Tara

Nov 032021
 

I have just finished watching the Netflix documentary Found.

As it is National Adoption Awareness Month (NAAM), which is not something I really pay much attention to but due to running The Universal Asian, I have to be somewhat aware, at least. This article from the Huffington Post made me nod quite a few times as it is also why I tend not to celebrate these kinds of ‘awareness’ days/months, etc.

Still, as I try to keep abreast of what is going on in the Asian diaspora, and this being the month it is, I thought that I would make a bit more of an effort to educate, or familiarize, myself with other stories that are being shared. The girls/ladies in Found made me reminisce on my younger days when I also was struggling with whether or not I would search for my biological family. Now that I have and come up to a dead end, I find my reaction to the film dredges up a weird sense of anger toward the country, government, system, and even the parents, on the concept of giving up their children. It is all so incredibly inhumane for no justifiable reason that results in so much grief and pain no matter how well one goes on with their life.

As I watched with feelings of sadness, disappointment, and also empathy, I couldn’t help but think on the current state of my search.

I have done DNA testing with those who should be related to me according to my paperwork, and yet they are not related to me at all. My closest DNA relation confirmed is a third cousin; and it is possible that I have found a closer cousin, but she has yet to take steps to confirm that.

On top of that, are the myriad of stories related to the Social Welfare Society that orchestrated my first adoption as being rather notorious for switching babies’ identities at the last minute if a child was returned to their biological homes or something else happened to them. Therefore, it makes me question everything I know about my origins including my name, birth date, etc. because what should have been a straightforward search has left me with so much doubt and mistrust of the information I have.

In watching the film, we get to see the side of the biological parents who are not necessarily actively searching, but are waiting to be found.

I have experienced three different occasions in which I have been told that I should search for my biological family. In fact, they were the impetus behind me starting the process. One NYC taxi driver told me that they were waiting for me to find them because most are not able or don’t know how to go about searching. This film confirmed that. If it weren’t for the woman helping to connect the adoptees with their biological families, the families would not have bothered to move forward in finding their children since they are all poor, feel guilt, and/or don’t know where or how to start.

So, again, I revert back to my own story.

Could someone actually be searching for me, but I was switched when adopted and so they cannot find me? Or, is my paperwork accurate and the truth will always be a mystery?

Either way, I feel anger at the system.

Don’t get me wrong, my love for my adoptive parents does not change, but don’t forget that they didn’t adopt me from Korea. The Universe brought us together for a mutual benefit to each other.

Still, whenever I am told that I must feel lucky for being adopted or expected to feel grateful that I didn’t grow up in an orphanage, I feel anger. I don’t feel lucky and I don’t feel grateful.

I am not lucky to have lost knowing who and where I came from. I am not grateful that I do not fully fit in, nor am fully accepted, in my adoptive country nor my birth one. I am not lucky to have been adopted multiple times and suffered for it. I am not grateful for my supposed better life, because who knows what kind of life I could have had. While growing up in an orphanage may have made me question if I was loved, I would have known my language, my food, and my culture. While I could have had a tough and poor life with my biological family, I would have known my people, my DNA history, my tribe. Of course, I could have still suffered abuse. Likewise, I could have still gotten a decent education and traveled abroad. We will never know the what ifs/could have beens.

Still, just because I haven’t been ‘found’ nor ‘found’ my biological family, I have to say I am not lost. While there was loss in my adoption journey, I know I have found myself along the way.

Thus, the documentary is well worth a viewing; and maybe there will be something new to be Found.

~T 😀

Oct 212021
 

Friendships come and go, this is a fact of life. As an expat, this is even more of a reality than perhaps for those who stay near their hometowns. 

Throughout my life, I have worked hard to maintain friendships so that the coming and going is minimized as much as possible since issues of abandonment, and the like, heavily way on my psyche.

Still, I’m an introvert. 

I like my own company, and I live in my head most of the time. Rarely do I ever feel lonely, and so independence is something that I do well and with pleasure. 

This doesn’t mean that I don’t have friends nor that I don’t need socialization. It just means that I am generally careful in discerning with whom I find worth spending my time. Therefore, when someone with chaotic energy and darker shadows enters my life, I am usually hesitant and wary to get too close.

However, when we moved to France, which was originally meant to be our “forever” area, I set my mind to being sociable and making a real effort to find some friends. After three years in Japan with my BFF and second BFF, I knew that I needed to have some lovely and strong ladies in my circle.

So, I did just that. 

However, there has to always be one, doesn’t there? 

On the first day of meeting some people in the area, I met four lovely ladies and later a few more. Of those original four, I am very good friends with three. Until a few days ago, I would have said this was true for all four, but somehow that one decided she needed to cut both me and M out of her life completely, which has resulted in some group drama, and sadly for her, no friends left.

While, ultimately, I am not hurt, or even surprised, about her decision, I am rather disappointed. 

Without going into details or sharing personal information about her or us, I will say that what has come out of it is a realization that when my gut tells me to avoid someone or something, I need to have no doubts or mental negotiations. In the end, my gut will prove to be correct and so much time, energy, and space will have been expended without a positive result for me and mine.

This is not 100% accurate, to be honest, the positive is that we no longer need to create space for someone who is every adjectival version of “selfish” or invest in trying to “help” one who does not truly want help. 

With that, this post is my closure on her and that fleeting friendship, as I had been calling it. I do not wish ill, and hope that one day she will truly become a better human being.

~T 

Oct 192021
 

A recent conversation on writing with emotion has gotten me finding clouded spaces in my head. There are parts of my brain that remain behind locked doors, both out of choice and out of subconscious survival mechanisms. However, I am in a good and safe space these days that perhaps I can at least take a peek through the keyholes of some of these doors to let in some light.

I see auras. They aren’t colorful auras of the rainbow that some say they can see, but rather variations of light and dark. I base my decisions on whether or not to like someone or to allow myself to be in a space depending on the shades I see. When this started to happen I cannot say, but I imagine that I have had this way of viewing the world from birth. It has only been in recent years that I have come to acknowledge it as a flashlight that can guide me in what often feels like the dark.

My first memory of a shadow and darkness was while in my first family upon being adopted in the States. Words came out of my mouth, but the faceless shadow overhead neither understood nor reacted with lightness. This left my psyche confused and forever marked with a fear of being unheard and misunderstood. My world was mostly dark during the two or three years that I was in this family. Some flashes of light pass through my mind when I recall my first snow day.

The world was white outside. My older brothers and I went out into the snow to play. I giggled freely with joy and unadulterated mischievousness that comes from snowball fights and building snowmen. The sweet taste of warm apple cider still lingers on my lips as I warmed from the cold outside, letting the crisp freedom of the day fill my heart with a rare and fleeting moment of lightness. 

That flash of memory would be the last light I would see for many years. It was also the day that I was taken away from this family in which I was just beginning to find my place. Grey confusion filled me, and still does even now, in trying to piece together the puzzle of why I was removed and the irony of it being one of the best days I had had up to that point.

Dark shades of grey remain as a fog of mystery over the next six months following that blissful snow day when I was supposedly under a protective umbrella of bright light. It wasn’t until my mid-thirties that I discovered the mechanisms of singing, swinging my legs in joy, and laughing out loud – the humorous side of me – had been nourished for a sweet six months, but my mind had hidden it away under an opaque grey cover. 

It’s as if my heart and mind conspired together to wrap up all the love and joy that I must have had knowing that it would be the only thing to keep me alive in the years to come. So, I buried the art of laughter and humor deep inside until I no longer recognized it as a positive part of the world. Instead, I see it as a way to tell the truth in a mean way. Perhaps, though, I am still wanting to protect the light that lies beneath.

During the extremely dark years from ages 5 to 8, I never saw more than fleeting spots of light much like driving on a rarely traversed road at night. My many stories of physical abuse, psychological warfare, religious brainwashing, and confusion of sexual touches as expressions of love were all surrounded in darkness and lies. There is no humor to be found. Instead, I determined that life was only worth living if I was honest with myself and to others. Honesty provided me with a semblance of light like a fluorescent bulb in a dimly lit room. 

It was his honesty that showed me how to let in the light when my father told me directly the most ironic statement, “You won’t last long in this family if you can’t learn to take a joke.” At eight-years-old, I cried deeply at this. There was so much in that one sentence that neither he nor I could have known its significance at the time. Would I last very long in my third adoptive family? His directness gave me freedom to be, to see, to feel honesty at last from those on whom I depended. More importantly, laughter and joy was required by the taking and telling of jokes. 

Well, I did last with them and I will forever refer to my family, and my father especially, as my guardian angels of light. Aside from my husband, these are the only people with whom both honesty and humor are no longer shady auras of the dark, but are rather an immense ball of bright radiance.

So, although I still lack appreciation for the humorous aspects of life preferring directness that is found in being honest, I realize that if I allow myself to dive deeper within, my underlying emotions are actually rife with humor, which provides me with the strength to reflect on my early years with more smiles than tears.

Oct 142021
 

Recently, I have been contemplating in the back of my mental space as to how much I am a product of my environment/experience and how much is a natural inclination.

Over the years, I have done a few character/personality tests as well as through tons of self-help resources reflected upon who I am when it comes to being able to label why I act/respond/behave the way that I do. No matter how much I might not want to be put into a box, life is easier when I have at least an outline of definition for who I am.

Recently, I did another test as part of a writing group for adoptees that I have joined. While the characteristics listed at the top and bottom of my list were not overly surprising, I considered again my contemplation of nature vs. nurture in my development as a human being and whether or not I want to change the labels, especially as a writer.

Since the time of my first memories, I have been an organizer. I remember putting toys away exactly as I found them or being able to remember just how pieces of something went so that I could put it back together again as they were. However, I am not certain if this is a naturally developed skill or one that I developed as a coping mechanism. Was I already naturally inclined to understand the organization and mechanics of things or did it develop as a way to control what I could of my life? Did my A-mom’s own tendency for being organized enhance what was already in me or confirm my need for it?

My eternal love for a schedule and routine can be clearly shown as a result of not being able to have any control or stability in my early childhood years. Thus, as an adult I learned that it was also a strength for success (however that is defined) and so I nurtured it further. But, was I naturally inclined anyway?

In Japanese culture, they have a belief that your personality is related to your blood type. This has spread to the West along with the idea of eating according to a blood type. If I follow this line of thinking, then the description for my blood type B+ would suggest that I am as I am based on nature.

Yet, upon my recent reflection of the top 5 character strengths according to the VIA Institute on Character, I feel that some points must be because of my early adoption experience.

Still, the truth is that people change and develop over time through both their natural tendencies and also their environment/experiences. So, my conclusion is that it’s probably both and, really, it doesn’t matter that much. More, it is a curiosity. Also, even more importantly, I have the power (control) to change whatever I want. So, if I want to move my least strong of 24 traits up on the list to a higher position, then all I have to do is train myself to be a bit more humorous! 😛

~T 😀

Oct 102021
 

Well, we moved to Europe just under a year ago (14th is one year!) with a plan to settle in France. We didn’t quite follow our original plan as M thought it would be a good idea for me to see the eastern part of the country before we decided to buy and settle closer to Spain and the Atlantic, but still on the Mediterranean coastline.

Any thoughts of moving that direction were soon foiled when I started to make friends with whom I connected quickly, which is most definitely not something I usually do. Still, we did explore areas and even drove cross country just to give it another viewing. However, we are fairly easily pleased by location as we don’t have a lot of specific requirements other than to be somewhat close to the sea, not be living with neighbors too close to us, and close enough to a town to get the things that we need, but enjoy visiting for a cafe or meal out.

Then, came the Italian idea. I have yet to complete my posts on the Europe Phase II saga, but – SPOILER ALERT – we have found our dream house!

Although this shall now be a bit out of order in events/process, I wanted to share where we are now. The details on how it all came to be will come in a more focused post on that, but for now, here are some pics and a brief description of our new abode.

Description

Located in the province of Umbria, near a town called Orvieto, we are renting-to-buy (over five months) a country farm house originally built around ruins from 1200 A.D. The house size is about 350 sqm (sorry Americans, I don’t know the conversion offhand, but it’s BIG). There are seven rooms to use as bedrooms, office space, TV lounge, etc. There is an open plan living and dining room with an entry area. The kitchen is open on the ground floor connecting to the open plan space. Upstairs are four of the rooms with two bathrooms and one ensuite bathroom and walk-in closet area. The surrounding land totals 10 hectares (approx. 25 acres) of which probably two acres is manicured with a pool. The rest of the land has olive trees, fruit trees, and open fields at the moment for us to decide what to do with it.

Just a few pics of our new estate

Visitors are already making plans to see us and we hope to have many more as our doors are always open!!!

Benvenuto a casa nostra – Welcome to our home!

~T 😀

Sep 242021
 

On September 17, 2021 a film, Blue Bayou, was released creating more than just a controversial stir amongst the Korean adoptee community. Although, I was aware of the Adoptee Citizenship Act activity since news coverage shared the deportation story of Adam Crapser in 2017, I did not stay updated beyond reading headlines or comments on social media, which brought to light this issue that is estimated to affect around 35,000 adoptees, who were sent to America to be adopted, but for whatever reason no one took the responsibility to ensure these young Korean immigrants became legal US citizens. 

So, when I got the chance to preview the film before its official release, I was excited to do so. 

The trailer successfully engaged me in the story and made me want to see how a professional film would portray an aspect of angst experienced by my adoptee community. A good friend of mine warned that there was some controversy in that the main role was heavily based on Adam Crapser, but without his permission. With that in mind, I watched the film…. 

It was a moving story that properly pulled at the heartstrings and expressed both sides of the truth – fairly, in my opinion. I found myself being torn between empathy for the main character with his traumatic adoptive experience along with his bad circumstances that led to the deportation, and judgement on his poor life decisions that prevented him from affording the means to help himself out of the situation. Of course, it’s a vicious cycle, so I am not at all placing blame on the victim himself. 

All that aside, what strikes me as most disconcerting in the discussions surrounding the film is the divide that is happening within the Korean adoptee and Asian American community. Those who know Adam directly, along with those who are naturally inclined to activism, have begun to protest against this film stating that it is too closely based on his story, which he had not given permission to tell. They have created a change.org petition to boycott the film altogether and are blasting social media with their protestations. One argument is that Justin Chon, the actor and director, is not an adoptee but a hyphenated Korean-American. This leads to a statement that non-adoptees should not be telling the stories of adoptees, especially without their permission. However, Chon and his media team continue to state that the story was an amalgamation of a number of deportees’ stories despite the uncanny parallels to just one’s. Meanwhile, Adam Crapser has only made social media statements to his limited audience, letting his supporters spew their rhetoric on his behalf, but still not speaking directly to the community to support the protestations being made.

For me, personally, it is not about who is right or wrong per se. Instead, what I see is a swirling cloud of dust that dirties the topic that should have been brought to the light for discussion as to how this issue even came to be in the first place. While the details of whose story it is, whether or not he gave permission, and the like are important, I am afraid that the true purpose of making the film at all is now lost. I am afraid that those looking in from the outside will only see the fighting and look away with disinterest in engaging in the conversation that should have been the focus about deporting forced immigrant populations. I am afraid that an opportunity has been lost.

Should a non-adoptee be allowed to share, take artistic license, or depict the story of an adoptee? Ideally, I’d like to say no and be able to believe that the adoptee’s story would still be heard regardless. However, in the same threads of whether or not a white person should be allowed to do the same with a minority’s story, I feel the same uncertainty in my answer. I would love it if the minority’s story and voice could be heard with the support of the majority, but today and throughout history that is not how the world works – yet. So, is it a matter of just getting the story out there in whatever way possible? Or,  do we fiercely hold on to what we believe is our story even if it may never be heard?

~T 😀

Sep 212021
 

It was a weekend of luxury and action (two weekends ago now) to make our visions for a certain lifestyle of our own come to fruition. Don’t worry – it’s more about the potential than affording the reality for now… 😜

On top of that, it was a chance to get to know new people more as the layers of individuals can only be discovered through time spent together in conversation , breaking of bread 🍕and sharing of drinks. 🥂

Anyway, just a short post to share from our visit to the Almafi Coast (Sorrento area) and boat day to Capri. Pics below and other highlights on social media platforms. 😬

Sep 092021
 

In Richard Templar’s The Rules of Wealth book, he makes a point of teaching that we shouldn’t necessarily tell others about our money goals or dreams because inevitably someone will pooh-pooh the idea or try to tell us why we are wrong in our way of thinking. He doesn’t say not to tell anyone, but to be selective in who we tell and make sure that those people are ones who will support and encourage us to reach our goals and dreams.

I have found that this can be true with just about every topic or area of interest. When Don Miguel Ruiz writes in The Four Agreements – “Don’t take things personally”, it can be applied to everything when we dare to share anything about ourselves, and we do not get the positive response that we want (though I’d say it applies even to the positives, too).

Just about everyone around me knows that I am not a fan of “people” on the whole. I am not a sharer of much, sometimes even to those closest to me, until I am good and ready.

In French this week, I learned the difference in the phrases ‘j’ai confiance en toi’ (I have trust in you) and ‘l’ami confident’ (a confidante). While we might want to translate it directly into our English word, confidence/confident, they are not the same. Also, trusting someone doesn’t always make them a confidante.

There are two regular people in my life whom I would call confidantes. They are the ones who get the most genuine version of myself and my thoughts. However, even with them, I find that I really have to have confiance en moi (trust in myself). 

It’s not that I don’t value their input or advice. It’s that they aren’t in my head, have my gut instincts, or understand what it is I am really trying to achieve. In their defense, I am most likely not explaining my ideas well enough for them to grasp in full. So, I’m not pointing any fingers or judging – I promise.

Rather, it is that I know what I want to do and where I want things to go.

Here are two examples:

  1. M has been encouraging me to find a retreat for either yoga or for writing. I appreciate this deeply. One problem for me is that I don’t want to spend a lot because we will have upcoming expenses once we are in the house and start our ‘nesting’ process. Also, the deeper truth is that I don’t want to go on a retreat to meet new people or share my writing with people I do not know. At the moment, I crave solitude, silence, and my own space. Therefore, I can spend about half of what a retreat costs by going to a hotel on my own for a week and writing and/or doing yoga there. M tried to mansplain how I was incorrect in my thinking, to which I politely (in my mind) told him he was wrong. 😛
  2. I want to generate an income from The Universal Asian. In this way, we can regroup our expenses and I can pay more to contributors and those who are helping to build up the platform. There are a number of ways that one can generate money from an online space, but I’m hesitant to move forward to many of them. Lots of people have given me advice and some have suggested I ask for more professional advice, but again I hesitate. It’s not from fear, but from not feeling ready or comfortable yet. I have an idea of how to go about it and I know that when the timing is right I will know how to go about taking action. This is how most everything has gone with it so far and I think that it’s been fairly successful. I’m not saying I won’t need help or outside expertise, but rather that when it’s right, it will happen organically and smoothly. 

So, these examples are where only I can know what I am aiming to achieve no matter how much advice others give me, only I can move forward toward the goals. 

Still, while I keep things close to my chest, it doesn’t mean that I don’t take in or listen to what others suggest. It just means that I might be slow to take it on board, or that I just want to do it my way. 😉

~T 😀

Sep 082021
 

Last weekend, we had a little getaway to Rome, which is actually only about 1.5 hours away from where we are living now in Italy.

It was M’s first visit to the capital city, so we did the touristy bit of doing a Big Bus Tour to see the main sights. With C19 limiting visits inside places, we ended up with a long tour of the Colosseum, but it was all part of the fun exploring. Some pics are below, but you can also see more on our @footnersineurope Instagram account.

More importantly, though, it was a nice chance for us to reset as all the stress of moving around and wrapping our heads around making Italy home now was making us a bit snappy with one another – though M claims it was more me than him. Never! 😛

One highlight that had nothing to do with Rome itself was getting a new laptop 💻. It wasn’t a necessity, but a want and a tool to help allow for me to write or do work away from the ‘dungeon’ we call home 👏🏽.

In fact, I am typing this post from a cafe with the comfort of my new laptop and freedom to be a true digital nomad. 😁 So, it’s already paying off. 😂

With that, I shall leave you with just a few images from our trip. More exploring to come.

~T 😀

Sep 032021
 

I cry at standing ovations, flash mobs, and moments of frustration that stem from a boiling of feelings buried within like an erupting volcano. I rarely cry otherwise.

In my youth, I cried a lot and I only cried when alone.

Crying was not necessarily about being a sign of weakness to me, but rather a reason for others to not like me, not keep me, not want me, not need me. Therefore, I would not show this side of me to others unless it was from physical pain, or when the feelings of frustration were too much to contain–as was often the case when getting picked on by my older brother.

Mostly, though, I learned to bury my emotions in front of others. This meant even the happy ones. Stoicism had a whole other layer of meaning for me. I built walls, and walls for those walls tenfold.

I remember my mom once telling me that she was so relieved when I had a negative emotional outburst as a teen because she was able to finally know what I was thinking and feeling. Later, I learned that she listened to my phone conversations, read my letters and diaries–all out of a desire to figure out just what exactly was going on inside my head because I never let anyone in. My poor mother just wanted to understand me, but the walls I had built were well-entrenched and difficult, even for me, to break down.

Still, I would cry every night in my bed–alone and scared with my thoughts. I feared for years that I would wake up the next day to learn that I was being given away again. My nights of insomnia, or escape into books until sleep overtook me, were my attempts at making each day last as long as it could since who knew what the next day would bring.

Add on to these overwhelming basic worries, teenage years of angst, a poetic’s soul of romanticism, and a dreamer’s wish for a utopian world. Tears were inevitable.

The tears flowed through university, into my twenties and first marriage. They streamed daily until I decided that I could take action to make them stop. I could change my life and take control of it. I did not have to be the victim of the whim of others or the object of disrespect. If I didn’t stop my tears, then no one else was going to. And so, I took one step at a time to turn off the tear ducts and switch on smiles instead.

Turns out it wasn’t hard to smile and it wasn’t a fake-it-’til-you-make-it kind of change.

These days, I save my tears for moments of unity, true expressions of love or attempts to reach beyond one’s natural inclination to show it, and appreciation of beautiful moments of humanity. Although it might seem as if I am unemotional or detached from my deeper feelings, I say that it’s that I’ve cried all the superficial tears. I’ve released all the ‘woe-is-me’ cries and consciously decided to have tears of joy and love. I am not without emotion or moments of weakness. I am, however, with control and discernment as to when a moment deserves the wetting of my eyes. 😛

Instead, my smiles are genuine and my youthfulness is in full force even as a 40-something-year-old!

~T 😀

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