Birth Parent Blogs
If you’ve just found out you’re pregnant and you weren’t planning it, you’re probably wondering what you should do and looking things up online like “giving baby up for adoption”. Maybe you’re thinking about giving your baby up for adoption, and that’s a very loving choice to make. The language we use to describe adoption is important. This is especially true when it comes to phrases like “giving baby up for adoption.” You might wonder what it is like to do this, and you’re not alone.
Lifetime Adoption has been helping women just like you find adoptive parents for their children for over 35 years. In that time, we’ve seen the language of adoption change as much as the process itself. One of the many things we’ve learned over the years is that you are not “giving up!”
Why Choosing Adoption is Not ‘Giving a Baby Up For Adoption’
When you choose adoption, you have chosen to make a new life for your baby — and for yourself! So instead of saying “giving the baby up for adoption,” we say “placing a baby for adoption.”
While the adoption decision can feel overwhelming, the actual adoption process doesn’t need to be. At Lifetime Adoption, our caring professionals understand the anxiety that comes with your adoption choice. We are committed to providing expectant mothers with support throughout the entire adoption process. Your Adoption Coordinator is here to offer you non-judgmental support and guidance during each step.
Choosing adoption is a positive, selfless decision. Plus, a modern open adoption plan, in which the baby is born with the adoptive family already chosen and waiting at the hospital, is a beautiful and special thing.
When you use Lifetime’s adoption services — whether you’re just a few months pregnant or thinking of adoption for your child — we’ll help you set up an adoption plan. Lifetime also helps you select the right adoptive parents for your baby or child. All of our hopeful adoptive parents go through a lengthy, detailed process before they can adopt. In-depth screening, interviews, and background checks are done on every hopeful parent, as well as a home study.
By reading this blog, you’ll learn more about how adoption works, from when you discover you are pregnant, all the way to maintaining a future relationship with your baby’s adoptive family. Stay informed, get tips on pregnancy and adoption, and hear stories from other birth parents on modern open adoption with Lifetime Adoption’s blog.
Lifetime Adoption’s dedicated, caring professionals work nationwide to connect birth mothers with loving adoptive families. If you have any questions about adoption, get in touch with us today by calling or texting Lifetime at 1-800-923-6784.
How an Unwanted Pregnancy Might Change Your Life
Have you ever wondered how having a baby might change your life? It can be pretty crazy how much things really do change when you have a baby. You've probably heard that you won't get much sleep, and that you'll have no social life. But things can get extra crazy if...
Open vs Closed Adoption: Understanding the Difference
Choosing adoption puts your baby on a path to a hopeful future. One of the first decisions you will make is what role you see yourself playing in that future. As you explore adoption, you’ve probably heard of the terms “open adoption” and closed adoption.” So what is...
Giving My Baby Up For Adoption: What’s the Process?
We often hear from women who are searching the internet for help with “What is the process for giving my baby up for adoption?” Whether you are struggling financially, not ready to become a mom yet, or want to provide your child with more than you can offer, adoption...
How to Find Adoptive Parents for Your Child
Many pregnant women begin looking into adoption because they want to offer their children the best life possible. That life starts with the perfect adoptive family. Like many women facing an unplanned pregnancy and considering adoption, you might be wondering, “Where...
Contact After Adoption
Birth parents sometimes worry that adoptive parents won't let them have contact after adoption if they want it. This is where a post adoption contact agreement can be important. In some states, adoptive parents and birth parents sign this agreement and it is filed...
What to Put in Your Pregnancy Hospital Bag
Your due date's approaching. You've been building a relationship with the adoptive parents you chose. You've agreed on how much you'll stay in touch with them after placement. Now it's time to pack your hospital bag. Getting ready for the delivery of your baby...