A friend of mine is adopting a 3 year old little girl from Ethiopia; it is through a lawyer or something they met when they were visiting, not a standard agency. We were discussing all the different things she is packing to take with her when she and her DH to pick her up in a few weeks, and she mentioned she had to pack her L'oreal shampoo and will be taking Johnson and Johnson for the little girl.
I have had a few clients who have adopted from Africa, which she knows, and I remember some of their stories about the children's hair and the condition that it was in. So I mentioned to her that she will want to take several different kinds of shampoo and conditioner, along with lotion for her skin. I also suggested that she might want to make the little girl an apt to get her hair done (cut and/or conditioned) a few weeks after they get back. There is a small place near here that an African lady owns, and she does free haircuts and treatments for adopted children. The lady is young, from South Africa, and is really sweet.
My friend got very quiet, and told me that I was being racist. I was surprised, and I asked her why she thought that. She told me I was racist because I think her child has alien hair or something; the little girl's hair is hair just like hers. (She is white.) She also told me that I was racist because I think her daughter should be treated differently then my child, and that she refuses to treat this child any differently then she would treat a white child.
I pointed out to her that a child from an orphanage would have different physical and emotional needs then a child in the suburbs. Not that they should be treated differently necessarily, but they will have different needs from their parents.
She said, See, you are a racist. And hung up.
Another friend of ours just told me that our friend told her she was being racist as well, so that made me feel a little better, but did I really say something wrong? I didn't think so but maybe I did... ::sigh::
Re: Did I say something wrong, or is my old friend nuts?
Breleigh & Mason
Dude your friend is so in for it.
I'm sorry her blinders are on so tight.
It sounds like your friend is just a little overly sensitive. She may just have some of the same concerns and feel guilty for thinking them. It does not make you a racist. These are actual differences that will need to be considered.
Sometimes I wonder if she really wants this child. I know that she met her and loves her, but it doesn't seem like she is handling it very well. Maybe she is just nervous?
I am starting to worry that she is going to give the little girl a complex or something; make the little girl feel inferior because mom is so over sensitive.
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Married 3-1-08 | Nathan 11-24-08 | Kaelyn 11-30-10 | Alicia 8-17-13
Your friend is a dufus. Anyone can look at black hair and see it is different from white hair. WTF?
You didn't say anything wrong at all. My guess is that your friend is probably getting a lot of shizz from some people around her and she is hella sensitive.
honestly, you were right on SO many points...first of all, the hair issue. If she is white and her new daughter is black, their hair tends to be thicker and coarser, harder to deal with. Even ask the mommies of bi-racial children on here! *I even remember one joking this morning how she would Love to even get a comb through her son's hair!* So, that is going to be different than a caucasian child.
secondly, depending on the child's age, there will be emotional attachment concerns as well as dealing with anything else they have been through.
You are being a good friend, not racist at all.
not at all. it sounds like your friend has been gearing up to defend against racism and opposition and she just completely over-reacted at you mentioning that the child she is adopting might (gasp!) be different.
recognizing differences and being knowledegable about how to handle them doesn't make one racist...it makes one informed. and in her case, a better parent. if she calls racism everytime someone recognizes the kid is different in some ways from her, she's going to be pretty miserable.
you weren't saying the kid was alien -- you were just pointing out an obvious difference and offering some helpful advice.
I don't think she is. I really wish they had gone through an agency; counseling and support groups are practically mandatory.
They jumped into the whole thing so fast, I wonder if it is really what she wants.
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Married 3-1-08 | Nathan 11-24-08 | Kaelyn 11-30-10 | Alicia 8-17-13
This makes me so nervous for the little girl.
ugh. i would suggest that to her, but given her reaction on you only trying to help her find a good place to have her hair done, i don't think she'd react well. it's unfortunate b/c that child is going to be the one to suffer. are you close w/any of her other friends, or even a family member, who you could talk to. just voice your concerns. maybe they could talk to her about it and she might not get so upset.
A different friend is going to call her tonight. She is african, so maybe our friend will listen to her? I don't know.
DH is also going to call her DH tonight. Her DH might not know that she is acting so oddly.
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Married 3-1-08 | Nathan 11-24-08 | Kaelyn 11-30-10 | Alicia 8-17-13
I feel bad for the new LO that her mom is so hyper-sensitive that she's not researching the cosmetic AND emotional/physical differences that this child will need to have attended to. Its a fact that black/white hair textures are different, by and large, why wouldn't she want to learn how to care for her new child??
i'm glad. hopefully the african friend can just approach it casually like "if you need any help w/hair let me know. it can certainly be different! by the way i find these products are really great for african hair." maybe she'll listen to her. fingers crossed.
I think I love you
If she's too wrapped up in perceived racism that she doesn't recognize that her daughter's hair will need a different type of maintenance than her own (which IS NOT a bad thing! why can't she just think of it as acquiring another skill?), then she is headed for trouble.
Wow. There is going to be a lot of tough adjustment in THAT household. It's not "racist" to simply recognize actual differences.
ETA: the more I think about this, the more I am inclined to say that the racism, if any, is all hers. She won't treat the child any differently than a white child? Why, because white is the pinnacle of being? She seems to think that acknowledging any physical difference (i.e., hair) because of her race is acknowledging inferiority. How fcukedup. Colorblindness is not the opposite of racism.
If she calms down enough to talk to me, I will definitely take you up on that.
It is great that you know an attorney who specializes in adoption! DH and I are planning on adopting a child in a few years as well, probably international. If the bump is still here in a few years, I might have to hunt you down for an agency recommendation! lol
"Life isn't about waiting for the storm to be over, it's about learning how to dance in the rain." -Unknown
Married 3-1-08 | Nathan 11-24-08 | Kaelyn 11-30-10 | Alicia 8-17-13
yeah. let me know. he's my cousin so obviously he's fab! lol. he's in the central west end, and can help you navigate the agencies.
shiit. my mom didn't know how to do my hair and we're both white. different hair textures require a different skill set. she is going to torture that poor girl by not letting her get proper hair treatments!
not to offend any st louisians, but i do find that stl is still pretty segregated, and i've encountered a fair amount of racism there. it is getting better, but maybe that's what she's worried about. i would be too. depending on the county shes in she very well could be one of the only black people around. that would make me nervous as a future parent, and potentially have me overreacting about perceived racism.
LOL, Happs - I couldn't have said it better myself.
I think this type of stuff is one of the reasons that some (not I) black people are uncomfortable with this type of adoption.
Nope, everything that you said is just fine. I think you were being super helpful and trying to give her some great ideas.
I'd still cut her a little slack, the whole adoption process is very overwhelming and she is probably just stressed out esp w/ a such a big trip looming! Maybe she is just still a little apprehensive about bring home a child of another race and is nervous about her being accepted. I'd maybe bring it up a again a few weeks after she is home w/ her little girl!
I'm an adoptive mommy, so hopefully I can add some insight from "the other side"