This is the story of a brother and sister separated for 35
years. A brother and sister who became family when the brother came to live
with the sister. They were 5 years old. They bonded, they loved each other,
they were each other’s best friends – and then the brother was taken away.
When I was a little girl, my parents decided to become
foster parents. I don’t know what their motivation was, but both of them came
from big families and they wanted to have lots of children. My “new” brother
came to live with us when we were both about 5. He didn’t speak much English.
He was born in Panama to an American mother. His mother brought him and his 5
(yes FIVE) siblings to America. Life became difficult for her, and the children
ended up in the foster care system – separated into 5 different foster homes.
My brother was small, tiny, very thin. Undernourished. With the brightest eyes,
the sweetest smile, and starving for attention and affection. He found a Mommy
& Daddy. He found a new brother and sister. He had his own bed, his own
toys, his own clothes. He had all the food he could eat … meatloaf, fried
chicken, pineapple upside down cake. Good, solid, homemade all-American food.
His new Mommy worked with him, learning English. She sang
the Connie Francis song “Never on Sunday” to him to help him learn the days of
the week. She took care of him when he was sick with a “rare tropical disease,”
that turned out to be the mumps. When his new Mommy found out that he had other
siblings in different foster homes, she worked to find them and help him spend
time with his other siblings.
The time came when his father’s family in Panama found the
children, all scattered in different foster homes. Arrangements were made to
re-unite the siblings and take them back to Panama to live with their father
and grandparents.
I didn’t understand how other people could take my brother away from me. I don’t
remember being at the airport for the reunion of the siblings, and his departure from our
family, but I’ve been told that I was distraught and hysterical. I couldn’t
understand how those people could take my
brother away. He was mine. He was my best friend and playmate. We shared a
bedroom. We shared the mumps, the measles and the chicken pox. We went to
church together. We went to school together. We did our homework together.
Life went on. My brother grew up in Panama with his
siblings, his father, his grandparents and extended family. I grew up with my
parents and two biological brothers. We kept in touch with my brother and his
family. He did visit us on occasion. We always had gifts and cards from his
grandparents. He spent some summers with
us.
When we were teenagers – 14 or 15 – my brother came to live
with us again. We went to junior high together. We were again each other’s best
friend. We had the same friends, rode our bikes, went to school together,
parties, dances … and again he was suddenly ripped from my life. My parents explained it to me as a “problem
with discipline.” He was “out of control.” They couldn’t “handle” him. I didn’t
understand. I didn’t see what they were talking about. I wondered if I became a
problem, if they would just get rid of me, too.
If we fast forward a few years, my brother showed up in our
lives again when we were young adults. He was living back in my hometown,
working with one of our cousins! It was magical. There he was. But the reunion
was short-lived. One day he just disappeared. POOF. He was gone. Nobody could
find him. He was just gone.
Life went on. I had a family of my own. Moved around.
Worked. All those things life brings us. Years passed. Decades passed. I never
forgot my brother. I wondered about him all the time. A framed picture of the
two of us sat on a table in my home, always. He was an integral part of my life
and my childhood memories. When my Mother became ill and was dying, she gave me
a box of letters he had written her over the years. There were photographs he
sent her of his life in Panama. Cards from his grandparents. She said to
me: “If anyone is going to find him, it
will be you.”
The advent of the internet gave me new tools to search for
my brother. Periodically I would search for his name. His grandfather’s name. I
never knew where to search. What city? What country? When I joined Facebook, I
would often search his name there.
Last November I typed in my brother’s name … and THERE HE
WAS. I recognized his face immediately. My heart skipped a beat, my hands got
sweaty & shaky. I sent him a private message and just said “I think you’re
my brother. I’ve been looking for you.”
Our first phone call lasted over an hour. I had to tell him
that Mom was gone – she had died 17 years earlier. We both needed time after
that call, and it was a month before we spoke again. Our conversations were
always good, and there was laughter and tears. He was able to talk to Dad, and
had a visit with him.
The time finally came that we were both ready to see each
other. My husband encouraged me to see my brother, spend time with him … it was
his encouragement that pushed me forward to set up a reunion with my brother.
The date was set. The right time came. We travelled to my brother’s home.
And.
There he was. The same slender boy. The same sparkling eyes.
The same shy smile.
Hugs. Smiles. Tears. Stories. Laughter. More tears. More
laughter. The first day was 6 hours of talking. The second day was 8 hours of talking. I gave him the box of letters
Mom had saved. An envelope of pictures with his name in her handwriting on the
outside. More photographs I found. An album of pictures of Mom and Dad for him to look through. Some of his stories filled in the gaps in my
memory. Some of my stories filled in the gaps in his memory. He learned that he
was never forgotten, and always loved. I learned that I was never forgotten,
and always loved.
My husband learned more about “who” I am through our shared
memories of our not-always-happy childhood. My brother’s wife learned more
about “who” my brother is … and more about his family. They sat with us and
held our hands, supported us as we shared painful memories and happy memories. I cannot express the gratitude I have to both of them for encouraging us, being there to share these moments with us, supporting both of us through this weekend ... When we went back to our hotel room at night, my husband would help me process
all my emotions – and would hold me while I cried at the painful ones.
Our journey has come full circle and brought us back
together, just as we should be.
Brother and Sister.
Wonderful...just wonderful..we should all be so blessed to experience an event in our lives such as this...
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