Image credit |
Oh, but is it? I hear that song at least once per day
from Thanksgiving all the way to Christmas. The song talks about going to
Christmas parties, toasting marshmallows, and singing carols out in the snow. For
some of us, it can be hard to sing that Christmas song with much conviction.
The holidays bring into sharp focus the part of our family that we’re missing.
Even if we have relationships with our children and their parents, maybe even
celebrating with them, it’s not the same.
My daughter just turned three in November. She asks about
the Christmas tree, loves the presents and loves singing Christmas songs. I’ve
always loved Christmas. My mom worked hard every year to keep traditions alive
and to really bring joy to our Christmases despite the lack of money. Though I
hold tight to any commonalities Mack shares with me all year, this time of year
causes me to want to hold tighter to those same traits and to hope she loves
Christmas as much as I did.
We birth moms feel loss all year round. Even if we have
other children (either before and/or after a placed child), no child can
replace the hole left by the child we’ve lost. Yes. It is a loss, even if we
freely chose that loss. I lost my daughter to adoption despite the fact that I
was not coerced at all. No one made the choice but me to relinquish my
daughter, and I accept that. But it’s still a loss. I used the example on my
own blog of someone who makes the choice to either have a pet put to sleep or
is forced by their circumstances to give that pet to other people. That person
is still allowed to love and miss that animal despite the fact that they are
the ones that made that choice.
More than any other, this season focuses on family and
friends and spending time with those we love. It’s focused on children and the
joy in their hearts when they get presents and see all the pretty decorations
everywhere. Of course as adults we know this season is child-focused.
Advertisements and community leaders like pastors encourage us to appreciate
the season like little children. So can we help it if our thoughts focus even
more on the children we’re not raising? I think not.
I also think that Christmas traditions become even more
important after becoming a birth mom. It’s important to not only continue to
enjoy Christmas for ourselves but to have something to share with our kids,
even if we only share them in our hearts. For instance, I make an ornament
every year for Mack to hang on our tree. It hasn’t been very fancy – just a
clear ball with fake foliage and a picture of Mack from that year inside. This
year, with clearance first from her mom, I’m going to be making one to send to
her as well. Of course not everyone has a relationship with their child and his
or her adoptive parents like I have. I realize that I and my daughter are
fortunate that her parents honor my role in her life. I know I’ve talked about
the importance of having Christmas traditions that you keep every year for the
child (or children) you’ve placed and I will say it again. As hard as it can be
sometimes to include your child in some sort of holiday tradition especially if
they’re not participating in it with you, it is so important. Write a letter or
note. Make an ornament. Have a special candle you light every day during this
time of year just for them.
If we honor the children we placed and really work to
keep the Christmas traditions we enjoyed before our children were born and
relinquished, I really think it can again be that “most wonderful time of the
year.”
No comments:
Post a Comment