Is he a Christian? What is the book he wrote? I want to look it up. I'm curious about what type of things he would write about. I'd be shocked if he wrote about being sensitive and caring.
Also, what you saw in his social media could just be a façade?
Do you know any info about your parents? If they're from North Korea, they might have given you up so that you'll have a better life in the US with American parents? Also in the 80's South Korea was still poor and maybe if your parents were South Korean, that could be why they gave you up so that, again, you'll have a better life in the US.
I'm just saying that most parents don't reject their child outright - most of the time it's because they feel that can't take care of the baby and will give the baby up to, hopefully, better parents. Also, if you really were rejected outright, your parents could have aborted you, or keep you and be horrible and/or neglectful parents to you.
Also, it sounds like your adoptive parents are really good to you. What's nice about adoptive parents is because with biological parents, neither side has much choice to love each other - it's just something you must or should do. But your parents CHOSE you, and that's pretty awesome.
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Hi Second,
My ex actually was a very sensitive and caring person in certain situations. He'd been through a lot, and had a lot of empathy for people who'd been through similar things. I would never give out his name or information for the sake of his privacy. I didn't write down the title of the book, because I didn't want to remember, lest I be tempted to look up anything more about him. As I wrote earlier, I feel God said to let him go and close the door.
I doubt any of the info was faked. This was in the early days of the internet, when things were more genuine. His business actually had a contact email and, even though we never had contact for years, I sent a short email, apologizing for the past and saying I was happy for where he was now. I never got a reply, which I'm sure is for the best. Maybe the message never went through, but God scolded me through a friend and said, "Let the past go and move on."
I was at one of the worst stages of depression in my life when I was with him. I sometimes talked about ending my life. He tried very hard to help for a long time, but I wasn't very receptive to many of his efforts. Eventually, he couldn't handle it anymore, and began to shut down and withdraw.
As for my adoption -- I have never heard of a North Korean orphan being adopted but I could be wrong. From the little I know, anyone trying to leave North Korea would be immediately shot, but again, I could be wrong.
So I am from the South. The story goes that I was found in a cardboard box at a few days old, then taken to the police, then to an orphanage. People have often said, "Moses was found in a basket, and you were found in a box!" The thing is, as an adult, I've read about other adoptees my age having the exact same story... Which COULD very well be true -- maybe mothers at the time were all dumping unwanted kids the same way -- but, I've also read that in some cases, it was a pretty story social workers at that time were taught to relay to prospective adoptive parents.
So there are no records and I have nothing go to on. To tell you the truth, I no longer want to know, and if they ever wished to find me, they'd have to come looking for me. When I was younger, not knowing anything about my background tore me apart, especially growing up in a small white town where I was regarded as an alien or curiosity, but over many years, God has given me peace (and with the help of many caring people along the way.)
I appreciate what I know you are saying as a way to comfort my concerns, and thank you for that. I have no doubt that my life with my adoptive parents was God's plan. But nothing, nor any reason, erases the pain of knowing someone "gave you up," "left you," or that you were literally "unwanted," and "abandoned." I've met other adoptees who DID find their birth parents and it closed some gaps, but not all, and there is always that feeling of, "You left me when I was at my most vulnerable and needed you most."
This is exacerbated when you hear stories of other parents who have literally walked through hell to hold on to their children, even though it's not the right choice for all parents. Something in your mind, heart, and deep in your soul, can't get over the thought of being "left behind."
I have also heard it said many, many times over that with adoption, your parents CHOSE you, which isn't exactly true. Adoptive parents purposely choose to add a child to their family, just like a birth couple who purposely tries to get pregnant. But like a pregnancy, God makes the final choice of whom the parents get. I understand that some people get pregnant by "mistake," and don't want the baby. But my parents also would have said "yes" to any baby picture the adoption agency sent -- it just so happened (all orchestrated by God, of course,) that the first picture sent to them was mine. They weren't waiting specifically for me, nor would they have particularly waited for my picture -- but of course, I do believe God influenced their decision to say "yes" when they saw it.
Adoption can be a wonderful and noble thing, and I do wish it was an option for more families (it's become impossibly expensive,) but unfortunately, everything can have a dark side, too. I've spoken to many adoptees who got a raw deal. Some had to hide the fact that they were adopted, because their parents didn't want anyone to know (yes, this would usually require starting over in a new place.)
Some were adopted to fulfill dreams and parental goals they would never meet. I once talked to a guy here on CC whose parents had something like 6 daughters, so he was adopted out of their desperation to have a boy. When he failed to meet their expectations (which were always changing,) he was written off as a disappointment and failed experiment. It's no wonder he went a little crazy and rebelled.
I'm very fortunate in that my adoptive parents are the greatest blessing of my life, which is why I've dedicated a good portion of my single time in trying to make sure they are loved and hopefully secure as they get older.
But as wonderful as our biggest blessings are, there are still many pains in this life they don't make up for or erase, which is why I suppose God made it so that we look forward to heaven.