Photo by: Kevin Collins

Adopting After Losing a Baby

Photo by: Kevin Collins

Why did Andrew and I decide to adopt immediately after losing our first baby instead of trying another pregnancy? Making the decision to adopt is always a personal decision, but here is the exact reasoning behind our choice:

After the autopsy, the doctors told us that Matthew suffered from an autosomal recessive condition. This meant that the chances of re-occurrence were one in four for each pregnancy. Some of our physicians, even friends and family, encouraged us to “try again.”

After all, they reasoned, there was a seventy-five percent chance that the next baby would be okay. To them, a one-in-four risk of a sick baby was an abstract. To me, it had already been a reality once, and it was not a number to take lightly. As someone once said, once it happens to you, the chance is one hundred percent in your experience.

Take a look at this more closely. Imagine that, in order to go home with her baby, a mother must first send him to the other side of the country. She will meet her baby at the destination and then they can live their lives together. To get to the other side of the country, her baby can take one of four airplanes.

Three of the planes will make the trip safely. One will not. On the doomed plane, there will be no survivors. Midway through the flight, the mother will learn whether or not her baby is on the doomed plane. There will be nothing she can do once the flight has taken off.

She will have no options to save her baby, no parachutes or emergency landings or rescue missions. But, hey, there is a seventy-five percent chance her baby will not be on the doomed plane, so why not give it a try?

Would any parent place her baby on one of those four airplanes without searching for alternatives? What if the only way she could ever take her baby home was by first putting him on one of those planes?

Even knowing that only one of the four planes would go down, could she take that chance, the agony of waiting to find out her baby’s fate and the helplessness that may ensue?

That scenario is what re-occurrence risk meant to me.

Any pregnancy of mine represents those airplanes. Before putting my next baby on a plane, I searched and asked, please is there any other way?

And someone replied, well, actually, there is another way. There is a train. But the train is a lot more complicated than a nonstop flight. See, you will have to take one train and your child will have to take a different train, and eventually you will need to find each other on the other side of the country.

The train ride will last much longer than a flight. It will be unpredictable, with sudden stops and starts. Far fewer people take the train, and many people think the train “isn’t for them.”

On this train, you will meet many different people along the way, and maybe you’ll even get off at the wrong stop a few times and need a lot of encouragement to get back on the train because you are so frightened and sad.

Your child will travel through places he or she has never been and will rely on the kindness of strangers to survive. You, too, will rely on the kindness of strangers. Just when you are feeling as if you cannot bear another moment of this search for your child, you will meet someone who is searching too.

You agree to keep your eyes out for each other’s children. You see their pain, and maybe it is even worse than yours, and you think, there but for the grace of God go I, and you are grateful for what you have, and you keep riding the train.

And then one day you hear that your child was spotted on a nearby train! You rejoice! You make plans to meet, you wire a frantic message for the conductor to hold that child at the next stop; we’re coming we’re coming!!! But when you get there it was a mistake, it was not your child after all, and you grieve horribly and then start searching again.

Weeks go by, then months. There are sightings of your child, glimpses that keep your hope alive. You are amazed to hear that people you do not even know are praying for you to find your child; people in dozens of states are searching for your child on every train that goes by.

The people at the train station offer you maps, blankets, coffee. The townspeople in some of the small towns offer you lodging and food, prayers and tears of compassion for your pain. And you wait. And you ride.

Sometimes it feels as if nothing is happening, as if you are not moving toward anything or anyone, simply riding aimlessly. The agony of waiting.

But you hang in there, because you know with certainty, your child will meet you on the other side of the country, and oh the celebrations that will follow when you can live your lives together and it will happen for you because others who have ridden the trains before you have told you that it is true and you must have faith and you must believe.

And when you finally find your child and hold her in your arms, the real soft aliveness of her, the gorgeous being that is your baby, the miracle the relief the awe that she inspires in you and the disbelief that after so long it is suddenly over.

You have found her and time stops and grown men and women stare as they bear witness to the unification of parent and child and everyone weeps with joy and it is a life moment that many will never know, an intensity of emotion likened to winning a gold medal at the Olympics, this moment that you have lived for all your life, it is here and your whole life’s purpose was to find this child and you have and it makes up for everything.

Adoption is the train ride. Andrew and I made the choice to take the train, with all of its uncertainties and stops and wrong turns, rather than take the plane ride with its uncertainties, because the only thing we were certain of at that point in our lives was that we did not want to face a one-in-four chance of certain death for the next baby.

There are babies entering this world every day that need a loving home. Ours was a loving home that needed a baby.

And, quite simply, that is how we decided to adopt.

Carrie is an artist and a writer living in Evanston. According to her, ‘I was actually trained to exercise the other half of my brain and worked for years in the Financial Services sector after receiving an MBA in Finance from Kellogg. But I had a change of brain after going through the harrowing process of adopting our daughter Katie, and I could no longer think in columns of numbers. I thought instead in splashes of color and shades of light and dark.’ When Katie was nearly a year old, Carrie left banking and started her own oil painting business, Artwork By Carrie. Working as an artist has allowed her to create a flexible schedule to spend more time with Katie and her second daughter, Annie Rose. Read her blog, Portrait of an Adoption.

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65 Comments

Thank you for sharing, and I'm very sorry about your loss.

I lost my first baby to prematurity, and I would have adopted a child that very instant if given the chance. My body and mind and heart were craving to mother a child so desperately, but we were going ahead with the plan for a bio baby and special pregnancy care. Thank goodness it worked for us, but there was no doubt that adoption would have been a great option for me if the process had been quick to get a child in my empty arms...

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Personally, I admire you for your choice. I am a NILMDTS photographer and I have seen several mothers lose baby after baby trying to have one of their own. It's so sad. Especially, since if they adopted their child would be "their own" if their hearts would only allow it.

you are a wonderful person, may God bless you and your children

A great analogy. I too am an adoptive mom. We wanted to know what a family would have to do to become adooptive parents and we must have been on the express train.

We started paperwork in May and our son 5 weeks old came home in October of that year and the adoption was finalized the following September a few days after his first birtnday. In fact he was placed with us a month before we were married 2 years which is the minimun requirement it all just worked...

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Alex. You want to talk selfish and evil? Read the evil spewed from your thoughts in that little box by your name..... Talk about a desire for Karma to come back and bite someone on the butt! I certainly hope you get that experience..... I am sure you know people will be praying for you now.... Praying that you learn how to make educated, compassionate, sensitive comments.

This perfectly captures the decision I also made: after trying with my own eggs(no good), I went to donor egg (found out I have an immune issue and kept miscarrying) and while the doc said if I kept trying there was a likelihood I would eventually carry to term, I couldn't keep putting my baby on the plane and having her end up on the wrong one. I've been on the adoption waiting list for 13 mos - it's very hard to wait, but yes, I know at the end I will have a child that is meant to be mine.

Adoption is a great option for many families. Especially ones where fertility or health issues make a successful pregnancy difficult.

I want any family considering adoption to consider domestic adoption before going overseas. Adoption through the state is free and even private adoption is less expensive than foreign adoption. And, either way, you get to help out an American child that really needs you to be a forever family...

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After having lost our first son when I was 3 months pregnant and having lost our second son when I was 6 months pregnant, our third son (who is now 35) was born successfully. However, he was stuck in the birth canal and was a forceps delivery which resulted in a slight case of cerebral palsy. Within 18 months of his birth, a pregnancy attached itself to one of my ovaries and, of course, that child was lost. Therefore, my husband and I decided to adopt. Albeit, we were 38 at the time...

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Hello, where is the moderator? Alex's comments calling someone evil and suggesting that she deserved the death of her baby are absolutely abusive. Alex's comments should not only be removed, but she should be banned from this site.

Wow, what a wonderful story! And what a gift for writing you have.
We took that train ride 11 years ago to adopt our son. We had many plane rides that ended early and one that ended at term but the visit only lasted 8 hours. The heartache can't be compared, but neither can the joy of the train ride.
Thank you for sharing your story.

We have lost 4 babies..2 sets of twins were stillborn... To the photographer.. The way you commented was if we are selfish for keep trying. ..Our scenerio was 2 totally different reasons and both were DR ERROR so not predictable .It is sad that you are judging the very people you are trying to help... No 2 people are alike and their reasons for continuing are their own and no one elses to judge ....
Btw ....

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I love hearing stories about adoption! After 5 miscarriages and much heartache, my husband and I rejoiced at the thought of adoption. Our birth mother was looking for a loving family and we were matched almost immediatley. Our son was born about 6 months after we signed up and completed all paper work. It was such a wonderful and blessed experience! Our bundle of joy is now 11 years old and a very happy and active boy. We love him dearly and are so thankful everyday!!!

Trying to control my anger at evil commenters here... I know they're just looking for a response, so I ask for a moderator to please stay on top of this topic. Some people have very strong opinions about adoption and not everyone is very nice about them.

Your analogy brought a tear to my eye. I am happy for you and your family and hope that things are wonderful for you all.

For the people who are bashing people's choices regarding infant vs. older child and domestic vs...

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I can fully understand your meaning. I had two wonderful births many years ago and two beautiful healthy girls. My eldest daughter passed away at the age of 30, just 4 short years ago. It doesnt matter if your child is a newborn or an adult. The bond is one that nothing can compare to. I still long to hold her in my arms. I wonder what I could have done different that she may have taken a different path. I cant replace her. I would be terrified to even consider having another child in your shoes...

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I had three biological children and after my first born died 14 months after giving birth to her son, we became mom and dad again to our grandson. The bio dad could not handle raising the child as he came from a very dysfunctional family so we stepped in. Please don't judge. First of all, I w/give anything to have my daughter live to raise her own son. Secondly, we didn't ask for the circumstances that occurred. I started caring for my gs when he came home at 4.5 lbs...

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