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Imaginary Birthmother’s Letter, Part Two

This is the continuation of a letter I imagined a birthmother might write. The last blog contains the first part. Again, this is my imagination and is not based on any birthmother that I know.

The letter continues:

By this time something else had happened. I began to feel you inside me. I was very scared, but also excited. It is exciting to have a human being growing inside of you. Sometimes you kicked me if you heard a loud noise. Other times it seemed like you calmed down if I spoke softly. I thought about wanting to be a good mother to you and to do what was best for you. But I didn’t have much time to think, because I had to keep trying to get jobs.

I also kept moving, since I didn’t have a place of my own. At first, my aunt let me stay with her, but when my pregnancy began to really show my uncle said I had to leave before their neighbors saw me. I had to go back to taking turns staying at different friends’ homes.

Sometimes I worked two jobs at a time, going from one to the other and not finishing until late at night. Sometimes I couldn’t get any jobs and I would skip lunch because I didn’t have enough money.

Mostly I worried a lot. How could I raise you if I didn’t have a place to live or enough money for my own lunch? Still, part of me kept hoping that if I worked really hard I could find a way.

When I was staying at a friend’s house, I did not go out with them but stayed home alone whenever I wasn’t working or looking for work, so no one would see me pregnant. In Korea, people say not-so-nice things to a woman who is pregnant but not married.

I thought you would be born in November, but in October I began to feel contractions in my belly. I panicked. I worried that it was too soon, and that you would come while I still didn’t have a place for both of us to live. I didn’t really know how to take care of a baby! I was still a teen-ager myself!

….to be continued…..

Please see these related blogs:

Who Are the Birthparents who Place Children for Adoption? Part One

Imaginary Birthmother’s Letter, Part One

Book: I Wish for You a Beautiful Life: Letters from the Korean birthmothers of Ae Ran Won

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About Pam Connell

Pam Connell is a mother of three by both birth and adoption. She has worked in education, child care, social services, ministry and journalism. She resides near Seattle with her husband Charles and their three children. Pam is currently primarily a Stay-at-Home-Mom to Patrick, age 8, who was born to her; Meg, age 6, and Regina, age 3, who are biological half-sisters adopted from Korea. She also teaches preschoolers twice a week and does some writing. Her activities include volunteer work at school, church, Cub Scouts and a local Birth to Three Early Intervention Program. Her hobbies include reading, writing, travel, camping, walking in the woods, swimming and scrapbooking. Pam is a graduate of Seattle University and Gonzaga University. Her fields of study included journalism, religious education/pastoral ministry, political science and management. She served as a writer and editor of the college weekly newspaper and has been Program Coordinator of a Family Resource Center and Family Literacy Program, Volunteer Coordinator at a church, Religion Teacher, Preschool Teacher, Youth Ministry Coordinator, Camp Counselor and Nanny. Pam is an avid reader and continuing student in the areas of education, child development, adoption and public policy. She is eager to share her experiences as a mother by birth and by international adoption, as a mother of three kids of different learning styles and personalities, as a mother of kids of different races, and most of all as a mom of three wonderful kids!