* Am I keeping this baby so that I can move
out on my own? Am I ready to live on my own with
my baby?
* How easy will it be to manage a home and a
baby myself? Can I get someone to help me?
* Am I keeping this baby to take away my
loneliness? Will the baby really make me feel
less lonely?
* Do I know what it is like to live with a
baby full-time, communicating on a baby's level?
Will this childish exchange really take away my
loneliness?
* Am I keeping this baby so that people will
think I'm mature? Am I really mature?
* Will I actually be any more grown up when
the baby is born than I am now?
* Am I keeping this baby so that the baby's
father will love me more or marry me?
* Do I think the baby's father will come
around to see the baby?
* Will I still want my baby if the baby's
father deserts me?
* Am I keeping this baby because others think
I should? What do I think?
* Do I feel unloved?
* Do I love myself?
* Am I keeping this baby so that my baby will
love me?
* Do I think that a baby will make me feel
important?
Misunderstandings About Adoption
* Do I think that a child belongs with his
birth mother?
* Do I have negative thoughts about women who
make adoption plans for their children?
* Do I have negative ideas about adopted
children?
* Am I keeping my baby because I do not
understand adoption or because, emotionally, I
don't like the idea? Are my emotions based on
fact?
* Where can I obtain information about modern
adoption?
* Am I keeping this baby because I have fears
about adoptive families? What causes these
fears?
* Do I fear that an adoptive family will
abuse my child? Can someone relieve these fears?
* Do I know how carefully an adoption agency
chooses adoptive families?
* Am I afraid to choose adoption because I
can't imagine "giving up" my child?
* Would I always wonder how my child was
doing?
* Do I know that I can learn how my adopted
child is doing?
* Do I know that I might be able to
correspond with the adoptive family and even
visit my child?
* How can I find out what information I can
have about my growing child?
* Am I keeping my child because I am married
and because I never heard of a married woman
making an adoption plan?
* Where can I learn about adoption for
children of married women?
* If I choose adoption, would I feel like a
failure as a wife or mother? Why would I feel
this way? Should I feel this way?
* Do I know a family that might adopt my
child? Could I find one by asking family or
friends?
Understanding Other Parenting Options
* Have I considered other parenting options?
* What do I think of temporary foster care
(no more than a year at most)? Would this help
me? How?
* Would parenting by a relative work? Would I
want to make this person my child's legal
guardian?
* Is a group home or institution a good
choice for my child? Why? Where can I locate a
good home?
Parenting Responsibilities
* Even though I like children, am I ready to
have one full-time at this time of my life? Why
or why not?
* What freedom do I have now? Am I ready to
give up this freedom?
* When my friends go out, will I want to stay
home with my child?
* Will I resent the amount of time the baby
requires and the demands that this baby will
make on me?
* Am I a patient person?
* Do I live in a calm, secure household?
* Would my child be in danger of abuse?
* How will I react when my child gets sick?
What if the sickness lasts a long time?
* How will I handle a difficult-to-raise or
strong-willed child?
* Is my partner patient? Will he be a good,
loving dad?
* If my partner and I are not married, are we
planning marriage? When? Do I want to raise my
child with a man to whom I'm not married?
* How much do I love my baby?
* Am I willing to put my child's interests
and needs before my own?
* Can I adjust emotionally to the time,
sacrifice, and interrupted lifestyle that
accompany raising a baby?
* Do I know how to raise a baby? Do I want to
learn? Where can I learn?
* Can I handle my child as a toddler, young
child, adolescent, teen?
* Do I understand that I will actively parent
for eighteen years at least and then still be
parenting for a lifetime?
* Am I ready, willing, and able to give my
lifetime to this baby?
Parenting Philosophy
* How do I think a parent should raise a
child?
* What values, morals, and character traits
do I hope to develop in my child? Can I discuss
child rearing with someone or read some books on
parenting?
* What mistakes did my parents make in
raising me? How can I avoid making these
mistakes?
* Can I lovingly discipline my baby? How?
* How will I handle my child when I lose my
temper?
Facing Changes
* What are my plans for the future? Will
raising my baby change those plans? How? How do
I feel about that?
* Will having to change my plans eventually
hurt both me and my baby? Will I resent my child
for having caused me to change my plans?
* Can I raise my baby and still follow my
plans for the future? How? Who will help me?
* How do I feel about having a larger family
than I planned?
* How do I feel about returning to the "baby
routine"?
* Can I think of creative ways to bring my
baby into a family of older children?
Emotional Adjustments
* If I am pregnant due to an affair or to
rape, am I comfortable raising a baby who is not
my lover's?
* Will I eventually look forward to having
and raising a baby even though I hadn't planned
on parenting now?
* Do I have a good sense of humor?
* If I'm expecting another child and already
have one or more small children, will a "light
heart and merry spirit" help me raise several
small children all at the same time?
* Will my determination help me raise a child
even though my mental or physical health may not
be good?
* Will I equally love a child of either sex?
* Can I lovingly raise my divorced husband's
baby?
* Can I parent my deceased husband's baby?
* Can I love a child of a man I dislike?
Dealing With Others
* Are others pressuring me to make a certain
parenting decision? Who? Why are they pressuring
me? What can I say or do to deal with this
pressure?
* How can I tactfully deal with comments that
imply that I am "overpopulating" by having too
many children?
* How will I handle the advice, support, or
meddling of family and friends?
* What will be my reaction if someone tells
me that parenting my baby or choosing adoption
is going to be the biggest mistake of my life?
* If I am a single mother, what will I say if
people ask about my baby's father? Will I resent
their questions?
* Can I handle prying questions tactfully
while maintaining privacy?
* What will I tell my child about the birth
father?
* Do I think that parenting my baby may make
it more difficult for me to get married later?
* What will I tell future boyfriends about my
child?
* Can I confide in someone when I have
problems?
* Who will help me when I need a break from
child rearing? Is anyone available to babysit?
Will I have to pay this person? How much?
* What type of relationship will I have with
my parents or other relatives if I parent my
baby? Will they support my decision? Will they
help me?
Practical Considerations
* Am I living in an "adults only" housing
complex? If I parent my child, how difficult
will it be to find other housing? Will I resent
moving? Can I afford other housing?
* Do I qualify for housing assistance?
* Do I need extra room for the baby?
* How do I feel about moving to a larger home
or apartment or adding on to my current home?
* How will I rework a job schedule or a
family routine?
* Will I need to adjust career or educational
goals? How will parenting my baby affect my
career or education?
* What adjustments must I make after the baby
is born? Will these involve day care
arrangements? Sitters? A nanny? Am I emotionally
prepared to make these adjustments? If not, can
I change my attitude?
* What expenses will I have if I parent my
child? Will I have enough money? Can I adjust my
finances? If not, how can I manage?
* Can I apply for government aid?
* Can I get an additional job?
* Will someone help me financially? Who?
* Will I have to do without some things to
buy what my baby needs?
* Can a financial planner help me? Where can
I find a financial planner?
* What baby furniture, baby clothing, and
other items will I need? How will I get them?
Can I get some from a PREGNANCY AIDgency, from
family or friends, or inexpensively at garage
sales or thrift shops? What government agency
can I contact to be sure that secondhand items
meet current safety standards?
* Do I plan to bottle-feed or breastfeed my
baby? How will I be able to do this?
* If I plan to breastfeed, is there a
breastfeeding support group nearby for advice
and support?
* How will my feeding plans affect other
areas of my life such as job, education, and
recreation?
Choosing a Parenting Plan
Your choice of a parenting plan will affect
you, your baby, and many others. Others affected
might include your husband, children, parents,
neighbors, and friends or the adoptive family
and its extended family and social circle. Think
through your plan frequently. Brainstorm to
devise some alternate plans, even if you don't
think you'd ever follow them, just to see how
you feel about them. Sometimes what we once felt
we'd never consider seems more reasonable with
time.
Use your confidant to help you formulate a
plan that will work. The plan will be
tailor-made for you. If one plan does not
obviously seem to be the best, review your
options again with a counselor or confidant. If
you still cannot make a choice, placing your
baby in foster care can give you a few months
more to decide. Choose a plan that will help
both you and your baby to become all you were
both meant to be.
PARENTING THE CHILD WITH SPECIAL NEEDS
OR A TERMINAL ILLNESS
If you are considering parenting a child with
special needs or a terminal illness, use the
previous questions as well as these to make a
choice. Answering the previous questions can
help you discover why you are considering a
certain parenting option. The questions in this
section will help you uncover the facts about
parenting your child.
Answer the questions here in consultation
with a teacher, doctor, or caseworker who has
experience with children similar to your own
child. Write down the answers to the questions
and discuss them with your partner or confidant.
Speak to parents of other children whose
problems are similar to those of your child, and
see how they handled the difficulties that
arose. Use their input as well as your own
answers to make some informed choices.
Practical Considerations
* What needs does my child have?
* What is the medical prognosis?
* What treatments or special equipment does
my child need?
* What experimental treatments or equipment
might I try?
* Does my child require hospitalization or
surgery? Might surgery improve my child's
physical appearance?
* What other medical services does my child
need? Are these available in my area? If not,
where?
* Can someone design a piece of equipment to
help my child? Who?
* Can I obtain, fit into my home, and learn
to use my child's equipment?
* Is my house suitable in design and layout
for a child with a physical or motor problem?
Financial Considerations
* What will my child's care and equipment
cost? Can I afford it?
* Will insurance pay some expenses? Which
ones?
* Will either my partner or I have to get a
second job to pay for these expenses?
* Can anyone raise funds, donate money, or
write a loan to help? Who?
Emotional Considerations
* What might my life with this child be like?
* How would my child affect my home?
* Am I physically and emotionally strong
enough to care for my child?
* How will others treat me and my child?
* Could my family grow stronger in faith,
love, and courage if I parent my baby?
* Will I be able to give time and love to my
other children if I care for this child?
* Will I have time for myself?
* Can I emotionally handle a child with a
terminal illness? How will I feel as my child's
health declines?
* Will I be able to fully love my dying
child? Or will I distance myself emotionally so
as not to feel the loss?
Educational Considerations
* What educational opportunities are
available for my child?
* Is early childhood stimulation possible?
* What type of education might help my child
the most? Do local agencies or schools provide
this?
* Are any books available so that I (or
others) can learn the techniques?
* Will my child need tutoring at home? Does
the local school system provide this?
Finding Help
* Who can provide practical help if I parent
my child?
* Will someone else be able to parent for a
while, so I can have time alone?
* Can I hire some part-time help such as
teenaged baby sitters or others?
* Do I prefer to have a live-in housekeeper
or baby sitter? Can I offer room, board, and a
small salary to a live-in helper?
* Would youth groups, religious groups, or
community service organizations provide some
free daily or weekly care for my child in order
to give me a break?
* Does my city have a facility that would
take my child days? How about overnight or for a
weekend occasionally?
* Can another mother and I occasionally take
turns child sitting?
* Can someone help with grocery shopping,
child care, or stimulation exercises for my
child?
* Is respite care available in my area? What
does it cost?
* If I have a low income or receive public
assistance, might my caseworker or social worker
be able to arrange for some homemaker assistance
for me?
* Will I have to lobby for help for my child?
A Plan for the Child Who Has Special Needs or
a Terminal Illness
Each child is unique as is each mother and
each family. What may work for another mother or
another family may not work for yours. Be honest
about your abilities and desires. Choose a plan
that will be best for you and for your child.
CREATING AN ADOPTION PLAN
If adoption is a good choice, you can choose
the type of plan you want. First, answer these
questions alone. Then review them with a few
adoption counselors. If you know what type of
plan you want, you can choose a consultant who
can help you make that plan.
Involving Others
* Would I want to have my pregnancy public
knowledge or do I prefer to keep things quiet?
* Do I want to put this whole experience
behind me?
* Would I want my husband to know about my
pregnancy? If I'm not married, would I want to
tell my future husband about my baby?
* How will my husband react if I keep in
contact with my child? Would he feel threatened?
If he did, could I choose between my husband and
my child?
* If I have now or ever have had other
children, how will they feel about adoption?
* Will it be good for my other children to
know how their brother or sister is doing?
* Which type of arrangement could my other
children best deal with?
* How will keeping in touch with my child
affect my future? How about having no contact?
Knowledge of Your Child's Progress
* Would I want to know where my child is and
how my child is doing?
* Would I want to choose and meet my child's
adoptive family?
* Would I ever want to see my child again?
* Do I want to assume any responsibility for
my child? How much?
* What will I feel if I know my child's
whereabouts? Will knowing cause me emotional
strain?
* How will my child handle knowing who I am
and where I am? How will the adoptive family
feel?
Contact With Your Child
* What degree of involvement do I want with
my child?
* Am I content to have no contact with my
child after the adoption is complete?
* Would one or two yearly exchanges of
information be enough for me?
* Would I want to visit my child? How often?
* Would my contact disturb the relationship
my child has with the adoptive family? Would the
child be "mine" or "theirs"? Could the child be
"ours"? How do I feel about this? What is best
for my child?
* Will the adoptive couple feel threatened if
I know where my child is? If I write to my
child? Visit?
Taking Your Child Into Consideration
* How will my child handle a relationship
with me? How will this affect the relationship
with the adoptive parents?
* How might my relationship with my child
affect my child's sense of family, stability,
and belonging?
* Can I be a biological mother and still
allow my child to have a family other than my
own?
* Will my presence have a good or bad effect
on my child's self-image? Will my presence help
my child or be confusing?
* Will my presence have any effect on my
child's relationships with others, especially if
I live nearby?
* How will I handle the following questions
from my child: "Are you my real mommy?" "Why did
you give me up?" "How could you give me up if
you loved me?" "Do I have to listen to my
adoptive family?" "Can I go home with you?"
* Would my child or I ever achieve the
freedom necessary to go on with our own lives?
Would we always have confusion and unresolved
feelings in our relationship?
* What kind of relationship would I have with
my child?
* Could I talk openly to my child about any
problems I might be experiencing? Could my child
talk to me?
Parenting Differences
* Would I want to parent my child? Would
parenting be wise for me? Good for my child?
What conflicts can I foresee with the adoptive
family?
* Can I accept visiting my child without
parenting my child?
* What if I don't like the way my child is
being raised? Would I interfere?
* Is it good for my child to have two sets of
parents and two sets of "rules"? If not, could I
accept the parenting techniques of the adoptive
family while keeping my own ideas to myself?
* Would I want to talk over some of my ideas
with the adoptive family? What if the adoptive
parents reject my ideas?
* Will careful choosing of the adoptive
family enable me to find a family whose
parenting style is similar to my own?
Emotional Conflicts
* If my situation improved, would I try to
reclaim my child?
* What if my child doesn't meet my
expectations? How will I react? How will I view
the adoptive family? Will I blame them? Why or
why not?
* How will I feel about conflicts between my
child and his adoptive family? Whose side will I
take?
* What if my child loves the adoptive family
more than me? Would I try to "steal" my child's
love?
* What if my child rejects the adoptive
family in favor of me?
* Suppose my child wants to come home and
live with me? What will I do? Can I rationally
evaluate such a situation to determine if my
child has valid reasons for wanting to leave the
adoptive family? If my child is simply being
rebellious or manipulative, what will I do?
* Suppose my child has valid reasons for
wanting to reject the adoptive family. What will
I do then? Who can help me make a wise decision
in this case?
Living Near Your Child
* Would I want to live near the adoptive
family or far from them? How would I handle
either situation?
* Suppose the adoptive family moved away? Or
moved nearby? Could I handle the new
arrangement?
* Suppose I had to move away from or closer
to my child? How would I feel about that?
Handling the Biological Father
* How will my child's biological father fit
into the picture? Would I want him to know my
child's whereabouts and be involved with my
child?
* How will the adoptive family feel about the
biological father?
* How will he answer the questions in this
Appendix?
* Are the biological father and I in conflict
over any of the answers to these questions? Can
we resolve our conflicts?
* How will my ongoing relationship (if there
is one) with my baby's father affect the
adoption?
* What if he and I no longer get along, yet
we still maintain contact with our child? Can we
handle this situation?
* Suppose we should marry each other? How
will we handle the adoptive situation?
* How will we handle each other's future
spouses? What will be their relationships to our
adopted child?
Finalizing an Adoption Plan
You have much to consider in making an
adoption plan. You must consider your own needs
and desires as well as those of the biological
father and adoptive family. In addition, you
must try to foresee how your child might respond
to the plan you choose.
Don't just think about your plan. Talk it
over with those you trust and those who have
been involved in adoptions. You might even talk
to some teens or adults who have been adopted.
What type of plan would they choose for
themselves?
Your answers to these questions, as well as
the input of others, may cause you to change
your plans a bit. Always try to choose what is
best for all concerned, right now and in the
long run.
CHOOSING AN ADOPTION CONSULTANT
Answering the questions earlier in this
Appendix should help you determine what sort of
adoption plan you want. Write down this plan. To
find an adoption consultant who will help you
make this plan, ask a few consultants the
questions that follow. Write down the answers or
tape-record them, then review them a few times
before choosing a consultant to work with.
Questions About Plans the Consultant Offers
* What type of adoption plans do you offer?
Will I be able to make the adoption plan I
choose?
* Can you help to make an alternate parenting
plan such as foster care, institutional care, or
parenting by a relative?
* How much counseling will I receive? If I
feel that I need more counseling, will I receive
it? Suppose I feel that I need less counseling?
* What financial arrangements can you make
for my health care? For other expenses?
* If I decide to parent my child myself, what
bills will be my responsibility?
* What legal services do you offer? Who pays
my legal fees?
* Will I be pressured to choose any option?
Can I request another consultant at any time?
Switch agencies? Make an alternative adoption
plan?
* How will you handle my child's father? My
desire for privacy? My family? Will I have to
tell them about this adoption? Who else will I
have to tell? What if I don't want to tell them?
Questions About the Consultant's Credentials
* Is this agency government sponsored? How
does this affect me? How does it affect the
adoptive family?
* Are you registered with a local business
bureau?
What references can this bureau give me about
your firm? (You can check with the bureau on
these.)
* What governmental office, such as a
department for children and their families,
would have information about you? What
information can this office give me? (Again,
check up on the consultant.)
* What can a legal association tell me about
you as an adoption attorney or about the
attorneys whom your agency consults?
* Do you provide references of clients
previously served? May I speak to these
references?
* How many adoptions have you arranged?
* How many adoptions do you plan to arrange
this year?
* Can you arrange adoptions across state or
national boundaries?
* How do you "find" birth mothers and
adoptive families? Through advertising? Referral
from doctors? Community agencies?
* What professional degrees do you hold?
* Are you a professional counselor? Lawyer?
Psychologist?
* What type of adoption arrangement can you
legally offer in this area? Can you refer me
elsewhere if this is not the plan I want?
* Who do you represent--me or the adoptive
parents? If not me, alone, can you refer me to
someone who will represent me?
Questions About the Consultant's Arrangements
for the Baby
* How long will my baby have to wait to be
adopted?
* Will my baby go into foster care before
going to the adoptive family?
* How many adoptive families are you working
with?
* If my baby has special needs or a terminal
illness, can you place my baby with a family?
* How many families are willing to adopt
children like mine?
* What counseling do adoptive parents
receive?
* How are adoptive families chosen? What
requirements must they meet?
* How carefully are adoptive families
screened? Are any rejected? For what reasons?
* Can I choose my child's adoptive family?
How?
* Can I choose my child's religious
upbringing? Ethnic family background? Social
status? Environment? Financial situation? Family
makeup?
* Do you allow adoption by single parents?
* What happens to my child if the adoptive
family divorces or one or both parents die? If
my child is abused or neglected? Who checks on
this?
* What type of parenting advice and
instruction do you provide to adoptive parents?
* How do you check on the adoptive family
after my child goes into their home?
* How can I be sure that these parents are
the ones I want for my child?
* Can you arrange an adoption with a family
that I know who wants to adopt my baby?
A Consultant Who Will Work for You
Interview several adoption consultants until
you find one who will give you the type of plan
you want. Then ask yourself if you feel
comfortable talking to this person. Does this
consultant respect your feelings and treat you
as a person of worth, dignity, and intelligence?
It's very important that you choose a consultant
with whom you feel comfortable and whom you
trust. Adoption can be an emotionally difficult
choice even though it is the best choice for you
and your baby. The right adoption consultant
will guide you through the decision and provide
answers and support.