Hi again Noonesharesmycoke - you're welcome! :)
I know someone who's been told that both her and her partner need to go part time, to work in a nursery to get childcare experience and that's before they even find out if they are accepted onto stage 1, let alone the rest, that's a big thing. In our area prospective adopters, so I was told the other day, are being told they could wait 3-4 years for a match with current situation of many adopters and fewer children, with one couple going on hold from matching because the process is just putting too much pressure on them and their birth children. I know of a couple who've had a match broken down after intros started and have now left the idea of adoption adding to their family behind...so when you wrote that, I thought the idea of everything you have to do, that could all come to nothing is likely what you mean.
Now, the other posters have given great advice on the realities of the doom and gloom scenarios of potential issues with adopted children and contact with birth family that are given out, so I won't add to that. I will say I have met people who've been through years of fertility treatment and it's resulted in nothing, a miscarriage, or even ill health, so fertility treatment is much the same when you think about it, in terms of possibility of ending up with a child. But fact is, you may just not want to put yourself through the adoption process. And it is hard making that decision and I'm sure hard finding alternatives to making family/life complete.
I had no desire to do fertility treatment, I wanted to adopt. Got to training and everyone's sharing these stories of years of hard going fertility treatments and there's me saying all I want is a child and I'll do anything...oh but I want to do it this way, not that, so I guess maybe I won't try anything! I'll tell you, I felt a bit like I deserved less of a place in that room....I didn't (but I did throw some serious respect their way!) So I get it and just because you want a child, no matter how badly, it is not a reason to just do the adoption process, if it's not for you there is a child's happiness at stake. And if you choose not to do it, it doesnt mean you want to become a parent any less than the next person that is, or isn't adopting.
There's one thing this process has made me realise more and more and that's unless someone is in the same boat, they don't truly get it. And while I may understand a bit, you need someone whose made that decision for similar reasons, whose living with that decision, whose looking at similar alternatives. Problem is I don't know where you find them but I hope you do! Chances are they'll appear back on here in 6 months time as they are just reading about adoption now, will remember this, do same and come back to you. Good luck finding someone who shares your coke, if you get what I mean 