I have successfully adopted three times - I adopted a 10 year old girl in 1996, then when she was 18, I adopted an 8 year old girl, and finally my DS (DD2's biological brother) arrived when he was 23 months old in 2007
I don't know what sites you were on (maybe an American one), but you don't need a solicitor. It costs almost nothing (you may have to pay the court cost at the end which is somewhere near £100 give or take a bit, but maybe your agency will pay for you)
The process works something like this
- You contact a local authority or a voluntary agency. Private adoption is illegal, so you have to go through a licensed agency. You can go through your local authority, a neighbouring authority or a voluntary agency such as Barnados, I-adopt, Coram etc. You can contact several who are near you and then make a decision if you aren't sure
- The time to get approved as a potential parent varies from around 1-2 years. To get approved you go to prep groups, then go through a homestudy. A social worker will conduct thorough interviews with you and your DH. You go through a CRB check and a medical exam as well, and will provide some references to the agency (they specify number and who may be your referee). The interviews and homestudy is very thorough. The point is for you to work out whether adoption is right for you, and what children you could adopt, and for the agency to work out whether you would be suitable for the children they have. It would cover you and your lives, difficult experiences, how you parent your DS, your relationship, your support network and so on. Then you go to an approval panel who vote on whether to approve you or not
As for the children available, you will be the ones who specify an age range, gender and what special needs you can handle. The child you adopt might be from your area, or from the other end of the country entirely. There is an age gap rule of at least two years between your DS and adoptive child. Some agencies have a greater gap of maybe 4 years. The homestudy will be the time you actually fully decide what you could handle, because it gives you the opportunity to examine your feelings, adjust your expectations, and work out which children could fit in your family
There are very few babies available in the UK. It would be a matter of luck getting a young (6-9 months ish) baby, the average age is 3 years old now, I believe
ALL children available are traumatised. Because relinquished babies are so rare, the children available are those who have been removed from their homes because of neglect and abuse. Those removed at birth tend to have been exposed to drugs or have histories of mental illness or learning difficulties in the family. They therefore need to be parented differently to your birth children. They have additional needs be they educational, social, attachment difficulties or physical needs like CP or downs. You have to think very carefully about which children you could parent, and how different childrens needs might affect your DS.
You will see profiles of children, and if you would like to proceed, you get more information then interviews with the childs SW. You aren't assigned a certain child. No one can say how long it will take to find your child, anything from a few weeks to a few years. The children you are open to will affect your wait time. There are barely any babies, lots of kids who are school aged for instance.
In my opinion, adoption is the best thing i've ever done. It's also the most difficult by a very long way. My kids are challenging to parent because of their experiences, which will effect them for life, and they are not like other children. But they are amazing as well. To succeed you need realistic expectations in my opinion, as well as the ability to seek help where necessary, and change your parenting style where necessary (far easier said than done!!). For me, totally worth it :)