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Should He Really have his Original Birth Certificate?

All of the concerns that adopted people should have the right to their original birth certificates in order to know their true origins makes 100% logic and sense to me. I completely support this, but have been thinking about what My Little Boy will find on his Original BC....

He will find he was given his original middle and last name for a man who ended up Not being his biological father..... and he will also find that this man spent four years sexually abusing the sister he was adopted with--who has very serious emotional issues...

Should he really actually have access to a Lie--and be named for a man who abused his big sister...he loves and sees living with this kind of pain?

Just wondering...... because this is what he will find and he does have rights---He was born in Oregon.....

Update:

***FYI: When our children were placed they were each given a LifeStory Book of their own. It includes pictures of their mother, and her boyfriend...the man named as his bio father. It includes the graphic details of why they entered foster care. It includes pitures of the Foster Family and social workers....

Everything is included... in detail... hospital records (for him) and nearly every DHS record of what happened...

So the info is here--and he will have it when the time is right as he grows up with more understanding he will know the whole story...Besides, his sister remembers and tells him anyway.

Update 2:

**** I do hope it doesn't sound as if I intend to not share this info... My question is about the fact that it is not correct information--and it does not tell the whole story.

****I have expereinced this EXACT situation with my Biological Children who have an Adoptive Father... I was one of the Petitioners for the Oregon Open Adoption Records. My biological children have Met their Married Biological Grandparents who placed their father after they were married and while in college. I have met them on their request as the mother of their Grandchildren. I did learn the my own Biological Children are nearly 1/2 Native American which was a Surprise to me... My oldest son attempted to obtain his fathers OBC but was not entitled and my ex finally searched 3 years ago....

There should really be no reason to be pissed by my Q..... I think I have the right to be concerned for my Little Boy... I know the "stories" my ex believed...they were not true but for my little boy they Are!

Update 3:

*** I guess I just wonder How Valid it inaccurate information? We know Why it is important--We know it is His Info--But, is this Really going to satisfy the Need that so many believe it will satisfy if it is wrong?

Our Daughters OBC wasn't even created until she was 4 years old so her info is only as good as it says it is too...

If knowing the TRUTH is important then I would wonder why having a lie with supporting documents would be His Truth.....Seems not to me--as he may never know who his bioloical father really is?

16 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favourite answer

    While more information than what is on the OBC may be necessary to help him make sense of it all, it is still his document. He should have access to it. It's part of his story. That doesn't mean he should get it in an information vacuum. But he should still have it.

    Source(s): Living life as an adoptee one day at a time
  • ?
    Lv 4
    5 years ago

    This was filed a long time ago by some conspiracy theory whacko who has a bunch of weird lawsuits. It was dismissed on the 22nd. The FBI and NSA are not looking into it. Any nutcase can file a lawsuit. That does not mean it has merit.People HAVE seen his birth certificate. He is a senator for God's sake

  • 1 decade ago

    When he is an adult he has the right to decide for himself if he wants this information. As a parent you have the right to be concerned, but you do not have the right to take away his basic human right. If this was your biological child and when he became an adult would you still be asking the same question regarding what information he has a right too? I think not! It goes to show you that no matter the life story behind an adoption, most people feel the need to decide what our rights are for us! This is where i get angry.

    Source(s): Just wanting basic human rights.
  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    The only thing I have to say is something you already know: he has a right to his information, no matter how good, bad, or ugly it is. Even if the info is wrong, it's still his info.

    But I'm preaching to the choir, aren't I?

  • 1 decade ago

    You know what? I worry about what I am going to have to tell my daughter, "Lauren", when / if I meet her. It'll be hard. I don't plan on "dumping" a load of stuff on her in one sitting... there are PLENTY of children who know that their parents killed / raped / molested people. THEY LEARN TO DEAL WITH IT. Adoption shouldn't change anything. I know, as parents, we want to protect them, but we're raising adults... not children. Everyone says, "I am raising 'a child'", when in fact, they have a child that they are raising to be an adult.

    Unfortunately, my son (Sam), will have to also face a tough reality about his dad. Knowing that, I talk to him about issues that will help him understand when he grows up. I talk to him about trust and lies. I try not to bad mouth his dad... I just try to use examples that will help him understand things better when he does find out about his dad. You have years of preperation.

    Talk to him now about mental illness. You don't have to say you're talking about his bio dad, just be general. Then when the time comes, he's prepared.

    He'll be fine. Lies and secrets destroy people. The truth makes us stronger, more understanding and sets us free. Yes, it can hurt, but at least you know EXACTLY what you're dealing with.

    Best wishes.

  • 1 decade ago

    My cousin Johnny committed suicide when he found out the "whole truth". He hung himself on the mast of his biological father's boat with a note pinned to his shirt that read "Sins of the Father".

    His grandmother blamed herself for years....I am not sure if everyone is emotionally capable of handling the truth.

    This is very emotional issue that hits home for me because my daughter's bio-father is a convicted rapist and registered sex offender. It's going to hurt her like HELL when she hears of the crimes he plead guilty too. I read the police report and nearly vomitted. So I am not sure.....only time can tell.

    I have dd's OBC and I will get it too her when she is old enough to understand. She should not be haunted by the crimes of her father!!!

  • 1 decade ago

    He has the same right under the law that any other citizen has.

    I wonder how many non-relinquished, non-adopted individuals have lies on their birth certificates? For example, if mom had someone on the side for a while, but of course hubby's named as the father.

    A lot of us have nastiness in our past. But, we also have the right to being treated with the dignity that allows us to know the truth and to handle it ourselves. I'm an adult. I don't need someone protecting me from the truth. I don't need someone assuming I can't handle it, as painful as it might be.

    I found out that my nmom committed suicide after quitting her meds 7 months before I located her. It hurt like hell. My father, with whom I'd only reunited 3 weeks prior to my finding this out, chose to jump in the car and drive down to be with me I took it so hard. I also found out that at another time she quit her meds she shot her husband while she was in an extreme paranoid state. (He lived and is okay today.) I found out that she literally walked out the door and never came back one day, abandoning my 3 and 5 year old brother and sister.

    I got to be the one to tell my two sibs about the suicide. Yes, it was hard to have that conversation, but they wanted -- and deserved -- the truth, even though it hurt like hell.

    Yeah, sometimes the truth sucks. But, it's MY truth. In the case of your son, it's HIS truth.

    Source(s): Happily reunited adopted citizen.
  • 1 decade ago

    When he requests a copy, he won't be a little boy any more.

    He'll be a grown man.

    And every adult is entitled to their birth certificate, no matter who they were named for, or what that person did.

    Source(s): Vintage 1963 BSE Adoptee.
  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    Probably not. Once an adopted child, always a child.

  • 1 decade ago

    I think he should have access to it. His life story is his story. When he is older he'll be able to handle it, besides he'll have you as a mother to comfort and guide him.

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