I was raised by my paternal grandparents.
It began when I was five weeks old, after I spent the first weeks of my life in a foster home. My mother placed me in the care of strangers shortly after my birth, then left town, not to be seen for about four years.
During those five weeks, my family had no idea of my whereabouts, and I had no contact with any relatives.
To this day I don’t know where I first called home, who changed my nappies or who burped me after each bottle. My grandparents later told me that when they collected me from the foster home, a young boy answered the door – my foster mother’s son. When my grandparents told him they were there to collect me, he responded with Oh thank goodness! All she does is cry.
The only way my grandparents discovered my whereabouts was because my father – presumably out of a sense of outrage at his paternal rights being thwarted by his ex-girlfriend – petitioned the court (with the financial backing of his parents) for sole custody of me.
Of course, my 21-year-old, unemployed and painfully self-centred father had absolutely no intention of raising me himself – no, no. That pesky task could be easily contracted out to his ever-doting and reliable parents. Which it was.
Consequently, after a few legal appearances my grandparents were awarded guardianship of me, for 20 years.
Obviously, recounting this story to others is not without its unpleasantness. If asked for an explanation of my upbringing, I can quite easily go on autopilot and simply state that my parents were young…my grandparents stepped in.
But that’s not the real truth, and it doesn’t convey the extent of the drama that unfolded because of this arrangement. It lets the person who asked me this question off the hook – it gives them a sanitary, palatable explanation for what was an ugly and sometimes heartbreaking experience.
Top Comments
I read through the author's entire blog and have a better understanding now but geez! the snark and the bitchiness that drip from the comment about about feeling superior is so off putting... I have a bitchy bitter narcissistic mother (not as bad as the author's "mummy") and most people cannot contemplate the person who is supposed to be your rock in life being the one who tears you apart. It doesn't mean they are stupid, just trying to relate on some small level.
I hate it when people say "oh, your REAL mum" when I say that I was adopted by my maternal grandmother.
No, my maternal grandmother is my real mother. I call her mum... because she is my mother. Any woman can carry a baby, but a mother is the woman who raises you.
I know who my birth mother is - and she does'nt even know the meaning of the word 'mother', herself.
She tells me that she is my real mum.
But tries to fill my head with lies about my adoption, and about a period of my life that she is sure I wouldn't remember but I had read all the paperwork and I know better.
If she was my 'real' mum, how come she never acted like it? She has been given many an oppotunity. But I have gotten on with my life, I am happy married now, and we are going to have our third child soon.
I can honestly understand her irritation - its a feeling that I have experianced myself. For some people, it is alittle hard for them to understand that you don't miss something you have never had.