Showing posts with label find biological parent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label find biological parent. Show all posts

Curious about Who’s your Birth Parents?

Katie loved her adopted parents, but obviously they weren't her birth parents. She has always had a desire to find her real parents. The only information her adopted parents could give her was the name of her biological mother and where she lived a while ago. The adoption agency was no help either, because they weren't allowed to give out private information. Katie even tried using the internet to find more information on her mother, but she didn't find anything. She had so many things to talk to her biological parents about, and she was very curious to hear what has become of them.

Katie hoped that if she looked at them, she would detect some kind of resemblance. She had always wondered why her parents had placed her up for adoption and just wanted the opportunity to say thank you for giving her life and the chance to lead a wonderful life with her adopted family. Katie tried to get past her need to speak to them or at least see them so she would know for sure where they were living and if they were even alive at all. She finally gave up when her money and leads dried up. It was on a last ditch trip to the adoption agency that she met a brand new woman employed at the adoption agency.

Katie pondered whether or not the woman at the adoption agency would provide her with the information she so desperately wanted. When she started to ask, the woman started to nod her head even before all the words came out of her mouth. The woman apologized and explained that they couldn't release any contact information. Just when all hope was lost, the woman approached Katie and told her that she was adopted as well and couldn't help directly, but knew of a good website that could. The woman wrote the URL for the website on a tiny scrap of paper and hand it to Katie.

Once she returned to her house, Katie found the online site, noting that it had a line to enter a name. Thinking back to the lady at the adoption agency, she entered her birth mom's name. In no time, the website turned up her most recent address and phone number. Katie was astounded. She had been searching so long, and suddenly she had discovered the location of her real mom. Once she had a moment to get her bearings, Katie at last phoned the number that the website had displayed.

Katie responded to the voice of the lady answering on the line, "Hello, I'm Katie, and I've been searching for my biological mom. Thirty years ago, did you decide to put your infant daughter up for adoption?" After an interval of silence, there was the sound of sobbing from the other end of the phone. Katie was amazed that at long last, she had discovered her biological mom. Since that time, she has become acquainted with her biological mom along with her half brothers and sisters. While her dad had died years earlier, Katie was grateful to get acquainted with all her other family members. She wouldn't have ever discovered this information without help and the internet.

Find Something Missing in Your Live, Biological Parents


Leveraging the far-reaching power of the Web, via registries and other sources of information, can make it less difficult to locate your biological parents, brothers, and sisters. Adopted children sometimes search for their biological parents when they are older and want to find out more about where they come from and sometimes the parents are looking for them as well.

The adoption may have been closed at the time, so this information was not made available through the adoption agency, as it is in an open adoption. Circumstances change and with time some people find that there is something missing in their lives, and finding biological parents, siblings, and other relatives can answer many questions that have always been in the back of their minds. Other than just wanting to know, finding biological parents may serve another purpose as well.

Many adults that were adopted as children want to know their genetic and medical history, which is a great motivator for finding biological parents, particularly in cases of disorders or diseases existing in the family that have a genetic link, it would be beneficial to know as much as possible. An severe situation could be in the case of finding a genetic match for a bone marrow transplant or other type of tissue or organ transplant. Breast cancer is another example. If a woman’s mother or sister has been diagnosed with breast cancer, she has greater than a 50% chance of getting it as well.

This circumstances is quite common, and many women are faced with deciding whether or not to take pre-emptive measures, such as elective mastectomy. Finding biological parents, siblings, and other family members is done for a number of reasons, but success in this endeavors ultimately fills an emotional void that can be made whole no other way. A good place to start finding biological parents and others is by registering on a number of sites dedicated to getting families back together.

You need to put out as much information as possible, while browsing public records and employing the people-search services available. Making contact with your natural parents is liable to be time-consuming but it's not likely to be time wasted. Employ an organized approach and be thorough about utilizing all available resources; interview everyone you can and methodically record all intelligence offered. Eventually, the big picture will emerge from all the different components of your research, and hopefully that picture will be that of a family happily reunited (by the way, beyond your biological parents, you may find other family members you have lost track of). Best of luck to you in your endeavor!