franciemczoo When we stopped IVF (having run out of money and me frankly hating being injected so much) I felt relief. We waited 6 months and then went through adoption and adopted our son within 20 months. He has been with us for three years.
I would not change a thing. (Except I would like all the assisted conception money we paid back!)
Our new son was three, almost four, when he joined us. Our birth dd was smitten with him on day one of meeting, we had over a week of introductions and then he moved in. The honeymoon period lasted exactly one day, the day he moved in! By day two the jealousy started and she was very jealous of him, and he (in time) learnt to be jealous of her.
Despite that they learnt to love each other!
Here is my advice, pick and choose from it as you will:
Be as open as possible when choosing who to adopt. Find a child right for your family, not the child you imagine will be right! And most of all a child for whom you are right! Be open about age and sex of the child you adopt. I really wanted a girl originally but a boy was right for our family. I wanted a baby but a three year old has been right for us.
Prepare your birth child well.
Have boundaries in place, e.g. the kids are not meant to go in each others' rooms unless invited in (our rule), and any special toys that cannot be shared are kept in their room. The toys downstairs are shared.
Do as much as you can to build connection in the early days, we did painting pots, junk modelling, trampolining, cinema visits, zoo visits, as much as we could to build connection with the kids. This doesn’t necessarily cause issues with bonding with you as parents. I think this is because your initial day to day experience are you and new child. However, at weekends and after school it is you and new child - and existing child - and maybe partner too.
So some of these times will be different from just you and new child.
The child will attach primarily to primary carer but you also want them to attach to their new sibling and new parent (if in a partnership) too.
Do not pass on any items from existing child to new child without existing child’s say so! Massive rows for us because we gave our son his sister’s special chair and apron! Really, the money you save passing things on is not worth it if your existing child does not want to pass things on!
That’s all I got, not a lot after three years! But I would echo fake it until you make it, vital.
And also I think the love is slightly different. But then I wonder if the love we feel for our kids will be different anyway, won’t it. One area is that our dd has been in our loves 12 years, four times as long as ds, so it is different. But ds is smaller, younger and that kind of makes you want to protect and care for them more!
I think adopting a child younger than your existing child (by at least two, hopefully at least three years) is always vital as you (as a parent and as a family) mostly do prioritise the younger child’s needs anyway. That means the new arrival gets the normal priority that would be expected and is not singled out as an adopted child, if that makes sense.
Good luck.