well put Frank, thank you. I put openly what we did when faced with the situation, and I have been put down or attacked. I dind't attack others choices that they made , only explained why I made the choices we did.
This is turing into adoption vs anti adoption thread rather than what did YOU DO.
Who attacked you or put you down? All I have read here (before your post) is people sharing their opinions that biology doesn't matter. Why do you assume they are addressing you and your choices? If anything, the poster that seems to be turning this into adoption vs anti-adoption is you.
Thank you very much for this post; now that you have brought this point up I will as well, I don't think most people think of adoption as a first choice though I know there were exceptions. I think it's incredibly unfair to a child to adopt only after learning you can't achieve a baby by your first choice method, why should this child know they were choice B?
We originally went about bringing children into the family the old fashioned way, not because it was our "first choice", but because it was the easiest, cheapest and most common way to do it. Honestly, we made no "choice" about it, we just moved forward with what most people do. It worked the first time, not the second, so we adopted our second child. Sure, it was the second choice method, but that's all it was, a method, the choice part has nothing to do with the child himself. It's no different than going through infertility procedures, IMO. I doubt IVF would be anyone's first choice method of bringing a child into the family, either, but no one ever seems to put it down as being "second choice" (not talking about ethical issues, creating life, just talking about the "choice"). This leads me to believe that your concern is more that the child himself is "second choice", not the method of bringing him into the family. Most adoptive parents do not feel this way. And for anyone who does think less of a child that doesn't share his DNA, please, please, don't adopt. It would be so unfair to the child.
I grew up in NY and went to college in Massachusetts, I had many good friends and a couple of girlfriends that were adopted. One of the common issues in all that were adopted after fertility was having some issue or guilt that they weren't the parents first choice; those were there thoughts not mine, and from an adopted childs pov very understandable. The other thing that was common was that most wanted to seek out their biological parents at some point to at least meet them or find out why the parent gave them up.
Wow. That's terrible. I know many adopted individuals IRL as well, and none of them felt they weren't their parents first choice. That said, I do remember one adopted adult on an adoption board telling us her mom had actually told her "you never love an adopted child the way you do your own."

While I and every adoptive parent I know disagree completely, I don't deny that there are some out there who should have never passed the homestudy and I'm sorry for their kids who have to hear crap like that. In fact, many adoptive parents use the term "chosen" for their adopted child, to let them know just how wanted they really are. I personally don't like the term for other reasons, but in reality, adoptions don't happen by accident.
As for seeking out biological parents, no biggie. Like you said, biology is important to many people. Secure adoptive parents know that, and will support their kids when they search.
When DH and I looked it over, we both realized that for us, "parenting" was MILES AND MILES ahead of anything else on that list, including passing on our genes or having a child that was a combo of us. For us, loving, raising, caring for a child was the be all and end all.
If I could go back in time and carry even one of those babies to term, I would not do it. Because if I did that, I would not have my DD. She is the child we were meant to have.
The
method of adoption may be second choice for some, because it is (IMHO) even more of a PITA than IVF, and that is really saying something. But the child is not.
And for many of our children, it is not so much that their birthmothers did not want them, it is more a matter of them not being able to support them. It's just a fact. It has little to do with the child and everything to do with economics. We never say one negative word about DD's birthmother. I give her a lot of credit for giving birth to what may have been the healthiest child ever born in Russia.

With our system of government assistance, we cannot imagine what life is like for people in countries with no such system in place. Wanting your child to have two parents who can feed, clothe, support and educate the child, as well as provide medical care and a decent home to live in is indeed thinking of your child and putting them ahead of yourself. Keeping a child when you have no way to feed it, buy even the most basic of medicines, provide clothes or even have a home/apartment to sleep in on a regular basis........How is that selfless? How is that putting the baby first?

Because I assure, in many countries, love is NOT enough by a long shot.
Emom, I agree with everything you've posted here, except one.

I know we've discussed this before, but for us, adoption seemed way, way, easier and cheaper than fertility procedures. (of course, I would have first needed surgery to remove scar tissue, then wait 6 months to heal, then try IVF with an egg donor, so I may have had more issues than some.) Our adoption was smooth sailing, we had our baby in our arms in less time than we would have even if the first egg donor cycle had worked, and it was probably the best choice we've ever made.