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What is Cooperative Adoption?

Cooperative Adoption represents possibilities. It is used by each participant differently. Cooperative adoption adds options and extends family relationships. Cooperative Adoption is knowing that children all come into this life whole, with all rights and relationships intact. And, it is understand that no one has the right to interrupt those rights or deprive another being of them.

Cooperative Adoption is the child?s access to both families, to both sets of parents, with progressive participation in the decisions that will affect his/her life. It is important to view adoption from the child?s perspective rather than from the adults? perspective. If the child has access to both families, he does not lose anything, and both sets of parents, by the nature of the arrangement will have continued access to each other.

In the past, birth families and adoptive families were considered to have antagonistic interests. Somehow the fact that they were all human beings with a child?s interest at heart got lost. It doesn?t matter how this happened and there is no blame. What matters now is that adoption ADDS OPTIONS to the child?s life and to the lives of all relatives. The ideal adoption expands the child?s life experiences. The ideal adoption is cooperative participation and interaction between all birth and adoptive family members. In an ideal adoption, the child loses nothing...not relationships, not knowledge, not continuity, not identity, not birth family, not siblings, not grandparents, not parents, not one single thing! Instead he gains relationships, knowledge, continuity, identity, security, parents, siblings grandparents, etc.

Secrecy and loss have made traditional adoptions difficult. COOPERATIVE ADOPTION is a positive option, a chance for everyone to celebrate, and a change for everyone to gain.

Cooperative Adoption requires an understanding that all relationships are continually renegotiable. None of us stay the same and all our dreams, needs and relationships change with time, maturity and experience. In a cooperative adoption the child must be seen as having progressive participation in his/her own life and in the relationships established by adoption. It acknowledges that the unconsulted, party, the adoptee, maintains control of self. With this in mind it is easier for the adults to view themselves as guardians of the child?s future and to acknowledge the great gift they have all gained in creating the nurturing a life.

What you will find in the book ?Cooperative Adoption? is a step-by-step guide to understanding the alternatives available. It is a handbook for avoiding adversarial adoptions and facilitating cooperative adoptions.

Feelings of anxiety, disbelief, discomfort, and excitement may surface as you read through this book. Remember that everyone has multiple emotions about most things. There is no rule that says you must only feel one thing at one time. You are allowed to work through your feelings as you choose and to feel anything you choose. It is not unusual to find that an open process such as cooperative adoption will feel uncomfortable for some of you. Know that this is not different from the emotional process for any important, identity-related relationship. People must learn to love and trust each other in any meaningful relationship.

Just as divorce once left its participants unable to relate, so has adoption. Just as divorce has moved in possibilities from adversary to cooperative, so can adoption. As part of a transition, cooperative adoption participants are traveling footpaths rather than paved highways. They may seem unfamiliar. They may seem untraveled. But that does not make the highway better. There would be no highways if footpaths and buggy had not preceded them.

Cooperative Adoption is what you make it. It is continually evolving and you may find that the harder you try to define it the broader the definition becomes.

Cooperative Adoption takes seeing each participant as whole until themselves, coming together as many whole people to extend a family rather than as pieces to create a whole.

By Sharon Kaplan Roszia & Mary Jo Rillera Co-Authors of ?COOPERATIVE ADOPTION?


CHILD ADVOCATE OF THE YEAR

Sharon Kaplan Roszia was honored as Child Advocate of the Year in 1987, by the Child Abuse Council or Orange County. This award is in recognition of Sharon?s 26- year-career in the field of adoption, her current thrust being the promotion of cooperative adoptions and training others about adoption loss issues.

This prestigious award was presented to Sharon at an honorary dinner attended by more than 400 individuals. Sharons?s remarks from the podium show that she is never afraid to speak from the heart. She stated that she was particularly pleased to see the community recognize that not only are abused children placed in adoption, but that children in adoption can be abused. In addition, she stressed that SECRECY IN ADOPTION IS A FORM OF ABUSE OF CHILDREN.? That?s a quote we should all use.

Pat Sanders, American Adoption Congress 1987

In October 2003, Sharon received yet another prestigious award from the international ATTACh organization. With an audience of 650 watching, ?The Lifetime Achievement award? was bestowed on her for her 40 plus years of work with children.

Cooperative adoption is an adoption that guarantees the adoptee?s access to both families over time.

COOPERATIVE VS ADVERSARIAL

Cooperative:
Birthparents choose adoptive family.

Birth and adoptive parents know the identity, location, and biographical information about eachother.

Birth and adoptive families exchange ongoing medical data.

Child is usually placed directly in the adoptive home.

Child can know the birth family.

Adoptive parents can be present at the birth.

Adoptive parents can see child and birth family during pregnancy and/or hospital stay.

Adoptive and birth families exchange hopes, ideals, and dreams.

Adoptive and birth families are aware of all financial expenditures.

Adoptive and birthparents and adoptees can see all files and records kept on them.

Names are added to an adoptee's birth certificate and it is preferable that this certificate is never "sealed."

Families have ongoing, direct communication in person, by phone, or through letters or photos and videos.

The adoptee is a progressive participant in the decisions and relationships.


Adversarial:
A.P. are chosen by an intermediary.

Birth and adoptive parents may know only restricted non identifying info about each other.

Medical data may be limited to the time of the adoptees birth.

Child may be in temporary or foster care before being placed in a home.

Child rarely knows birth family.

Adoptive parents often do not know they have been chosen until after the child is born.

Adoptive and birthparents do not share pregnancy, labor, or birth.

Adoptive and birth parents do not communicate directly.

Neither adoptive nor birth families are usually aware of all financial expenditures.

Parties rarely see files and records which are kept on them.

Adoptee's birth certificate is sealed and names changed.

Families communication is severely restricted or limited by Intermediary.

Adoptee has little/no participation in the decision relationship proccess.



HERE ARE SOME QUOTES THAT FAMILIES WITH COOPERATIVE ADOPTIONS HAVE SHARED:


* ?COOPERATIVE ADOPTION? is like a precious heirloom; later the child may recognize that long before he/she was conscious of certain needs, you anticipated and planned for their connections. You all preserved something whose value might easily have been overlooked, lost, or misplaced.?

* ?It is helpful to think of all humanity as related.?

* ?When casting about for a relationship on which to model COOPERATIVE ADOPTION look to a spouse - a beloved, unrelated person to whom you presumably have made a total commitment over time who has close relatives of their own.?

* ?We believe that staying available to your child over a lifetime (both birth family and adoptive family) will enable your child to feel whole.

* ?The end result for kids should be a big ho hum.?

* ?A child is a voyager in our life; does not belong to anyone. The most we can know for sure is that we are the child?s.?

* ?Every adoption is like a snowflake. There is no formula, no recipe, no guarantees. Each is unique & different.?

* ?Openness shows our gratitude, our faith, our trust.?

* ?Having contact confirms and validates the decision for both families.?

* ?We parent the child; we didn?t give birth to the child. This has been a cooperative venture all along.?










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