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Reclaiming
Her Identity: A Mother's Diary
Copyright © 2005 Ruth Andrews Garnes
Author of "Fantasy/ Controversy - or My Reality"
http://home.earthlink.net/~rgarnes
After
giving up my profession to become a wife, a mother of one, then
suddenly seven made life very taxing for me. I soon came face to
face with a challenging question. How did my identity become so
obscure that I lost track of my hopes and dreams? Believing that
I did not have any time left in my hectic schedule to accomplish
my goals, I slowly began to lose perspective of whom and what I
was about.
My life became filled with doctor's appointments, therapy sessions,
counseling, grocery shopping, laundry, house cleaning, dance classes
and swimming lessons.
I
anticipated my various new roles but they were not quite the way
I imagined them. Adopting four children seemed like a really noble
idea but the reality was that its profound vertigo-like existence
of seemingly insurmountable ordeals, trials and triumphs followed
by more trials was very challenging for me. Its intense effect led
to my struggling with the choices I had made in life.
First
I chose to marry my husband, who I knew would be transferred from
the city where we lived at the time of our marriage. This meant
giving up a job that I loved, and that family and friends would
now be two thousand miles away.
This marked the beginning of my abandoning many of my aspirations
and dreams without any insight into all the other wonderful things
that would emerge as a direct result of that. Outwardly I expressed
the joy of being a newlywed; inwardly I mourned the loss of my friends
and colleagues and then quietly expressed my
thoughts through poetic writings.
Two
years after marriage, my first child was born and this was a joyous
time for both Bill and I. Remembering his own childhood and having
been raised like an only child, Bill did not want to inflict the
same ordeal on his child. He was the last of three children, born
eight years after a sister that preceded him. He brought up the
topic of adoption when our son was five months old. We had discussed
adopting prior to marriage, so when our son Trey was ten months
old, we started our state-mandated parenting class.
It was at these classes that I first viewed the photos of our four
beautiful daughters. The children's photos were in pairs of two,
so naturally I thought it was a family of two. Upon inquiring about
the two children, I was told it was a sibling group of four. I certainly
was not interested in adopting four children, but I could not shake
their precious little images from my mind.
On occasions I would inquire about the progress of finding a home
for the children. The answer was always the same: Most people were
interested in one child maybe two but not four. After months of
prayer and soul searching William and I decided to bring them home.
After
our daughters came home, life was far from what I imagined it would
be. My beautiful daughters had some struggles of their own. Moving
from the house they had come to know as home was very traumatic
for them. They were not equipped with any training or experiences
to make the transition easier. With limited self- expression the
older children acted out their fears and frustration by throwing
temper tantrums and bullying their younger siblings. For the most
part our household was in constant commotion. I became very focused
on wanting to makes things better.
Pretty soon I took on their issues as my own. There were numerous
difficulties, from struggling to adjust to a new home, to dealing
with abuse from their past, to learning difficulties. Through it
all I learned to love them and took measures to make life better
for them. Simultaneously, I bemoaned the fact that they were not
the perfect children I dreamed of parenting and to add to my already
precarious situation, I became pregnant with our sixth child.
I
gave birth to that child soon after we consummated our adoption.
I now had six children ages zero to five years, after four years
of marriage. Time to do the things I loved was now non-existent.
I was compelled to eliminate all other activities that were outside
of home life. This, however, had a profound impact on me. I slowly
became conflicted.
Having to meet the needs of my household was overwhelming; yet I
had to do it, convinced that if I faltered it would mean that I
failed my children. I held firmly onto my preconceive idea that
if I give them my all there would be a miraculous improvement. Instead
I became frustrated, then discouraged and resentful. No longer tactfully
problem solving, I began to focus on all the things I wanted to
do and no longer had the time to do.
I stopped taking pride in my accomplishments, even though I had
made great progress with my children. Every negative encounter I
had became magnified. I felt that they were a direct reflection
of my community and their views of me and my family as a whole.
Having
lost focus of the things that were important, I no longer took pride
in the things that a mother found fulfilling, like teaching my five
older children how to read fluently by age five, despite some of
their academic challenges. I was now finding it very difficult to
help my youngest daughter with her reading. In the past, teaching
my children was worth more to me than its weight in gold.
Not wanting to give into the misconception that giving up my profession
to become a homemaker had some how robbed me of myself, I started
to reflect inwardly. Where did the vivacious, cheerful, fun-loving
side of me go? I loved my family! Could the inner struggles I was
having be as a direct result of my choosing to dedicate all my time
to them? I needed them as much as I needed the woman I was. They
needed her too.
Paging
through my diary, hidden within the pages of the many poetic entries
was my hopes, fears, my love for my children, lost love and dreams
for the future of forgotten hurting children, all the things that
made up the core of who I was. Then being the dreamer and risk taker
that I was, I compiled my very personal thoughts and submitted them
to a publisher in the form of a book called Fantasy/Controversy
or My Reality.
Having
taken this fascinating journey through my struggles, I now had a
new understanding of some of the challenges that mothers of large
families, adopted and foster families have. These struggles which
sometimes included giving up social events, having a full calendar
of appointments, and frequently having to carry all the children
grocery shopping, were very humbling for me. While it thought me
to become more reliant on my creator it also changed my dreams and
goals, for they now incorporate other foster and adopted families.
I know who I am.
I also know the value of having others around to help and offer
support. I also know the importance of taking time to replenish
myself. For many adopted mothers, this is currently not apart of
their lives, but I would very much like for it to be, even if it
comes in the form of post-adoption services. I dedicated my poetry
book to hurting children everywhere so as to hold unto this dream
of making a difference in the lives of hurting children. I hope
to accomplish this by donating a part of my royalties to agencies
that provide services to adoption and foster families.
Life-altering
circumstances changed the direction of my life and momentarily robbed
me of its joy. If one person can benefit from it, then living through
it is worth it. It was my struggling, loving and advocating for
my children that has rewarded me. I am now mindful of the things
that are most important, for I have
been blessed in ways I never thought I would be.
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Ruth Garnes' Fantasy/Controversy or My Reality can
be purchased
on line from Barnes & Noble.com,
Amazon.com
and from the
Publisher at Publish America.com.
For more information about the
author visit her web-site at http://home.earthlink.net/~rgarnes
.
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