A Korean Adoption Story
I found this on a blog I just recently visited. The story is absolutely amazing and one that I think everyone should see. The story isn’t about the race of the child but the future she faced if she had stayed in a society that did not accept her for who she was, a talented, spirited child.
A Thousand Words
I’ve been getting sentimental these last few days because I know that in just a few weeks I will be breathing in the warm scent of my new son. However, nothing can compare to those days and weeks leading up to AJ’s adoption.
I came across this photo this afternoon and it stopped me in my tracks. It was in my most used photo folder on my desktop but I had passed it by so many times lately. Today I stopped and looked. He didn’t look like the same kid. So much so that I spent 30 minutes looking for a …read more
NPR’s Adoption Series
Over the past few years NPR has offered up a fabulous series on adoption, not only stories and journals about adoptions covering domestic but also transracial, international, birth mother, and adoptee.
Their latest story is that of an orphan in the 1950’s.
In 1994 they presented The Many Faces of Adoption with four families out of the 1.6 million American families with adoptive children.
The Orphanage, A Movie
I have to tell you that I am not sure how I feel about this movie. Sure, it is just fiction, just a movie, just a work of art (and some critics say Oscar worthy).
But deep down (okay, not so deep) I know that orphanages can be scary, traumatic, hellish places and I would hate, absolutely HATE for the hundreds of thousands of children who lived in orphanages to stumble across this trailer.
What do you all think? Am I overreacting?
The really sad thing is that I am totally drawn to this movie. I LOVE thrillers and for some reason I …read more
Kylie Minogue Plans to Adopt
According to sites all over the internet Kylie Minogue plans to adopt a “aborigine orphan” from Australia. How about we be politically correct and say something like, oh, I don’t know…a child?
In our culture would this be like saying she was adopting a black orphan?
Just wondering.
At least some people got it right. Kudos for using the term underprivileged instead of the aforementioned terms.




