The Impacts of Adoption

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The Impacts of Adoption
On March 28, 1990, the agonizing screams of a seven-teen year old mother echo throughout the halls of Ingham County Hospital. After nine extensive months, at 4:35 a.m. a healthy brown-haired and brown-eyed baby girl is born weighing merely seven pounds, eleven ounces.
Thus, begins my story, I am the child of the teenage mother. Since birth, I resided with my grandparents, and on June 12, 1995, my grandparents legally adopted me. I believe adoption is a wonderful opportunity for children of unwary parents to receive nurturing support from an adoptive family, to receive better health insurance, and to obtain superior education opportunities. In addition, the adoptive parents become able to raise a child since he or she is incapable naturally. Furthermore, the adoptive parents receive the opportunity for his and her family to expand.
Currently there are over 100,000 children residing in foster care within the United States who are available for adoption and each year at the age of eighteen 23,000 children become ineligible to continue residing in foster care (National Adoption Day, n.d.). Hence, only 77% of children in foster care are provided the opportunity to be nurtured by an adoptive family.
Once, the child is in the welfare system, adoption begins to affect the child psychologically resulting in emotional and social issues which includes, low self-esteem, feelings of loss, abandonment, and loss of identity. Consequently, the child suffers from behavioral issues such as anger, aggression, resentment, and depression towards the biological mother and the adopting family. As well as seclusion from social activities which he or she may encounter (Adoption Services, n.d.).
Furthermore, younger children exp...

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...ns superior education opportunities. Furthermore, adoption provides the child a comforted and protected state-of-mind since the adoptive family adds financial stability. In comparision, the adoptive family benefits from his and hers family expanding and the adopting family gains a child to nurture and to protect, when complications such as infertility, menopause, or previous births reduce the chances of conceiving.

Works Cited

American Adoptions, (n.d.), Benefits of adoption. Retrieved from https://www.americanadoptions.com/adoption_benefits.htm
Adoption Services, (n.d.), Emotional issues and adoption. Retrieved https://www.adoptionservices.org/raising_your_child_family/adoption_emothion_issues.htm
National Adoption Day, (n.d.), Reality for children in foster care. Retrieved from http://www.nationaladoptionday.org/media/public/images/NAD-Infographic-2013.jpg

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