Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew (Paperback)
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| Author: Sherrie Eldridge |
| Format: | Paperback |
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Random House Inc
ISBN-10: 044050838X
ISBN-13: 9780440508380
Buy.com Sku: 30509909
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Dimensions:
(in Inches) 8.25H x 5.25L x 0.75T
Pages:
240
Age Range:
NA
See more in Adoption & Fostering

| The author, an adopted child herself, offers powerful, poignant essays highlighting the 20 most important issues adopted children face.272 pp. |
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From the Publisher:
Sherrie Eldridge was adopted at ten days old and raised in a family that had a difficult time handling her special needs as an adopted child. As an adult, she has dedicated herself to educating families on how to deal with issues specific to the adopted child. To this end, she formed an organization, Jewel Among Jewels Adoption Network, Inc., which helps educate people about the unique needs of the adopted child and publishes a quarterly newsletter, Jewel Among Jewels Adoption News. Speaking to the unspoken concerns at the heart of every adoptive family, Eldridge offers practical advice for addressing past issues, handling current crises, and ensuring a long, loving future for readers and their children. Themes covered include everything from mourning birth parents to identity issues and suggestions for discussing adoption with kids.Lists the fears, concerns, doubts, and questions of adopted children, and explains how adoptive parents can ease their children's minds and understand their feelings |
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Hidden Losses Row upon row of tombstones lined the lush lawns as I drove through the tall black iron gates toward my adoptive parents' graves. An elderly man filled a plastic pitcher at a spigot and the smell of freshly mowed grass filled the air. A new grave was being dug across the way, a vivid reminder that loss is an undeniable part of life. On the seat beside me were two long-stemmed roses, symbolic of my late-blooming gratitude to my parents, who had weathered the growing-up years with me. I was returning to their graves as an adult who had finally come to grips with the fact that adoption had, and continues to have, a profound impact on my life. This was to be my day of reckoning, forgiveness, and closure. As I exited the car and headed toward my parents' graves a tidal wave of grief washed over me, and I felt like an orphan once more. How I hate that feeling! I was gripped by the cold, hard fact that the people who loved me most were buried below. |
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