I'm a birth mum to a little boy who was unfortunately taken from my care at birth when I was a teenager going through domestic abuse. The risk to him was never about me, but my perceived inability to protect him from future harm should it occur as a result of his birth father.
I've gone on to lead a relatively good life far away from that man and have been blessed with another child who is in my care with no social services involvement which I'm extremely thankful for - but I do miss my first born terribly and want to be a part of his life.
I have one letterbox contact per year but sadly no photos as the local authority who placed him don't include photographs in the letterbox contact agreements, so I'm told by the adoption social workers not to ask for them. I'm not permitted to send presents or cards for special occasions either and that is also a condition imposed by the local authority and not the adopters themselves.
I've not been able to meet his adoptive parents which I would love to be able to do because they come across as wonderful people in the letters I have received. I opposed the adoption until the eleventh hour and desperately wanted to keep my baby - I think perhaps that's why the social services wouldn't put forward my request to the adopters to meet. I'm not sure. I wasn't treat very kindly by the social services but I won't go into that here.
My birth son knows he's adopted and has been told in a child friendly way, he knows all about me and his parents have reassured me via the letters that he knows I love him. He asks them for his baby story every night at bed time with is about me and where he came from.
I may come across as selfish but I really don't feel that one letter per year and no photographs is enough, although I know this isn't his parents doing and I hold no resentment towards them whatsoever.
Would you, as an adoptive parent, allow more contact under these circumstances? Even if it were just photographs to begin with, and the opportunity to meet in person?
It would mean the world to me to be able to develop a more relaxed relationship with the adopters outside of what seems to me to be an extremely harsh contact agreement.