Once the decision to adopt a child had been made, there were
months of provincially-mandated classes in order to qualify, followed by a frustrating waiting period that saw
the redneck heterosexual couple in our class quickly matched with a child.
This, after Husband Redneck stated in one class that his approach to dealing
with a child (hypothetically) traumatized by seeing his parents gunned down in
the street would be to give him a rifle or first-person shooting video game to
let out his frustration.
But they were white, straight, Christian, and, well, straight. So naturally they got a kid almost immediately.
So the decision was made to foster a child that was in the
process of being cleared for adoption. There were no guarantees offered, though
the case worker did confide that it was likely any child placed for fostering
would remain with that family if the choice to adopt was made.
We set up a meeting with our own case worker for Friday morning
to discuss fostering a child. She had a few kids that seemed suitable, and
would bring their files. As we sat in the living room, discussing each child,
it became clear that only one was suitable for our lifestyle and abilities. The
others were exhibiting signs of autism and/or fetal alcohol syndrome – needs
that were simply beyond our capabilities.
So we tentatively decided on Baby N, and asked if a meeting
with him could be set up at some point in the near future. Well, the near
future was a little nearer than initially thought. If we were amenable to
fostering Baby N, he would arrive that afternoon. In three hours. With nothing
more than a few clothes and a couple of toys.
Well shit.
Professor D was conflicted. He had a wicked cold and was in
the midst of organizing a major work conference. This was not a good time. But
Baby N’s other option was going to be what was euphemistically called ‘24 hour
Daycare’ – in actuality an orphanage.
There was no way I was sending this kid to an orphanage.
So Baby N’s previous foster parents lugged over a spare crib,
some formula and some baby food. They were heartsick at him leaving, but were
caring for another baby whose immune system was so compromised she needed
intensive care. As they already had five
older foster kids, and two of their own, Baby N needed to find another home.
It was a hell of a weekend. I napped while Baby N napped,
but was so sleep-deprived I lost track of the days quickly. Baby N wasn’t yet
walking, but crawled around the house at astonishing speeds, getting into
everything that wasn’t baby-proofed (and at that point nothing was) and leaving
me an exhausted mess by the end of the day.
After a week of this, it became clear that I wasn’t able to
juggle parenting and work and life in general. Professor D had helped where he
could, but I was largely left on my own during the long days. We made the
gut-wrenching decision to tell Baby N’s social worker that this was beyond us.
We had no help, no family, and no friends stepping forward to offer aid, and
the future seemed untenable. But then something miraculous happened. Something
so magical, so wonderful, that everything changed.
Daycare.
By this point, we had fallen utterly in love with the child.
It had only taken two weeks to feel he was inextricably a part of our family,
and I couldn’t imagine life without him. His sunny disposition, his curiosity,
his bouts of crying, everything about him made my heart full.
What followed was eight months of anxiety, as we waited for
the adoption process to proceed. There were plenty of hurdles to overcome, and
the outcome wasn’t sure until the moment a judge signed the adoption
certificate. It’s only now that I realize how terrified I was that it would all
fall apart, and that our son might be taken from us.
Three years later, we are a family. We argue, we laugh, we
play, we sulk, we watch videos, we dance to music, we sing songs and we eat ice
cream. It’s a beautiful life, and I’m deeply thankful for it. I’ve never felt
loved by anyone like I am by my son, and I’ve never loved anything so
protectively, so fiercely, so wholly, as I do him.
Is it perfect? Well,
yes it is. It’s perfect in that it’s complicated, and wonderful, and
challenging, and joyous, and shitty and all of the things that make up a life.
Are we treated differently as a queer adoptive family? Yep, absolutely. We had
to get through it on our own, without baby showers, family babysitting, doting
relatives and all the things that straight, natural birth couples are given in
due course. But by being largely
self-sufficient, we've also been mercifully free of the meddling, criticism and
all-around hassle that so many other families have to deal with when it comes
to attentive relations. So I’m
definitely not complaining.
And now, in an age where we LGBT folks don’t need to play
‘special uncle’ or ‘honorary aunt’ to other kids, we can have our own families,
secure in the knowledge that we’re not just some politically-correct accessory
to discard in favour of ‘real family.’
So no matter how marginalized we get, or how many times we
turn on the TV and hear how we’re ruining our children’s lives, or destined to
burn in hell, we still have the family we've made for ourselves. We still have each other. And that’s
something to celebrate.
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