket. So there's lots of different options out there.

Now, in addition to finding family, there are DNA kits out there too that talk about health issues and give you health reports. [00:17:00] I kind of wanted to share a story. Now, me being a foundling, and again, I had searched for so long. It was in 2014, through some connections with work, I went ahead and I got my entire genome sequenced through a private firm. Now, to give you an idea how fast science has also moved forward, that test back in the day was about three thousand dollars. Today, I think they're about 500. Now, really, essentially, my biggest question, and I hate for this to sound so dark, was I'm looking at myself going, I'm probably never gonna find family. It just seemed so impossible at the time, and I'm in a family and I know nothing about my life. And Haley, I really wanted to know how will I die? I know that sounds… Okay, I know, but you have to understand and this isn't in an obsessive way at all. But I had already done so much work [00:18:00] really trying to understand where I came from and who I was. And I had been in therapy since I was 15 and here I am, looking at my children going, wait a minute, I feel so responsible. What if I have cancer markers or what if I have this or that? Is there something I can do today that can stop that? So interesting. I'll share with you two pieces that it came back with. So in one of the tests it showed a dopamine d2 receptor gene. And so essentially what it showed in my results is I was very unlikely to develop unhealthy eating or addictive behaviors. So that was one. And then another one, which I actually found really interesting is they tested a specific gene that was found in a 2010 study of Rwanden genocide survivors. So this gene type is rs4680. Essentially what it's [00:19:00] associated with is a person that can go through trauma, PTSD, see the most horrible things ever in the world, but almost quickly, and I don't want to say automatically, because that sounds a little psychotic, but can quickly come to a very quick resolve, can quickly come to a very fast kind of repair and overall balanced personality in the end. And the reason why they know that is they went back to this one village that saw the worst of the worst, and they all have this gene. I have the exact same gene. So then when I look at myself, my resiliency within my story, how I handled it, the way that I have made certain decisions to do therapy and to try to be a very healthy person, I just go, wow. Interesting. Now, I'll tell you, I “found out” how I will die. Do you wanna know? I know.

Haley Radke: Do you [00:20:00] wanna tell us?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I'm open. I really am. Because again, I'm going to get into this. You don't just spit in a tube and think that nobody's gonna have access to your private data. Which by the way, I'm gonna argue isn't all that private. Okay, so I'm gonna go for it. So it showed me that I will likely die of late onset heart disease. Now, interesting, as I look at my maternal family, again, most of them who have died, for the most part, the last three generations in Canada, none of them live past 60 because of everything from alcoholism, smoking, stress, severe mental health issues. But then you look at my father's side, they're all very healthy, slim, trim, whatnot, late onset heart disease. So it was very interesting. And knowing my biological father, Emil, I told him that and he's but that's true. And I'm like, yes-

Haley Radke: That's interesting. And I know that for people who are like, I don't wanna know that [00:21:00] information, those are things you can choose to look at if you've added that on but you don't have to.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I will say, when I did that specific test, I actually received genetic counseling, which I will argue again, companies like 23andMe that give those health reports, they do not do that. So in effect, the physician that actually, and it was a blood test, the one that I did in 2014, which was private versus the one with 23andMe, which was spit. But I had to go through two appointments because essentially what the doctor said to me is, look, we are going to give you information, and we do not all of a sudden want you to be like, oh my gosh, that's it. I'm changing my entire family's diet and I'm changing this and I'm quitting this job and I'm divorcing my husband, or whatever it could be because they see it as they're playing God. So they really had to go through it with me. And from what I understood [00:22:00] is they would not give that type of test to any person that has any kind of anxiety or say depression or knows that they're prone to it or struggles with any of that kind of stuff. Any kind of glimpse of a person who just can't handle that kind of information because they just don't wanna play God and ruin lives. So I passed the test. And I found out how I would likely die even before I found family. And I also don't recommend it for everybody but again, Haley, put yourself in my shoes. You're a foundling, you know absolutely nothing. And at that moment in 2014, I really, I just thought hey, this is probably how it's going to just be. Again, even though I was searching, right? But I just thought, what are the chances of finding answers?

So now getting on with the 23andMe stuff, I pulled out some sort of funny things. So 23andMe has a few different tasks that [00:23:00] people will see on their website. You can only do, for example, if you just wanna match with family, you can just pay for that. That is the cheapest kit out there. And then they've got a few different levels of the health and wellness reports that they do provide. So for myself, of course I've got that. So I looked at it today because they're always changing it. So again, this is the one thing I really have to stress to people is that everything's always being recalibrated. And I'll certainly speak on this with ethnicity as well. So I went on there this morning and I'm like, okay, what do they say about me? I'll also say, when you look under the fine print of all of these companies, there's a key word that they always put in there because they have to, and it's novelty. So it's fun. This is lighthearted. But then now, of course, if you just go on 23andMe, you certainly say that they are putting a fair bit of time and a fair bit of medicine, science really, [00:24:00] into their health reports. So they’re certainly amping it up. And I would also estimate that within a decade, maybe, yeah, it's true, you will probably get the same kind of test that I did, and you can go, wow, I'm gonna die of this, or wow of this. But again, it's one of these pieces where it's like, who's playing God here and who is really ready and able to live with that kind of information, right? So on mine, I went on there on the traits, and so it showed me this morning that I have a 77% chance that I've never had dandruff. Oh yeah. Oh yeah, Haley, we're getting really personal, and I will tell you that is true. I've never had that. Okay. Then it says, I have a 52% chance of having blue eyes. Now you know me, my eyes are blue. They are like glowing blue. So it's okay, yes, they got it. Yeah. Then it went on to say, I have a 39% of very fair skin. Yes, I am so [00:25:00] fair. You can see blue in my arms. I'm that fair.

Haley Radke: I probably have the same result for you there.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Oh, I tell you. So that's true. And then actually one of the funniest ones that they have on there: I have a 67% chance of not having a unibrow. Woo. Woo.

Haley Radke: That's lucky.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I know. Woohoo. Thanks mom and dad. Now I'll get into the stuff that's not so accurate. It says that I am likely to wake up at 7:58 AM. I do not know how they come to 7:58 AM. Why not 7:34? Why not 8:05? Haley, I am not a morning person. Okay. I am not likely to wake up at 7:58 AM. It also says that I am more than likely to experience motion sickness. No way. Put me on a rollercoaster. Get me in a car for 12 hours. I just love it. It's fantastic.

Haley Radke: Okay, huh?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: [00:26:00] Then it also tells me that I prefer salty food. No. I love my sweets. Actually, I have a bag of candy in front of me right now, so you have to go, okay, that's interesting and okay, that's not really right. They're just estimating. So now I'll get back to the family matchings. You've got your DNA sent in and then you wait. Some people get fairly good results right away, which I would have to say would be a first cousin, a second cousin. Third cousins aren't so great, but you can still work with that. That'll certainly require more work in the family tree. And so you will be related to hundreds of people and they will be fifth cousins, sixth cousins. So again, I logged in this morning to Ancestry and it showed me I have 288 4th-6th cousins on there. To be really blunt, I just wouldn't even touch those in a search. It's just far too much. So [00:27:00] to give you an idea, a sixth cousin, that's a person who shares my great, great, great, great, great grandparent with me. So to then build up a tree working that way up, it's just too arduous. Like you just really can't do it. Now, sure, fine, technically of course you can, but then you are relying on a lot of other people. You are relying on hoping that their records are correct and on it goes, right?

Haley Radke: So what's the magic if you have this one it's easy and-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: I would say the first cousin and the second cousin are really okay. Of course, can you get on there and be matched with a parent or a half sibling or a full sibling? Yes you can, but for the most part I find that doesn't really work that way. It's more in the cousin realm. At least that's what I've seen. And again, it says that too. The biggest piece that you want to look at is you want to look at the percentage of DNA [00:28:00] shared. And so I'll get into that as well. And what you need to do with that, with every passing year. Again, these companies are all about profit and further developing their product. So it's always getting easier and easier to use their site. I said to you earlier, a fifth grader could do it and I actually mean it. I really do. It really isn't that complicated. So another piece that I want to speak of as well is once you have your data done in Ancestry, 23andMe, and Family Tree, also upload it to a company called GEDMatch. Now GEDMatch is a US-based service company and they compare DNA data files all across the different testing companies. So you might have heard of them. They were part of solving the Golden State Killer case in California. So essentially that database was used by law enforcement [00:29:00] and they did solve a very serious case on GEDMatch. They have over about 1.4 million DNA profiles. I'm gonna get into my story a little bit just because it gives a very simple example of why people go on DNA sites and why others do. So for myself, I was on two years on one of those sites and I just waited. I had no good matches, like nothing. I was sitting in like the fourth to sixth realm and it's are you kidding me? And especially for a foundling too. Here I am, even if I wanted to try knocking on the door, hey, does anybody know about an abandoned baby? Guess what? People who have women like my mother or any woman that abandons her baby, they don't know. No one in their family knows. It is a secret they take to their grave, right? So I already had known that. So finally, I waited two years and I got a first cousin [00:30:00] maternal match. Haley, that was gold, okay? Now, the reason why she was on there is because she had a boyfriend at the time who was very close with his family, and he was just like, I can't believe you don't know your family. She was actually somewhat ambivalent. It's not that she didn't want to find family, but she was like, yeah, okay, sure. No big deal. So a very different personality from someone like me who again, had been looking, at that time, for 21 years and oh my gosh, I just can't believe it. Now, if she didn't take that test, I would've been matched with a second cousin on my dad's side around the spring of 2018. He took the test because he and his wife saw some special deal. I don't know if it was like a two for one. She wanted confirmation on her bio father. He was curious about health information, but he also wanted to know more information on his ethnicity in connection to the Faroe Islands. [00:31:00] Because on my dad's side, I'm Faroese-Danish and Norwegian. So for him it was health, it was ethnicity. Her, it was, hey, I wanna know more about my dad. For my first cousin it was, why not? And again, I hear all these stories all the time. Some people just do it because they're sitting on the couch and they're like, hey, that looks like fun. And they press all their information in and the DNA kit comes and they go, hey, why not? I don't know. But the main thing that you always have to remember is when you are matched with a person, it will show you on there, like first cousin, it always says estimated. And I cannot stress that enough. And this is really where I say to people, this is where you have to do your own work. What I see quite often and people are not wrong to do it because they look at a word, but they take out “estimated". I don't know why, maybe because they get so excited and they wanna belong to a family and oh yes, this is who you are. But people do get attached to [00:32:00] the estimated labels, as in yes, you had estimated first cousin, estimated sibling, and in the end that causes so much anxiety and distress because often actually it's wrong. So for example, again, this morning-

Haley Radke: Totally wrong.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Totally wrong. Yeah. For example, in Ancestry I logged in this morning, it shows that a confirmed half sibling of mine is a first cousin, and I can go on for hours and hours on exactly how I know: the private DNA test, the family tree, the this and the that. I can do that, but it's wrong. However, on 23andMe, it shows we are in fact half siblings. So again, it's definitely, it's a wild west. It's buyer beware, 23andMe analyzes their data very differently than Ancestry. And also they're only leaning that against the data pools that they currently have. So I would actually estimate again, in five years, if I log into Ancestry, it wouldn't [00:33:00] show that my half sibling is a first cousin. It would show she's a half sibling. So again, buyer beware. Really look at the words they're saying. They're saying estimated.

Haley Radke: And just as you're describing these things, it's amazing to me that it could be literally any day, you can log in and there's a new person who's tested because they got it as a birthday gift or whatever, right? Those new matches could come anytime.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Anytime. So that's the other piece. They've got a lot of different ways in how you want to be informed. Their systems are very intuitive and easy. You can click on there that you want to be private. You can click off and say, nope, this isn't my time right now in my life. You can click on there and say, I want to be emailed every single notification known to man. Wonderful. You can click on hey, I only wanna know when I get a match. You can click on, hey, I want no notifications. And again, I will log on when I'm ready and present and able. So there's so many ways that you [00:34:00] can receive the information. And again, I really say to people, if you do your work in advance, you know what you want out of this experience. So incredibly key. One of the pieces that people ask about a fair bit is, okay, great, so I've spent a hundred bucks here on Ancestry and I spent this money here, there, and whatever. Oh, and it's an estimated relationship. I really caution people and just say, okay, just take a step for a moment and say, do I need further relationship testing? So what I'm actually seeing in families is a little bit more of a savvy reaction to these estimated relationships, and they want more proof. Instantly, people are going into reunion with doubt where families are going, yeah, but you know now, sure, fine. That's for the families to discern the information and maybe the adoptee to say, hey, I have this paperwork too, or this or that. But for a family, [00:35:00] we really get into this issue because in foundling cases, there's no biological mothers that really admit what they do. I mean, are you kidding me? They're outed to their entire family, maybe even their current husband has no idea that they've done it. Everything in their family has shifted. They're not going to admit they've done it. Now what I have done myself personally, because again, I like my facts and I like my organization and I don't like estimated. So what I did even before I got my first cousin, wonderful match on 23andMe, is I had to confirm those relationships anyway because I found them through traditional media, through newspapers, through radio. And so I went through a private sibling-ship test that also does private paternity tests. And sure enough, those came back with absolute accuracy, without a doubt.

Haley Radke: So just to pause there, so the private [00:36:00] test, I'm sure there's lots of companies that do that too.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes.

Haley Radke: That means they're not uploading it to a database and-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: They're not.

Haley Radke: It's private. Just for you guys. Yeah. Okay.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah. It's only between the parties who sign the documentation. They're also more money as well, so you have to really be sure that hey, at, say, $300 a pop for a sibling-ship test, and for $700 for a legal paternity test. It's hey, you really have your ducks in the row. And this is just to fully confirm, so I did this with my biological father. He's very much of the same mind. I am too. Although I will say that he did say, Janet, I know you're my daughter. And of course I'm like, yes, I know, but I need this. You have to realize I've lived my whole life without it. I don't know what to trust. I don't know who to trust. Sure enough, it came back 99.999% he's my biological father. Now again, with that, [00:37:00] I had to go into a nurse, like a sort of a physician's office. They checked my ID, they did the same with my dad, so that it is actually court admissible. Not that's what I was looking for, but people should educate themselves to know that, hey, is everybody around me? Are all the parties comfortable with an estimated relationship, or do we really have to go further and spend the money and get it officially done right and signed off. Now in regards to understanding your results, you're gonna get a whole breakdown of everybody and they always show who you're closest related to and all they're showing is a percentage of DNA shared. That's just how they analyze your relationships, right? Now, I will also say this in recommended resources, but there is one place that I go to. It is issog.org, and it [00:38:00] is a wealth of information on there. In fact, every time when I'm searching for others as well, they've got a great chart that breaks down all of the range of DNA shared within your family members. So it's super visual, super easy to understand. Really simple to decipher. All right. Is this person really a first cousin? It just gives you a better idea of where you're going with that specific person. From that point, it really is, hey, honestly, the minute you get a good match, you'll be jumping up and down at your kitchen table. You'll be shouting it outside your window. People will think, what in the world is wrong with this person? But it's just human nature, especially for anybody who has searched for a long time.

Haley Radke: Yeah,

Janet Weinreich-Keall: But this is what I always say to everybody. Pause. Just collect your thoughts. You do not have to respond right away. I always ask, what is [00:39:00] your game plan? Have you done your work? And I mean psychologically? Do you have a therapist? Do you really understand what you want out of this experience? And what are your expectations? And I believe that is so key to say because the minute you press send on a message, because you can message people within the 23andMe platform, and say with Ancestry and Family Tree, the minute you press send, you could get a response in minutes or it could take months. You've gotta be prepared,

Haley Radke: Right? Because you said you can set up all your notifications, so if someone else has set it so-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah-

Haley Radke: Don't send me anything. It might be six months before they're like, oh, I wonder if I have any new matches.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And that's the other thing is there's a lot of people on there who aren't checking all the time. One of the things I always recommend to everybody, and again, I do not believe this is being untoward or real sleuthy or slimy, but here's the thing, [00:40:00] if that person has their name as their username, take that name, screenshot it. Screenshot everything you can find. Some people have their family trees open. Screenshot them, then research them to the nth degree. Screenshot their Facebook friends, screenshot just anything you can find on them. Online obituaries are also really great to get information. Before I actually contacted my biological father, I already had a full family tree done. It really is so simple. The amount of data that people share in today's world is astonishing. And I say you do all of that work before you send the message, because unfortunately, not everybody who's on the site is searching or wants to be found. Some people are on there because, hey, I just wanna know what my ethnicity is. Or, hey, I've always wondered if [00:41:00] I can grow a unibrow. I don't know Haley. It's just like whatever people go on there for, it's not necessarily for the reasons that we are.

Haley Radke: Yes.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And what I have found unfortunately is that the older generations will get spooked, scared off, and they will then set their profile to private and you can never contact them again. So it's really important to go, okay, I've got the name. Screenshot, screenshot. Just anything you can find, save it, and then back up your savings. Like really be vigilant and organized. So then if all of a sudden you go in the next day and you go, oh, that person's gone. You know what you do? You find somebody in the younger generation. You message them through Facebook. You have a lot of different ways of contacting people. Don't just sit in the land of DNA. You do not have to find people just through that portal. If their name is put out there, you can find people. I guarantee you.

Haley Radke: Wow. I [00:42:00] think that's really good advice. Really good. I wonder how many people have had the match, sent a message, and then lost that information?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: So much. Absolutely. Incredibly. Yeah it's just so much. But again, I hate to say it, if you are not organized, if you don't have a system, but again, think of why people don't have a system, Haley, and I really believe this. It's because they haven't done the pre-work. They haven't done the work that they needed to do. For myself as a foundling, I put myself into therapy at 15. I understood implicitly how it impacted me and changed me as a human being, and essentially I did not want to grow up and to not have a good life and have that hinder me. I can tell you the amount of foundlings, or rather the majority of foundlings, they are in addiction, poverty, three, four [00:43:00] marriages, bankruptcy, no career. It just goes on and on. They're recreating almost what happened to them. Children up the yin yang, even, almost abandoning their own children with poor relationships. And they're not going to be organized in a DNA search if you bring so much emotion that's just oozing, it's just oozing.

Haley Radke: It's almost like what I'm hearing you say is we have to mentally prepare and make sure we're ready before we start searching. But then when you're searching, you're like, okay, now I'm putting my Sherlock Holmes hat on. I'm not Haley the adoptee looking for answers. I'm Sherlock and everything you are going to do is detective work. We're not bringing emotion into it, whatever. And then when you're like, okay, I have my answer, and now I take it off and then I can process the feelings and things. It's almost like two separate streams.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: So in fact, I actually learned that quite early on in my search. [00:44:00] In the early days of my search, I was very emotional. Again, I was young. I started at 18. By the time I was about 25, I was like, yep, I get it. She doesn't wanna be found. Yep, I get it. I started understanding the harsher realities. Then as I started building my career in business, one day it came to me and I'm like, okay, Janet, this is a project. Yes, I can always be very in tune to my emotions, my needs, who I am, my triggers, what I know needs to be healed, on it goes. But when I'm searching, I'm going to have files and a computer system and even a server to back up my files and paper files for each person. So I really separated the two. I did. And honestly, that is actually how in the end, which I will also argue, if you don't do it in that manner and have it really rigid and organized, in the end, [00:45:00] you yourself won't have the truth. And what I mean by that is you're gonna be on the phone call with an aunt here, an uncle there, an ex-husband here or there, whatever. They all have a story, right? But then your job as almost-detective is interesting. I've heard the exact same story three times, said three different ways. You almost have to say that one is true, right? And you go, okay, that one's almost validated. Then you go, okay, I have facts here. I have some files, I have paperwork. That is true. Maybe you wanna throw in a margin of error, I don't know, for whatever reason. But then of course, then you've got the other stuff, which I would consider, again, a lot of adoptees I found in families, they come from families that are not well. They are not healed. There's a pattern of relinquishment and trauma. So then you get into this whole gossip, and maybe even in my case, there was a lot of backstabbing [00:46:00] and slander and really vicious behavior because these people were not healed. You have to go, that's not true. That's not true. So that's the other piece too. Even outside of DNA work, but the problem with the DNA work is when you get a match, it's like instant. And it's here you go, load up and giddy up. You are going. You have to be ready. And so many people are not ready.

Haley Radke: Okay with all the caveats and we're ready, and we've, okay, now maybe we take our Sherlock Holmes hat off. So you get the match, you've got all the screenshots and you've gone all the way for screenshots, Facebook, obituaries, whatever, all the way. Then you send a message. But what do you send in a message?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Honestly, I always say to people, you've got to think about you are using a product that is being marketed like happy, happy, joy, joy. Everything's just wonderful and sunshine and rainbows, right? So I always [00:47:00] say to people, look, you don't know who you're messaging because any person can spit in a tube and put any name to it, Haley. Think about that for a minute.

Haley Radke: Ohhhh.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And I've actually uncovered, not for myself, but other people that I have helped find family, children having their parents' DNA on there, because maybe they're older or they don't know how to use a computer, but they put their name as a child, or this account is used for my great aunt and she's actually now passed away. So there are just so many variables. It's not done like a legal paternity test where IDs are checked and everything's done in a row. So what I always say to people is keep it light. I always write something like, hi, isn't it so neat that we are related and we are estimated first cousins? Isn't that so neat? Hey, I'd love to talk with you sometime. [00:48:00] Instantly I want to take it offline. Offline. I want a phone call. Because verbal gives so many cues to people. That's just how we are as humans. We're listening to this today and it evokes so much, doesn't it? Instantly I like to get the people offline. I hope that I can hook 'em and say, wow, that's so great. Isn't it wonderful that we're related? Keep it very positive. Hey, let's talk on the phone. I'm available anytime. Let me know, blah, blah, blah. That type of thing.

Haley Radke: Okay. And you're so right about the verbal being different, the tone.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: It is, and I also feel, and some people might not agree with me, but that's how we are in this world. We can have different opinions. I think that you don't say you're adopted. I think that you don't say you're a foundling, depending on the generation. It can scare people off. So I say that no, you just [00:49:00] keep it light and airy. You don't know what they've been through. You don't know what they're hiding. You don't know anything. You are pure strangers sharing DNA. Wonderful. And I always say, get off as quick as you can. Have a verbal. Then the minute you're on the phone with them, hopefully they respond. For the most part, I find people do. Sometimes it might take a while. That's why I say sometimes. People then go now I've got their name. I'll just go on Facebook and message them. Or, ooh, I'll try somebody else who's related to them. So there's a lot of different ways of contacting people. And then from there, I do say that you are adopted. Now, for the founding community, I don't personally believe you say you're a foundling in the first call. Abandoning a child is a serious offense. In Canada, it's a criminal offense. It scares people off. It's not to hide and be coercive, but you just have to play the temperament. You don't know these people, so don't [00:50:00] start telling everybody everything in the first call. You might scare someone off. So then essentially from there, just good old, fashion detective work. It's pulling out family trees. It's pulling out that one, I'll say again in the recommended resource of the chart, showing the shared DNA and just getting, hey, who's your mother and who's your sister and who's this person? And all about pen and paper. I think you get a huge monster piece of paper and you just start making your family tree as you talk.

Haley Radke: And that's it. Like basically you've solved the mystery and we'll put a pin in that because we've had so many shows on Reunion and all the other things that come with it. But you make it sound so simplified and it's amazing what DNA has really unlocked for us.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And that's my biggest concern, Haley. It's just like our instant gratification kind of culture that we have. When it comes to [00:51:00] this subject it's just not that healthy. That is why I always say you have to do your work in advance. You just have to. I want to speak a little bit about ethnicity and I'll do it pretty fast. I just want to tell people it's an estimate, right? So in all the DNA kits, they all have the same type of estimated ethnicity. Now they're always changing though. So what I always say to people is you're so excited. Suddenly, you're 40% Norwegian. When you say that you should say something like this, as of today, as it shows on this platform, I am blah, blah, blah. Because I guarantee you, a year later it'll be completely recalibrated. I want to share with you my journey to figure out who I was, whatever you want to call that. So in the very, very early days, I was probably one of the first pioneers of trying one of these kits in 2005. [00:52:00] That feels like forever ago, and I think it was like $500 at the time. But again, Haley, I was so hungry to know where am I from? Who am I? It was a pretty basic result. I will say that this company who did it was later purchased by Family Tree DNA, right? Because of course they have all the machines and stuff. So in 2005 it said that I was 89% European. I was 8% Native American, 2% East Asian, and 1% Sub-Saharan African. Okay. Guess what all the three tell me today? 23andMe today tells me I am 46.9% Scandinavian. Ancestry says I'm 84% Scandinavian, and Family Tree says I'm 66% Scandinavian.

Haley Radke: Whoa.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: So that's a range of 46.9 [00:53:00] to 84%.

Haley Radke: Yeah.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Okay. Then 23andMe tells me I am 26.9% British Irish. There's a lot of different ways they just categorize the zones. But that's just the way I'll simplify it for today, Ancestry says I'm 13% British Irish and Family Tree DNA says I'm 3% British Irish. So you're going from 26.9% to 3%. Then for West Central Europe, Ancestry says I am 0%. On 23andMe I am 8.5%, but on Family Tree DNA, I'm 29%. Now, I'll tell you just my last one because this is quite interesting. 23andMe and Ancestry show markers for Ashkenazi Jew. So 23andMe shows I'm 1.9% and Ancestry [00:54:00] says I'm 3%. Family Tree DNA doesn't even do it. So again, what I'm trying to show you is every company is just siloed. They have their own data pools that they draw from, and that just gives you your estimated ethnicity. Now, of course for me, I've done my work and I can say to you that none of them are actually really all that accurate. But the Ashkenazi Jew is, that's pretty accurate. So I don't know. I don't know, girl. So again, it's a novelty. You take it with a little bit of a grain of salt. And it gives you a general feel.

Haley Radke: Yeah. And going back so you were saying just that the companies are siloed, so they're not talking to each other about the ethnicity estimates or likely the medical things. But when you can take your DNA and put it to GEDMatch, GEDMatch would just be the Family Tree side of things, right?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah, it is.

Haley Radke: Yeah. Okay. Huh.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: And now one of the other biggest [00:55:00] pieces that I always say to people, and it's funny because for whatever reason people don't like to hear this, and trust me, Haley, I'm not trying to get into like conspiracy theory. This is not my type of thing.

Haley Radke: Okay, wait. Just so you know, there is a reason I haven't spit in a tube. Okay. Okay. There's a reason. So tell us, why are people nervous about it?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: The thing that I always say to people is all these companies boast that once your data is on their system, it's private. I am going to say no. The minute you spit in that tube, you just have to succumb to the fact that private data is public data. And the reason why I say that is for a few big reasons. These private companies are not moderated by any government body. And even if they were Haley, what are we looking at? We're looking at technology and human beings. Look at our world, look at the [00:56:00] headlines. There's constant hacks. There's constant mistakes. These companies are continually recalibrating and making their product better. That's actually really fantastic. But what happens when they do that? What happens when they relaunch their new websites and then they move their data over to that server and to this server? So what I always say to people is look, you have to know when you are spitting in a tube, it can be used for anything, right? It's almost to say, if you have something to hide, then don't then don't do it, because now I will also tell you serious crimes are being solved because of people like me on these systems. I will tell you that every company, major company, they've got all their terms and conditions and they've got all of that type of stuff. Oh, blah blah, blah, whatever. But I will tell you, I'm [00:57:00] just looking here right now because I actually took out a little paragraph, essentially what 23andMe, and I'm not trying to out 23andMe, all the companies have to abide. But essentially what they say is, oh no, we will never release your information. But however, the minute they get a court order, think about it, a police officer here or there or whatever goes, hey, wait a minute. We gotta throw this in the kitty and see what happens. Then yes, it is true. These companies have to abide by the court orders-

Haley Radke: Right.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: So they don't give it freely, but they have to abide by law.

Haley Radke: And when you mentioned the Golden State Killer earlier and when you said, they're using my information to solve these crimes, it's true because not that you yourself committed a crime, but you're the link in the chain to go backwards and find that tree or find the person via the family tree.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: But that's exactly it. And in fact, in 2019, [00:58:00] Family Tree DNA has reported, because this is the other thing, you can find this online. All of these three major companies have to be transparent on who is requesting user information. And Family Tree DNA reported that 50 law enforcement agencies submitted DNA samples for matching. And that almost 150 cases had been submitted by Spring 2020. So by, in effect, Family Tree DNA helped solve 27 violent cases in the USA and we're talking serial killers and violent crimes.

Haley Radke: And law enforcement are the ones uploading the DNA sample. Wow, okay. Okay. I didn't know they could do that. See, that's-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Uh-huh.

Haley Radke: Very interesting.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: But again, that's the whole thing. People go on there and these companies are selling a product. Oh [00:59:00] no, we'll never do this. We'll never do that. But actually if you dig on there, even 23andMe has a full page called Transparency Report and they update that on a quarterly basis. They're very transparent to say, hey, actually yes, it is true. Now I actually read it today. Fascinating. They break it down by country and who is requesting this information? Only today the USA has requested information. This is a thing, my DNA is on that system. So if a half sibling of mine committed a serious offense and in five years Canada starts leaning on DNA, they're going to contact me. So now do I comply? Do I ignore? They'll find me. So you just have to be comfortable knowing that, hey, I'm in the system. I have to be part of the greater good. Whatever's gonna come out is gonna come out. And don't get too swept up in the, [01:00:00] oh, we protect this, we protect that because at the end of the day, these companies can only do so much. And you throw in technology and you throw in human beings, mistakes happen all the time. We're human, right? Just saying.

Haley Radke: Yeah. And we know a few fellow adoptees who have found their first families via mistakes, requesting their records and names aren't redacted or that “should be”. Yes, it's true. They happen just on paper and also technology. When you're talking about how many millions of records these people are keeping, the chance for error is much higher.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah. Yeah. No, I know.

Haley Radke: Any last thoughts that you really wanna give us? I really appreciate the cautions you've given so far, and anything else that we really need to keep in mind when we're thinking of doing DNA testing?

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yeah, I've just got a few notes as like my 2 cents. I would have to say the biggest piece [01:01:00] is that searching through DNA is far more psychologically taxing than it's made out to be. The biggest reason is because these companies are selling a product and it's happy and it's wonderful, and everybody is healthy and hugging. That does have implications because it gives a sense of how easy it is and how easy it should always be, and I've seen this continually in reunion. Reunions are tricky on their own. I don't know about you, Haley, but I almost guess that reunions are maybe 50-50, but when you take it to a foundling group, reunion on the maternal side of the family, it's almost zero every time. So again, don't confuse the ease of information coming at you with the ease of what you are going through as a human being. It's incredibly difficult to go through a reunion and you have to get psychological support and take care of yourself. One of the biggest things [01:02:00] is that you have to understand your intentions, and you have to understand your expectations. For myself, in my reunion, I always said that to every person I met. I told everybody my intention upfront, and I told everybody my expectation, which by the way, was just very low. It wasn't very heavy. It was very gentle and casual. I can tell you, Haley, not one person could tell me the same thing back because nobody had done their work. Nobody had done their work.

The other biggest thing that I want to talk about is privacy. So we get on this site and there's just this instant feeling that, hey, all this information that I've come into, I can do anything with it. For example, in the foundling community, or again in the adoption community, where babies are kept secret. I am not a supporter of keeping secrets. Look at my story, Haley. But I am a [01:03:00] supporter of human decency and respect, and I have never to this day released my biological mother's name. Now, I will tell you, this is where it gets tricky when you start finding biological family. And again, it's so easy. It's through a portal, through DNA, there is this common mindset that, oh, I own this information too. I own this information too. So what I did very early on is I had talked to every single person in my family to stress the importance of why my biological mother's name should remain a secret. For so many reasons I can go into, she had a very hard life. She actually passed as the result of me searching. You can piece that together however you want. Not only that, but she had no relationship with any of her family members. But again, these people go, oh, this story is so public. And oh, Janet's this sort of half kind of [01:04:00] Rupert famous person. Oh no, I'm just gonna say it. I'm gonna give her name out there. Who cares what Janet wants? So I have to tell you, it was incredibly traumatic for me. Later on, as a result of that, I ended those relationships and then a major campaign was put against me. Slanderous lies attacking only because I wanted her name kept private. I only say that so much, Haley, because I want to say to the listeners, you have to ask yourself, who owns this information? Again, I am not saying that it should be kept a secret, but I think there is a beautiful fine line of having respect, having comfort levels of everybody being met, and still having your needs met. You don't have to plaster it out because, oh, look at this, what I found on 23andMe and throw it all over [01:05:00] Facebook. You don't have to do that. But again, I have seen it so much because the information is so available and any person can go on their 23andMe and go, hey, look at this. Look at this. This is true. Who has a say? Who owns the privacy? So that's something that's very near and dear to my heart. It's been incredibly traumatic. Incredibly. Yeah.

Haley Radke: Thank you for sharing that. That it's a caution, it's a warning. I'll skip ahead and I always give a recommended resource and I felt immense pressure to do that again today on the theme. But, what has really come out from our conversation, and I didn't expect myself to say this, but you really wanna be in charge of your own search. I think it's-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes, absolutely.

Haley Radke: When you're talking about who's getting to share the information and those kinds of private things, [01:06:00] I just recently heard someone share their story and I'll keep it private, except for that they were using a search angel. And the search angel is the one that was getting in touch and being the first one to open up some of those conversations and shared some information that they didn't have a right to, and so from what I've heard, I feel like it's really empowering for you to do your own search.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes, it is. And I've seen that as well. In fact, a half sibling of mine had somebody help her find her biological father and to be really blunt, that search “angel” was a bully and she actually had it completely wrong. In fact, the man she was accusing to be the father, and I would almost say terrorized his family for a good week with this knowledge, was actually the uncle. So again, it just [01:07:00] shows you that you really do want to be in charge of your own search. And not only that, but even from my own perspective, as soon as I saw that people on my maternal side were not trustworthy, I started holding back almost everything. But I could, because I was the one receiving the files. I was the one putting the data together. So I said, nope, that's not for them to know. So it is really difficult because then you also get into, say even legalities of a minor. There are many foundling stories where the biological was a minor. But the newspapers have no problem publicizing that. That's actually against the law. So but again, like I said, my concern with DNA and everything I want to talk about DNA is this overshadowing feel of how easy it is, so then because it's so easy, it's almost as though everyone's entitled to it. [01:08:00] Everyone's involved, everyone can talk about it, and that's just simply not the case. So you really have to know what you're doing. You really have to do your own pre-work in advance, and yeah, you've really got to have a strong, organized head to yourself without a doubt. And like I've been saying all along, understand it's a product. You are buying a product a company is profiting from. So buyer beware.

Haley Radke: Thank you for the cautions and I also thank you for letting people feel empowered, like they can be in charge of their own search and the timing of the things. And once you've done your work ahead of time I really appreciate those. So one more thing I want to recommend is that you do go back and listen to Janet's story. It's episode 87 and 88 and Janet [01:09:00] shares her story. And then we have a really special episode where we talk to her biological father and her adoptive father about their relationship. And it was the season finale of our relationship series, season four. And it's really special. But, okay, now I want you to share what your recommended resources are for us, and I'm assuming they're on theme.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Oh, they are on theme. Haley. I am organized, so when I searched and when I help people search as well, there is a website by the International Society of Genetic Genealogy, and you can find that at www.isogg.org. It is a wealth of information and again, like I said, it is really easy to understand your DNA as soon as you get on the portal. This here gives some [01:10:00] really great charts, really great how-to, it's very simple to understand. The other recommended resource is all the YouTube channels for Ancestry, Family Tree DNA, and 23andMe. They've got some really great how-to videos and they're in really small sort of tidbits of two or three minutes, and they're just really invaluable when you first start your DNA journey.

Haley Radke: They want you to be able to figure out their systems and now they obviously have a billion dollar in resources, so-

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Oh boy, do they ever. That's the whole truth though. I would have to say in the earlier years it was a little bit more convoluted and a bit more confusing. Today it is just so simple to use it, and that's why I say you don't need a search angel. You just don't-

Haley Radke: Take your own power in your own search, in your own hands. Okay.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Absolutely.

Haley Radke: [01:11:00] Gosh, I am so grateful for your wisdom. I feel like I've learned a lot about things I had no idea about. So thank you Janet. And where can we find you online and follow your story as you continue to search? And I know you are working on lots of things.

Janet Weinreich-Keall: Yes, definitely. Yeah, so you can just find me under my name, Janet Weinreich-Keall. I know that's a real big name, but I earned it. And I'm on Facebook, Instagram, I also have a website that also refers me there as well. And I'm just continually sharing my story. Just like you Haley. I really want to highlight the honesty and the real authentic adoptee journey. So that's what I do. I know I'm a foundling, but again, I think I share all the same things as an adoptee as well, so yes-

Haley Radke: Absolutely. Thank you so much.[01:12:00]

Can you believe she just gave us a masterclass in DNA searching? Amazing. So generous. I'm so thankful for Janet. I want to tell you about something really fun. I just launched the Adoptees On merch store and I am seeing everyone get their orders in, their mugs and t-shirts and journals. I've seen people order stickers and pens, like there's a ton of different things. You can get masks even. So there's the traditional Adoptees On logo and then we have an autumn one and a winter one out right now, and so you can get that on basically anything. I love seeing your beautiful faces with your Adoptees On merch. It's amazing and it's just like this physical manifestation of the community kind of building and building and building. I don't know, something about it is just really special to [01:13:00] me. I know I talked about this last week with Carrie, but it's been one of my absolute favorite things so far in 2020, seeing you guys with the stuff with the logo on it, which is just so cool. I wish I had done it sooner. That's my one regret. I wish I had done it sooner. So if you want to grab some Adoptees On merch, it's adopteeson.com/shop and you are taken over to a Tee Public store and they make everything as you order it and they send it off to you. I'm so pleased with how everything is looking when you guys are getting your shirts and everything, and Tee Public makes it really easy for you to find the right fit and the right swag for you.

I'm thankful too for my patrons. So many of you signed up during the month of November. I had a sale on, and it's amazing to see how the community is building around the show and helping to keep it sustainable for me to be able to do this full-time for you, and I'm really grateful. [01:14:00] So thank you. If you wanna join us, it's not too late. You can go to adopteeson.com/partner and find the details of how to join Patreon, all the different benefits. There is a weekly podcast, Adoptees Off Script, with me, and most of the time, Carrie Cahill Mulligan. There is a Facebook group. There is an opportunity to have a call with me, and yeah, I'm so thankful for everyone who has signed up for that. Thank you. Adopteeson.com/partner if you wanna join Patreon or adopteeson.com/shop if you want to support the show by buying some merch. Thank you so much for listening. Let's talk again next Friday.

164 Adoptees Off Script with Carrie Cahill Mulligan

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/164


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm your host, Haley Radke. Before we get started, I want to let you know how much it means to me that you are showing up here to listen to adoptee voices. I remember when I was first in reunion with my dad and we hit the inevitable rocky patch after the honeymoon period faded.

I felt so alone. I believed I was absolutely unlovable because my first mother had ghosted me after a few months into our reunion about a decade prior. And for me, creating this podcast has been a tremendous labor of love so that adoptees like me who were feeling alone or struggling in reunion or coming out of the fog would have a connection so we wouldn't feel like we were crazy.

The wildest part of all of this is that it succeeded. Adoptees On has become our show. [00:01:00] Our show to connect and share what the adoptee experience is really like, and I'm asking you today to support the podcast and make it sustainable for me to continue doing this work.

I'm Haley, the host and creator of this show–our community’s show–and I'm also a wife and mom to two little boys who are sleeping in their bed as I write this. When you sign up for Patreon or donate via PayPal, you are helping me, Haley, contribute to my family's needs. What I didn't expect when I started podcasting was that this would become my full-time job.

I'm showing up for you and saying yes to adoptees, and I would love for you to show up for me and commit to support Adoptees On. For three weeks only, I have a sale on for yearly membership to the Adoptees On Patreon, and you're going to get one month free. After that, it's going to go back to regular price.

I'm honored by the support I've already gotten from the community and, truthfully, pretty scared to make this ask, [00:02:00] but if I am going to continue to make this show, I really need your help to make it sustainable and to have the ability to meaningfully contribute to my little family over here. Click the link in the show notes or go to adopteeson.com/partner to sign up right now.

Okay, let's get to the show.

On today's episode of the podcast, I am giving you a peek behind the scenes to Adoptees Off Script, which is the second weekly podcast I produce for my monthly Patreon supporters. So here it is behind the scenes. You can take a little peek behind the paywall curtain to see if it's something that you want to join for 2021.

And as I mentioned, there's a sale on and the sale is ending on November 30th, so you have a couple more days if you're listening to this when it drops to make sure you join us; adopteeson.com/partner has the details. Okay, let's listen in. [00:03:00]

Welcome back to Adoptees Off Script. I'm Haley Radke, and with me today is Carrie Cahill Mulligan. Hi, Carrie.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Hi, Haley.

Haley Radke: I want to start out with a big thank you, because I have gotten so many new supporters over the last couple weeks. I just want to say thank you so much and welcome here. You guys all get to hear this on Monday. Everyone else is going to join us on Friday for this episode, so it's a big group show for us.

So thank you and welcome, welcome into the Off Script family. Just for one day we're going to give you a taste of what it's like. No pressure. Carrie, no pressure. Do you feel pressure?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I do a little. I'm going to do my best.

Haley Radke: Okay. Okay. Yep. Throat clear, stretches, okay.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: That's right.

Haley Radke: Carrie and I have been leading everyone through the Adoptee Reading Challenge over on Off Script all year, and [00:04:00] it's been really fun. How about you, Carrie? How has it been for you doing the Adoptee Reading Challenge?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I've loved it. I haven't done so much focused, adoption-related reading and specifically adoptee-written reading ever. And this was challenging to keep up with the pace, honestly, because you and I did extra, I don't know, maybe a third or a half of the months.

Haley Radke: How stupid was that? I mean, sometimes I was like, “Oh, you know what? I found four books that fit the theme.” That was really, really not smart. Anyway–

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Nope. But at the same time, it was exciting. Yes, it's been really wonderful and there's been great feedback in the group. A lot of inspiration and conversation going on there. So I have really loved it and I'm so looking forward to–are you gonna say?

Haley Radke: No! No, they have to hold out a little longer. You're gonna say, we're looking forward to the 2021 plans. That’s the teaser.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yes.

Haley Radke: [00:05:00] Okay. I want to introduce everybody to you just in case they haven't met you before, which would be a big surprise because Carrie was my very first guest all the way back in Season 1, Episode 1. So if you want to hear some of Carrie's story, you can go back and listen to that.

We have a lot of similar reunion experiences and lots of different reunion experiences. So on the Off Script podcast, we talk all about those things and what's going on for us right now. And Carrie shares lots of wisdom with me, you know, being the older, wiser one.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Oh, we're going this way. I see how we're playing this.

Haley Radke: I do a lot of throwing her under the bus. Vice versa. No, it's probably more me, which is sad.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: No, it's fine.

Haley Radke: Okay. Okay. Anyway–

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I think what Haley's trying to say is that we have a similar and yet divergent, diverse set of viewpoints between the two of us that we enjoy, I think.

Haley Radke: And friendly banter [00:06:00] with lots of good-hearted teasing.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I think so.

Haley Radke: Mostly it's fine. I don't know, maybe you might tell me later that I hurt your feelings, but hopefully not.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: No, and I would tell you.

Haley Radke: I know you would. We're the friends that have had those hard conversations. Okay. The next thing I want to introduce people to is our reading styles. Can you give us a picture? I'm curious, I don't know all of the answers to these, but where are your favorite places to read? What are your favorite ways to consume your books? Give us a little picture of how Carrie is a reader.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I love this. Thank you. This is a great question. I generally am reading through audio books because of my hands being busy making hats and masks and all the different things I do in my fiber business. [00:07:00] But so many of our adoptee-written and related books are more niche and harder to find, and so a lot of those are hardcopy and I have to make sure that I'm reading paper books every day as well. And so that has helped me set up a routine where I have, in the morning while my tea is steeping and, if I'm good, I'll do it before I get into social media or email and just get my 20 to 30 minutes of reading done in the morning.

But I'll usually be on the couch by the south-facing window. And, yeah, usually paper copy for us. But I really do like audio books because then I can be multi-tasking. I am just that type of personality that likes to have a story with me wherever I'm going so it makes mundane tasks a lot more enjoyable.

What about you?

Haley Radke: First of all, that's a very, like, aesthetic situation.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Very cottage corn.

Haley Radke: Setting up with your tea. Yes, it's very cottage corn.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: The wood fire is going, yeah, yeah.

Haley Radke: Well, this may surprise some [00:08:00] of you. Not if you've heard the Off Script podcast. I really don't drive well with audio books. I love podcasts, but audio books have been my stumbling block. So I much prefer reading hard copies. Occasionally. If I maybe was a little slow on the ordering, I might have to resort to getting it on my Kobo or even worse on the Kindle app on my phone. I've had to do that a few times, which is rough, you guys.

It’s rough reading a book on your phone. That's not my style. I love a nice paperback or hardcover, and there's a lot of good places to read in my house. I just love having a blanket and my little Lucy curled up next to me, my dog. That's totally my thing. I don't plan out my reading time. If I am ready to sit down and [00:09:00] read, I will usually read for an hour or two, kids permitting, and if a book is really good, I will do it in a sitting

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Oh wow.

Haley Radke: I'm a binge reader.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Wow, that's so fun. If there’s a series, do you try and read all the books in a series right away, or do you pace yourself on them?

Haley Radke: I know you're asking me this because of Louise Penny, who's not an adoptee, but we've talked to you about her books before, and we love her. Yes. Once I find a series that I really love, I will read all the way till the very last book, and then I'll save the last book because I don't want it to end.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yeah. Yeah, I totally relate to that.

Haley Radke: So there's a lot of series where I've not even picked up the last book for whatever reason. Just those endings. I don't know. I don't want to deal with the endings.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yeah, I wonder if there's anything there to dig at.

Haley Radke: Uh, not everything's adoption related. Maybe it is. I don't know. [00:10:00] Oh, that's so funny. Well, just to give you a little background, if you didn't join us for the 2020 Adoptees Off Script Reading Challenge, we read all kinds of different books. We read memoir, fiction, artsy-creative, and nonfiction. And in those categories, we wanted to read books from late discovery adoptees, from foster youth, from transracially adopted people. We forced ourselves, Carrie enjoyed it very much to listen to audiobooks, and we read short stories and poetry. We read middle grade and YA; we did graphic memoirs and then we did anthologies, essays by one author, anthologies by multiple authors. And we also did some nonfiction reading on the history of adoption, which was [00:11:00] a wild ride also. So we had the whole gamut.

Now I'm curious if, after reading all these books–I didn't even count them. I wonder how many books we read?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Oh, good question.

Haley Radke: We must have read close to 30 books between us.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yeah, I would think so. Yeah.

Haley Radke: And I'm wondering if you figured out your favorite types of books by adoptees or this was the grand winner of them all? Did you have any thoughts on wrapping up our year’s Reading Challenge, even though we have a month left while we're recording this? We're not quite done.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I really enjoyed finding particular authors. Like I was really enjoying a couple books by Jeanette Winterson and those couple books by Jackie Kay. And I was surprised to find how deep their catalog was and that I found multiple selections interesting. I think that probably [00:12:00] I could do a Reading Challenge on just memoirs and be happy. Like I just love memoirs. I really do. And particularly if it's a reunion or messy reunion collection of memoirs. I just really love memoirs. I was wishing for more of that, but listening to you talk about all the different types of books we read, I am proud of us for branching out and hitting all those different genres and types of books because I was surprised to see adoptee authors in all of those, which I think reflects my own close-mindedness. But it was really fascinating and it broadened my horizons about what's out there. And now I just want to read. There's so many more books to read. What about you?

Haley Radke: Well, I am going to agree on the memoir front. I thought maybe I was getting sick of them, but it's not true. I love reading people's stories, and it's incredible the diversity of adoptee memoirs available. [00:13:00] It's really quite stunning. And the ones that we read in particular, there were some amazing ones, like My Name is Why by Lemn Sissay. It was recommended to us by a Patreon supporter, which was fantastic. And she sent us a bunch of podcast episodes he had been interviewed on, which was really interesting.

The other one that Carrie and I both read together was From the Ashes by Jesse Thistle. Yes. And it was so good. I have all my tabs still sticking onto that book. Those ones were really powerful and just so well done. And I agree, too, that reading all those different genres really stretched me and surprised me, really surprised me. In my non-work-related reading life, I love psychological thrillers. I love scary books, and those are the ones I most [00:14:00] gravitate towards. But it was pretty amusing to me that I read my most scary book ever in the Adoptee Reading Challenge.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Who knew?

Haley Radke: Who knew? Scary, creepy. And it was an audiobook. It was all the things. So Dan Chaon really just brought it. So if you are into really gross, really scary, ill will, it may be the book for you.

The other thing that kind of surprised me was the poetry and short stories. Sometimes I think I was like, “They're so short and I'll be able to just get through them quickly.” And that's good especially since I committed to reading three or four books in a month. But I really found myself slowing down and enjoying and just being amazed by the skill [00:15:00] and the language. Especially the poets we read really have this immense grasp on – just, see, like words. Words are hard for me, but not for poets. What's the word I'm looking for?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Uh, sorry, I was counting up how many books we read.

Haley Radke: Thanks. Thanks, co-host. Just leave me out to dry. I'll let Carrie keep counting. I can't even pick a favorite book over the whole year either. There were so many that were wonderful. But what I did figure out is: it's really hard for me to tell you that I didn't like an adoptee book because I feel like I understand the cost it takes to put yourself out there and be really vulnerable. And I've never written a book, but I can imagine the amount of time it would take. [00:16:00] And so sometimes I would read a book and be like, this is not my favorite and that it's probably for someone else, just not for me. I really struggled giving critical reviews.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: But I think that there are so many different kinds of readers and, I don't know, I never felt like you bashed any books, but I always felt like you were honest when a book wasn't for you. And so it's helpful for readers to know, there's a lot of books out there.

Haley Radke: But when I go on Good Reads or Amazon, I still give five stars.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Every adoptee.

Haley Radke: Can you imagine, I don't know how to say this. This is not meant as a humble brag. Can you imagine if you listened to my show and you wrote a book and then you went and saw that I gave your book three stars? Ouch. I wouldn't want to do that.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: No. Do you want to know how many books we read? I'm sorry that I was counting while you were talking.

Haley Radke: Oh my gosh. Okay. I'm going to guess. I'm gonna guess 33. [00:17:00]

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Really? That's right!

Haley Radke: No!

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yeah, I think so. I got a little distracted when you caught me counting, but I think it's 33. Crazy, I know!

Haley Radke: I'm so proud of myself. I promise I did not do that ahead of time. I cut and pasted my spreadsheet and then I realized, “Oh, I don't even have all the titles on there.” Perfect. 33. Go us. That's awesome. And I know that there were so many of you reading along, some of the same books and some different ones, so that's fantastic.

I'm curious if there was anything that you were like, “Oh, I wish we didn't really read that genre after all,” or “I wish we had leaned more into something like that. After reading all of these books.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: No, I was really happy. Like I said, I think going into it, I was wishing we could do a memoir every other month or just like a memoir companion in each category. [00:18:00] But I was really enjoying being pushed to every different genre. Poetry is hard, but I was just tonight before we were talking, looking up another collection because I remembered, “Oh, looking at the spreadsheet, there was that one that Haley read, Alison Malee. I never did find that. So I'm putting that on my wish list. Christmas is coming.

Haley Radke: Yeah, that's a good idea. Another question I have for you–I'll answer first–is if you found any genres particularly difficult to read? I am going to say the nonfiction history of adoption, which is what we're reading this month for November, was really hard. I focused my reading on the Baby Scoop Era and, wow, it's just so hard to read. It's so depressing. I mean, it's important to know, but it's just so depressing. I don't even know what else to say about it. Especially when I think, “How far have we come?” Like not that far. [00:19:00]

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I would have to agree even though my book, the Georgia Tan history, was really gripping and super readable. I had in mind that I was going to read two history-of-adoption books this month, and I'm not. I'm just not. We US listeners, we had a lot of other upheaval in November and it's National Adoption Awareness Month, and one history of adoption focusing on a bad mean person is enough for a month. So I can't do it this year.

Haley Radke: That's fair enough. Fair enough. And one thing we did talk a little bit about on Off Script occasionally was that even when these books are really hard to read, it's so important for us to know these things. And so we can't stick our heads in the sand. We cannot do that. It's very important we know it. So even though it's hard, we still have to do it, in my opinion. [00:20:00]

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: And I agree, and I think that's why the challenge was so useful to me because I would've been reading a memoir and never getting around to that book. And it was really good and it's important to know and I'm going to be thinking about it a lot. So thank you for the nudge to read the hard books.

Haley Radke: Awesome. Awesome. Alright. Now you may all be thinking, “Man, where did they even find all these books? I can't believe it. Can I even think of 33 adoptee-written books?” One of my very favorite places to find adoptee-authored books, of course, is our favorite website. We have mentioned it so many times: adopteereading.com. Karen Pickell curates that and it's excellent. She indicates whether a book is merely adoption related or if it's adoptee authored. You can tell right away on each book and you can sort by all the genres we mentioned and more. [00:21:00] And there's even a page where she has a list of every single author that's represented on her site. You can click through and just see all the books that a particular author has either written or contributed to or edited. It's really a tremendous resource, and so I would definitely recommend that.

But I want to know, Carrie, where you find your books, because I know you use Adoptee Reading. I know you use that. But Carrie brought so many books to the show that were–I don't want to sound ageist–that were older.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: They were backlists

Haley Radke: Thank you. She found all these books from years and years ago that I've never heard of and they were just so good. And you described them, and I've read some of them since and I'm like, “How did you dig these up?”

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I don't know. I think I might have just gone sideways.

[00:22:00] I might have started with books that were recommended on Karen Pickell's site. But then, like I said, I found some favorite authors and just burrowed along their bibliographies and got lucky, found some really good books. And, oh, I just want to say the Jackie Kay book, Trumpet, that I read and reviewed and really loved, that was based on a real person I read today. I was looking up more Jackie Kay stuff.

Haley Radke: Man, when you go down a rabbit hole, you're just like all in.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I know. So I can't tell you exactly which part of my rabbit warren that I dug up some of these resources, but definitely rabbit hole, yeah.

Haley Radke: I'd love to know because even before we got on the call, you were texting me book after book. I'm like, “Oh my gosh.”

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: You asked if I had any ideas about what I wanted to read next year. I’ve definitely got ideas.

Haley Radke: [00:23:00] She has all the ideas. Actually, maybe this is a new service we can offer. If you need a book recommendation, Carrie is gonna be the one.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Tell me what you've read.

Haley Radke: If you tweet her, she may give you a recommendation. I don't know? Maybe?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Absolutely. Yes.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Absolutely.

Haley Radke: Oh, that's so good. I am really excited about 2021. We have some really fun things planned. For 2021 we want to be reading the books together. And so what we did in 2020 was sometimes Carrie and I would read the same book, but most often we were reading different books, different multiple books, and we'd come back and we'd give you a book report on our books we read. But my most favorite parts of the Reading Challenge were when we read the same book and we could discuss it, and we had both been on the same page and you would highlight things to me that I missed and vice versa. And so [00:24:00] we would love for you to come and read with us.

And so what we're going to do is we're going to announce our first book for January, 2021. So you have time to get it in your hands and read it before we do a group Book Club. So that'll be really awesome. I'm very excited about that. And then we're going to be asking you a couple months ahead, every single month, what do you want to read? So we will make the decisions as a community. We will do polls on Patreon and in the Secret Facebook Group.

And so we'll include you and we'll also include you on how we're going to be doing the Book Club. So we're going to give you guys a couple of different options. We may do a Zoom call where everybody can chime in if they'd like to for a Q&A period, or we may do the more traditional panel where we may ask a couple of readers to join with Carrie and I, [00:25:00] and you guys can submit questions in the chat. We're going back and forth on that, what it looks like.

But I'm very excited to tell you what our first book is. I feel like we should have a drum roll, but I literally don't have that sound, so can't do it. Just imagine a drum roll in your head. We are going to be reading Alice Stephen’s novel, Famous Adopted People. And Alice is going to be joining us for our very first Book Club and Q&A.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Really?

Haley Radke: Yes. In January. So I'm so stoked. We arranged that just today, and I'm so excited to announce that for everyone. Yeah, what do you think about that?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: That's amazing because you were just mentioning you were hoping it could happen and that's the last I heard from you today. [00:26:00]

Haley Radke: Carrie loves Twitter. This is why: this happened on Twitter. Alice was very responsive and excited to join us. So we are going to be doing this in the Adoptees Off Script for Patreon supporters. And so it'll be a small group and we'll be able to ask her questions about the book and just chit chat with her, so it's really exciting. All right. What do you think? I think that's a pretty good kickoff to the 2021 Adoptee Reading Challenge.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yeah, I hope that people are as excited as you and I are.

Haley Radke: It's just going to be us, us and Alice.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Even if it is, I'm still going to be pretty psyched because this has been so fun and I agree with you that it was wonderful to be challenged and we each had piles of books laying around, so we were a little scattered and making up as we went, but like fine-tuning it to make it an actual Book Club where we can look at it from all our different own points of view. [00:27:00] I think this is going to be awesome. And, we're growing and learning. This is the first time we've hosted a Book Club. I guess you did a couple.

Haley Radke: We have done a couple book clubs for the Adoptees On listeners, yes. And they were all really good. We had some amazing authors, and so I'm excited to continue that.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: But yeah, this is the long-term commitment that we haven't made before. So a full year of Book Club is very exciting. Honestly, there's more books than looking at the 33 between the two of us that we read.

Haley Radke: And we only have to read one book a month.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yes. And it could be some books that people enjoyed hearing us talk about and want to read in community. And that would be fine too.

Haley Radke: Yes.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: We wouldn't mind repeating. Let us know! There are going to be polls, and you'll have plenty of chances to chime in and let us know what you would like to be reading. Otherwise, we'll just fill in with what we want to read and assume and trust that works for you.

Haley Radke: Absolutely. The polls will be up for everyone. [00:28:00] You don't have to be a Patreon to vote in case you're thinking about joining. You can. You can come and have a look at what's going on over there. So if you go to adopteeson.com/partner, you'll find the Adoptees On Patreon page and we are going to have a couple polls up on what genre we're going to read for February, 2021. So we'll have that up for a little bit. Pick the genre and then we'll do a vote on what book we want to read for February. And we'll see, depending on the author. Hopefully I can get a few more authors to join us through the year.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: That's just so cool.

Haley Radke: It just depends on what year the book was written, also. So keep that in mind. And then we'll also have a poll on what style of book club you would like to participate in. If you want to be able to have a chance at sitting on a panel with us for one month, or if you just want to see the author's face and never see me and Carrie and just pepper them with questions, we'll see what we can do. [00:29:00]

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Or if you just want to lurk and you just want to listen to the book conversation without participating, there's no essays required. There's no minimum level of participation required. Lurkers are fully welcome.

Haley Radke: Yes. And people that haven't read the book. You know what, there's always time for conversation and you can always get something out of it. And I also want to say we'll be recording these and releasing them into the Adoptees On Patreon feed. So even if you can't be there with us live, you'll still be able to watch or listen to the recording.

Alright. That is the exciting news. I love learning together in community. That's what's so powerful for me about book clubs. I think I am a really fast reader and so I often miss things, to be totally transparent. So I love needing to slow down to make sure I absorb everything [00:30:00]. I mean, how many times have people come to us after and been like, “Oh, did you notice this or that?” And I'm like, “No, I didn't notice that. Thanks for pointing it out.” So I love that part of reading in community. How about you, Carrie? What are some of your favorite things about book clubs, book discussions, like processing after the fact?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I don't know that I read quickly because I'm listening a lot of the time, but readers definitely bring their own experience to books. And so I find it fascinating, and there'll be times when I'm caught up in language but there's a plot thing that I'm missing, or vice versa. So it's just wonderful to have other people, and particularly other adoptees, to read these sorts of books because I value each of you all who are here listening and supporting us and giving us feedback in the Facebook group about books we could read and things to be thinking of. So thank you for being there and reading along with us. I'm excited.

Haley Radke: [00:31:00] Yes, community. It's just one more opportunity and if you're not sure about joining a group, this is one of those safe ways in, I feel, because you're discussing a book. Of course, adoption will likely come up as themes, right? But then you're not necessarily all about your personal story, you're learning as a group about broader topics and that can feel a little bit safer than going to a support group and sharing all your personal stuff right away. Just a thought.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Totally. That's a good point, yes.

Haley Radke: Alright, another thing that we do every single week on Adoptees Off Script is we always wrap up and share something we are loving right now. And I always make sure it's not adoption related. But today I am going to break that rule because I can.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: For sure. [00:32:00]

Haley Radke: Okay. I am so excited because the Adoptees On merch store launched. And so it's been so special for me to see people starting to get their orders. Anne Heffron posted a video of herself in the Adoptees On fall T-shirt. So there's autumn leaves and these beautiful roots. My friend painted it for me. It's gorgeous. And so Anne made a commercial on her Facebook page.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Oh, I'm gonna have to check it out.

Haley Radke: So that is so delightful. And seeing people with their mugs. I don't know what else could make me happier except for, can I tell you? I want you to guess how much merch I have from my own store at this moment.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: What? How much?

Haley Radke: None.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: None?

Haley Radke: None! You guys are getting it first. Thanks for being in Canada, Haley. Yeah, I know, I'm serious.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: [00:33:00] Where do we find the shop?

Haley Radke: If you go to the Adoptees On website, there's a tab for shop or you just go to adopteeson.com/shop. It is a TeePublic store. I researched a lot of different places that you can have drop shipping merch, which is the most helpful for me because I didn't want to have something in Canada that would have to cross the border to all of you; most of my listeners are American. And TeePublic has the most inclusive sizing I could find, ethically sourced products. And so they're very conscious about those things and so I really was hopeful that most of their products were in that direction, so it seemed like the right choice for me.

And they're also very podcaster friendly. There's a lot of other podcasts that have their merch there, so that's fun. And there's a lot of cool stuff in the TeePublic store, including celiac shirts that are very funny. [00:34:00] So, I have celiac disease, that's another thing that people find out more about on Off Script than they ever wanted to know about celiac disease. So that means I can't have wheat and other things that have gluten in them. So there's all these shirts that have like giant no wheat signs or rowdy things about how terrible gluten is. Those kinds of things.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Wow. Just in time for the holidays and for gift giving and Thanksgiving, I mean US Thanksgiving.

Haley Radke: I know. Now this is coming off like I'm making a commercial. I'm really just telling you because I'm so excited. And I'm waiting on my mugs to get here and my shirts and the boys were like, “Where's our shirts?” And I said, “I didn't put kid shirts in the shop because I don't want little adoptees wearing Adoptees On shirts because I don't feel that's appropriate.” [00:35:00]

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I love you.

Haley Radke: Okay. Tell me what you're loving.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Okay. Besides you, I am loving the other book club that I've been part of, and I have mentioned,

Haley Radke: Are you serious? You're going to promote somebody else's book club when all we talked about was our Book Club?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I just want to give a nod to the What Should I Read Next? Modern Mrs. Darcy book club that I have recently become a member of. I've been reaching out to adoptees there, so I'm having a really good time being a little subversive, a little bit proselytizing.

Haley Radke: There's other adoptees in her book club?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yes. Super excited. But what I'm specifically loving is this past month the book we read was Silver Sparrow by Tayari Jones. And she wrote American Marriage, which I might have mentioned as being a really powerful book that I loved back in the spring. Specifically why I loved Silver Sparrow is the first line of the book is “My father is a bigamist.” That’s not a spoiler, that's the first line of the book. And it's told from two points of view of the two half-sisters and there's the family that was the first family, and then there's the one that comes secondary. [00:36:00] And the author in the author chat, which we had with her just last week, she was very specific not to really believe that out of wedlock means illegitimate. But in the context of the story, the one sister's legitimate and one is illegitimate. And you get to see each sister's point of view, and then their storylines overlap and there's a big dramatic conclusion. And just the issues of family and identity and legitimacy and presence and absence of parents. You could see this could have been an adoption situation given other pressures. A mother who became pregnant with a married man's child in a lot of stories that's somebody else's adoption story, the beginning. [00:37:00] So here's a story where the mom kept that baby in that complicated relationship. And so just a really fascinating book by an author who is talented and lyrical and thoughtful. She does this thing where I don't think anyone's really a bad guy. There's no real black and white. Everyone's got some motivations that you can relate to and understand, and so it's a very human and humanizing look at a complicated family relationship story. So loved it.

Haley Radke: Interesting. That sounds really good. That's one thing from us reading all of these adoptee books this last year, and I don't think we mentioned this, but lots of them are not necessarily about adoption. But then they are below the surface. And so now when I'm reading other books, I'm finding that theme in so many places. And I [00:38:00] don't just mean the adoptee tropes of “Oh, surprise! It's an adopted person at the end who's the murderer.” I just mean there's so many themes of adoption and family separation and trauma, all of those things that we're so familiar with, and I think we learn a lot from books that are like that.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yes. Like where there's just enough similar but a little bit different so that you can tease out some of the themes that we all have in common: complicated family stories.

Haley Radke: Yes. That's it. That's totally it. And I won't throw Modern Mrs. Darcy under the bus. I have very much enjoyed her podcast, What Should I Read Next? I used to listen all the time. I just could not keep up. There's so many good recommendations and if you want your to-be-read pile to be the size of a skyscraper. I remember for a while I would just put every book that sounded good on [00:39:00] hold till I literally maxed out my wish list on my library app, and that's 40 books, I think, before it maxes out.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Wow.

Haley Radke: Yeah. If you're an avid reader, that's a fantastic podcast. And Carrie is working hard to make sure that they read more adoptee own voices over there.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Yes. Thank you for supporting me in that.

Haley Radke: Now that I say that, will you tell us what “own voices” is?

**Carrie Cahill Mulligan:**Oh, own voices is a hashtag, but it's also a point of view in publishing, of wanting to publish books by minority authors. If you're going to show a minority point of view, then those stories hopefully could be shared by the people whose voices are being depicted. And so many times in adoption or orphan stories, it's just a fascinating setup. Fiction is premised on bad things happening as an inciting incident. And adoptee stories are just like perfectly ripe for fiction. [00:40:00] But it can be really damaging when people are just writing with stereotypes in mind and no real understanding of the adoptee experience. And so in our case, reading own voice books would be reading books about the adoptee experience by adoptees, just so that we are not being drowned out by industry platitudes or feel-good stereotypes or cultural norms. All the rest .

Haley Radke: Are the adoptive moms who email me because they want to come on the show because they wrote a book from the adoptee perspective?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Oh no.

Haley Radke: Did that happen again this week? I don't know. Well, thank you so much, Carrie. I can't wait for a Book Club with you. Before we go, can you please let everyone know where we can connect with you online and ask you for book recommendations?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: [00:41:00] Yeah, sure, please. Mostly I'm at my initials and the word hats. So CCM hats except for Twitter, where somebody else had that handle. And so I'm CCM felt hats. But I think all the other places are CCM hats and including my website and I've got all the links there as well. And I'm on Goodreads if you're there. I used to have a library thing that those are both CCM hats. I would love to talk books with you. Please come say hi.

Haley Radke: I will link to all those places for Carrie in the show notes. And, now Carrie mentioned earlier, but I'm going to just highlight this for you, Carrie is this amazing, talented fiber artist. She makes the most gorgeous winter cozy hats with beautiful embroidery on them, and she's been making masks. How many thousands of masks have you made?

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: I think that I've made just over 2,000. I started making hats again, so I slowed down on the masks. But yeah, I'm picking back up on both.

Haley Radke: Oh, she's made these stunning [00:42:00] masks and she sent me a few and they were my favorite to wear and so I will also link to Carrie’s store in the show notes for you if you are in the market for either of those things.

I would welcome you to come and join us on Patreon to make sure you're included in our adoptees Off Script Book Club for 2021. And make sure you go grab a copy of Famous Adopted People so we can read along with Alice Stephens. We will announce dates very soon for the actual live Book Club with Alice. We'll record it so even if you can't be there with us live, you'll still be able to hear it. Thanks so much for chatting.

Carrie Cahill Mulligan: Thank you, Haley.

Haley Radke: Hey, you know what? Thank you for indulging me. I hope this did not come off as a gigantic sales pitch for the show. [00:43:00] Truthfully, we do want you to join us over on Patreon. That's how the show is sustainable and continues to grow and support more adoptees around the world. So if you go to adopteeson.com/partner, join us there.

But Adoptees Off Script is so fun for me. I get to be a little bit more casual and a little more myself. In my regular interviews I really try to highlight the guest and have it be all about them, with a few exceptions I'll insert myself here and there, but on Off Script you get to know me a little bit better, so I would invite you to join us.

The other fun thing is, the shop really is cool. It's open; there's lots of cool stuff in there. Adopteeson.com/shop. It may sound like a giant sales pitch, I apologize for that. And also that's the way the show can keep going and become self-sustaining and I guess it's my full-time job now. So who knew that would ever be a thing. [00:44:00]

I am so glad you stuck around. Thank you so much. I'd love to have you in the Book Club and if that's not on your radar, No problem. One way to support the show is to share one episode with one friend that you know that's adopted. It makes a huge difference. It might really impact their life.

I was really humbled a few days ago when I had a friend say they knew someone who literally was contemplating taking their life. They listened to an episode of the Healing Series and reached out for help and has really come around to addressing some depression that they had going on and some of those underlying adoption issues.

Honestly, guys, just share the show so people know they're not alone. There's so many adoptees that are hurting and lonely. And you can help them to know they're not alone, just by sharing an episode of the show with them. [00:45:00] It's such a gift. So thank you for doing that. I really appreciate it.

And I thank you for thinking adoptee voices are important and for honoring them. Whether you are an adoptee and you are listening to your peers here, you're welcome. If you feel like you're sitting with us having a cup of coffee with us or if you are a first parent and you wish you had a relationship with your child that has been taken. Or you are an adoptive parent and you're really hoping that your adopted child will grow up and still feel loved and whole, and you're trying to figure out how to do that. You're welcome here. We welcome you to eavesdrop in on adoptee voices. And so thank you.

Thank you for honoring my work and my guests’ work. It's a real honor to serve here in this way. Alright, that's it. Thank you so much for listening. Back with a regular episode next week. So let's talk again next Friday. [00:46:00]

163 [Update] Maeve Kelly

Transcript

Full shownotes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/163


Haley Radke: [00:00:00] This show is listener supported. You can join us and help our show grow to support more adoptees by going to adopteeson.com/partner.

You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I'm your host, Haley Radke. Before we get started, I want to let you know how much it means to me that you are showing up here to listen to adoptee voices. I remember when I was first in reunion with my dad and we hit the inevitable rocky patch after the honeymoon period faded.

I felt so alone. I believed I was absolutely unlovable because my first mother had ghosted me after a few months into our reunion about a decade prior. And for me, creating this podcast has been a tremendous labor of love so that adoptees like me who were feeling alone or struggling in reunion or coming out of the fog would have a [00:01:00] connection so we wouldn't feel like we were crazy.

The wildest part of all of this is that it succeeded. Adoptees On has become our show. Our show to connect and share what the adoptee experience is really like. And I'm asking you today to support the podcast and make it sustainable for me to continue doing this work.

I'm Haley, the host and creator of this show, our community’s show, and I'm also a wife and mom to two little boys who are sleeping in their bed as I write this. When you sign up for Patreon or donate via PayPal, you are helping me, Haley, contribute to my family's needs.

What I didn't expect when I started podcasting was that this would become my full-time job. I'm showing up for you and saying yes to adoptees, and I would love for you to show up for me and commit to support Adoptees On. For three weeks only, I have a sale on for yearly membership to the Adoptees On Patreon, and you're going to get [00:02:00] one month free. After that, it's going to go back to regular price.

I'm honored by the support I've already gotten from the community and, truthfully, pretty scared to make this ask, but if I am going to continue to make this show, I really need your help to make it sustainable and to have the ability to meaningfully contribute to my little family over here. Click the link in the show notes or go to adopteeson.com/partner to sign up right now.

Okay, let's get to the show. This is Episode 163, Maeve Kelly. One of our favorite guests is back. Maeve Kelly. She is a good friend of mine, and she is here to share her story of a trip to Ireland to meet some of her extended family on her maternal side. We have shared some major ups and downs in reunion with Maeve, and this is a really special episode. She dropped some really incredible wisdom towards the end. I really appreciate her candor and honesty. As always, let's listen in. [00:03:00]

I am so pleased to welcome back to Adoptees On, Maeve Kelly. Hi, Maeve.

Maeve Kelly: Hi, Haley.

Haley Radke: I made my husband guess who I was interviewing today and I said, “It is the third time she's been on and she was Episode 3,” and he said, “Maeve.” So he knew it was you.

Maeve Kelly: Wow. How many times has he listened to the podcast?

Haley Radke: He gave up a while ago. He for sure has heard your episode, but maybe he gave up in the fifties. But yeah, so you have been on, and then you were also on Episode 102, giving us another update. And you had some interesting things happen in the last while, so I'd love to hear about them. [00:04:00]

But first, do you mind giving us the little short version of your story just to remind people if they haven't heard your episodes for a little while, all about Maeve.

Maeve Kelly: Okay. So the Cliff Notes version would be that I am an adoptee from the Baby Scoop Era, a domestic adoptee, and grew up not knowing anything about my first parents or anything about my first family in a closed adoption and had always been really wanting to find out who I was and where I came from.

And later in life after I had my children, I started looking in earnest and I made contact with my first mother and then experienced some secondary rejection. I was sent a cease-and-desist letter from her lawyer after we'd had that one phone call, which I describe in detail in the first episode, which is the first time I'd ever told anyone that story. [00:05:00] And after a couple of years of shoving my feelings back into a box, I wound up making contact with her other children, my siblings. I think I discussed that in the first episode, no, I think I left the first episode with, I had not made contact with them, but I wanted to.

Haley Radke: Yeah, I think we talked about that. And you've been on Off Script, too.

Maeve Kelly: I'm a little overexposed. I hope people aren't sick of me.

Haley Radke: Well, I guess if you're friends with me, just, people just keep getting on. I don't know.

Maeve Kelly: Right, so let's see. Okay. And then in the Cliff Notes version, I made contact with them, and then my mother would not tell me who my father was. And I was desperate to find that out and I resigned myself to perhaps never knowing and was in a really dark place for a long time. [00:06:00]

And suddenly out of the blue, I got a hit on Ancestry and found out who my father was in the course of about a day by Googling and doing some other sort of internet sleuthing. And I have since reunited with him, and that's been a really wonderful, unexpected discovery and development for me.

So I think that was where we left it the last time we talked.

Haley Radke: Yeah, I was so excited for you. And we've talked a little bit since then about how there's still challenges, even in a nicer situation, I would say with your bio dad. But can you tell me about connecting with some of your extended family on your maternal side?

Maeve Kelly: Sure. So I had only made contact with my two siblings at first, and that didn't go very well. I met them both one time and I didn't do anything else in order to meet anyone else because I just felt really low about those meetings. I did not really feel accepted. They didn't really share much. [00:07:00]

I knew that there was a very large extended family in Ireland. I did a little research on my own, but I didn't try to make contact with any of them. I really just didn't have it in me. I had felt so rejected for so long, first by my mother and then by my siblings. I just didn't have it in me.

But I had my information out there on Ancestry and 23andMe, and in October of 2018, about a year and a half after I had first reached out to my siblings, I got a note from a first cousin on my maternal side. She was the first of my maternal-side extended relatives who had ever tested on any of the commercial DNA databases. That was a pretty big moment

Haley Radke: Because to your knowledge you were a secret and from a very large family.

Maeve Kelly: Yes, so it was definitely a secret. I knew that from my siblings who told me that my mother had never told anyone about me, including them, including her husband. She was planning to take it to the grave. [00:08:00] So no one knew it, not any of her siblings, not her parents. Nobody ever knew that she had been pregnant and had placed me for adoption.

So, I was sort of waiting. I knew this was going to happen because I knew what a large family she was from, and it was just gonna be a matter of time. And I'd even tried to raise it with one of my siblings to say, you know, it's gonna come out. My DNA is out there and at some point someone is going to test and it's gonna be out there. And I really don't want that to be the way that people find out.

I don't think that's a good way for them to find out. I think it's really jarring. It could be really upsetting and I don't think it's a great way for our mother, for this stuff to come out. It's terrible for me. And I really wanted her to tell her siblings and her extended family about me, but she wouldn't do it. [00:09:00]

And so sure enough, what happened was my first cousin, who actually lives in England, got a DNA test for her birthday, as they normally do, right? Isn't it always like a gift? And she had no expectation that anything exciting was gonna come out of this. She fully expected that her results were going to be 100% Irish, and they were. But I popped up in there as the only first cousin that was on her list, and she was actually in Crete celebrating her 50th birthday.

And she saw that she had me as a match, and she emailed me and she actually thought that I was my sister because she just couldn't understand. And I said, “I'm so-and-so.” And she's, “who are you?” And I said, “I'm so-and-so’s daughter.” And she said, “Oh, you're so-and-so” And I was like, “No, I'm actually her first child. She didn't raise me because of what I said.” And we took it from there.

Actually I was rereading some of the texts that she had sent me before we spoke this evening, just reminding myself of what that was like. [00:10:00] And she sent me a text very soon after we had made contact and she said, “I believe I'm the only member of the entire family who knows about you.” And then she said, “I really don't know what else to say except welcome to the family. I cannot wait to meet up with you. We will never let you go.”

Haley Radke: Wow. I have goosebumps hearing that, even though I think you've told me that a while ago. But did you believe that because you've had some not-so-great receptions?

Maeve Kelly: No, but I tell you, it was the opposite of the reception that I had gotten from everybody else. In any other time I had ever tried to reach out to anyone, it was always with a lot of distrust and they responded to me with some hostility, and I felt like I had to prove myself. It was very uncomfortable and not pleasant. [00:11:00]

And to get this immediately from someone who didn't know me at all. I clearly was breaking some kind of code, and she's writing this from her restaurant in Crete during her 50th birthday holiday with her husband. And that was her immediate reaction. I couldn't believe it. It blew me away. It really did.

It was the first time anyone had ever really been kind to me, either on the adoptive family side or on my birth family side as regards my reunion or my attempts to search or anything. It was the first time anyone had ever really said anything nice to me. So I was blown away. And that's who she is. I came to find out that she is that person. She's as kind and lovely and as wonderful of a person as I've ever met. And she doesn't know anything about adoption. Nothing. She really has no experience with it. She had a couple friends growing up that were adopted, but certainly never read anything about it. [00:12:00] She doesn't know anything. And for her to come out with it like that was just miraculous to me.

So we started off our relationship from there, and within about 24 hours of my making contact with her, she sent me over email the first pictures of my mother that I had ever seen. In the time that I had made contact with my siblings, we had texted a couple of times, and we met one time each, but they had never sent me a picture of her. And so my cousin is the one, she sent me what pictures she had on her phone and then she went home to her home and she took photos of pictures that she had on her mantle and she sent them to me. Immediately, without any reservation, without looking me up or investigating me, sent me these really lovely pictures. And it was incredible. I couldn't believe it.

Haley Radke: Amazing. Like, that's what you hope for, right? That's the dream. To have it extended from a cousin. It's pretty special.

Maeve Kelly: Yeah. Yeah, it was unexpected.

Haley Radke: So she lives in England? [00:13:00]

Maeve Kelly: She lives in England. She was born and raised in Ireland, and she married an English guy, and she's lived in England for the last 20 years. But she goes home to Ireland every couple of months because she wants to see her dad, who's in his nineties. And he's living alone, although close to her brother who cares for him, but he's still living alone in his nineties in a big modern farmhouse in County Mayo. So she goes home to see him every couple of months.

So, after we'd been in contact for, I don't know, about a year and a half, she said, “Hey, if you want to come to Ireland and meet more of the family, I would be glad to arrange for that for you and we can just meet there, I'll plan it around a time I'm going to be there to see my dad anyway. What do you think of February, 2020? Or April, 2020?” So I jumped on it and I said, “February, 2020.” Even though I knew the weather was going to be terrible, but I really wanted to do it as soon as I could. As soon as I had the opportunity. I didn't want to wait around.

Haley Radke: [00:14:00] And at the time we're recording this, we're still in the delightful pandemic of 2020, so it seems like you have picked the good time.

Maeve Kelly: I know, right? Who would've known? If I had waited, I wouldn't have been able to go. We were shut down here in March of 2020. Yeah, it’s really fortuitous that I did push it to February. So yeah, I went there in February.

Haley Radke: So what were you feeling when she asked you that? Like I'm just thinking, okay, am I gonna go to a country around the world and go meet some strangers and hang out with them?

Maeve Kelly: Exactly. I was exhilarated and terrified. In equal parts.

Haley Radke: But you just said yes. You just knew in your gut: of course, this is what I want. Wow.

Maeve Kelly: And, you know, I've always been that way. I am just hit the gas pedal and get to 70 miles an hour. I'm just, yes if I have an opportunity to meet someone with the exception of one person, which we'll probably talk about later, I'm all for it. So I was an immediate yes, and book the tickets. [00:15:00]

Haley Radke: Okay. So when she invites you and she's planning this around the timing to visit her dad and everything. But we're talking about your extended family. So has she been telling people about you? Did she contact your first mother? Do you know what was happening behind the scenes there?

Maeve Kelly: Ugh. Yes, I do, unfortunately. Like I had said, she's the first person in the extended family that knew about me because my siblings didn't tell anyone and my mother didn't tell anyone. She reached out to some of my aunts, the ones that she's closest with. And it started to sort of get around the family.

At that point, when my mother found out that it was getting around the family, she sent a letter out to the oldest child in every family group. She's one of nine siblings, so there's 10 total in her sibling group. [00:16:00] And of those 10, there's 39, including myself. So she sent out 10 letters to the 10 oldest, and I did hear about the letter. My cousin actually read it to me because she is the oldest in her sibling group.

So she got it, and it was like a one-page letter. It said, “Some of you are aware that I gave this child up for adoption. She may be contacting some of you. This woman”–she called me this woman–“has a family of her own.” It ended with something that was pretty bland. It was, “If she makes contact with you, then I would ask that you welcome her” or something like that. But it certainly was no resounding “this is my daughter and I'm so thrilled and she's a wonderful person.” Because at the end of the day, she'd never even laid eyes on me. [00:17:00]

I still haven't met her. And we have this very tortured history where she had sent me a cease-and-desist letter five years prior, telling me she was going to sue me if I ever made contact with her again. So it was a very tortured letter. And it made me out to be a bad guy. It was really distressing. It was a very sad letter. I was very upset about the letter. It was very cold.

So at that point, you know, it was out there, for sure. Now everyone definitely knew who I was. Then my cousin could talk more freely about me. And when I decided to come out in February of 2020, she started making plans a couple of months ahead of time to set up meet-and-greets for me.

Haley Radke: And did you have second thoughts when you knew that everybody got this letter blast, or were you still just like no, I wanna know some of these people. I don't know. I, it just feels so scary to me. You're so brave. I just, sometimes the things that you do, I'm just like, wow, [00:18:00] I'm in awe of you.

Maeve Kelly: I had so many second thoughts.

Haley Radke: Okay. Okay. So you're human Good.

Maeve Kelly: Third thoughts, fourth thoughts and fifth thoughts. Yeah, I really did. It was really difficult. Yeah. My cousin was really honest with me that she'd had some very tough conversations with two of my aunts in particular, who just couldn't understand why I wanted to meet any of them and just couldn't understand why I couldn't just go away.

One of them said to my cousin, “You know, she has a family.” Meaning my adoptive family. So I'm glad my cousin was really honest with me about that. I would much prefer the honesty. I think I'm like a lot of adoptees in that I need truth. I really need truth, I need honesty. I cannot stand it when people act like they like me when they don't or what have you. Like, I can deal with honesty and truth. So I was glad she told me all of that. I was more prepared and I didn't try to win them over. So when I went over there in February, there were two aunts who didn't want to meet me. [00:19:00] And that's fine. That's up to them. I can't do anything about that. I think that story was written 50 years ago. It's sad. It's really sad. And my cousin didn't try to press it.

Haley Radke: Yeah. This is sort of an aside. I don't wanna go down the rabbit trail, but did you find out, like, did any of them have any clue about you?

Maeve Kelly: No.

Haley Radke: Okay.

Maeve Kelly: No one had a clue, which is really, well, yeah.

Haley Radke: Because she was in the States already.

Maeve Kelly: Right. So long story short, she was in the States when she gave birth to me, but the entire family save one sibling was in Ireland and remained in Ireland. And she also moved in order to hide the pregnancy. So she was living and working in Manhattan. And her brother was also there in Manhattan, so she saw him every so often. But when she got pregnant, she moved to Philadelphia to hide it from everyone, even him. Never told a soul.

Haley Radke: Yeah. So she was fully successful, like, almost her whole life.

Maeve Kelly: Completely successful. No one had a clue. [00:20:00] And in fact, it's really funny. My cousin and I have had some jokes, because she said that, when she was speaking with a few of my cousins about it, they were joking about it. Like, my mother is the last one anyone would've expected to have this secret child because she's very proper. Everything is just the way it needs to be.

Haley Radke: Did you ever see that show, Keeping Up Appearances?

Maeve Kelly: No, I don't know that.

Haley Radke: It's a really old PBS show from the UK and the mom in that show is very proper and her name's Hyacinth and it ends up everything is always a big fail. But yes, it's the keeping up appearances part.

Maeve Kelly: Yeah, exactly. Yeah, that's pretty funny. And it is amazing when you think about it, how someone could keep the secret like that. She was absolutely going to take that secret to the grave, including from her own husband. [00:21:00]

Haley Radke: I'm reading The Girls Who Went Away in the Baby Scoop Era right now. And they went away, but people kind of knew, right? They still knew, they gossiped. Some of them were successful in hiding. Some parents were successful in hiding their daughter's shame, etc. But that's wild that she was gonna take it to the grave.

Maeve Kelly: She was a little different, too; she's not the typical girl who went away in that she was 30 years old when I was born. This was absolutely a choice of hers. If she had wanted to raise me, she absolutely could have made it happen. She could have gone back to Ireland. So many of her sisters were having babies at the exact same time, and I think I probably just could’ve slid in there and maybe no one would’ve even noticed, “Oh, there's another one!”

Haley Radke: Do you know what order you are in the 39?

Maeve Kelly: Oh my gosh, no. That's a really good question.

Haley Radke: Are you in the middle there somewhere?

Maeve Kelly: I think I'm right in the middle.

Haley Radke: Okay, that's there. I've done my rabbit-trailing. You went to Ireland, right? [00:22:00] I wanna hear about that. I just can't believe you did it.

Maeve Kelly: I can't believe I did it either. And again, like, harken back to the fact that my entire childhood all the way up to the time I was about 40, I had no idea about any of this. And I was never encouraged in any way to ever find my family. Ever by anyone. So when I found myself on that plane, I just couldn't believe it. So I flew out–I worked all the way up till Wednesday. The thing is, when I was preparing for this call tonight, Haley, I realized I have not processed this at all. Haley Radke: Oh no, I'm not supposed to bring up stuff people haven’t processed.

Maeve Kelly: No, but I mean, my counselor, she was like, “Listen, you need to write everything down. You need to really take this all in. You need to take some time off, before you go, after you go, you really need to think about it.” I didn't do any of that. I worked until Wednesday. I got on the plane on Thursday, then I came back and I went right back to work and I didn't write anything down when I was there, I was too tired. [00:23:00] I was so emotionally blown away every day that I couldn't write anything or reflect or think about anything.

So this is really the first time that I sat down the night before to get ready for this interview and I started looking at some of the pictures and stuff and thinking about what had happened. But, so anyway, I flew out on a Thursday. I spent the night at a London airport hotel on Thursday night, and then on Friday morning I flew out to Dublin. And my cousin and her husband picked me up at the airport, and the first thing that we did was we went to my other cousin's house for lunch.

So right from the airport, here we go. And my cousin had set up this sort of weekend itinerary where every day we were meeting with new groups of cousins, new family groups that she had set up perfectly, like to the hour. And they were prepped and primed for me to be there. So I would walk in and it's just, “Oh, [00:24:00] hello!” It's everyone's waiting for me. She knew, they knew exactly what time we were getting there, it was so organized. She did such a wonderful job.

Every day I was there, I had different groups of people I was meeting with, different relatives. So my first day I met right away with our mutual cousin and her husband and daughter. And we stayed at my cousin's dad's house. I have said that her dad is in his nineties. And he lives alone. So we all stayed in his house. Which was fantastic. It was so much fun. He's such a gentleman, and that was such a great place to stay. I had the whole sort of upper floor of the house to myself, which was really nice.

Haley Radke: Had you ever been to Ireland before?

Maeve Kelly: I had. When I was 14, I went there. It's a really painful memory. Very coincidentally, my adoptive father, his entire extended family from many generations ago is from the same county, County Mayo, as I am from. [00:25:00] And my adoptive father was really into genealogy and Irish history, and he brought us to County Mayo when I was 14, and we looked at graveyards and we went to cemeteries. And he walked into restaurants that had my adoptive father's name, last name, trying to find relatives from hundreds of years ago.

So his family had come from Mayo hundreds and hundreds of years ago. Little did I know that, at that time, my entire extended family was in the same county and I probably crossed paths with one of my 36 cousins during that timeframe. My grandmother was living about 10 minutes away from where I was when I was 14 years old at that little bed & breakfast. So I had been back there and it was a very painful trip for me. And then going back brought back a lot of those memories. Of course, I had no idea that I was from Mayo, but I do now. [00:26:00]

And I actually, when I was there, everything came back to me about being there and all that.

Haley Radke: Did it redeem anything for you or was it more just, “Oh my gosh, I can't even think about that right now?”

Maeve Kelly: I couldn't think about it. It was so painful. I couldn't think about the fact that there I was trailing, I have a distinct memory of trailing behind him and my adoptive brother, who was their biological son, as they were looking at cemeteries and dusty old books in churches to try to find some evidence of their ancestors, when in reality, my grandmother was 10 minutes away. Who's dead. And I will never meet her and she never knew I existed. It was very painful. It was really painful to think about. Yeah, but anyway, back to the good part.

Haley Radke: Yeah. [00:27:00]

Maeve Kelly: So then, Saturday morning my cousin brought me over to Foxford, which is where my entire family lived, including my mother being raised. And I met with her oldest sister, who's in her nineties, and she has six children and three of them were there to meet me, which was really amazing, including the oldest of the grandchildren. So the oldest of my cousins, a guy named Francis. I think he's like 60 years old now. And he is a very soft-spoken introvert, I could tell, and definitely not a gregarious kind of guy that's gonna be the life of the party. He was kind of standing away from me a little bit, and at one point he took me by the elbow and he took me into the next room. He looked at me, like, straight in the eye and he said, “I want you to know that you are welcome here.” It was crazy. I was like, “What is happening?”

Haley Radke: Did you cry? I'm crying.

Maeve Kelly: Well, I cried. I did. I held it together for that. I did cry when I met my aunt. So this would be the oldest of my mother's siblings. She's such a lovely lady. And it's a tiny house in Foxford, right? [00:28:00] She's lived there for 50 years, and they put her right next to the stove in the kitchen so that she could be warm because again, remember, it's February in Ireland. It's really cold. So she's sitting there next to the stove with the stove on to be warm. And they had left a chair there for me, for me to go sit there right next to her in the kitchen.

And I walked in and she's 92 years old and she pats the chair and she's like, “Come over here to me.” And she just looked at me and she was like, “You are the image of your mother.” And it was so sweet. And the thing was, I remember when I first made contact with my cousin. She was like, “Oh, everyone's really afraid of Auntie May. What is she going to think about you? What is she gonna think about this situation?” Because she's really the head of the family and she's gonna be the tough one. [00:29:00]

She was not the tough one. She was so sweet and loving and gentle. And I just sat there the whole time next to her, and she held my hand. It was so incredibly meaningful. And again, this is the first aunt or uncle I've ever met. It was this moment, and it was just incredible. It was so, so meaningful. Such a gentle lady, who grew up in a time where, you know, having a child out of wedlock is basically, you're doomed to eternal damnation, right? And she was able to step out of that. And just look at me as a real person and as a member of the family.

So it was really beautiful. And then each one of my cousins, actually, who were there, they all, Francis started it and he took me aside, and I said, what he said to me. And then the others also, individually, they each took me–they didn't just stand back and be in the conversation, but they each took me individually–into the next room to have a conversation with me. Which was, again, so unexpected and so meaningful. [00:30:00] So that was such an emotional time for me.

Haley Radke: Were you just like a wreck every night, like crying in your pillow?

Maeve Kelly: I was a wreck every day and every night. It was so hard. It was so hard. Then I went, I won't belabor it, but then I went on a funny murder mystery excursion with five of my women cousins. We had a blast that night. Just went off and I spent time as me and five cousins. And the whole time I'm like, “I cannot believe this is happening to me. Here I am with all these cousins, like I'm related to them. I'm just as related to them as they are to each other.” I couldn't wrap my head around that. Like these are my actual cousins. These are not my adoptive cousins. These are my actual flesh and blood cousins. I had to keep telling myself that because I just couldn't believe it. [00:31:00]

So the weekend went on and it was the same thing where my cousin would set me up with these meetings at the various family homes, and I would hang out with people, and then I would go back to the house. And collapse. One of the great things, actually a unique thing, that she arranged for me was a tour of the mill where my grandfather had spent his entire career. He worked in the Foxford woolen mill for his whole life. And she arranged for us to have a tour there. Which was just fantastic. And again, I just could picture him being there and it was very grounding to actually walk the walk, see the streets, see where he lived, where he spent his whole career, look at the buildings. It really put it in perspective for me.

Haley Radke: That's amazing. And when you were talking about just being with your cousins, I just kept thinking, most people just take that for granted, that they know that they're related to the people they see at family gatherings and stuff. [00:32:00] And then juxtapose to you following your adoptive dad looking at gravestones when you have no connection. That's really poignant for me because one of the major fights I had with my adoptive parents was showing me this folder full of genealogy stuff and I was like, “This is not my history.” There's no recognition: this is so important to me, but yours shouldn't be important to you. That's interesting that those things would come together, of course, on a trip like this.

Maeve Kelly: Right, yeah. So I met my only living uncle, who lives in Foxford. He, again, was as gracious and as polite and welcoming as I could ever hope. I met another one of my aunts. So I met my oldest aunt and my youngest aunt of the 10 siblings in that group. There's one in her nineties and one in her seventies. So the last aunt that I met was in her seventies and that was where I saw the most resemblance to me, sort of on the last day when I met that aunt. For sure, a lot of resemblance, which was really, really fun, actually. [00:33:00]

Haley Radke: Did anyone tell you anything about your mother when you were there? Did you even ask or was that kind of not really on the table?

Maeve Kelly: So people would make it a point of showing me pictures of her when I was in their homes. One thing that they did was each one of them, whether it was one of my actual relatives or whether it was an in-law, would show me family pictures and they'd always point out my mother and say, “There's your mother.” In a very nice way, a very loving way. They didn't really talk too much about her personality. A little bit here and there, but no, they didn't really tell me that much. No, I didn't ask either. I just wanted to be there for me.

Haley Radke: Yeah. [00:34:00]

Maeve Kelly: I didn't want to make it about her at all. I really wanted to be about me. And the whole story didn't really come out. If anyone asked too much about it, I just tried to keep it really light because, you know, I had been warned that I was making people uncomfortable or what have you, and that people felt like they needed to choose between me and my mother, and all of that. And that's like the last thing I wanna do is make people feel uncomfortable. So I just made it about me. And I just was so happy to be there and thanking people profusely and stuff like that. Just trying to have fun, trying to keep it light, right? You know, making jokes about, “Well, surprise, another cousin here!” And of course being American, I can always joke about that as well, apologize for whatever the Americans have done lately that's embarrassing the world.

**Haley Radke:**Wow. So I don't even know how many people you met. It would be hard for me to keep track of that many names and faces day after day. How did you wrap up and end the trip? And I know you went right back to work after, but there must have been some processing on the plane home. [00:35:00]

Maeve Kelly: Oh my gosh. I think I just collapsed on the plane home. I was so exhausted. I was so unbelievably drained. Because the other thing was, I am very much an introvert and it is really difficult for me to be in those situations. And I really felt like I needed to perform. I really felt like this was it. I've gotta do this. Like I've got to get these people to like me. I need to show them that I'm not crazy. I need to show them I'm not out for their money and they don't need to be afraid of me. I'm just a normal person. I need to be likable. I need to be smart. I need to be the kind of person that they are going to want to continue to have a relationship with.

It was exhausting and I did it for four days straight in several different environments with all of these people who were gathered in order just to meet me. And I collapsed. I just collapsed after that. I had nothing left in the tank. And then I came home and I just went right back to work and I haven't thought about it that much since. I mean, of course, I thought about it, but I haven't really sat down to be like, “Wow, what just happened there?” Like, “Okay, I can't believe that just happened.” [00:36:00]

Haley Radke: I really appreciate you saying all the things you were trying to hold together because I think so many of us hold that in reunion. And it is another reunion of sorts, right? Even if it's extended family, it is still completely legitimate, it counts, whatever you want me to say about that. But, to try and prove yourself like that, that feeling is always with us, “You still like me, right?” And, especially, I don't know, did you hear anything after the trip, like, from your mother? I keep asking about that because I know it was such a huge conflict.

Maeve Kelly: Not after the trip, but I did hear before the trip. I went in February of 2020. In December of ‘19, she got wind of the fact that I was planning this trip, and she emailed me. This is the first time she's ever initiated contact with me. [00:37:00]

She emailed me and suggested that we should get together in January, the next month, that we should meet. And she sent me some dates that would work for her for me to travel to meet her. She also indicated that she felt like it would be better for the family, that they would be more comfortable with me if I met her before I went and that wouldn't I agree that it would be better for them that I would do this.

And it ruined my Christmas, Haley, because this came in like the middle of December and I was already so worked up about this trip, thinking about it and stressing about it. And really just beside myself thinking, you know, the anticipation of it. And then I get this email outta the blue. I had really made peace with the fact that I was never gonna meet her. [00:38:00] And then she sends me this. I spent a lot of time reflecting about it, and I talked to my counselor about it a lot. And I came to the conclusion that I wasn't gonna do that, and that there was nothing good gonna come out of that for me.

And it was really, really clear that the only reason she wanted to meet me was because I was going to Ireland. And she thought that would reflect badly on her if we hadn't met before then. She didn't want that to be the story, and it also was really clear to me that it was going to be a one-time deal and I just wasn't willing to do that to myself. She had said some really hateful things to me on our one phone call, and I was picturing her say those hateful things to me in person, and I was picturing myself not able to recover from that.

And so I wrote her a long email back–I probably spent like a week doing this email–but I sent her a long email back in which I said something to the effect of I appreciate her reaching out to me and I would love to continue our communication, but I'm not ready to meet right now. [00:39:00] But I would love to hear from her again. And I explained that I'm very afraid of what she would say to me if we met in person, and I'm very afraid that she only wants to meet me one time, and I didn't think that I could handle that.

And she never replied. Well, no, I take it back, she did reply. She said something like, “I can understand why this is not a good time for you. Maybe we can meet some other time.” That's what she said, and then I never heard from her again. So I was right, she didn't want to meet me for me; she wanted to meet me because I was going to Ireland. That's why. So it wasn't about me. So that was really hard. That was really, really hard. It was yet another holiday that had been ruined by adoption. I dunno about you, but like every holiday is ruined by adoption for me and for some reason or another, you know. I was like, “Darn it, I wanted to have a good Christmas.” I was really angry that Christmas, I was like, “She did it again!” [00:40:00]

Haley Radke: We may have talked a little bit about this situation, and I recall it quite vividly, in fact. Okay, now I'm gonna put you on the spot here, I think. I wonder if you have any advice coming out of this for other adoptees because, if you'll recall in our very first call, I think we both said to each other, basically, our mothers could do anything and we would run back to them. And yet, these years later you had that opportunity, but now you have these extra supports in place and you can read between the lines a little. And it sounds like you made a really wise choice for yourself and had really good boundaries about it all. Can you talk a little bit about that and how you, I guess maybe, extend that advice? It was so cool that you [00:41:00] still got some answers about your history and some connection and you didn't need to have the “pity visit,” I guess–I don't know what else to call it. It was gross the way that came about, so, I don't know, thoughts on that or advice?

Maeve Kelly: I can't give advice to anyone. I'm barely–I have no idea what I'm doing. The only advice I would have is just that you never know what's coming around the corner and you really can't predict what's going to happen in this bizarre life of adoption.

I never would have anticipated that my cousin would've reacted the way that she did. Never. I never could have anticipated that I would be at a place that I would decline to meet my own mother. I guess just to be ready for anything and not to put too much pressure on yourself to ever handle anything perfectly. I do think a lot of these things are put in stone before we're even born. [00:42:00]

I think two things have come out of my experience over the last several years. One thing really hits me. I think that sometimes we're presented with situations that come out of the blue. And the way that we respond to those situations shows what kind of people we really are. And I think the way my cousin reacted to me in that moment, when she's sitting there and getting that email from me and realizing who I am, it shows who she is as a person at her core. And I think the same is true of my mother. I think she's shown the person that she is. And you just can never know how any individual is going to react to these situations.

And you have to be ready for anything and not put pressure on yourself to try to control the result or control how other people are going to act. [00:43:00] Because the second big learning that I've had is: we can say the most perfect things in the most perfect way and explain things and just perfectly, and write the most perfect letter and be the most perfect person. And the people who were meant to reject us are still gonna reject us. And the people who were meant to accept us are still gonna accept us.

It's not our fault. None of this is our fault. This is just the way people are and the way the story was written well before we were born. So I've taken a lot of pressure off myself, I think, and realized that this really isn't about me and I can't control the way people are going to react to me or not react to me.

Haley Radke: I think that's very wise. [00:44:00] Something I've learned from you, and I'll just check if this is how you've reacted in the times you've had an opportunity to do so when you've received communication or information, you have paused and really decided how you're going to respond versus –I know some of us, especially if we're communicating by email, digitally in some format, and we feel like we need to give that instant response. I feel like you're really good at the pause and considering before you responded. I think that really helped you, Do you think so?

Maeve Kelly: Yeah, I do. I think I made a lot of mistakes in the beginning, for sure. I think part of that is just my personality too. It’s a little bit of self-preservation. Yeah, I always think it's good to pause and, of course, we need help with this stuff. Trying to go about these sorts of monumental, life-changing, incredibly emotionally impactful events without help is impossible. We need each other, right?

We need other adoptees in our corner. We really need people, we need our adoption-competent therapists along with us. I did make that mistake early on, when I first made contact with my mother. I was completely alone. [00:45:00] I had no idea what I was doing. I was not in therapy. I did not know a single adoptee. I hadn't read anything about adoption. I had no idea what I was doing. I made so many mistakes. But, you know, now that I've grown up a little bit, I've learned a lot and I realize we really need our people along the way. So I've learned that.

Haley Radke: Yeah, we really do.

Maeve Kelly: We can't do this alone. We can't. It's too big. This is way too big. This is more than one person can bear. It really is. It's overwhelming.

Haley Radke: Thank you so much for sharing about your trip. I'm so excited, we're gonna do recommended resources and this is only one good thing I can think of right now about the pandemic, is that there are so many awesome online things happening for adoptees. I finally got to see a play I have been dying to see, The Good Adoptee by Suzanne Bachner. I don't know if you've ever had a chance to see it in person, Maeve? [00:46:00]

Maeve Kelly: I have not, but I know I've seen pieces on it or write ups on it, and I've always wanted to. I was planning, actually, on going to see it and then the lockdown happened. But I know what you're talking about.

Haley Radke: I'm sure a lot of us have seen the playbill for it. Anyway, it has been recorded and I was messaging Suzanne a little bit back and forth, and she told me they are going to do another online adaptation of it, as well. But I was able to rent it and watch it and I just loved it.

It's a one woman show and one of the most interesting parts of the play, I thought, if you like the tea spilling, I love that [00:47:00]. If you listen to any of the things I share on the Adoptees Off Script on the Patreon podcast, you'll know that about me.

She talks about hiring a search professional who probably a lot of us have heard her name before. She doesn't say her whole name, but she gives all the hints that you need to figure out who this is. And about the drama behind the scenes of that. And I found that really interesting because I never needed help searching, and I know there's so many people that use Search Angels or do hire a private investigator, and what that looks like.

So, yeah, if you want a little tea, that, I feel, is one of the bonus parts of the play, but I really enjoyed it. It was really well done, and of course I would love to see it in person and I hope I will be able to sometime. But I really think it's a great way to support an adoptee who's doing some really amazing creative work. [00:48:00]

So I really enjoyed that and I'll link to where you can watch it in the show notes. You do pay to view it. Of course, we should pay adoptees for their art just like other artists. And then when there's a new version, I will let you guys know as well. I'm not sure the timeline on that, but I really loved it and highly recommend.

What did you wanna share with us?

Maeve Kelly: If I could do two quick ones. I had meant to bring up this piece that I just read today in Medium by Mindy Stern. I don't know if you know Mindy, but she's on Twitter quite a bit. I follow her, and she does this really great piece about how she met her birth father and coming out of the airport, what that was like to see him in the baggage claim. And it is exactly what it was like for me when I met my birth father as well, and also when I got off the plane in Ireland to go meet my cousin. I just think that she's such a great writer and the stuff that she writes about really resonates with me. [00:49:00]

And the second one, if I can give you a second one, is of course, Jessenia Parmer. She has the I am Adopted website, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. And this month for National Adoption Awareness Month, she is posting just about every day a different story or an account by an adoptee, giving each person the floor to talk about their adoption experience in their own words. And I'm finding these pieces so moving, really moving. So well written. And I find when adoptees can just talk about their experiences in their own words without interruption, it's the most powerful method of communication there can be. So I can't recommend that enough. What Jessenia is doing.

Haley Radke: Yeah, it's such a good series. [00:50:00] And she started another Instagram account, and it's (at) adoptee mental health stories, so she's curating them there as well. And I don't know about you, Maeve, but I love that she has the photos of the authors. Because you're seeing their face and their story. I love having that connection. That's the special part of Instagram, right? The extra visuals. It's really well done, very well curated of course, by Jessenia, who does all the good things for our community. She's amazing.

Thank you for sharing those. I'm so glad we got to highlight them. Thanks for sharing your story with us. Again, if you want to go back and hear Maeve tell her other stories from the beginning. She was in Season 1, Episode 3 and back again in Episode 102. And she has a couple episodes on Adoptees Off Script. If you want to tweet to her, what is your Twitter handle, Maeve?

Maeve Kelly: I am (at) MaeveKelly11.

Haley Radke: Wonderful. Thank you so much. [00:51:00]

I'm so grateful for adoptees like Maeve who are ready to tell it like it is, the hard stuff and all. I think it really helps prepare the rest of us for what reunion and search can actually look like and what's going on behind the scenes of our mind while we're in the moment. I think it's really helpful to help prepare us if we ever get an invitation like that. Anyway, I'm so thankful for Maeve and for the other connections I've built from making this podcast. It's been really special to see how we have changed and our opinions have evolved over the last few years, and I'm grateful I get to share that with you

I want to thank everyone who has signed up so far on Patreon. There's been so many of you signing up for the yearly membership and getting one month free and others that are signing up for month-to-month membership, which is awesome also.[00:52:00] And I've received several donations and I'm just really thankful for your support. I don't know how many times I can say it, so I'll just say it one more time: Thankful for your support, for your ongoing support of the show.

And if it's not in the budget right now, literally one of the best ways you can help the show is to just share it with one person. So if you know an adoptee who would really connect to Maeve's story, you can share this episode or share your favorite episode, maybe a Healing Series episode with your adoptee support group, or another one of your favorites.

And, the best part about podcasts is that they're free and you can teach other people how to download them. Because you're listening to this. So if you grab their phone and show them how they can listen to Adoptees On, it's a huge gift to me and to them. So thank you. Thanks for sharing the show.

Thanks for your ongoing support in so many ways, and thanks for listening. Let's talk again next Friday. [00:53:00]