Korean Adoptee – Denmark
This site isn’t a blog, but it is a website set up by a
Korean adoptee from Denmark. I wish that there was more of a blog attached to it because I think I would find her ideas fascinating. This site takes you through parts of her life and introduces her family. It gives you a glimpse at her reunion with her Korean family and how she has embraced Korean culture.
Third Mom
I don’t even have to look at
Third Mom’s site because I knows there’s a good one right at the top. I wrote about her most recent post
yesterday.
Outsiders
Over on the
Viet Nam Adoption Blog, there is a post about Rebecca’s worries for her daughter. I think that this is one of those things that everyone worries about when our children come from other countries.
SPONSOR
Julia’s Jam
Over on
Julia’s Jam there is a post that made me think. It’s a short post, but it’s powerful in its message. One of the big problem with Korean adoption is that when it is not open (or there is no possibility of being open), it is often the adoptee that suffers. In this case, it is a physical suffering as much as a mental suffering.
Experts
This is a post on my
personal blog that I wrote last month. I was a little frustrated the day I wrote it, so I think some of what I said came out a little more sharply than I planned. My frustration had stemmed from a comment that a parent made about my blog making her feel that everything would be fine with her child. My goal has always been to show that there is a positive side to Korean adoption, but it is not my goal to overshadow the other side.