Losing two moms

I have to apologize if I’ve given off the impression of having a meltdown this week – not true at all.  Slightly agitated, but to be honest, the adoption-in-your-face is nothing new:  I just seized the randomness of this week’s slap as an opportunity to pass along what it’s like.

It’s actually been a relatively calm week in the life of adoptee school teacher in the Korean countryside…

Just yesterday I was sending photos of old hairstyles to newer friends, and I came across this photo:

This is me, thirty pounds overweight and pregnant with my son.  (Yes, the glasses are huge – it was the eighties!)  And behind me is my mom.  See?  She had her moments.  She really liked babies, and here she is on a rare (only?) occasion with two grandchildren.

I’ve been wanting to write about her for a long time now, but was feeling too fragile.  But feeling strangely strong right now, I’m thinking about her and want to explore some of the complexity of what it is to hate adoption and love your mom and hate abuse and love your mom and to leave the mom you love yet continue loving her and to never reconcile and lose two moms.

That would describe a lot of adoptees, you know.  A lot of adoptees have to put distance between themselves and the people who acquired them, controlled them; molded them.  And in so doing, they lose a big part of who they are.  Again.  And for those who bonded with their foster moms, that’s three moms they lost.  And some lose even more…

For us adoptees, there is always that duality of nature vs. nurture to contend with.  My family was all musical, and despite years of piano lessons and band, I struggled with it.  My family were literal yet educated people who spoke proper English, in a plain manner, but never in a socially common manner.  And I:  I spoke in metaphor or precise multi-syllabic words and, from as long as I could hold a pencil, preferred to communicate in images.  And we looked different.  So that was the nature half of the equation.

On the nurture half of the equation, I am very much my mother.  And this is because we spent sooooo many hours alone in each others’ presence, though we rarely interacted.  She, too, was a feral cat and I learned all my spooky ways from her.  And because half of me is her, I of course liked many things about her.  I liked how she hated PTA moms, Tupperware parties,  bridge games, cocktail parties, social gatherings, dressing up / being uncomfortable, family gatherings, etc.  Her critic of any obligations made perfect sense to me.  Her wanting to retreat and lose herself in fantasy made perfect sense to me.  Her not wanting to discuss feelings, her recoil at physical demonstration, her mistrust of others, her cynicism and unearthly composure also made sense to me.  She’d had a rough childhood she did not want to discuss or deal with.  She was contemptuous and repressed.  I got that.  On an essential level.  She was my role model.

And so, I just knew better that I was not going to get whatever the heck it was I needed from her.   It’s just the way it was, and I accepted that.  And in a strange way, our relationship had a lot more mutual respect to it than her relationship with my other siblings, her biological children, had, as they were deeply offended by her emotional absence.  She just wasn’t nurturing, and they all went a little out of their minds seeking that.

She did what she could.  She sang nursery rhymes to me because she once loved to sing.  She fed my insatiable appetite for preschool activity books.  Later, she taught me how to sew and knit.  She purchased art supplies.  She scrimped and saved and purchased me things I wanted.  And in return, I was to be quiet, not bug her and leave her in peace to escape and read about other people’s lives, fictional lives, lives of satisfaction unlike hers. In return for her sacrifices, out of gratitude, I was  to give her no grief and heaven forbid, have emotional needs.  My life of quiet desperation mirrored her life of quiet desperation, so how much weight did my private complaints have?

People hear about my abuse and they imagine all kinds of horrible things, or that my parents were monsters.  But life is not that black and white.  My parents did not look or sound or act like monsters.  In their minds they loved me, as much as they were capable.  In many ways, they loved me too much.  They did the best they could, with their lame and broken tools.

I think that in many ways my parents were just like almost every other adoptee family that exists:  there was a deficit in their lives and the hope was that I would fill it with joy.  They were unfulfilled, not fully formed or evolving people. And again, an awful lot of adopting couples are just that.  They are seeking something they think a child will provide.  I get a lot of grief from adoptive parents claiming they are not filling a need by adopting.  What are they adopting for then?  Charity?  And why are they expending energy on trying to convince others?

We have a big job to do, us adoptees.  Filling such big holes is not easy.  And some, heaven help them, have to fill the shoes of another child, the child that never lived.

It turns you into a tiny parent, because you recognize the insecurity and fragility of your parents, and it is your reason for being to care for them.  This is the reality: this is the realm in which you must call home.  You just have to be pragmatic when you’re an adoptee because you learn from the cradle that you have no choices.  It’s a poverty stricken love, but it’s the only love you’ve known.  And you can’t discount that.  Well.  You can.  But I can’t.

Incest survivors will take to task the survivor who holds onto an idealized version of their hostile mother, hostile in the sense that the child’s needs become secondary to their own and they refute their child’s victimization and view the child’s crisis as a threat to their own life, when what the child needs is protection.  I don’t believe I idealize my adoptive mother at all.  Nor do I disagree that her lack of protecting me was wrong.  But I/we can still love the only mother we’ve known. We being me and the child I monitored at CPS, for whom I winced in sympathy when witnessing the attitudes of social workers towards her mom who was labeled hostile, which was required in order to protect children from further harm…that little girl loved her mom, in spite of it all, and so did I.  This is the burden of a child of incest.  Now, compound that with the burden of a child who’s been adopted.

So how culpable was my mom, anyway?  Did she know what was going on?  Did she contribute to it in any way?  To which I ask – does it even matter?  Hadn’t the harm already been done?  Would her life having been further destroyed have improved my own at all?  Probably not.  Did she mother me when she found out too late?  No.  Would she have protected me had she found out in time?  Probably not.  Does that make her a monster?  Not at all.  It makes her a failure at nurture.  Her choice was denial, which was nothing new.  Her entire life was spent in denial.  Hell, I just spent forty years in denial.  No.  She was just human, and had to live with her failure.  So I don’t see the value in blame.   I wouldn’t want to be her.  That would be hell on earth.

Did she know?  Probably.  But without my verbal acknowledgment and confirmation, that could forever remain a suspicion, which meant she could continue to cope with her already unhappy life.  There were plenty of clues:  literally dirty laundry, times she caught me pleasuring(?) myself, increased friction between my father and myself, the conversation I’d overheard them have about pornography whose female subjects appeared under-age.  These did not go unnoticed by her, and they all went unaddressed and were buried.

I remember the day she did confront me about my change in attitude towards my father.  She demanded to know “Why are you so mean to your father?”  I think I was about eight at the time.  I knew this was code for:  the imbalance of your attitude is really damning, and I want you to stop making it apparent so I can keep on living my life.  What is a child supposed to say when confronted with a question/demand like that?  I knew nothing would come of it but all hell breaking loose.  And so I took care of it (and her) and told her I didn’t know what my problem was and would try to be better.  But I also knew that wasn’t sustainable, and the thought that crossed my mind at that moment was, “Damnit.  Did you have to go do that?  Now I’ll have to be nasty to you too.  (to maintain balance in this ruse of a life you require.)”  I didn’t want to be mean to her, too.  But that’s what I had to do if I was to be able to have any emotional outlet for my own survival – and hers.  It was on that day that I lost my second mother, and not nine years later when I left home for good.

I think it is often the adoptee’s role to tend their parent’s mental health.  It is our role to fulfill their needs, and tend their emotions.   While the physical needs we have require our parents’ oversight, our emotional needs we must always tend ourselves, because it’s not possible for our parents to comfort us, as they have no capital in that kind of trauma, and they are also our loving captors.  So we grow up really fast.  And we become nurturers at an early age.

So in a strange way, I was forced to be the parent.  And I see this a lot in other adoptees too.  It has nothing to do with being abused and everything to do with going to emotionally starving people, it just means our relationship went further off track than most.  I gave up hope of being her child, but continued to be her parent.  And I continued to care long after I was gone, despite being too paralyzed to pick up the phone.

I couldn’t verbalize it then, but I think I had stumbled upon the limitations of adoption that day.

Loving My Captor

there should be laws against this

Hey you Koreans — Abandoning kids is NEVER OKAY.
Then, now, ever.  Not here, or there – Not in Korea and Not in America.

 

More Korean Kids Ending Up in Foster Care

Click on the photo for the well-written and grim story.

I’m so angry…And NO this does not justify adoption!  What it justifies is NOT MAKING ABANDONMENT AN OPTION.   You make a baby, you gotta put in the time.  Responsibility comes with birth.  Period.

On the bright side, a little bird just told me some good news about a vote in the Korea Parliament, so there IS progress being made.

After this week, I just want to go to another planet and tend a rose by myself.

So funny it hurts

Since R had never heard of Gotcha day, I thought I’d also take the time, in honor of this week of being assaulted with adoption kool-aid I absolutely WASN’T looking for, I thought I’d share some pretty old and famous images that have kind of hit home why we adoptees feel so icky about this thing we’re supposed to love.

The caption reads "Adopt. You will receive more than you can ever give." (By The Indian Association for Promotion of Adoption and Child Welfare)
Here is one example of "Going Home Barbie" that the White Swan Hotel in China uses as a marketing tool in their part of the business that adoption has become.

I can’t remember the name of the graphic artist who was making t-shirts to sell, some of the proceeds going to help needy families.  But Louis Vuitton didn’t like her design, which showed – instead of a rich entitled privileged western woman carrying a third world baby while sporting a designer bag – a third world child carrying a chihuahua and a designer bag, turning the idea of commodity on its head.  Louis Vuitton claimed her campaign was a ruse for profit, and forced her to shut it down or be wiped out with a lawsuit.  So she had to pull the campaign and ask her friends to help with lawyer fees.

Well, I saved a copy of it and I’m not selling anything, so here it is.  Sue me, Louis.

The design was called "fashion victim" And I think instead of LV as the trademark fabric, it had FV...

Some people just can’t take a joke…

But Australian satirist Myles Barlow can!

And Tracey Ullman can!

And the piece de reistance!

Anyway, those might be new to you.  I think we need a lot more satire.  Like this:

(thanks, Myung-Sook for the introduction!)

But actually, the entitlement is so plainly gross it’s almost not necessary.  I think we need to satirize these selfish people whenever we get the chance.

Is there anywhere free of this shite?

So today I went and google’d “younger sister Korean” just because I forgot how to spell it.  I skipped the first Yahoo answers citation because in the second citation “bowel movement…dong” caught my eye.  (aw come on, it would catch your eye too)  Why would those be in the same post?

One look and I knew exactly.  It seems that in forty + years since my similarly piss-poor how-to-care-for-your-Korean-orphan manual, adoption agency handbooks for parenting Korean children hasn’t changed much (okay, about twenty more words) – it’s just been transferred to pixels instead of ink is all.

drill down to its home page, and it gets even worse. Figuring prominently, just below the banner in huge type:

You may be eligible for

a $13,170 federal tax credit

No Waiting Period After Approval

No Foreign Travel Required

Your baby will arrive at LaGuardia or JFK Airport in New York City.

We place healthy infants who receive personal care from foster mothers before placement

And!  You can learn all you need to know about how to care for and help your Korean child adjust in one 3-hour seminar…

Oh, and please send us a donation…

It’s a good thing we can’t be crated and shipped in boxes…(which, btw, is essentially what Harry Holt did to infants on the first orphan flight – white cardboard boxes with air-holes, so the babies could be stacked)

I don’t know about you, but I’d have SERIOUS RESERVATIONS about ANY of the over 4,000 parents who answered an advertisement like theirs.  Answered and received.  And no doubt donated.  Just gross.

The subsidized purchase of human beings is another matter altogether…

Better than manageable

Half way through the first week of classes and I can see this is going to be a good year.

The new first graders are attentive – THEY EVEN TOOK NOTES !!! – and awesome.

The second graders are the ones I’ve developed a relationship with last year.

Third grade is elective, so all those rotten architecture students are gone, gone, gone.  (though I must say, the ones I do have are just like my last batch of third graders)  I mean, FIRST DAY of our classes together and I’m hearing

“Break time”

“Teacher I’m tired.”

“Stop teaching.”

“Finished!”

“Time.  Break time.”

Aigo…And the passive co-teacher just chuckles with an “isn’t that cute” attitude.  Why even bother offering it as a class?

Teaching from the national curriculum is easier, as it reduces my scope and gives me fodder for counterpoint.  Although I find it complicated to keep things straight, as I’ve got four different textbooks, and the three first graders are split up into two levels of academic and then the lower technical students. Plus I was given the teacher’s manuals but not always the students’ books and none of the students’ workbooks, so I have to view everything electronically, and it’s unwieldy.  I make power points of the textbook (except for the book which is missing, and which is locked from saving and which I have to SCAN the ENTIRE BOOK) which helps the kids and me see where we are at.  Then I digress or illustrate my own grammar pointers or more common expressions, etc. off to the side.  I think it’s working well.  Co-teachers seem pleased (because this is probably the stuff they normally skip or can’t do well) and I can teach the class alone if I have to, as the lessons just instantly have more gravity to the students as they are connected to what they will have to be tested on.  Anyway, I’m hoping this can be somewhat formulaic so I can have a life this year and won’t be lesson-planning at home anymore.  Now if I could just stop with the after school naps I could get more use out of my evenings…

For my first non-book exercise, though, I’ve made each student in the whole school write on index cards their names in Korean, their English nick-names, 3 things that interest them, and what they want to become.  Optionally, they can tell me something unique about themselves.  Halfway through the school student body, and so far there’s not been too much uniqueness going on here, but one boy actually put down Trot (your parent’s pop music).  In addition, I’ve taken a photo of each student to paste on the cards.  The third graders refused to cooperate because “I have no makeup today.” or “home page.  no!”  I couldn’t convince them that I would be the only one looking at these photos…But I mean, COME ON!  Out of 300 students, approximately 100 of them have Kim as a last name and they’re all wearing uniforms and 75% of the girls have the same hair-cut!  So some laughed as I joked about my plight, but the third-graders?  Don’t care.  Fortunately, those are small classes, (and I stole some candid shots) so it shouldn’t be too hard.  I know with my aging brain cells that memorization of all these names is futile, but I’m shooting for half, and at least it is reference…

Broadcasts WILL begin again next week, only we will be using the book I wrote last year.  It’ll be review for the previous students and new to the new students.  Saves the school money, saves the Korean teachers from having to translate some pages, and gives me another semester to finish the second book I’m writing.

Last semester I asked for night classes to get to know some students better to combat the loneliness here.  This year I want my nights free so I can try and draw and paint and work on TRACK stuff.  But the class got such good feedback that I’m being pressured into more more more.  And the last teacher never did anything like this for the five previous years…So I offered to teach a Club Activity every other Saturday to stop the pressure, but I really don’t want to do it as I’ve got enough prep work.  (maybe double what other English teachers in Korea have)  So we’ll see how many kids want to sign up for it, as Club Activities are the only fun things they get to do and do they want to sacrifice something else to take an activity by me only taught in English?  Only she’s selling it as English conversation, but I’d much rather do an actual activity – maybe something crafty…So we’ll see…hope interest is low and I don’t give up two Saturdays a month.  The extra pay is really not much and not worth it, though I suppose the good will is priceless.

Just sent off my story to the restaurant owner / Gangwon papers, so we’ll see how that goes as well.  I’d pretty much gotten real comfortable with reaching a dead end, but then I realized that I’m still living in Korea and it would be stupid to not find some alternative means to continue searching while here.  There are so many long-lived Koreans here all around me, and their memories may just be waiting to be activated, so I think the issue is needing more exposure.  People who must put the painful past behind them are not always scouring the earth for infrequent broadcasts, and despite being as publicized as an adoptee can be here, it’s still just like an explorer message to unknown lifeforms catapulted into space.  So I’ll keep doing stuff on the side when I can, but also won’t stress about it.

 

fast or feast

Following my strange illness last week, which was wonderfully cleansing and slimming, has been an unprecedented amount of eating…

First the steak dinner, and the following day a meal welcoming the new teachers.  The restaurant ran the length of a hotel water-front.   One room wide, glass on both sides, it must have been 50 yards long, with stunning views of the Han and the mountains.  First sashimi, then broiled eel, then tempura’d shrimp, then stewed fish, then bulkogi, then seafood soup and oranges for dessert.

The incredibly elegant electronics teacher kept going from table to table pouring soju and chatting.  (I think the five technical teachers with their two private offices get a little lonely)  I told him he was a social butterfly, and everyone got a kick out of that expression.  It’s almost Asian in its poetry, yet easy to understand.  When I saw people leaving but my co-teacher, who lives in Seoul, staying, I had to ask her how I would get home.  So she waved me in the direction of a group of teachers already queuing to get into a van.  Good thing I asked!

I declined on the eel and only ate one battered shrimp, so managed to walk out of there still feeling human.  Most Koreans I meet are so battle-of-the-bulge conscious that they don’t over-eat during meals, but at these banquet-type functions the eating is usually epic proportions almost to the level of Roman binging…The end of the year Bar B-Q was so gluttonous I couldn’t even bear to look at it anymore and had to leave early.  I mean, I’d consumed enough meat for two at that function, and we were only through the first two courses of several different kinds of meat…I think it’s because meat is so expensive here and when it’s on someone else’s dime, you might as well eat ’til you’re sick.

Then it’s back to the school lunches with its carb-rich comfort food.  I also really like the school’s kimchi, which is very bright and what I imagine the blog reader David’s kim chi recipe tastes like.  Somehow this week I got lazy and have eaten dinner out (night school and school dinners don’t start until next week)  every night.  I really need to cut back.  Anyway, I’m taking in double what has become normal…and the pants are tight.

I did take the new bike to school Friday.  Getting to school was a breeze, except for one little slope.  Getting home was not such a breeze.  Those hills are deceptively steep, especially the last one to my apartment, and I am in incredibly bad shape..and can’t make it and have to get off…and I’m normally too much of a weenie to do anything physical, yet I imagine I’ll take the bike often because I run behind in the mornings, and cutting my time to school in half will suck me in…My gluts are not happy with me right now.

Anyway, tonight I went to the little family tofu restaurant by my apartment where I always go.  I usually order dubu kim chi and take half of it home for another meal, or I get dubu jeon gol, which is tofu & veggies stewed in a broth with a little fermented soy bean paste.  Half way through that dish tonight I eyed two bikers eating something with fresh lettuce and vegetables in it.  It looked like bi bim bap from my vantage point, only I didn’t see that on the menu.  So I asked the ajumma what it was, and instead of just the name before I knew it I had a SECOND meal being served to me.  Isn’t that the way it goes when you try to cut back?

Anyway, I am totally in love with this dish, and I’ll probably order it all the time now.  It’s called 도토리묵밥 (dotorimuk bap) and it’s acorn jelly in some broth (have NO IDEA what that broth is, but it seems vegan) dressed with fresh veggies, lettuce, and kochujang paste, similar to bi bim bap, only with all that liquid, served at room temperature.

click on the photo to see all the ingredients at a Korean cooking blog

So yummy!  I love the Korean dishes that more resemble salad.  (the one I ate had a lot of lettuce in it too)  So this is a light, low-calorie, bright dish that is zesty and refreshing.  And the rice comes on the side, so you can make it as bap-full as you want.

This is my other favorite dish, only I don’t know where to get it in my town:  It’s called 회덮밥 (hoe deot bap) and it’s basically a bi bim bap, (rice mix) but with sashimi.  I keep my mixing shallow, and then I can avoid half the rice.

I will definitely miss the food when I leave this place.  What’s sick and wrong is that a single person only experiences a tenth of what is offered, so I may never know just how good or bad it gets.  My  gyopo friend  says she’s sick of Korean restaurant food, because it’s over-salted and carelessly put together.  I wish I could experience home-made Korean food on a regular basis.  I wonder how many Korean kids do experience that these days, what with eating meals at school like I do.

Oh yeah, that reminds me – the reader David told me “poja” was the wrong thing to say when you ask to take home leftovers.  But actually, that’s what the ajummas ask me, so I think it IS the standard way to ask.  My gyopo friend says that sometimes people here think she is rude because of her American Korean.  She says that it’s kind of stuck in a time warp.  She says that American Korean doesn’t have as many pleasantries in it as contemporary Korean in Korea does, which has changed a lot in the last twenty years due to raised consciousness about commerce and customer service.  So maybe I can speculate that wrapping up your food like a present is a poetic euphemism that’s a newer usage.

Meanwhile, it seems like the white dog (who barked a lot) is missing next door at the tulli-shaped house.  A couple months ago he got a second dog, a mottled mutt, but I’ve only seen him by himself this week.  Yesterday, the ajosshi sat all day stoking the fire under his house.  Maybe he was making dog virility broth…Honestly, I don’t know how that elderly couple survives, since their farm really isn’t big enough to be commercially viable.  Also, I haven’t heard the turkey.  Moving here I was afraid the roosters would wake me up, but I don’t hear them at all.  Only around Christmas I started hearing the gobble of a turkey, and it drives me insane.  Only now that, too, is silent.  I never thought of farms in terms of sounds and the absence of sounds before.  It’s enough to make me turn vegan, only that’s really hard when you’ve got low blood sugar and you also have no idea what you’re eating a quarter of the time.