Saturday, October 10, 2009

Hit Me


It took me a while to learn how to win at Blackjack. You can't be all intuitive about it. You can't bet on a strong feeling that the dealer has a 16 and that your next card on an 18 will be a 3. You just follow the rules -- what cards warrant a hit, what warrants a stay.

So it is with social media. The rules say that you publish relevant comments to your posts -- even if they are negative. It's part of being in an honest dialogue. So I did that with my 48 hours of hate mail from the Pregnant Teenagers on BabyCenter.com. I'd apologized profusely, but many of them still had something to say about how wrong it was to post a (supportive) reply to a girl considering placing her child for adoption.

I was scared that a prospective birth mom might read this and think I'm a monster. I considered just deleting all the posts and the comments. But, in the same way you hit on a 17 when the dealer is showing an 8, I just kept it all up there. And then, in the same way that 3 or 4 comes as the next card, the sweetness began to roll in.

"I didn't mean to come off sounding so...bitchy. I tend to have a sharp tongue. I've been on the Pregnant Teenagers site for 3 years so I know the impact adoption posts have on the girls there. I never stopped to think you would not know that. I sorry for that."

"Hello, I was one of the teenagers on that board when you posted. I did not comment, however. I understand your frustration and confusion. I did not comment on that post because I knew that you weren't being condescending, and you really thought that perhaps this forum was some sort of link to a possible adoption. I am sorry some of my cyber friends were so horrid to you, but you have to understand where they are coming from. I am a teenage mother. I am 17 years old and my daughter is one. I was planning on giving my daughter up for adoption up intil three months. Please don't be too offended. They were just protecting their rights as mothers. Hold your head up. You will get your baby."

"i was lurking on the pregnant teen boards and saw your post. i understand their reactions, but it seems as though you're not as terrible of a person as they make you out to be. keep at it. you'll get your baby soon enough."
We're all scared. We're all feeling raw and protective. We all want Blackjack.


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3 comments:

fortymama said...

Wow-this is quite the journey! I just read your last few posts-- keep your head & heart up girl! Once your child finds you this will all be so worth it.

Don Cummings said...

This is some journey.

Funny, you just don't know where your future child will come from. It's so interesting. THE POINT OF POWER IS IN THE NOT KNOWING. Seems to me. At least, this is what I say to myself when I want, but must wait.

Anonymous said...

I'm glad that you've been made to feel better about the whole thing, and I'm sorry that this was such an ordeal for you. I know that trying to find a baby to adopt is so stressful and heartbreaking at times, and I do understand the desperation to take advantage of every opportunity.

However, I really hope you understand that what shocked most members of the babycenter community was not your faux pas in posting your comment in the wrong forum. It was in the way you described that board here on your blog. To refer to a support group for teenagers wanting to keep their babies as the "mother lode" just came off as tacky. Those young women are often very scared and vulnerable when they find babycenter, and it becomes an extremely valuable resource for them, and to refer to them like some roundup of preggos for you to pick and choose from really rubbed a lot of us the wrong way.

Again, I know you meant no harm, but to make it sound like you received some totally out of left field reaction is really missing the point. There is a reason it is so hard to find a baby in this country to adopt, and that reason is that giving up a child is the hardest thing any mother will ever have to do. A group of women facing that decision is not a "mother lode," it is heartbreaking.

On another note, why haven't you looked into foreign adoption? There is no demoralizing process of having to "sell" yourself to potential birth parents, you just complete your homestudy and then wait and get placed with a baby.