Spring’s here, and Mother’s Day is around the corner. In this section, we offer a variety of perspectives on how to celebrate when adoption is part of your story.

When Mother’s Day hurts

Holidays are a natural time to reflect on family and the past. For obvious reasons, Mother’s Day and Father’s Day are extremely common times for adopted children to feel down or to have a lot of questions about their birth parents.

Here are some tips to help you help your kids.

  • Stay open to questions without judgement. This will help your child feel safe expressing their feelings.
  • Incorporate traditions that honour your child’s birth parents and/or heritage.
  • Reflect and talk about the possible experience of a child’s birth mother.
  • Encourage the child to write in a journal if talking is difficult.
  • Be prepared to lend a listening ear and a loving voice during these sensitive times.
  • If you have openness with your child’s mother, reach out to her and ask how she would like to be celebrated.

If your adoption isn’t open

Sometimes, adoptive families — especially those who adopt from foster care — can’t have a relationship with their child’s original family. Here are some suggestions from our Permanency Support Manager Correen Coons for families in that situation.

Mother’s Day is a difficult day for birth moms. Instead of feeling joy, they may feel grief, loss, and shame. Our children’s moms are still mothers. Most would love a simple recognition on Mother’s Day.

Acknowledge your child’s birth mom with your child on Mother’s Day. Create a family ritual such as lighting a candle, writing a letter (even just a few lines) and putting it in a keepsake box, buying flowers and displaying them in the home, or planting a tree in the garden.

For those families that don’t have openness, take a few minutes to talk about the children’s birth mom. Acknowledge that Mother’s Day is a difficult day and that she is thinking about her children and misses them.

Adoptive families who have challenging relationships with first families can acknowledge their child’s mom by sending a “thinking of you” letter and pictures through the registry or via email.

Maybe it should just be Mothers’ Day?

We all know it takes a village to raise a child. This May, why not nudge that apostrophe over and call it Mothers’ Day instead? What a great chance to acknowledge all of those who mother us! Here are some ideas for people to celebrate:

  • Stepmothers
  • Adoptive mothers
  • Biological mothers
  • Foster mothers
  • Sisters
  • Grandmothers
  • Aunts
  • Elders
  • Neighbours
  • Teachers
  • Friends
  • Big Sisters or other community volunteers
  • Therapists
  • Childcare providers
  • Fathers, uncles, and grandfathers!