Nearly 3 years have elapsed since I wrote
the story of my life as an adoptee titled "My personal Holocaust". Since
that time so much has happened. Rereading the words that I wrote at that
time in my life I remember the pain I felt as I described my adoption
experience – for the first time in my life. I look at where I am today and
see that great changes have occurred and that God has been with me all the
time. It is only in recent months that I have realised and accepted that I
have never been ‘alone’ in this life. I was abandoned to an orphanage by
my mother - that is true - but God was always with me. This is important
for me as I have discovered that my relationship with God directly affects
how I feel about myself. I would now like to tell the story of my journey
from victim and victim hood to survivor and then to integration and
acceptance.
At the time I wrote the original story I had joined
Alcoholics Anonymous and was working through the 12 step program with a
sponsor. I wrote the story after completing the fourth
step - the Moral Inventory. I decided to do this focused on my
adoption experience.
In one of the first meetings of AA
that I attended when I left the detox I met a man who had 17 years of
sobriety and he was to profoundly change my life. He was different from
other recovering alcoholics. He had inner peace and serenity. He talked of
his love for God a lot - he didn't talk of houses, cars, money - he lives
a life of faith. The things of this world mean nothing to him. All that he
values is contained in his relationship to his Creator. Now I can say,
after having known him for 3 years, that I have never met his spiritual
equal. Not amongst church men or woman or in any other place. Something
inside me told me that I should ask him to be my sponsor and he agreed. He
has since taught me many things - some that I was not able to understand
at the time. He is not an educated man with degrees etc and yet he is the
wisest person I've known. The reason I mention so much about him is that I
would not be who I am today had I not met him. He became my inspiration,
my guidepost and eventually a friend. There is a saying – when the pupil
is ready the teacher appears.
Today I continue my membership of AA and
participate in 4 or 5 meetings a week. My daughter asked me recently when
I would be able to give AA away – I replied that when I die I would
graduate and no longer have to attend. I always did like the dramatic!
Apart from my sponsor the most significant
things to happen include my reading "The Primal Wound" by Nancy Verrier. I
have read quite a few books on adoption but this book is outstanding. When
I read it I turned each page and as I read I said to myself – "that’s me",
"that’s me" etc. I identified so much with it. It tells my story and
explains so much about the adoption experience. I know that it has touched
many adoptees. I am currently reading Nancy’s follow-up book called
"Coming home to self". It is a worthy follow-up to the original book. It
challenges the adoptee to drop the victim attitude and to move onto
greater and better things - what Christians would call becoming an over
comer.
In the original story I wrote that "I have
never truly loved anyone in my life - I understand this now. I think that
in my present state that I'm incapable of love and trust." During my
second year of sobriety someone mentioned the book, the Road less
travelled" in an AA meeting. I obtained a copy and read that the author
believed that real love was working for the spiritual growth of another
person and commitment to this goal. I decided that this would be my
definition of love and it has transformed my attitude to love. I recall
that my second wife often spoke to me about love being about commitment
but I just could not understand that at the time. I heard her say the
words but I was not able to understand her. I now practice love in my
life. I have committed myself to staying in my daughter's life in a
constructive way - I try to contact her regularly and see her as often as
possible (well at least as often as a busy 15 year old has time for her
dad!!!)
A couple of years ago I travelled to India
with a group of people from my church fellowship. A number of profound
events occurred whilst I was there. I witnessed a woman being delivered of
a demonic spirit - I saw it unfold in front of my eyes. I also witnessed a
motorbike rider being struck by a taxi - his body eventually stopping 3
feet from my left foot and he then convulsed and died.
The most moving thing that occurred in
India occurred when I went to an orphanage. There were about 30 orphans
aged from 1 year to 15 years of age. At first our group of people took
photos with them, gave them lollies and sang some songs to them. They were
all smiling but I could see the sadness in their eyes. The same sadness
that has been in my eyes all my life. After a while I was overcome with
emotion and I cried and cried.
The healing of my shame about my ethnicity
began in India. Every time we arrived at new location all the Indian
children would run up to the bus and want to shake hands with us. As I
reached out to shake hands with them I could see that I was much lighter
in colour than them. I felt quite pale in comparison. At time I felt as if
I were no longer brown at all. A very strange sensation as I've always
felt as if I were dark (which I am comparative to white Anglo Saxons).
One day whilst travelling in the bus we
were made to stop by the Police and a convoy containing the world's
richest man then (Bill Gates) left HiTech City in Hyderabad and continued
up the highway passing Indians living on the median strip and in tents
made of broken bricks and rubbish by the side of the road. What a contrast
that was. Meeting Indians made me feel immoral and corrupt by comparison
with the simple uncluttered non materialistic lives they lead. I no longer
accept the premise that western countries are the leading nations. Leading
nations of depravity and greed? As Nancy Verrier states in her book, there
are more neurosis in the USA than any country in the world. I’m sure that
Australia is not far behind as another, so called, advanced country.
I became engaged to an old girlfriend at
one stage. After we had been engaged for a month or two I realised that I
was making a mistake and that it would not work. I called it off and even
though I regretted hurting her I knew that I had made the right decision
for the right reasons (a first for me!). I am open to the idea of a future
relationship with a woman - my expectations have changed so much. For a
relationship to work it would need to be someone who was spiritually aware
and able to deal with occasional adoptee behaviour (eg pre-emptive
strikes, living in an imaginary world, assuming the worst etc). I don’t
say this to justify or condone my behaving badly. But I acknowledge that
even though I have a much better idea what love is and how to love – I
lack the practical experience. I would really like to grow spiritually
with a woman. I would need to feel that I could ‘fail’ at times and not be
rejected. I guess that may sound defensive but what I mean is that I need
someone who understands the issues and can help me to challenge my own
behaviour. I look back at my many previous relationships and see the
destructive acting out behaviour on my part. I no longer accept that I
have to act like this. I will no longer allow myself to act irresponsively.
Once I was on the path of sobriety I began
to chase emotional sobriety and I looked at my life and wanted to work
through all the issues – I wanted to be whole. I was very enthusiastic
about this because I saw that it was possible that I could be well – and
that life could be wonderful and fulfilling. At first I went to a
psychotherapist and 2 psychologists. I wanted to explore my adoption
issues and the sexual abuse issues. Let me recommend not seeing so many
practitioners concurrently - it's very confusing! I contacted the Post
Adoption Resource Centre at Bondi (in Sydney) and went there to meet with
a counsellor. Meeting that counsellor was an extremely disappointing event
at the time. On reflection I think that she was concerned about my
enthusiasm to be well and tried to dampen me down a bit! Through her I was
given the contact number of a woman that was to become a dear friend. This
woman had founded the organisation ICASN (Inter Country Adoption Support
Network) and she had organised a meeting of adoptees at a restaurant in
the near future. I turned up at the restaurant and the journey of recovery
from the wilderness of adoption and aloneness began in earnest. As I
listened to her story and talked with and observed the other adoptees I
could see that I was no longer alone. I was 39 years old and had never
ever spoken with a group of adoptees about adoption. Suddenly I was
surrounded by adoptees who were interested in my story! Through this woman
I was able to begin a journey of healing that I thought not possible. I
liked and wanted what she had so much (the emotional and spiritual growth
and recovery from the adoption experience) that I decided that to be her
friend I would have to forget that she was a woman so that I can hear and
understand her without the filter of male female sexual politics which
normally dominated my contacts with females. Much to my surprise it
actually worked. Every time I had contact with her I cultivated respect in
my head for her and concentrated on who s! he was rather than what she
was. I believe that the way I have treated her is a prototype for better
relationships with females for me. I acknowledge that I have legacy issues
with relating to and trusting woman from my adoption. However I now know
that I can learn another way of relating to them.
When I was first sober and for many months
in early sobriety I was perplexed that I still became involved in various
arguments with other staff at my work. I had always struggled with trying
to always be right and win every argument. It was a life long obsession
about justifying my existence. I felt that losing an argument or being
bettered by another person was equivalent to extinction. I also behaved in
one of 2 ways - either being overly nice (people pleasing) or overly
aggressive and defensive. There was no middle ground. There was no
normality in my relations with other people. However, over time I began to
change and a friend at AA remarked that I was no longer as angry as I had
been when I first came into the program at my 3rd sobriety birthday (we
celebrate the anniversary of becoming sober in AA with a ‘birthday’). I
have realised that my attitudes are no longer so rigid. I no longer find
myself needing to be right. I can let other people have opinions that
differ from mine (in fact I often ask myself if they are right if they
hold a contrary view). Indeed I have also begun to use the expression "I
don’t know". Once I used to express contempt if someone mentioned
something that I didn’t agree with or know about eg if someone said that
they were involved in aromatherapy (this is only an example - I have
nothing against aromatherapy!) I would immediately dismiss them as an
idiot. I was a self confessed expert on everything before I realised that
I was actually wrong about most things.
Along the journey of recovery in AA I
undertook the 9th step which is to make direct amends to such people
(People we have harmed) wherever possible except when to do so would
injure them or others. I know that God was on my side and helping me
complete the steps because I bumped into both my ex wives in supermarkets
whilst doing this step. One of them I hadn't spoken to for more than 16
years and there she was in front of me in the supermarket. The other I
hadn't seen for a couple for years and I also met her in a supermarket -
one that I'd never been to before.
So what do I want from life now that I have
discovered it (so to speak). I want to be at peace in my heart. To accept
and love myself that I might be capable of loving others. This is to repay
the love that I have received from God. I want to "pass it on" as Bill W
(founder of AA) would say.
Being a transracial adoptee has made the
adoption experience a complex one (all adoptions are complex!). I have
spent the years from age 8, when I first experienced racism at an
Australian School, until the last year feeling shame at being ½ Pakistani.
However on a recent trip to the UK I went to an AA meeting in the midlands
and was sitting in the meeting when 2 Indians\Pakistanis walked in. The
most amazing thing happened – I felt like I was no longer the only one! As
I walked in parts of Birmingham and Wolverhampton I walked in areas where
Indians and Pakistanis predominated. I felt like I was no longer the ‘odd
man out’. I felt like I was just one of many. Another very interesting
thing happened - I began to see how beautiful Indian Pakistani women are.
I had never had a relationship with a brown skinned woman. I had never
considered them attractive. Suddenly I was in lust!! These feelings
continue to this day. My eye always catches women of Indian Pakistani
appearance. I have even taken steps to actively date women of Indian
Pakistani appearance. I undertook to eat Indian\Pakistani food when I have
a chance. I wear my Korta Pyjamas when I eat at these restaurants.
I guess it will seem an enigma but I also
felt shame that I was 1/2 Scottish. I would particularly feel this when
asked to explain my origins. I would say that I was born in Scotland and
watch the look of disbelief appear on the face of the person I was
speaking with. One of my natural uncles helped me to feel proud of my
Scottish ancestry. I went on a tour of the highlands including the home of
my Scottish clan on the Isle of Skye. I found out that my ancestors, on
the Scottish side, were from Viking stock. My daughter was quite happy to
be a Viking as was I! Does that explain and excuse my aberrant behaviour?
(of course - no).
I have taken various actions along the way
to further my recovery. These include embracing my origins by wearing a
bracelet that has my Pakistani birth name, my Scottish Clan name, the name
the nurses used in the orphanage for me and my adoptive name. I have
recently completed a photo shoot of myself dressed in different ways. The
different dress styles represent the various facets of the composite Ron.
I had my picture taken dressed in Indian Pakistani korta pyjamas; Scottish
Trews; casual clothes, leather clothes and also one of me without a shirt.
These represent my racial origins, my Australianness, my expressive,
exploratory nature and my natural state. These 5 pictures will be framed
in one picture frame and I will include the words integration\acceptance
at the bottom. It marks acceptance of who I am. I am not just one aspect
of my self but an integration of all these things. I am at peace with Ron.
I am considering how I might integrate my original name L S.
There is a part of me that is giving a
voice to the real Ron - what Nancy Verrier calls the authentic self.
I have experimented doing things that
please me including growing my hair long, exercising, dressing in radical
clothes such as leather pants and jacket etc. I even painted my
fingernails black and went to a birthday party (Boy was I self conscious
that night! but I was pleased with myself that I did it). I have
considered using eyeliner. Interestingly I have just discovered that men
from certain parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan wear eyeliner (is it
genetics??!). I must try quite a few things to find what it is that I
really want to do for myself. I know that some of my friends are probably
thinking that I'm on some sort of mid life crisis trip but rather I'm
embracing reality rather than running away from it (well apart from the
fact that I now dye my hair!!). Others think that I have become gay
because of the way I dress. Homophobia lives on! The truth is that I take
a lot more pride in how I dress and I dress to please myself. Before I
stopped drinking I couldn't even stand to look in the mirror at all.
My attempts to bring to the light and
empower the real Ron are not confined to navel gazing - I am reaching out
to help others. I have joined a committee that assists adoptees and
adoptive parents, I participate in service work and 12th step work for AA
(visiting and talking with those still suffering from active alcoholism)
and I also take opportunities to share my adoption story within AA. Of
course, there are many adoptees in AA and I have always shared very
frankly when I've had a chance. At a recent AA conference 3 adoptees
approached me about my story after I'd shared it. One of the adoptees had
pitched their tent next to me - out of 130 campers this was no coincidence
- God works like this. We adoptees are mostly anonymously carrying the
huge burden of the 'primal wound' with no relief and if I can help in any
way I do. The AA program has been instrumental in helping me be less self
obsessed. What an ironic situation - I've had to be more honest with
myself and think alot about who I am and who I want to be yet have had to
reject self obsession. A friend in AA says that true humility is not to
think less of yourself but to think about yourself less.
AA encourages rigorous honesty. I embrace
rigorous honesty but one thing that I know and accept these days is that
we humans are all running blind to some extent. We all have areas in our
lives that are pockets of darkness - areas of self delusion\denial - the
shadow that Yung spoke of. There is much work to be done in my life.
So how do I feel and think about religion?
Religion is my great enemy! I see now that there is a religious spirit - a
critical judging spirit that corrupts those it possesses. It certainly
possessed me and continues to attempt to make me feel guilt and condemned.
I therefore chose to believe in a loving God and no longer in the shadow
god that I created throughout my life. This god had rules that I could not
possibly live up to. This god loved me when I was good and rejected me
when I wasn't good. Of course I was projecting my own failures and
judgements onto a blank canvas I labelled god. When I realised this my
journey through life became a much nicer place to be. The God I believe in
is the God I see in the story of the woman caught in adultery in the
Gospels. A God of forgiveness and mercy. This was the first story I
thought of as I considered this point - obvious links to my life. I accept
that I am fallible. I am not all good nor all bad. I am a composite being.
God's in on this little secret of mine. Somehow it appears that He always
knew that I wasn't perfect and yet He still loves me.
Last year I returned to Scotland and
England to search for my birth father, to stay with my birth mother and to
meet some of my maternal relations for the first time. When I arrived at
my mother's place we began a process of getting to know each other. I
can't say that it was easy - it was strained at times and confronting to
discuss issues. My birth mother is from the old school and in many
respects I was overwhelming her with my eagerness and recovery. I was
trying to take her along my path of recovery. I tried this with my
adoptive mother and I failed in both cases. I have let go trying to force
my recovery on others. On one occasion, with my adoptive mother, I spent
45 minutes on a mobile phone trying to convince her that I had brown skin
and that I didn't want her to ever call me 'special' again. At the end of
the call she said to me that I was special to her and that I looked just
like her two natural sons (fair skin, blue eyes). I nearly threw the phone
against a wall. I have come to realise that that is her way of loving me.
She is in denial and that's ok. My birth mother and I spent 6 days
together without much of a break and then on the 7th day she turned and
accused me of various 'crimes' including leaving hair in the bath, not
putting my plate away quick enough after a meal, being a racist and
various other things. The stay with her came to an abrupt halt! At the
time I felt a very intense feeling of pain - the thought that I was
experiencing a second rejection flashed through my mind - the tears were
welling in my eyes. I said a prayer to God asking for His help and I knew
that He was there with me (I've never been alone remember). I sussed the
situation and realised that it was best to 'cop it sweet' so I said
nothing to defend myself. I let her vent and then quietly left her house.
I journeyed to her brother's place, my uncle. As I reflect on the
experience I see that she warned me when I first arrived that she had
certain problems. She told me that she had a sickness with cleaning. I had
! no idea what she meant. I look back now and remember that she used to
pull the washing machine out and clean behind it 3 times a week, that she
would get up hours before me and clean the house from top to bottom every
day - that she ironed my socks and underpants every day....
Talk about a slow learner - I just didn't
understand at the time. My mother also chose to ring her brother and tell
him of my crimes. He insisted that I come up to Scotland to stay with him.
My mother travelled to Australia a few weeks after my return to stay with
a friend of hers. She had originally intended to stay with me too. She
visited my work and left a note for me that says in part "Yes we got here
this is your cheap t shirt you will need it more than me. You cost me 97
for your bracelet 70 for boots. Also 112 for my car repair 49 insurance
plus your trip to the Rangers. Some trick you pulled don't ever come near
us again in your life. Also you stick to R M because your name is not L
S". Since she left me this letter she has emailed me 3 times. The emails
were reasonably innocuous. So what do I make of all this? I see, in her
behaviour, the pain of her own response to the primal wound. I also see
the reactive behaviour of someone who grew up in a violent alcoholic home
and was a practicing alcoholic for most of her life. She and I are so
similar. I have used the same instincts in defending myself in an alien
world. I choose to continue the relationship - I'll respond to the emails
if she sends anymore. I accept that she is not capable of change. I saw
that she wanted to when we both went to a post adoption service in the UK
to start the search for my father and she was told by the counsellor that
she could have counselling if she wished. She became very emotional and
said that no one had ever given her a chance to talk over the events of
the past. She was amazed. She told the counsellor that she would
definitely take up the opportunity. I hope that she does. She is my birth
mother, there is no other than can replace her. She has had a very hard
life and perhaps it was mostly the relinquishment that caused most of the
pain. Who knows? She hasn't spoken to my half brother, her oldest son, for
14 years. She has not been in contact with her daughter or other son for a
lon! g time. Her inability to connect successfully with them or with me is
beyond her current capability. It was not my fault. It was no flaw with
me. Once I walked in darkness and I just didn't know. She is there - in
that same place - how can I judge her for this? She just doesn't know.
My uncle was very kind to me and explained
that my mother had had issues her whole life. There is a great deal of
unresolved rage within her. The very same rage that plagued me - (for the
same reason?). I was able to connect with this uncle on a very deep level.
We had a great deal in common. In fact it was spooky at times - our
political views were similar, we shared a love of Israel, we had been on
similar journeys through life. We were both convinced that it was the
grace of God alone that had brought us through life. He was like a
wonderful tonic for me. I identified with him strongly.
My relationship with my adoptive mother has
improved since my return from that trip. I no longer need to drag her
along on my recovery - I can live and let live. I wouldn't say that we are
the best of friends yet - I have it on my agenda to try the love thing on
her (i.e. commitment to stay in touch more often).
One thing that I battle today is my
addictive nature. I am always on the look out for feel-goods. These can be
breakfast cereals, over exercise, women, television etc. I have learned so
many techniques to avoid sitting with myself! I am aware that my addictive
nature plays itself out in my life. I try to do all things with
moderation. As long as the feel-goods are not dangerous (alcohol, drugs
etc) I can go with the flow and live with them.
One significant event that changed me
occurred after an AA meeting. There was a guy in the meeting who I admired
and I got the idea in my head that he didn't like me. I sat with that
feeling for at least 12 months. One day, in an AA meeting, I said to
myself that maybe that thought, that he didn't like me, was wrong. After
the meeting I said to him "This might seem strange but I have a feeling
that you don't like me and I was wondering why?" Now this was a
tremendously important event because I challenged my own belief system
and, of course, I found out that this guy thought that I was ok and we've
become good friends since that day. I'd proved that my perceptions could
be wrong. I am so happy that I had enough courage to do that because it's
meant that I can do it all the time about every feeling and thought that I
get - if I choose.
So I'm perfect now right? Far from it. I am
much happier than when I wrote the original instalment. I have placed a
Che Guevara poster in my house - not to suggest that I have now become a
commy bastard - (I'm just a bastard! –apologies to communists – I am able
to respect other’s beliefs these days). I am a revolutionary. I am
embracing change - I reject the lies of the past. I am not afraid to be
wrong. I am not afraid to say I don't know. I am no longer afraid of my
own shadow.
There is a chance that I might abandon
spiritual growth and then backslide. There is a chance that I might resort
to active alcoholism. By God's grace this will never happen. By the way I
received a letter from the West Midland Post Adoption Service a couple of
days ago. Apparently they may have found my father... But then that's a
story for inclusion for the next installment. Onwards to life! I embrace
all it has to offer.
Ron's Adoptive
Mother's Story