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In reply to the discussion: N.J. woman refuses to meet daughter she gave up for adoption after being raped over 30 years ago [View all]JoDog
(1,353 posts)who sometimes has potential clients who offer him these kind of cases--adopted children who are now adults who want to find their birth parents.
He very rarely takes these cases, and this story is an example of why. From what he tells me, many of the adopted want to satisfy their curiosity and frequently have romantic ideas about their conceptions. As he says, "Each one is convinced their mother was a head cheerleader, their dad a football captain, and their parents kept them apart tragically like Romeo and Juliet." Experience has taught him the stories often are not so pretty.
My brother knows that they eventually will find a PI willing to take the case, so he warns them, "Think long and hard about this. It is very likely you will find out that your life started as a crime, a betrayal, or a tragedy. Your birth parents may want nothing to do with you. Can you handle that if it happens? It may be better to accept the life you have than chase after another one."
The only times he has taken these cases are when the adopted child needed to know about parental and family health history because of a possible or diagnosed disease.