_parenting   adoption

How I Became Your Mother: When Uncle Eddie Took Care of His Birth Mother.

by Anna Glendenning | More from this Blogger

11 Jan 2007 02:50 PM

Continued: From The Journey of How I Became Your Mother: Thanksgiving and LeRoy's Boys.

Aunt Millie
When I was 13-years-old Uncle Eddie announced that his birth mother was sick and needed someone to take care of her. The mother he had not lived with since he was only 4-years-old, had found her son and asked for a place to stay. The picture here was taken the day she flew in from Illinois. This is my grandmother, Aunt Terrie, Uncle Eddies birth mother with the white hair, and my parents--Uncle Eddie took this picture.

Not very many years ago most adopted kids never knew who their birth mother was, everything was kept a secret. But, because no one ever adopted Uncle Eddie he knew his birth mother's name and could remember a few things about her. Finding his birth mom and bringing her to his home was very unusual, no one had really ever heard of such a thing happening in 1976.

I remember this was a difficult time for Aunt Terrie, she worried about the man she loved bringing home a mother who couldn't even take care of her little boys. The whole family was concerned and didn't really want to like a birth mother, who couldn't even take good care of her sons. It was hard to understand what was happening, or even how to act about it. Some wanted to be judgmental about her, and ask what the heck her problem had been.

Uncle Eddie asked everyone to just understand--this was his mother. He told us all that he was the hurt child--not us, and we had no right to judge her. Uncle Eddie told us that Jesus had died on the cross for our sins, the least he could do was to forgive his own mother. So we all watched and followed his lead as he showed us all how to love a mother who hadn't been there for him as a child.

It wasn't easy. She wasn't much like the people in our family. She had problems that showed in her eyes, and she was an odd person. She seemed rather old compared to our Grandmother, but as time went along we all grew to love her too. She was our Uncles Birth mother, my Aunt Millie and if Uncle Eddie was able to forgive her for the terrible childhood she gave her sons we could too.

After some time in our family, Aunt Millie returned to Illinois. Uncle Eddie kept contact with her and wrote letters, until he died. Aunt Millie is living in a nursing home now, and some of us try to be sure we remember her in honor of Uncle Eddies forgiving heart. It wasn't ever too hard for me, because I could tell when I met her there really was something wrong with her. It seemed pretty clear that as bad as she had been, her sons were better off having grown up in an orphanage, without her. But, that never meant we couldn't love her.

Continued: I Married An Adopted Boy.

Point Related Blogs:

Point Special Needs and Adoption-Related Terms: Adoption terms and special needs words may vary from agency to agency. The terms used in this Special Needs Adoption-Related Glossary may be slightly different from one State to another.

A | B | C | D | E-F | G-H-I | J-K-L | M | N-O | P | Q-R | S | T-U-V-W-X-Y-Z

For more information about parenting special needs children you might want to visit the Families.com Special Needs Blog and the Mental Health Blog. Or visit my personal website.

Anna Glendenning is also Families.com Insurance and Guest Blogger. Read her blogs at: http://members.families.com/happymomanna/blog

 
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Learn more about Anna Glendenning
HappyMomAnna`s avatar

Anna Glendenning is a mother of four. Two biological children grown and out of college, and two siblings and adopted together in 2003. Anna's Personal Website http://www.adoptiveparentsnetwork.

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User Comments

rsbg (501) 11 Jan 2007 02:02 PM

Your Uncle Eddie sounds like such a wonderful person! I wish there were more people out there like that, and it reminds me to be a little more forgiving of others. I am really enjoying reading your stories!

Julie Gentry (5915) 11 Jan 2007 08:03 PM

Wow. What a big heart your uncle had.

Linda Hansen (1796) 11 Jan 2007 08:07 PM

I too think Uncle Eddie had a big heart, but can you imagine the joy he felt in his christian heart to be reunited with his mother and to show her he loved her? No matter how old we are, we always want to be near our mothers. Art

Anna Glendenning (4234) 12 Jan 2007 12:12 AM

I think his example and love for his mother has very much helped me as an adoptive mother--understand the importance for my children to know the truth and be permitted to feel love, even under the circumstances.

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