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Where to Find Support for Birth Mothers

Do you wish that there was more support available for birth mothers and fathers? Many refer to birth parents as the “unsung heroes” of the adoption triad. They are an integral part to the successful placement of a child in a loving adoptive home, and yet there seems to be very little support or encouragement for these individuals. Fortunately, the landscape of adoption is changing to offer more resources available to birth parents and birth mothers specifically.

You can find the support you need and crave whether you want an online support group, access to reliable resources about adoption, or a retreat where you can meet others like yourself. There are plenty of options available to help you feel more comfortable with your decision and process through the grief of losing a child to adoption. Here are just a few of the places you might want to look first in order to find some support for your adoption plan:

BirthMom Buds

BirthMom Buds is one of several online organizations that provides support to birth mothers and pregnant women who might be considering adoption. They are a faith-based organization that offers peer counseling, private forums for birth mothers only, and even an annual retreat exclusively for birth moms. Here, you can find resources, blogs, and the support that you need to make a wise decision regarding the adoption of your child.

Birth Mother Baskets

Birth Mother Baskets is a unique organization that is designed to provide tangible support and encouragement to mothers who are placing their child for adoption. This nonprofit company allows individuals to sponsor baskets anonymously to send support to expectant mothers. They also have an Expectant Parent Peer program that partners expecting mothers with birth mothers who have already been through the adoption experience firsthand.

One of their most valuable offerings is their blog run by birth mothers who have already walked through the pain of placing a child. You can find firsthand experiences, tips for coping with the grief, and more information on what it’s like to be a birth parent through this amazing resource.

On Your Feet Foundation

The On Your Feet Foundation is another nonprofit that offers case management, monetary grants (available in Illinois and Indiana), and annual retreats to birth mothers who need more assistance after an adoption plan is made. The idea is that they will help her to get “back on her feet” after the pain of losing a child through the adoption process. Their annual retreats and mini-retreats are relatively inexpensive, offering you the opportunity to connect with other mothers who have already been through the entire process personally.

Three Strands

Three Strands wants every birth mother to fully know and understand that her role in the adoption triad is valued. Too often, birth mothers may feel unappreciated or devalued through the adoption process, particularly after the hospital experience when she leaves empty-handed. However, Three Strands aims to combat these feelings with a tangible outpouring of support. One of their services is to provide each local birth mother with a hospital bag directly before she leaves the hospital in order to lift her spirit.

In addition to these gift bags, Three Strands also offers other forms of support for birth mothers before and after the placement is made. They have a private Facebook community for birth mothers, adoptive mothers, and adult adoptees. Quarterly gatherings are also hosted for birth mothers who live local near the Lawrenceville, Georgia area.

Concerned United Birthparents

Concerned United Birthparents (CUB) is yet another online organization that aims to offer support and encouragement to birth parents. They focus on the experiences, healing, and wisdom that experienced birth parents can offer to newcomers on this painful journey. However, they don’t exclusively cater to birth parents. CUB also allows anyone who feels forgotten during the adoption journey to join their circle of support. This can include adult adoptees, professionals, and even adoptive parents.

With such a wide circle of support available, they aim to help raise awareness and benefit each member of the adoption triad equally. You will find plenty of resources and support available even if you are just in the beginning stages of considering an adoption plan for your child.

This organization also hosts an annual retreat where you can get to know and hear from other birth parents who have shared your same experiences. Their retreats are usually located somewhere near the shore to give you a beautiful and relaxing space for reflection on your experiences.

Birth Mothers Unite!

Do you want support and encouragement for your decision to make an adoption plan but are too shy to reach out in person? Birth Mothers Unite is an excellent compromise that can give you the resources you need from experienced birth parents. This Facebook group gives you a small and close-knit community where you can ask questions, receive encouragement, and commiserate through the grieving process with other mothers who have been there and done that already. You gain access to the support you need from the convenience of your own home whenever you need it the most!

Our Agency

My Florida Adoptions, LLC wants to ensure our birth mothers have the support they need. Many times birth mother’s feel left behind after they have placed for adoption. It is our intent that supports are put in place ahead of time. Every birth mother is offered counseling during their pregnancy and following the placement of their baby with the adoptive family. It is important for a birth mother to receive the support and encouragement she needs whether it is through counseling or other birth mothers. Who knows your pain better than someone who has experienced the same pain? Please know that you can reach out to us at any time for support and counseling.



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Adoption is a beautiful thing. We have an adoptive family that is overjoyed as their dreams have finally come true and they are able to be parents for the first time. Then there is a brave birth mother who has put the needs of her baby before anything else and because of her love for this child, she makes a mature and selfless decision to place her baby for adoption. While choosing to place your baby for adoption is a brave decision, there is a grieving process that accompanies it. Some birth mothers expect it and know this will be hard and emotional and others may not acknowledge the grief. In 1969, a Swiss Psychiatrist, Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, introduced five stages of grief that people will go through when they experience a loss or change of some kind. During our lifetime, we are going to experience grief many times. It may be the loss of a loved one who dies from cancer. It could be a divorce or broken relationship. It could be a job change or a move. It may be a miscarriage or a still born. The list is endless. Grief is what we go through when we experience a loss or change. Birth mothers who place their baby for adoption also will experience grief. Let's look at the five stages of grief that Dr. Kubler- Ross introduced: Denial - Denial is the initial stage of grief that helps us cope with loss or change. It is a time of avoidance. We avoid the reality of the situation as it may be too overwhelming. It is actually helpful to experience denial as it gives you time to pace our grief. We could not handle the impact of loss all at once; therefore, denial allows us time to avoid it and deny the reality of it until we are ready to process it. The important thing is to be sure you do not get stuck in denial. The best way to process grief is to feel it and express it and tell your story. If you stay in denial and deny or avoid the feelings, you will not be able to process it. The pain will be stuffed inside and at some point it will come forward at a later time of life. Anger- Anger is a common emotion to have once you are out of denial and into reality. This is when one may say “It is not fair” or “Why me”. It is when one needs to blame someone else for their grief. It is important to feel the anger and express it or say it out loud. Eventually the anger will dissipate. For a birth mother, she may be angry at the birth father who left her in this position. She may be angry at her mother who insisted she place for adoption or who withdrew her support from her. She may be angry at the adoption agency that made it sound like rainbows and unicorns and didn’t forewarn her of this grieving process. She may be angry at the adoptive family who are holding and cuddling the baby that she should be holding and cuddling. She may be angry at herself for not being in a better place financially or emotionally. Depression- Depression and sadness is the most commonly accepted stage of grief. It is the emptiness we feel when we are living in reality and realize the person or situation we had is gone or over. It is a time where you may want to isolate and withdraw or stay in bed. This could be accompanied with hopelessness and/or suicidal thoughts. It is important not to get stuck in this stage. Accept therapy and support, even when you do not want to. I had a birth mother say to me once, I don’t want to talk to a therapist and move on, I want my baby back. She was feeling so hopeless. Within three days, she was doing so much better. It was still hard and painful, but she was not completely hopeless. She described it as I am now rational again. She was feeling normal grief. The hard thing for a birth mother is there is a normal grieving process after placing your baby for adoption and then there are hormonal changes going on in your body at the same time. It is like a double whammy. When a birth mother is feeling depression it causes her to question if she did the right thing and if she did, why does it hurt so bad. Bargaining- Bargaining is a stage where we are looking for a chance to stop the grief. You make yourself believe you can avoid the grief with a type of negotiation. Bargaining is many times accompanied by guilt. It is the attempt to get things back to the way it was prior to the loss or change. A birth mother may bargain with God and say, “God, if you will let me get my baby back, I will live right from here on out.” Or negotiating with the adoptive family. An example may be, I can’t do this unless I know I can visit her twice or three times a year. Acceptance- In this stage, one comes to terms with their new reality. The emotions begin to stabilize. You have good days and bad days. But you are moving and growing into your new reality and you have a sense that you will be okay. It is important to let people support you during your time of grief. Counseling and Birth Parent Support Groups are available to birth mothers. Grief is a process and everyone processes it differently. It is important to express your feelings and tell your story to help you process your grief. It is so interesting that when an employer gives you bereavement time off, it is usually three days paid time off. I think that the most intense time is the first three days. You are bouncing from stage to stage and feeling all kinds of emotions. It does not end there; however, you may start to get some breaks from the grief.. Then there will be something that triggers your grief like a movie or a smell and you will experience some of the emotions. But then you will get a break again until the next trigger. Grief is a process and a journey. There is no right or wrong way to grieve. We are all individuals and will grieve at our own pace and in our own way. Don’t judge yourself or let anyone judge you during this time. Be kind to yourself. Find a safe place to tell your story. Here at My Florida Adoptions, counseling is made available to you at any time during your adoption plan and your grieving process. Remember we have offices in Tampa, Port Richey, Orlando and Clearwater. It would be our pleasure to support you throughout your adoption plan.
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You have selected your agency, attorney or consultant of choice. You survived the Home Study process. You spent hours creating your Profile Book. You are officially “APPROVED to adopt”, so what now? The past few months have been leading up to this moment and you were feverishly filling out forms, scheduling interviews, doctor’s appointments, and pulling all of your creativity into an 8x11 book, and now you are told to simply, “wait.” Excuse me? You have been in fact “waiting” to add a child to your family for what seems like forever already and “now” is when the waiting starts? The true and dreadful answer to that question is “Yes.” However, this time of waiting does not have to be filled with anxiety or checking each day off of that calendar in your kitchen. Here are my “Social Worker Approved” tips for surviving the wait! 1. Realistically prepare for your new addition. DO NOT, and I repeat DO NOT buy clothes, diapers, bottles, specific toys, etc. as that can make the wait seem even more excruciating. Instead, start clearing out that extra bedroom, pick out a gender-neutral wall color (unless you are adopting a child of a specific gender) and paint the walls, pick out a crib or bed. Start looking on Pinterest for different decorating ideas for when the time comes. These are simple ways to prepare, while not adding to your anxiety of waiting. A fallacy of adopting a child is that the baby or child’s room has to be completely done. I always suggest to families to wait and decorate the room once the baby or child is in your home. You will be able to make the room specific to your baby or child, which makes the process much more fun! 2. Work on household projects. Take this time to update that bathroom you felt you never had time for before. Start that garden in your backyard, knock down that wall, or clean out that garage. This is the perfect time to keep busy, while feeling accomplished with projects here and there. 3. Start an adoption journal. Write about this amazing process you have begun. Share your feelings about your hopes, desires, and dreams for your future child. Share your fears about the unexpected and the struggle of waiting. This can be very therapeutic and great to read through again years later, even with your child one day. 4. Start a blog or vlog…if you are into that sort of thing. This can be a great outlet and way for your family and friends to support you throughout your adoption journey. 5. Continue your adoption education. Read books, blogs, etc. about discussing adoption with your child, adoption resources for families, books for children on adoption, and so on. No one will ever know everything there is to know about adoption, so continue your education as you prepare! 6. “Date” your spouse (if applicable). No matter how long you have been waiting and preparing to add a child to your family, your lives are about to change…even if you have children already! Use this time to strengthen your relationship as a couple. Go on dates, a weekend getaway or that cruise you have always wanted to go on. Have no money left after your adoption savings…have a date night in and binge watch some Netflix. If you are adopting as a single parent, then use this time to take that one trip, visit with out of state friends or family, etc. Take time for what is important as you wait! The wait is just another part of your journey to adopt a child. You will look back on this wait one day and think it was completely worth it…trust me, you will! Do you have any tips for families “surviving the wait?” If so, we would love to hear them!
By Tammy Holcombe 14 Aug, 2020
We are excited to share that My Florida Adoptions has opened two new offices-Tampa and Orlando-to better serve our clients! Our main office is in Clearwater. Let us know how we can serve you in these areas and all other parts of Florida as well. We are happy to travel to you, no matter where you are. If you are an expectant mother wanting to make an adoption plan or wanting to discuss your options, we are happy to meet with you at any time. If you a pre-adoptive family who needs a home study to start your adoption journey or if you would like to discuss the adoption process, feel free to reach out to us. We are here to serve you. Sincerely, Tammy, Leah, Susan and Tina
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