One Woman's Choice
For three years I tried to
raise my daughter myself. Her father left two weeks after
he found out I was pregnant. My parents live in another state.
My mother is remarried and my stepfather didn't really like
me. So we didn't see each other very much. So it had been
Amber and me from the start.
I tried to take care of her
the best I could at nineteen. She had been raised by a lot
of day care people. Something I didn't want. But welfare
wasn't enough and I had to go back to work when she was six
weeks old. I only saw her in the evenings when I picked her
up from the sitter after ten hours of being apart.
Sometimes she came to me
but sometimes she'd look up and didn't want to leave. That
broke my heart to see her reject me and hug the sitter. I
worked long shifts, came home smelling like fried chicken
and grease. I was dead tired and all I had at home was bills
and more bills. I couldn't seem to get ahead. I made just
enough to get by. I was able to buy her a toy now and then,
pay the sitter and was forever putting money in the dang
thing called a car.
I came home one Friday to
an eviction notice. I don't where we were going to go since
my credit was shot. I wouldn't be able to get into a decent
apartment. The only apartments were located on a trashy side
of town and Amber's sitter was on the opposite side where
my job was. I could have gotten another job but then she
would be at the sitter over fourteen hours per day and Saturdays.
I looked into her sad eyes
and saw that I wasn't doing parenting very well either. She
wasn't happy and she always knew when I was upset and acted
out. I decided she needed more than I could offer. I rethought
the choice I had considered when I was pregnant with her.
That was adoption.
That was the hardest thing
that I've ever done. But I loved her enough to follow through
with my decision. I chose an adoptive family that had one
child that was seven so she would have a big sister to play
with. Something I couldn't give her. She would also have
a mom that was at home and a dad. Another thing I couldn't
give her.
It is still hard, but I couldn't
have kept on living the life we were. Moving and dragging
her at all hours of the day in here pj's to babysitters,
so I could come home dog tired and just sleep while she waited
for me to wake up to play with her. Sometimes I was so tired
that all I wanted to do was push her away and she couldn't
understand why I was rejecting her. I felt like we would
both have a better chance at a new start.
Some of the people at work
thought I was being selfish. I think I had been selfish for
keeping her in this lifestyle for so long. I thought of adoption
when her dad left. My family pressured me to parent, saying
that they would help. Yeah, for a whole three weeks and then
they were gone and I was alone again.
Amber has been with her new
family for six weeks. It was hard for me the first few weeks.
I went to see a counselor that helped. That day I got in
my mail, more bills but also a card from the adoptive family.
I could tell by the way the envelope felt that there were
photos inside. My heart started pounding and when I got into
my apartment, I just placed the envelope up against the lamp
on the kitchen table. I looked at it awhile going through
the other mail and bills. I couldn't open it. It took me
until the middle of the night when I woke and went to the
kitchen; there it was still sitting waiting for me to open
it. How would I feel when I saw the photos? What if I cry?
What if she looks sad?
Finally, I carefully opened
the envelope, on the back there was a pretty pink heart sticker
that was over the flap. When I looked inside I found a card
with a teddy bear on the front, a verse that said "To
a Special Person." I guess that's me. Inside the card
were four photos. The first one was Amber sitting on the
lap of her new sister. Their arms were wrapped around each
other; big smiles covered both their faces. I couldn't remember
Amber ever having a smile like that before.
The second one was a photo
of Amber with Becky, her adoptive mom. They were outside
at a park. Becky looked so relaxed, so natural. Amber had
her arms wrapped around Becky's neck; squeezing it so tight
it distorted Becky's neck.
The third one was just of
Amber alone. Olin Mills Studio was stamped on the lower left
side of the photo. Her hair was up in a little pony on the
side of her head. I never thought of putting her hair up
that way, but it was really cute on her. She had on an old
fashioned ivory dress with little buttons on it. It looked
real expensive. Her eyes were shining. I realized she looked
like me when I was her age. She looked so happy, it made
me cry.
The last photo was a special
one. It was one of the four them. She was being held by her
new dad, Doug, a dad she never had before. He held her with
such love and confidence. I could tell Amber was happy. Seeing
her with them as a family made me realize I had done what
was right for her, very right. I cried, but my tears were
from knowing she was safe, happy and relieved that I had
made the choice that was right, even when others said it
wasn't. Other people weren't here. They couldn't see what
I could see or feel what I could feel or know what Amber
really needed. She needed this family and this family needed
Amber.
I finally just went back
to bed. Sleep came easier. When I woke up the next morning
I felt a weight had been lifted. The final act of a play
had been played out and now it was my turn to start over.
One thing I will always remember
is I made the choice from Amber's standpoint. Through her
eyes, she told me what she needed and I'm glad I looked into
her eyes and realized it before it was too late and I would
no longer be able to tell. Her eyes spoke to me again when
I saw the photos of her with her new family. They were saying
thank you for giving me a chance. I know she loves me and
she will always know I loved her enough to want the best
for her life.
I wrote her long letter and
put together a small photo album of her life with me and
sent it with her the day she went to be with Becky and Doug.
Amber is always in
my prayers and will always be in heart. It is hard sometimes,
but these days are becoming fewer. What keeps me going
is knowing that she is living a wonderful life with everything
I ever wanted for her. A second chance for both of us.
I love you, Amber,
Your birth mother |