Why "BIRTHMOTHER" Means "BREEDER"
by Diane Turski
I had never heard the term "birthmother" until
I reunited with my son. When the social worker who located me referred
to me as his "birthmother," my first reaction was to instinctively
recoil in distaste. What is a "birthmother?" It occurred to
me that perhaps she had merely applied this ridiculous sounding term in
an attempt at political correctness, so I ignored it. However, when my
son's adoptive mother initiated her first contact with me she referred
to him as my "birthson." What is a "birthson?" And
what would a "birthfather" be - I didn't know that fathers gave
birth! In a "birthfamily" are there also "birthsisters,"
"birthbrothers," "birthgrandparents," "birthaunts,"
"birthuncles," "birthcousins," "birthpets,"
etc?
It was then that I began to suspect that these ridiculous
"birth" terms were not merely being applied in a benign attempt
at political correctness. Was it possible that the adoption industry intended
to insult us by applying these ridiculous labels to us? Is it possible
that we mothers have been so naive that we haven't yet realized their
true intent? Could it be that we are insulting ourselves every time that
we apply or allow others to apply these ridiculous terms to us?
Investigating, I learned that U.S. social workers had collaborated
about 30 years ago to invent their own list of contrived terms to appease
their adopting clients. Adopters no longer wanted anyone to use the original
term "natural mothers." Why? Three reasons: 1) it indicated
respect for the mother's true relationship to her child - she could not
be written-off as a "convenient slut" whose only value was reproduction,
2) it recognized that the sacred mother/child relationship extended past
birth and even past surrender, and 3) it implied that the adoptive mother's
relationship to the child was unnatural.
The adoption industry didn't want adoption to be considered
unnatural - they could lose customers this way! After all, people were
paying good money for "a child of their own."
Adopters didn't want a reminder that the child they were
adopting still had a loving parent somewhere else. After all, social workers
had promised them a child "as if born to."
So social workers responded by creating a list of ridiculous
"birth" terms meant to confine the mother's relationship with
her child to simply giving birth, ending at that point. In other words,
"birthmother" is simply a euphemism for "incubator"
or "breeder."
Then, social workers deliberately disguised their disrespectful
intent by calling it "Respectful Adoption Language." "Respectful"
to adoptive parents, who are now to be called "parents," as
if the two natural parents no longer exist.
Deliberately creating the term "birthmother" was
a further attempt to break the bond between mother and child; in addition
to altering birth records to indicate that adopters gave birth, sealing
the original birth certificate, and changing the child's identity with
a false adopted name. Adoption is built on lies and denials of truth,
so we mothers shouldn't be surprised that "Respectful Adoption Language"
is just another deceitful ploy.
However, one truth that cannot be denied is the truth that
thousands of mothers and their lost children have found in reunion: that
the deep spiritual/emotional mother-child bond between them has never
been broken, despite the decades they were separated. That natural motherhood
is forever, that the relationship extended *past* birth. Adopters feeling
threatened by this sometimes try to pressure adoptees to end reunions:
instead, they should hold their brokers accountable for lying to them
with the "as if born to" sales-pitch.
Now that we mothers have learned the truth about the invention
of these ridiculous "birth" terms, what should we do about it?
Do we really want to continue to disrespect ourselves and allow the adoption
industry to continue to disrespect us by applying and allowing others
to apply these terms to us?
Or should we insist on applying truly respectful language, such as the
term "natural mother," which is still used in other countries
who have not been as propagandized by the United States adoption industry?
I believe it is time for us mothers to defend ourselves and our children
from further insults and attacks.
Diane Turski is a mother who lost her newborn son to a sealed-record
adoption in 1968. Thirty years later they happily reunited when he found
her, proving that the mother/child bond can never be broken. During
those thirty years Diane, as a single mother, had successfully raised
her daughter while earning an MBA degree and pursuing a business career.
The reunion triggered Diane's activism and her dedication to bringing
truth and social justice to other mothers of adoption loss.
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