It’s Hispanic Heritage Month, a month I know nothing about despite being 100% Latina. That’s a strange confession to make via a writing piece for work but it’s my truth and an honest part of my adoption story.
When I left Chile in August of 1983, I came to America and became very… American. Every bit of my Chilean identity was buried in Chilean soil the day I left. It was as if that part of me died. I lived throughout adolescence feeling curious about my Latina culture, but it was never a part of me that was acknowledged and certainly not celebrated.
When I entered adulthood, I took my identity by the horns and started trying to connect with the culture I had lost. I started attending Chilean festivals. Living so close to Washington, D.C. keeps me in this eclectic pit of culture, and I easily found a Chilean community. However, I’ll never forget the isolating feeling of walking up to my first festival. I came face to face with the harsh realization that while I am Chilean, I also am not. I don’t know any Chilean music or traditions…I don’t know the “slang” words in Spanish that are partial to the country. I don’t know any dances or how to cook their cuisine. I know nothing about being Latina.
I’m being faced with other identity challenges as an adult. My daughter wants to celebrate her Chilean culture and have a quinceañera…a traditional coming of age ceremony in the Latin culture and again, something I know nothing about. My “coming of age” celebration was a Bat Mitzvah, the path my parents steered me on when they converted me to Judaism. So now, here I sit, a 41-year-old mother, trying to learn new traditions and execute a ceremony for my daughter. Time is ticking as her birthday is just a few months away. I feel stress, pressure, loneliness…the list goes on!
Hispanic Heritage month is here, and I am still trying to figure out how to be Hispanic. Each year I hope to learn a little more…do a little more…teach a little more…and I hope that one day, I will feel like I have reclaimed the Latina identity that I lost when adoption was chosen for me. Life continues to show me that this adoption journey is not linear — it has ups and downs, waves of emotions and experiences that seem to keep popping up as life goes on. The journey continues…
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Due to traumatic life experiences and compromised beginnings, many children who are adopted, who are being raised by relatives (kinship care), or have experienced foster care have higher risks for developmental, health, emotional, behavioral, and academic challenges.
Of therapy clients were children under the age of 18 in 2021.
Served in 2021 through therapy, case management, post-adoption services and Wendy's Wonderful Kids recruitment program.
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