When adoptive parent’s divorce,
despite this being common, it is often painful
for the child – at any age. My parents separated when I was twenty-one. As
a young adult with some maturity behind me to see reason, I tried to
accept their decision in as rational a way as possible. I considered their
perspectives and their needs. If they no longer are happy together, it is
wasteful and hurtful to remain unified in marriage. However, there is no
doubt that their decision lead to deep self-reflection and personal
considerations too.
My sense of security in the concept of the family – the
idea it gives us the ultimate sense of belonging; the concept of family
home – the idea it represents our sense of historical self – became
fragmented and set in doubt. What new ways would I have to re-orientate my
sense of belonging and sense of where I come from? This of course, has
always been an issue due to my skin colour indicating to others that I
‘come from somewhere else’ separate from my white family.
The new definition of family had to expand to my parents
being in separate locations, with new partners, in new homes. The selfish
side of me gave in to indulgent but brief thoughts of a promise being
broken. Not the promise of marriage between my parents but the contract of
me being adopted into an environment where they came as a stable package.
This contract or promise of course, is only a sentimental illusion and of
course, it was broken.
The second indulgent but perhaps validated concern was,
how are my new stepparents going to treat me - as a strange foreigner
juxtaposed in their western lives? Was their any xenophobia that might
lurk beneath their pleasant enough exterior? Or would they unconditionally
accept me as ‘one of them’ in the warmest, sincere way that my parents had
done so? I imagine all children meeting stepparents must go through issues
of trust. I feel I experienced many doubts children have when their
parents go through a divorce and settle in with someone new, only there
was a fear of how they constructed ‘race’ included as well. From society
often treating me as different, I felt particularly sensitive to having
that feeling replicated within the safety of the sphere of family
interactions.
Ultimately, what I had to fight briefly but painfully was
my deep fear of losing some parents all over again – after coming to terms
that I ‘d lost my biological parents first time around. There was that
terrible fear of being alone in the world. The fear of being rejected by
stepparents also reverberated against a long time hurt that maybe I was
rejected by my birth parents.
Of course, the power of dealing with parental divorce is
to put things into a rational perspective and to reduce self-doubt and
self-reflection to an awareness of what other people’s needs and
experiences are. My parents needed to be separated, they needed to be
loved and accepted by new people – they had the same fear of being alone
and fear of rejection as everyone has in one way or another. I then felt
more balanced and ready to face change and to hope for the best – which is
all that divorce really is about too.
September 2002
