There are questions, I've found, that I can reliably anticipate in certain interactions: "Would you like anything to drink besides water?" "Receipt with you or in the bag?" "Have you ever tried to find your birthparents?"
That third one is, of course, not mundane like the others. It feels sensitive. It is weighty. Thus the asker, though genuinely curious, often presents it with a worried look.
If only he or she could know that there's no need to be ginger about it. I'm never bothered by the question, and frequently I've invited it anyway by volunteering that I was adopted. I've often wondered why I do so. I don't bring it up unless it's germane, but I can't help feeling that it's also part of a very human compulsion to express an identity, to say this is something about me that stands out.
The answer, by the way, is a simple no. I haven't tried to find my biological parents. Which generally prompts a follow-up along these lines, more emboldened: "Aren't you curious?"
For many years, that answer also was no. It began to change a bit about the time I turned 40. Many hesitations remain. But I grew interested enough to discover that it wasn't going to be easy to satisfy my curiosity on my terms.
What terms? At the risk of sounding creepy, I want to lurk first. If there's to be a new course to my life, I want some control over its trajectory. I don't mean stalking; I'd just like to gather whatever basic information I can without tipping my hand. I'd want to know enough to know that I was serious about going through with it. I can only imagine that the same might be true of biological parents who are wondering about the children they gave up for adoption.
Therein, a conundrum. In Minnesota, adoptees do not have access to their original birth certificates, but that's precisely the document that could be a starting point for an investigation. Although it's possible to request it, or to work in a more general way with the agency that handled the adoption, these are involved steps that trigger third-party contacts with the biological parents, perhaps raising expectations that an adoptee is not ready to fulfill.
Year after year, there are bills before the Legislature that would make the original birth certificates available, as several other states have done. So year after year, I've thought about writing about the topic for these pages. I've always held off, partly because the proposals rarely find traction and partly because of what a public divulgence might set in motion. Still, I'd like to balance what appears to me to be a predominant assumption: that it is natural, even obvious, to want to sleuth out one's past — all the way to the point of arranging a reunion. Indeed, that may be true for a fair number of adoptees. But not for all.