Maynard’s International Adoption

I started listening to Joyce Maynard’s most recent memoir The Best of Us in a lighthearted mood. She’s one of the most clueless people ever to hold a pen but she describes her exercises in superficiality in a sincere and charming manner. It’s all good fun, I thought.

By chapter 7, however, the book took a very dark turn. Maynard’s ex-husband remarried and had another child. She wanted to have a baby, too, to equal the score but she was past the child-bearing age. To address this problem, Maynard traveled to Ethiopia and purchased two girls who were supposed to help her pretend that she was “a 35-year-old single mother” instead of a very spoilt and careless woman in her late fifties.

But wait, it gets worse.

Within a few months, Maynard tired of the children and rehomed them with people she had casually met a single time in the past. One wouldn’t gift a pet cat to a complete stranger because the cat proved to be unsatisfactory.

International adoptions are a terrible thing. Rich, clueless people purchase children as accessories, separate them from their families, and often even rename them like they are not even human. Then, once they get bored, they can just palm the kids off on somebody else. It’s very similar to how you sell a used coffee-maker on Facebook Marketplace.

There’s no likelihood that children subjected to all this will integrate well and make a positive contribution to society. Maynard herself says it was deeply irresponsible to allow a 58-year-old single woman with an uncertain income to adopt two kids. She never knew and obviously didn’t try to learn their language. She had a very vague idea of what their actual age was. And the next family to which she outsourced these girls knew as little about them. This is breeding ground for all sorts of abuse and unsavory situations.

There are many abandoned children in the US. There’s no reason not to foster an American child and instead trudge to another continent and purchase a kid whom you don’t understand linguistically or culturally.

4 thoughts on “Maynard’s International Adoption

  1. ”There’s no reason not to foster an American child and instead trudge to another continent and purchase a kid whom you don’t understand linguistically or culturally.”

    I am quite sure the requirements for foster and adoptive parents in the US are more stringent than in some of the countries abroad. I bet she went to Ethiopia because she couldn’t do the same thing with an American child. Quite a few countries now forbid international adoption, which is a good thing in my opinion.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Exactly. She knew the entire time that at her age and with her living situation, two small children from an AIDS family in Africa should not be a possibility.

      I’m very upset by this and by the ease with which she throws around the word daughters. “At that moment, they stopped being my daughters and became somebody else’s.” These girls were always the daughters of their actual parents, not some clueless American consumers.

      Like

  2. “she describes her exercises in superficiality in a sincere and charming manner”

    God…. is this woman insufferable… I’ve never read anything she’s written and I hate her with the fury of a thousand suns going nova….

    I looked up a youtube video to listen to (how I get a sense of people) and lasted less than three minutes….

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to cliff arroyo Cancel reply