Adoptee

My nationality,
over and above all else,
is adoption.

Michelle Madrid Branch

~

I want to know what you feel like, when you look at your family and people look like you. I want to know what you feel like when you‘re at your grandparents‘ house, and they haul out the box of family photos, and all the aunts and uncles talk and laugh about how you‘re the carrier of the family nose or the family eyes, or how you look just like your aunt when she was your age. What does that feel like? What does it feel like when you hug your mother, and you‘re just the right size so that your face comes up to her belly, where you came from? What does it feel like to pass a mirror and not be surprised?

Jane Jeong Trenka

~

What I never had
is being torn away from me.
What I did not live
I will miss forever.

—Volker Braun

~

Our homeland is each other.

Michael Mullen

Note: This page is informed and inspired by my partner, who identifies as a transracial, transnational adoptee, as well as by my adopted brother. Their respective journeys have touched my heart and opened my eyes to the singularly resilient and courageous paths of all adoptees.

Adoptee-Therapist Directory

Available adoptee-therapist referral list

100 heartfelt adoptee quotes that honor the truth of adoption

20 responses to #adoptionislove

Ambiguous loss: When what you don’t know hurts… forever

Ghost Kingdoms & Phantom Worlds

Adoption is trauma; it’s time to talk about it

Best adoption books for adoptees

Poets on adoption

The De-Classified Adoptee

First Person Plural

In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee

Geographies of Kinship

Forget Me Not

Twinsters

Return to Seoul

The Return

Joy Ride

Blue Bayou (note re controversy)

Korean American Story: Adoptee

Side By Side Project

I Am Adoptee

InterCountry Adoptee Voices

BIPOC adoptee curated list of resources

Invisible Asians: Korean American Adoptees, Asian American Experiences, and Racial Exceptionalism

Adopted Territory: Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Politics of Belonging

Theorizing Korean transracial adoptee experiences: Ambiguity, substitutability, and racial embodiment

Comforting an Orphaned Nation

You Should Be Grateful: Stories of Race, Identity, and Transracial Adoption

All You Can Ever Know: A Memoir

Journey of the Adopted Self: A Quest for Wholeness

Living in adoption’s emotional aftermath

Outsiders Within: Writing on Transracial Adoption

Red Thread Broken

Adoptees Connect

Adoptee podcasts

Adapted

Adopted Feels

Adoptees On

Lee Herrick poems

Scar and Flower

Spouse of adoptee resources

Adoptees for Justice

Poem: Connections