International Adoption Information - What Happens If I Refuse a Referral?
International adoption offers so many choices: good choices,
difficult choices, complicated choices. While most people
never even consider the possibility of refusing a child
referral when they embark on their international adoption
journey, you can quite easily and unexpectedly find yourself
in a very tough emotional situation. Some people compare
turning down a child referral to having a miscarriage: Both
are situations of personal loss and lost possibilities –
you’ve lost the possibility of parenting a particular child.
If you are referred a child who brings circumstances you
didn’t expect – or has more severe special needs than you
think you can handle – don’t immediately say, “No way, this
isn’t what we asked for.” Instead, stop and take a deep
breath. Then, do some digging – lots of digging. Find out
what is truly involved in parenting a child from this
particular situation or with these particular needs. Get
multiple opinions from doctors and specialists, ask your
adoption agency to connect you with other adoptive parents
whose children are in the same (or similar) situation. Talk
it over with your spouse and then talk some more.
Only after you have done the research and gathered all the
information you can find should you decide to turn down a
referral – and even then it will be a devastatingly
difficult choice. In the end, you must make the choice that
is right for your family – a choice about the type of life
and lifestyle you want for your family. If you turn down a
referral because the child has more needs than you can
handle, you won’t be seen as a bad person and your adoption
agency won’t put you back at the bottom of the referral
waiting list. (It’s a different story if you repeatedly turn
down referral after referral for trivial reasons – at that
point your adoption agency and your social worker will
probably want you to re-evaluate your desire to adopt.)
If you turn down a referral, be prepared to grieve – grieve
for the child you said “no” to and grieve for all the lost
possibilities. Also, be ready for a lack of understanding –
and the insensitive remarks that can bring – from some of
your family and friends. Just when you need their support
the most, you may hear, “So what? You’ll get another
referral,” or, “What’s the big deal? You never even met the
child.” This type of remark is akin to telling someone who
miscarried, “You’ll have other children,” in that it doesn’t
acknowledge and validate the real nature of the grief you’re
feeling. Try to remember that most people who say
insensitive things at a time like this are very
uncomfortable with expressing emotions. Don’t go adding
their problems to yours!
The bottom line on evaluating a referral – any referral – is
that you must take into consideration what is best for you
and your family. You must weigh everything – your job, your
needs, your lifestyle, even the type of health insurance
coverage you have – when deciding whether to accept or turn
down a referral in international adoption because absolutely
everything will change when you say “yes” and bring that
child into your life. You have to be brutally honest because
you’re not just considering the impact on your life – you’re
also considering the impact on the child. Don’t beat
yourself up if you find that you have to say no to a
referral. Instead, take strength in the fact that you are
honest and in knowing that the right child – your child –
will come along.
Credits: Excerpted from "International Adoption Guidebook,"
Mary M. Strickert, © 2004
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