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A Look at Lifebooks
Create a Biological Baby Book for Your Toddler
By Kelly Burgess
Kerri Charette's daughter, Joy, was 7 months old when she came to their family. In her first seven months, Joy was adopted by a family on the West Coast, removed from that family and placed in a foster home. While Charette of Ledyard, Conn., doesn't want to dwell on the circumstances of Joy's journey to her permanent home, she does want Joy to have a sense of her first few months of life. To accomplish that, Charette created a lifebook for Joy, covering her birth and her early life.
"This book was actually purchased by Joy's godparents and can be used for either domestic or international adoptions," says Charette. "We just took out the pages about international adoption, because they didn't apply to us."
Since Joy is only 2 years old, Charette also left out details of Joy's first adoptive family, because there were domestic abuse issues involved. Right now Joy is too young to understand that, but down the road, as Joy gets older and Charette decides what is appropriate, pages can be added to the lifebook to tell more of Joy's story.
According to Cindy Probst, a licensed clinical social working, giving children a backstory, what happened to them before they came to their family, is the most important function of the lifebook. Probst, who is the author of Adoption Lifebook: A Bridge to Your Child's Beginnings
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