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2007-10-09 11:02:48 · 16 answers · asked by jesse 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Adoption

should i tell the father that i am gving the baby up for adoption

2007-10-09 13:02:43 · update #1

16 answers

If done for the right reasons (the child genuinely NEEDS a home - not because people have told the relinquishing mother that it's the 'right' thing to do / or for those waiting in foster care - unable to be parented by their parents - they are really the children in NEED), and if full disclosure of origins to the adoptee is maintained throughout their lives AND open contact with the biological family is maintained (if the child is in no real danger) - then I believe there is a need for adoption.

And on a side note:

For those that keep sprouting that adoptees are better off than being aborted - please STOP.

The opposite of 'ABORTION' - is - 'CARRYING TO TERM'.

ADOPTION should only be considered once a mother has decided that they can truly NOT parent the child - or that right has been taken away from them because of possible danger to the child.

Saying to an adoptee that they should be grateful to even be alive - is a lie - and is extremely hurtful.

Please refrain.

Thankyou.

------------------------------------

Added to comment on your added comment !!

Yes - if you do decide that adoption is the only option - then YES - you do need to advise the father of his child - and your intentions.
He is the father of the child - he deserves to decide if he would like to parent the child - and the child also deserves to know who his/her father is.
Please consider all options very carefully before deciding.
Adoption is a short term fix to a long term problem.

Please take the time to read -
http://keepingbabieswithmommy.blogspot.com/
http://paragraphein.wordpress.com/
http://thechroniclesofmunchkinland.com/
http://originsusa.memberlodge.org/

I wish you all the best.

2007-10-09 12:48:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 7 1

Adoption is not a guarantee for a better life - it is a guarantee for a different life. Adoption cannot guarantee that the child will not have a miserable life any more than it can guarantee that the child will have a great life.

Many adoptive parents are not educated about what it takes to raise an adopted child, and most people are not aware that it damages infants to be separated from their mothers at or soon after birth (not to mention the damage to the mother - and both hurts last a lifetime). This alone makes an adopted child a 'special needs' child.

Even in the best of adoptive homes, the child still has to grow up without the genetic mirroring that kept children get. They know the origins of their features and characteristics. They know how tall they will get and what color and texture their hair will be when they are adults, and what body shape they will have.

Kept children live in an atmosphere where the rest of their family has already learned from experience how to "be" in the world based on their characteristics and personality traits. The adopted child has to feel his/her way blindly. And, if it is an open adoption, the child has to watch while his mother raises his/her younger siblings and wonders why s/he too was not kept. His/her younger siblings wonder why their sibling was given away and if they too will be given away.

In the adoptive home, the child lives without the primal connection to the Family of Man. Immediate family provides that connection as no one else can.

Oops gotta go. More later if I get the time.

2007-10-09 12:55:29 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 7 1

Yes dad should be informed, lets face ithe has a right to know and therefore decide what he wants for his child. He may want to parent. The laws in IL regarding the fathers consent were changed due to a case called "Baby Richard" who was placed for adoption by his mother at birth. This case went through the courts for many years and finally when dad won the child back the media was all over it like a fly on ****. The media showed this child get transferred from the only mom and dad he knew to the parents he knew nothing about. Watching this child scream and cry and not let go of his mother was gut wrenching. Long story short...the birthparents (now his only parents) end up getting divorced and mom has custody. As aresult of this adoption....laws became stricter in IL and less room for error (well you need a legitimate lawyer too).

I would let dad know so he can participate in the decision making and if it is adoption you all chose then it can be done correctly so that there is no risk for disrupting the childs life. You need to do what is in the best interest of the child (short term and long term). Good luck!

2007-10-09 14:10:45 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

Adoption involves a big loss for birth mom and a big loss for baby. Most of the time it involves loss for the adoptive family that had wished for "their own". Even in the best of circumstances, its complicated because that loss is always there. I think it messes the adoptive kid up a little, or maybe a lot, but it might mess them up more to grow up with an unstable biological family. And it is nice for the adoptive family to be able to have children so it does have positive outcomes.

2007-10-09 11:58:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

it is an rather thrilling question, i believe the difficulty itself isn't black and white, incorrect or top. before everything, i have not provide an newborn up nor have I been followed, meaning I actual don't understand how those human beings experience. I see in a lot of solutions how the bio-mom who provides up her newborn is going via a good grief era, i believe it is authentic. Now, no one forces those females to grant their children up for adoption, and that i'd assume this is a determination it is not any longer made in one day. I do experience for each of the youngsters who're followed, as i visit in worry-free words imagine the point of loss they experience (even if this is rational or irrational it would not count number) i visit in worry-free words imagine the experience of loss they experience, even nonetheless the followed mothers and fathers are magnificent and the youngster didn't wish for something, they're nevertheless without their beginning mothers and fathers. Having reported all that, adoption is taken under consideration necessary, for this isn't a proper international and childrens want households and females choose to grant their newborn an outstanding existence ( i extremely believe it is what those females imagine, and that i will not fault them for it) this is painfully glaring nonetheless that the adoption gadget is in want of adjustments.

2016-10-20 06:15:42 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I'm adopted, so I know how it is and when it comes down to it..it hurts. Yes you get a new family that actually wants you, but you will always have that emptiness in your life. And all the questions that are unanswered. To you it maybe the right thing to do,but when that kid gets older they will never have what others do. And that is to know who their real parents are. So if your thinking about putting someone up for adoption, just try and work it out before you give the one person who loved you for nine months away.

2007-10-09 11:31:27 · answer #6 · answered by helmscrystal17 1 · 10 1

The baby can not be adopted unless both parents sign over their rights

As far as adoption I think it’s great, there are lots of children that need a loving home. It gives people who might not be able to have natural children the oppturinity to be parents. I’m not just talking about infertile people, gays and lesbians, single people who don’t see themselves getting married anytime soon but want to start a family. Those that don’t want to use donor eggs or donor sperm.

I’m adopted and have never had any major issues over it.

2007-10-09 14:53:03 · answer #7 · answered by Spread Peace and Love 7 · 0 3

Well, to start with, I am adopted. I was adopted into the same bloodline(family) actually. If you decide to adopt a child just let me tell you this. You have to decide when you will tell them you aren't his/her biological parent and if they are adopted at a young age(old enough to talk) if they get mad they may call you by your name and not mom or dad. I did the same way. That just means they don't understand. It can be hard but at the same time it's a great experience because you are saving a child from never having a good life or never having parents and you can experience parenthood.

2007-10-09 12:20:04 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 5

adoption is a touchy subject but its hard to give birth to a child that you don't have the means to raise, but you need to inform the biological father that this is a choice your considering since it's his child as well, its only fair.

2007-10-09 15:24:24 · answer #9 · answered by Simply D 3 · 0 1

I think NO WAY!! If i was adopted i would have gone out and search for who my real parents were. But still i would lluv the family that adopted me!!

2007-10-09 11:10:30 · answer #10 · answered by Aman's gurl 2 · 5 2

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