The Process of Adoption

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Child adoption is a major step in anyone's life. Child adoption is when a person or couple legally takes care and raises a child as if the child is their own. Many people feel the need to adopt for many different reasons. If it is because one is single, but wants children. Adoption can be a choice for infertile couples. It can also be a choice for couples of the same sex. Even for people who just have the desire to adopted. There are many different cases that can be named and there are plenty of children in need that can fill those voids. Adoption can be long, tedious and aggravating, such as a pregnancy would be, but once the parent holds that child in there arms it all becomes worth it. Children in need are desperate for love and someone simply to hold them at night. Everyone who has the desire to adopt should find the time, the money and the energy and pursue with adoption. Adoption is a long arduous process that requires perseverance, but in the end is worthwhile.
Getting started with adoption is the longest part of the whole process. First off, the couple or person wanting to adopt needs to become familiar with the whole idea of adoption. They might want to subscribe to magazines, go to the library, talk to friends who have adopted and research the topic. Make sure the house, the child is coming home to, is stable and has plenty of space to make them comfortable. The couple or person adopting is required to understand that this is a immense responsibility and that once started has to be finished. An article from New
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York Times said, "Adoption is a wonderful option that works out so wonderfully for so many people. But it's not easy. It's not simple" (Klien 1).
Once the couple or person adopting is mentally ...

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...ll be easier for them to have a more son to father or mother to daughters feel. The child will not know any different than what the adoptive parents have raised them to be, which is easier for the adoptive parents to go through.

Works Cited

Caldwell, Mardie. Called to Adoption. Nevada City: American Carriage House, 2011. Web.
Espejo, Roman, eds. Adoption: Opposing Viewpoints. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, Inc., 2002. Print.
Kinn, Gail. Be My Baby. New York: A Division of Workman, 2000. Print.
Klein, Amy. "Have You Ever Thought of Adoption." The New York Times. 29 October 2013: 1-2. Fertility Diary. Web. 26 March 2014.
"Open Adoption Facts." Independent Adoption Center. Independent Adoption Center. 2013. Web. 30 March 2014.
"What Can You Learn From Your Responses?" Foster Care and Adoption Self Assessment Guide. Iowa Kids Net. n.d. Web. 13 April 2014.

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