</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I'd love to hit the fast forward button and see the reunion. Somehow I see a made for tv ending here...perhaps a Waltons moment.)</font>
I have no doubt it'll happen. We were only with the adoptive parents a couple of times. But I'd bet they're the kind that will explain things to their daughter in such a way that she'll be accepting and appreciative of her birth mother.
My philosophy on living a life successfully is when the big picture is overwhelming we concentrate on the details. And at those times when the details are overwhelming we need to step back and look at the big picture.
This situation more than just about any other has had me going back and forth between the big picture and being in the middle of the photograph.
The big picture involves a little girl wondering about herself and where she belongs and reading the story. And developing the position that she was given her opportunity because she was so loved, not because she was unloved.
The parents of an adopted child reading the story and accepting that they shouldn't feel guilty for having such a treasure. The birth mother is doing fine and knowing that the same kind of inate character to be such a strong human being flows in their adopted child's veins.
But probably the most important person I'd like to read the story would be the young lady stuck in a position where she needs to decide what to do. No matter what she does she's going to have to live with it for the rest of her life and it will make a difference. Maybe seeing that she can hold her head up high, have the baby, and still have a productive and happy life after giving the baby up to someone who's willing and capable of what she isn't at the moment.
So if any one of these things happens I'll feel good about my daughter making the best of a rough situation.
I raised her pro choice. She chose life. She had the wisdom of Solomon after the frailty of character of David. The most rare of combinations in a human being.