Category Archives: Add Water & Stir Podcast

Add Water & Stir 018: Raising #CarefreeBlackGirls

Thursday @9:30pm EDT!

Thursday @9:30pm EDT!

On this week’s episode of Add Water and Stir, Mimi and ABM chat about raising their daughters to be Carefree Black Girls.  Launched on a Tumblr site and expanded through articles and hashtags, the Carefree Black Girls movement is about celebrating and embracing our lives as Black girls and women.  The movement seeks to shine a bright light on our hair, our styles, our creativity and our diversity.

On Thursday, March 19 at 9:30pm EDT/8:30pm CDT, the Add Water hosts will discuss how best to embrace motherhood and the desire to raise their girls to be carefree!

Join Mimi and ABM on Google+ live on Thursday night or later on Itunes, Stitcher or YouTube!


Add Water and Stir- Motherhood is Great, But…

On the 16th episode of Mimi and ABM get real about being new parents!

Parents can really enjoy and adore their kids; however, the day to day juggle of parenting and mothering, specifically, can be challenging.  Finding the right place and ranking for kids in our lives is hard and can result in bad hair cuts, dye jobs and buying sneakers from the grocery store.  In this episode ABM and Mimi talk about their transitions to motherhood, what they miss most about being footloose and fancy free, and what they are doing to maintain their sense of self as individuals, moms and partners to the people in their lives.

As always, the ladies will dish during the Wine Down on the latest TV dramas, along with sharing shout outs and recommendations!

Got something you want to anonymously vent about your parenting transition?  Do it safely here [no worries it goes to ABM’s email] and we’ll shout it out during the show.  If you’re unashamed of your vents, drop a comment below, hit ABM up on Facebook or Twitter!

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Watch the show on Thursday, February 19th at 9:30pm EST/8:30pm CST on Google Hangouts!  Or you can catch the show later on YouTube, Itunes or Stitcher!

 


Add Water and Stir: Adoption Records & Documentation

The Podcast!

The Podcast!

On the next episode of Add Water and Stir, ABM and Mimi explore issues related to adoption records and documentation.  The amount of paper involved in adoption seems endless.  Once you plow through one stack of records or documents, another pile awaits.  If you thought that all of the paperwork drama ends after finalization, well, you might miss some important things about finalization documents and what they say and mean.

Recently the Add Water hosts noticed posts on Facebook support groups and blogs about finalization practices that produce documents that scrub the existence of the first family.  Adoptive parents and adoptees express a continuum of emotions about revised birth certificates that suggest the adoptive mother gave birth to the child.  Some aren’t bothered by it, while others are weirded out by having a document that says they gave birth when they did not or were birthed by folks that did not birth them at all! Post finalization documents can also be emotionally messy.

When coupled with various limitations on adoptees’ ability to obtain their own personal information, post-finalization, revisionist documentation can result in a mimicry of the lost histories of the African American experience.  Tracing lineage for African Americans can be particularly challenging given how we were counted as property rather than persons up until the end of the American Civil War.  Sounds heavy and messy right?  Yeah, it can be.

So join us tomorrow night on Google Hangouts to chat about documentation at 9pm EST/8pm CST!  You can also catch us after the show on our YouTube Page, Itunes and Stitcher!

Have some show thoughts?  Feel free to drop ABM a line at adoptiveblackmom@gmail.com or Tweet her at @adoptiveblkmom!


Add Water and Stir: The Lost Freestyle File!

On the fourteenth episode of Add Water and Stir, Mimi and ABM decide to throw caution to the wind and just freestyle an episode!  They give updates on the teen and the toddler and dish on some articles of interest about parenting from across the web.

The ladies chat about how parents relish the opportunity to engage in the most rote daily activities; who knew going to grab a coffee could spark such excitement. All the excitement is counterbalanced with the need for thoughtfulness in teaching kids about race and the implications of color-blindness.

As usual, ABM and Mimi dish during the  Wine Down about the Real Housewives of Atlanta and Married at First Sight; they also kick around catching up on new show, Empire.

Articles of Interest

10 Boring Things that Moms Find Awesome

Am I a Racist? I Don’t See Dead People, but I do See Color

Where you can find us:

YouTube

The Add Water and Stir Podcast Page

Itunes and Stitcher!

 

 


So What About Those Resolutions?? #AddWater

The latest episode of  Add Water and Stir is live!

On the first episode of 2015, Mimi and ABM kick off the new year by discussing New Year’s vision boards and parenting resolutions.  ABM shares a bit about her vision board process and how she encouraged a reluctant Hope to develop a vision for the next year.  Mimi share some of her resolutions and walked the ladies through a list of breakable resolutions in hopes of encouraging us to all have reasonable expectations of ourselves and our families. Mimi and ABM also review the major motion picture Annie and chat about what they’re watching on TV these days.  @mimicomplex @adoptiveblkmom #addwater

You can find us on YouTube, our podcast page, Itunes and Stitcher!


Add Water Returns: Parenting Resolutions

The Podcast!

ABM and Mimi are jumping into 2015 with a new Add Water and Stir podcast this Sunday, January 11th at 7pm EST/6pm CST.

Each year millions of people make New Year’s resolutions geared around self improvement. In the 2015 kick off podcast, Mimi and ABM will chat about their resolutions and visions for parenting for the year.  They will talk about what they’ve learned and what they might resolve to do differently.  They’ll explore how they will work towards being better parents, especially as new adoptive parents, in 2015.

Did you make parenting resolutions for 2015?  Did you think about it?  What do you think about it?  Sound off below and let the hosts of Add Water and Stir know what you’re planning for 2015!  Of course we’ll shout you out too!

As always Mimi and ABM will also chat about pop culture and bad (but so good) TV.

So join Add Water live on Sunday on Google+ or after the show on the podcast page, YouTube page, Itunes, or Stitcher!


Holiday Hiatus!

The ladies of Add Water and Stir (ABM and ComplicatedMelodi‘s Mimi) have decided to take some R&R with our families and take a short break from podcasting during the holidays!

Be sure to catch our next episode early in 2015 on January 8th!  Same time, same place on Google+.

Season’s Greetings!


Add Water & Stir: Taboos, Trials and Triumphs

On the 12th episode of Add Water and Stir, hosts ComplicatedMelodi and AdoptiveBlackMom explore the upsides and the downsides of parenting.  We’ll share some of the taboos that we’ve encountered related to parenting and, specifically, parenting adoptive kids.  We’ve bumped into all kinds of stuff out here in the blogosphere and in our various support networks related to adoption. We’ll also share about some of our top parenting trials and triumphs.

On Thursday night, December 4, at 9pm CST/10pm EST, ABM and Mimi will discuss what we’ve learned during our first year as adoptive parents.  As usual we’ll Wine Down with some pop culture and reality tv.

Join the dynamic duo on Thursday night on Google+.

Or catch Add Water and Stir later on YouTube, iTunes, Stitcher or the podcast page a few days later.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast and rate us!

Tell us your adoption and parenting taboos, trials and triumphs, and we’ll shout you out on the show!

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Thoughts on Becoming an Adoptee Ally

Parenting is scary. Adoptive parenting has actually scared the crap out of me on many a day during the last year. It’s been scary for me because as much as I wanted to be a mom, my worse fear was somehow screwing things up for Hope after she’d already been through so much stuff. It’s all a lot, or as Hope would say, “a lot, a lot!”

I found the adoption process to be stressful, really stressful thanks to lots of paperwork, home visits and feeling judged by so many people: social workers, adoption agency folks, family and friends who could not understand why I needed to parent the way I do, the way that Hope needs me to because I need to help her heal. It’s the heaviest responsibility I’ve ever taken on, and because I’m a ridiculous overachiever, the fear of failure when the stakes seem so high has worn on me a great deal in the last year. I started looking for a new fur baby recently and the rescue agency requirements to adopt a new dog have actually triggered emotional flashbacks of sorts of the adoption process [I’ll be writing about this soon]. It was hard. It is hard. And I fret that it will never get easier, even though it does and it has in many ways.

When I first saw the #FlipTheScript hashtag, I honestly felt some kind of way about it. I thought, “Gosh these adoptees are sooooo pissed!” “Do they hate their adoptive parents?” “Is Hope going to be this angry? Is she going to hate me?” “Holy, ish, this hurts. This scares me. “ “Gosh after everything, I’m going to be judged by adoptees I don’t know [insert pursed lips and a neck roll for good measure]?” Based on some of the posts and tweets, I was terrified that I was already screwing up and maybe effing Hope’s life up royally.

I didn’t get it. I wasn’t that adoptive parent who wished the hashtag and all the stuff behind it went away, as Tao writes about in “Dear Adoptive Parents who are tired of Adoptees speaking up…,” but I sure as heck didn’t know how to reconcile my fear of failure and possibly being rejected by Hope down the line and the need of the adoptee, and Hope specifically, to have a voice in her story. In those first few days, I couldn’t tell the difference between frustration and anger in the expressions. I could barely sort through my own emotions after reading the expressions.

I feel like I kind of beat myself up a bit trying to figure it out.

But, I kept reading tweets, kept trying to wrap my head around what they meant and what adoptees were trying to say to me as an individual, as a part of the adoption community, as a parent, and as an adoptive parent. I started to understand that the voice of the adoptee wasn’t necessarily angry, but frustrated by the reality that they lacked any sort of real power and privilege in the adoption narrative. The story about adoption is all about the parents and not the adoptees, that adoption is complicated, that they couldn’t always learn about themselves because of a whole host of reasons that sometimes don’t make sense under the light of scrutiny, that adoption is messy for adoptees too and that being adopted isn’t the end of a story, but the start of a new chapter fraught with its own plot twists.

I noticed that much of the discussion seemed to focus on infant or very young child adoption and I wondered where me and Hope fit into these new scripts. I wondered what Hope would say about her life experience if she was on Twitter (not for a few years yet!). I wondered about what flipped scripts must look like for foster kids, especially after she spent so much of her young years moving through the system.

I also noticed that very few adoptive parents were weighing in; maybe they were just being voyeurs and trying to figure out where or whether we adoptive parents fit into this new version of the story anywhere. Maybe they were scared of all of the expressed emotions that can be crammed into 140 characters.

So here I was a couple of weeks ago looking at these tweets, and the new, sensitive, scared of judgment, adoptive mom in me was taking all of this so personally.

And then I had a moment where I told myself to get over myself, at least for a spell and think about why these voices are ssential. And  what would I  and could I do to ensure that Hope could flip all the damn scripts she wants?

#Ibetyouthinkthissongisaboutyou

#itsnot

Gosh the thing about privilege is that you always, always, always think everything is about you! So on that rare occasion when someone else creates a narrative that’s not about you, you get all in your feelings and cry that your feelings are hurt or that they just don’t understand that you’re not the enemy or that if they just let you talk, you can explain everything and everything can then return to normal; normal being that you are once again in charge of the narrative.

I struggled with the notion of looking at these tweets through a power and privilege framework. It fit and I was soooo convicted.

Ouch.

The recognition that the framework fit also meant that I needed to hush up, have several seats and continue to listen and learn. I’d love to say I’m evolved enough to get it, but even now with Hope, I struggle to understand what the loss that surrounds adoption is like for the her; it’s hard to imagine. I see how hard it is for Hope. I see the toll that it takes on her. How could I not be an ally for adoptees when I have a beautiful, amazing, resilient kid who has a voice too?

My commitment to learning from the adoptee voice and amplifying it is purely motivated by my need to figure out how to be the best ally mom I can be to Hope. I want her to have every birthright of knowledge or stuff that she’s entitled to, and I am working hard to make sure she gets them. She is an older adoptee and she has lived a life of countless experiences, good and bad, before I ever entered the picture. I don’t replace all of that, nor does ny presence just erase all of that. This isn’t an add water and stir event. And it isn’t easy figuring out what she can handle, how to provide access with age appropriate boundaries, how to deal with the meltdowns that follow the availability of new information or artifacts provided by her family. I realize that perhaps I don’t have the same kind of power and privilege held by adoptive parents of very young children—Hope engages me at a whole different level and her family coming on the scene with all of their fears, hopes, dreams, memories, expectations have set me back on my heels trying figure out how to make all of this work. I lay awake at night trying to figure it out…often.

But that’s what it means for me to be a parent, to be this type of parent. I didn’t know I was signing up for some of this voice stuff; I suppose I was naïve about it. I didn’t realize that having a chat about sex with my daughter would be sooo much easier than telling her about my recent phone call with her aunt.  It is and it was.  There was no sobbing and dis-regulated behavior after the sex chat.

My Add Water co-host, Mimi (ComplicatedMelodi.com) recently wondered if we, as adoptive parents, were somehow co-opting the Flip The Script movement. I don’t think so. I think that it is important for adoptive parents to weigh in and to be seen as allies. We talk a lot about power and privilege in adoption, in parenting and as women of color on our show; talking about power and privilege in the adoption narrative seems to be a natural extension. And well, I don’t see a lot of parents talking about it in positive terms, and I think we should use our power and privilege to echo the voice of adoptees.  It’s important.

So, that’s how I got to this place of being an adoptee cheerleader. I’ve learned so much, and there’s still so much more to learn.

I’m going to shut up now and go read some tweets and learn some more stuff that I hope will help me be a better mom to my most favorite girl.


Narratives & Flipped Scripts: The Remix

Ahhhh, Thursday night’s Add Water and Stir podcast on Narratives and Flipped Scripts was so much fun that Mimi (ComplicatedMelodi.com) and ABM (AdoptiveBlackMom.com) are going to do it all over again this weekend!

Well, it was fun and the topic is so important that we want to talk about it again, but really, ABM was on the road and her internet connection was what we might call “raggedy.”

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The audio wasn’t the best, and we don’t want this topic to get shortchanged.

So, join Mimi and ABM for Add Water and Stir’s Narratives and Flipped Scripts: The Remix on Sunday, November 16th at 5pm CST/6pm EST on Google Hangouts! Look at that! Earlier time, great break for all that football watching, right? Right!

Tweet us, leave a comment below or drop us email using the comment box if you have some thoughts on our topic and we’ll be sure to mention them on the show.

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K E Garland

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