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When making a family tree for an adopted child?
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When making a family tree for an adopted child?

When making a family tree for an adopted child is it proper to not add yourselves, the adopted parents? The mom is helping make one for the baby and she asked Why I had not included myself and husband? I just want this to be a gift just for the baby, so is it ok if I leave us out of it?
Additional Details
So you haven't even taken possession yet, and you're making a family tree? Still greasing the wheels, eh?

What a good, new coercive technique to play into your quest to get this woman to hand over her child. You really ought sell this idea to agencies--you could sell it right along with the "Dear Birhmother" package!

Heaven help this poor kid.

Sunny, back off you have made your point you disagree with what I'm doing now stop making comments that don't apply to the actual question.


    




DevonChaos
It is okay to leave yourself out. You aren't the biological parent. If this is the same baby you've been wanting to take from your aunt, then you know the family lineage.
I just wouldn't count my chickens in your situation, know what I mean?

ETA: Seriously, you are all about the coersion, aren't you? I think you need to spend time thinking about what you are going to do if and when she decides to keep this baby. You are really getting the cart in front of the horse. IF she doesn't abort (as you said she wanted to do) and IF she decides to give up the baby, what would you do if she changed her mind later? This isn't something to go about lightly, and you sound like you are so concerned with the superficial. Look behind the physical family tree, and look at the real one, and try to help keep it intact, rather than cut off a branch for yourself.


Linny G
You shouldn't make one at all. You said your husbands aunt wasn't due til July, and that she was still unsure about relinquishing her baby.

If she decides (on her own, and since you wont leave her alone, I doubt THAT'S going to happen) to relinquish your husband's cousin, the family tree will be easy to make.

lol Sunny and Magic Pointe Shoes.


monkeykitty83
Most people don't have perfectly straight and linear family trees. Mine has a branch-off because my great-grandmother died and my great-grandfather remarried, and his new wife adopted my grandmother, who was still a child at the time. We always include my step-great-grandmother and her family also because she's the one we all knew when we were growing up, and she was a mother to my grandmother too.

It depends on the purpose of your family tree. If it's meant to be a genetic tree, you should leave yourselves out. If it's meant to include a broader definition of family, you can include two different branches as parents for the baby.

Basically, is your personal tree about biological family, or social family? Deciding that should indicate who ought to be on the tree.

I have to be honest, though-- I think it's too early for the tree. You need to prepare yourself that the expectant mom may still decide to parent. I would deal with the adoptive family tree only after you've actually adopted. It's not like the baby will have any idea when the tree was finished; I think you should wait till the adoption is legally finalized.


Kim
I guess it depends on the purpose. If the purpose of the "tree" is to show genealogical history, then it would be appropriate just to make it the natural family.

However, if the purpose of the tree is to show "family" then I think it would be appropriate to include *all* of the child's family (first family and adoptive family). If you google "adoptive family tree" I bet you'll get some different ideas for how this can be done -- including a grafted tree with two trunks that are entwined together, or an arrangement that has the child in the center and works away from him in two directions (roots and branches, if you're thinking of a literal tree).

Good luck.


Rowan
Rating
yes its fine to leave yourself out. You are not the childs parents yet, its only right.

If the mother pushes the issue, explain that the tree would not be correct, and might confuse the child later on.

i hated those projects in school. my teacher always asked me why i wouldnt do it once, and i told her why. She made a big deal out of it, and after that, i made it up.


kateiskate
Rating
I would wait until the adoption is final to work on it. If and when it becomes final you could do a few different things such as do two different family trees, adopted and bio, or just do one showing her bio fam. You would still be on it since you are also biologically related to her, so I don't see a problem...

Not to lecture you, because I know you're set in what you want, but I'm sure it's difficult for your aunt right now. Why don't you give her some space so you can ensure she's making the decision that's right for her without regard to what you and your husband feel? Also, making the tree after the adoption is final is best because I can acknowledge that you would be sad if she did change her mind. So take the pressure of of everyone and just give her some space.


mom of many
when we went to our foster parent classes someone showed us a family tree an adopted child had to do for a school project. It had 2 trees side by side with the adopted child in the middle and had both families on it. I thought that was pretty inventive.


Dream_Weaver
I have two trees. Our baby initially was in foster care so his parents weren't that helpful, mostly because they would never show up, so I made one with the information his caseworker gave us, and then I made another one with our family. We have contact with some of his birth family so they were helpful too.


magic pointe shoes
Rating
I'm with Sunny on this one. What are you doing making a family tree for a child that isn't yours, may not be yours, and shouldn't be considered yours until the relinquishment revocation period is done and over with? And what are you doing making this into a project with the expectant mother before she has relinquished?


AdoreHim
It is so wonderful to see that your baby's birth mom wants you to be included in the family tree. You are her parents, and she knows it. It can be a gift for the baby, and you still be in the family tree. Because your baby is apart of your family. He/she is your child. You should be included. Your baby's birth mom is correct.


C Wood
Rating
Unless it's an open adoption, it would be difficult to do a family tree for an adoptee.

You could put the ancestry and below the mother and father, place a line straight down to the adoptive mother and father and then to the child, but the rest of the tree must be ONLY blood relatives.
cw


MrsJ
If you are investing your lives into a child by adopting them, you are bringing them into your family and you are really their parents now. True, you aren't part of the biological tree, but as long as it's an open adoption (which obviously it must be the way you've described it), you should be there to the side, just like the sunshine is there for the tree, nurturing it and helping it grow strong.


sunny
So you haven't even taken possession yet, and you're making a family tree? Still greasing the wheels, eh?

What a good, new coercive technique to play into your quest to get this woman to hand over her child. You really ought sell this idea to agencies--you could sell it right along with the "Dear Birhmother" package!

Heaven help this poor kid.


Sophie
Rating
I would include all family members. Biological and adopted... but NOT label them as such. Family is family.





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