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The Journey: A Personal Search
by Kendra Belvins-Barton
Originally Published in TransCultured Magaine Winter 2000-1
My parents have never given me a straight answer to my queries
of why I was adopted. Usually their answer goes like this: "Well,
we wanted to have four kids and we planned to adopt two and have
two." I've never had the courage to press them further, even
thought they stopped adopting after me. My guess is that after some
problems conceiving they decided to adopt, and at that time international
adoptions were quicker and cheaper than adopting caucasian babies.
I think it appealed to their religious natures to adopt, and since
I acted the role of the good orphan. I was grateful, obedient, quiet
and did well in school.. I never wanted attention so I did whatever
I could to blend in. I despised questions over my ethnicity or queries
over my unusual family situation. It was painful to be singled out.
At the same time, I always wanted to know more and feel more connected
to Korea but I was afraid to hurt my parent's feelings. I felt so
out of place as it was. And I had no other family anyway; this was
it.
Until about seven years ago, I never had a desire to meet my birth
family. I was satisfied with the thought that if my birth parents
couldn't take good care of me, I was better off. I've never been
bitter about it since I'd always held on to the romantic notion
that it was an act of love. When pushed, I'd have answered that
I was curious about them, for medical reasons, of course, but that
I considered my adoptive parents my real parents. But when my daughter
reached first the age I was when abandoned at fourteen months, and
then the age I was adopted, it really hit me what I'd lost. But
even then, I assumed that searching would be useless. I was abandoned
at Taegu City Hall. There were no records of family members dropping
me off at an orphanage. I just suddenly appeared, like Moses in
the bulrushes. Whatever story was behind my abandonment, I assumed
I would never know. Ironically, it was about this time that my mother
became interested in charting her family's genealogy. Suddenly my
mother "found" my adoption files in a box in the basement
and it was soon after that I found Kim.
Kim and I had first met as six-year-olds at the summer church camp
our families attended. For several summers, we would meet up and
pretend we were twins, and given the fact that we were the only
Koreans at camp, all the other kids believed us. One year, the summer
before fifth grade, Kim didn't show up. For the next twenty years
I occasionally heard news about her all the time, I never made the
effort to look her up. She was the first and only Korean adopted
friend I had ever had. One day about a year ago I was reading the
current issue of Korean Quarterly and I came across an article about
an adoptee who was facing issues of identity for herself and her
family of four biracial children. Since becoming a mother myself,
this was something I had been concerned about. I worried that I
had nothing to teach my children about their heritage since I had
never known it myself. As I read through the article I immediately
wondered if this woman was my friend from so many years back; her
name, the references to her father, and the fact that one of her
daughters and I share the same name struck me as too coincidental.
I e-mailed her and she responded the next day. It was my friend
Kim. As we began to catch up on our lives, I was struck at how similar
our paths had taken us - early marriages, children, stay-at-home
moms, and now involvement in the Korean adoptee community for the
first time.
Kim and I packed a lot of catching up in nine months. It was she
who brought me an offer to go to Korea with 6 other adult adoptees.
Although my husband and I planned to go to Korea the year before,
a new baby and tight budgets had postponed the idea. I wanted to
go but was worried. This was to be a birth family search. It was
to be adoptees only, so that we could feel free to experience all
of our emotions with those who could support us as only other adoptees
could. There would be no need to explain why we had felt what we
did, no split loyalties between wanted to preserve adoptive families
feelings and our own longings for birth family. We all knew what
it was like to grow up with those dual feelings. For myself, I had
just come to a willingness to want to meet my birthfamily. And now
I was given the opportunity to do something proactive instead of
just thinking year, maybe someday.
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