WE DO NOT CONDONE THE
              USE OF THE “BIRTH” TERMS SUCH AS “BIRTHMOTHER”
        
         
        “The word
              "birthmother" is a derogatory, degrading and inhumane term
              which was devised by adoption professionals to relegate a
              natural mother to a biological incubator for 
          adoptive parents and further to imply that the
              sacred bond of mother and child ends at birth in order to
              facilitate and further the adoption agenda .” 
           
          “Language is powerful. It is a tool of oppression.
              Groups that control the lexicon (words people use) can
              control a society’s thinking subversively”
          
          LANGUAGE OF ADOPTION
          
          “Language is very powerful. Language does not just
              describe reality. 
          
          Language creates the reality it
              describes.”   Desmond Tutu
          
        
         The term "birthmother" was created by adoption
            professionals to relegate the natural mother to a biological
            function. This term marginalizes mothers and creates a role
            for them in society which separates them from their lived
            experience. The use of this term implies that the sacred
            mother-child bond ends at birth and that the natural mother
            is secondary to adoptive parents and other mothers in
            society. 
        
        The earliest recorded use of the terms “birthmother”
            and “birth parents” are in articles written by adoptive
            parent Pearl S. Buck in 1955, 1956, and 1972. They were
            further used in articles published between 1974 and 1976 by
            adoption workers Annette Baran and Reuben Pannor and social
            work professor Arthur Sorosky (Origins Canada, 2011).
        
        Prior to the use of the term “birthmother,” mothers of
            adoption separation were “natural mothers”.  Most
            provinces in Canada still use this terminology in their
            adoption laws.  Adoptive parents were uncomfortable
            with the term natural mother as it was felt it made them
            unnatural.  “We use the term "birth family" instead of
            using "natural parent" as this implies that there is
            something unnatural about adoption.” (Snodden2009). 
            The term natural mother was also challenged  as “it
            recognized that the sacred mother-child relationship
            extended past birth and even past surrender” and “it
            indicated respect for the mother’s true relationship with
            her child” (Turski, 2002). 
        
            For the adoption myth to work effectively, adoption and
            adoptive mothers could not be perceived as unnatural. 
            Adoptive parents were promised that the child would be “as
            if born to” and that “no one will ever come for the child.”
            The secrecy of closed adoption records was for the benefit
            of adoptive parents, not for the benefit of natural mothers
            as governments protecting closed records would later
            attest.  Calling a natural mother by her true name was
            intimidating and threatening to adoptive parents. The
            “natural mother” had to be destroyed.  Adoption
            reformer Dian Wellfare explains, “Adoption practice works on
            the premise that, in order to save the child, one must first
            destroy its mother.” (Wellfare, 1998) 
        
            The work of Marietta Spencer, a social worker at the
            Children’s Home of Minnesota St. Paul and co-director of the
            Adoption Builds Families Project, became the model for the
            adoption language in use today. Her work strongly supported
            the use of the adjective “birth” for mothers, fathers,
            sisters, and any other relatives of a child who was being
            adopted. These terms were meant to assign the mother’s
            relationship with her child to that of simply giving birth,
            relegating her role to that of a biological event. In
            Marietta Spencer’s work, she applauds any term that implies
            only a biological tie, such as birth mother or bio-mother.
            In addition, it was suggested by Marietta Spencer that the
            term birth mother or “the women who gave birth to  you”
            was useful in explaining birth to a young adopted child; and
            in so doing became part of the psychological warfare used on
            adopted children by minimizing their  mother.
        
            The adoption industry embraced these birth terms calling
            them “Respectful Adoption Language” (RAL), although they
            were hardly respectful to natural families, and in
            particular natural mothers.  
        
            This new language not only psychologically destroyed the
            existence of the natural mother, but also became a tool in
            the arsenal of the adoption industry for use on pregnant
            youth and women for coercion. By labelling a pregnant woman
            a “birthmother” BEFORE birth, the adoption industry had a
            new, powerful weapon in hand. 
        
            While pregnant, a woman given this label is instantly drawn
            into coercion and given a psychological role to fulfill by
            the adoption industry. A pregnant woman is not a
            “birthmother”, but simply an expectant mother. 
            However, once labelled a “birthmother”, the natural
            progression of her pregnancy is impeded.  She is 
            psychologically changed through this label and is expected
            to produce her child for someone else.  Pre-birth
            matching, a practice where mothers choose adopters and bond
            with them prior to birth is common in modern domestic
            adoption. This is reproductive exploitation.  
        
            The adoption industry is fully aware of the transformative
            nature of birth, however a woman who is pregnant for the
            first time is unaware of how she will feel when she holds
            her newborn baby for the first time.  In most cases,
            adopters are present in delivery rooms and hospital waiting
            for “their baby” and the mother feels pressured and
            obligated to “complete her assignment”. This is why the
            adoption industry encourages mothers to have a “hospital
            plan” to ensure mothers do not change their minds once they
            see their child.  Mothers labelled “birthmothers”
            during pregnancy have a job to do, and that job is to create
            a baby for someone else, and to “deliver the goods” upon
            delivery. “The only thing I was ever told was that it was
            best to begin separating now... To think of myself as a
            birthmother rather than a mother.” (Heather Lowe, natural
            mother, quoted by Axness, 2001)
        
            A lucrative satellite industry has grown from the term
            “birthmother.” This industry promotes “Birthmother Packages”
            (offering everything from all expense paid trips to designer
            maternity wear), “birthmother” jewellery,” birthmother”
            stationery, “birthmother” gifts, and more. Marketing firms
            aid prospective parents in drafting “Dear Birthmother
            Letters” designed to  catch the attention of a
            vulnerable pregnant woman in a sea of desperate infertile
            couples. If lucky enough to catch one, she is referred to as
            “our birthmother” similar to their car or other chattel.
        
            The celebration of  Mother’s Day was created to honour
            mothers.  For mothers of adoption separation, Mother’s
            Day is rightfully and equally their day to reflect upon,
            celebrate and acknowledge their motherhood as they choose to
            do; they stand equally with all other mothers on that
            day.  In contrast, “Birthmothers Day” was created to
            marginalize natural mothers, and to perpetuate the message
            that mothers separated from their children by adoption are
            not considered to be mothers.  Separate social
            celebrations called “Mother’s Day” and “Birthmother’s Day”
            perpetuate the marginalization of natural mothers and
            undermine their position in society. This blatant separation
            of mothers is often embraced by young, unsuspecting mothers
            who may not fully understand the implications of their
            complicity.   
        
            The “birth terms” are part of the insidious psychological
            coercion and have been derived to break the bond between
            mother and child.  A mother cannot be a mother and a
            “birthmother” at the same time.  This term keeps her
            separate and apart, in her separate sphere.  The use of
            this term is synonymous with past practices such as
            preventing eye contact between mothers and babies in
            delivery rooms, sealing original birth certificates, and
            changing the identity of children.  
        
            The term “birthmother” which is widely used by media,
            governments, and even by mothers themselves, is similar to
            many other words which we do not use in society today. The
            difference is that groups have rallied together and fought
            against inappropriate terms applied to them by society, and
            have had new terms applied to their status which are
            acceptable to them. 
        
            For example, terms such as African American, disabled,
            challenged, Little People, and First Nations are terms which
            have replaced others that were felt to be inappropriate,
            degrading, and disparaging for those groups. Society has
            responded appropriately to various groups when they have
            insisted they be identified differently.  Groups and
            individuals in society should have self determination with
            respect to any term applied to them.
        
         Once it is understood how and why the term
            birthmother was coined, how it is used today to coerce women
            before and during birth, and how it is used to marginalize
            women after birth, it becomes impossible for us as a group
            to embrace this term in any way. This is not a term that we
            created for ourselves, but is a term that was created for us
            by the adoption industry to break our bond with our
            children, to destroy our identity as mothers, and to
            relegate us to the sidelines of their lives. 
        
            We are mothers. We are simply mothers... and if
            differentiation is required, we are natural mothers.
        
            Even though we may be separated from our children by
            adoption, our motherhood remains. It is time to abolish the
            “birth terms” in our modern vocabulary.
         
        References:
         
        Axness, M. (2001). When Does Adoption Begin? . The
            Association for Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and
            Health.   
        Origins Canada. (2011). The Development of “Birth
            Terms” to Refer to the Natural Mothers of Adoptees (1955 to
            1979).   Download PDF.
        Snodden, Catherine, Communications Coordinator,
            Children’s Aid Society of Toronto, 2009.
        Spencer, M. (1979). The terminology of adoption. Child
            Welfare, 58(7), 451-459.
        Turski, D. (2002). Why “Birthmother” Means “Breeder”
            .  Mothers Exploited By Adoption.
        Wellfare, D. (1998).  A Sanctioned Evil. 
            Submission to the NSW Australia Parliamentary Inquiry into
            Past Adoption Practices. 
        
            Copyright © Valerie
              Andrews 2011