mamaScarlett
Active member
As an adopted Cfer, who is now an adult and 'been through the fire' so to speak I can tell you from the bottom of my heart all that will matter to your child, regardless of when you die is knowing that he/she had a parent that loved them with all their heart and fought for them. (speaking strictly of the adoption issue)
My biological parents both chose to leave me, and I was adopted at 7. There is no connection between that real abandonment and losing a parent that is fighting for you, if that gives you any comfort from an adopted person's perspective.
Obviously not having lost a parent to death I can't speak on that, only imagine.
Our daughter is almost 4 and Cf is part of our familys normal. She sees me do all my treatments, take pills, she's not afraid of my purple faced coughing spasms. Its important to me that she does see me taking care of myself 1. So she knows that mommy has always fought hard with every ounce of my being to be here. and 2. So that she learns the value of hard work to fight her own battles one day, whatever they may be.
One day at her cousins house, she asked 'where's Aunt Dina's vest?'. As if every mom has one! She's asked why I have to go to the doctor or take medicine and for now a simple child's explanation is all thats needed. ('to help keep my lungs healthy...etc') Usually thats enough, but if she keeps asking I keep answering until she understands in that moment what a 4 yr can understand. I've also brought her to a few checkups bc its important to me that the doctor/hospital is never the enemy or scary. Its all part of our team, and our familys routine. As time goes by we'll keep talking, keep it open, and keep re-evaluating how to handle things.
My biological parents both chose to leave me, and I was adopted at 7. There is no connection between that real abandonment and losing a parent that is fighting for you, if that gives you any comfort from an adopted person's perspective.
Obviously not having lost a parent to death I can't speak on that, only imagine.
Our daughter is almost 4 and Cf is part of our familys normal. She sees me do all my treatments, take pills, she's not afraid of my purple faced coughing spasms. Its important to me that she does see me taking care of myself 1. So she knows that mommy has always fought hard with every ounce of my being to be here. and 2. So that she learns the value of hard work to fight her own battles one day, whatever they may be.
One day at her cousins house, she asked 'where's Aunt Dina's vest?'. As if every mom has one! She's asked why I have to go to the doctor or take medicine and for now a simple child's explanation is all thats needed. ('to help keep my lungs healthy...etc') Usually thats enough, but if she keeps asking I keep answering until she understands in that moment what a 4 yr can understand. I've also brought her to a few checkups bc its important to me that the doctor/hospital is never the enemy or scary. Its all part of our team, and our familys routine. As time goes by we'll keep talking, keep it open, and keep re-evaluating how to handle things.