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Unspoken

The Silent Truth Behind My Lifelong Trauma as a Forced Adoptee (Stolen Lives)

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“I was two when the woman I called Mummy told me, ‘You came out of another mummy’s tummy.’ I grew up thinking that my birth mother didn’t want me. I assumed there must’ve been something inherently wrong with me – why else would a mother give up her baby?”

In 1974, Liz Harvie – born Claire Elaine Watts – was given up for adoption by her birth mother Yvonne. Claire was just eight weeks old when her adoptive parents took her in – and renamed her Elizabeth.

Although brought up in a ‘perfect’ household, the emotional – and physical – trauma of being taken from her biological mother would never leave Liz. She constantly wondered: what does my real mum look like? Will she come back for me? Why did she abandon me? But whenever Liz voiced such questions, she invariably received the same response: “Your birth parents were not married. They couldn’t look after you.”

Years later, aged twenty-eight, Liz reconnected with her birth mother – and finally learned the shocking truth surrounding her adoption. Yvonne had not abandoned her daughter. A social worker had snatched her ten-day-old baby from her arms. “I didn’t even get a final cuddle. She just took her away from me,” says Yvonne.

Liz became one of 185,000 victims of forced adoption between 1949 and 1976 in England and Wales. As a young unmarried mum, Yvonne was deemed unfit as a parent by the government, churches, adoption agencies and her father – and made to give up her child against her will.

Although reunited, Liz and Yvonne are still struggling to cope with the agony resulting from their devastating separation. As Liz says, “We can’t just skip hand in hand into the sunset. The trauma of being a forced adoptee is lifelong.”

©2023 Liz Harvie and Eve Hatton (P)2023 Boldwood Books
Parenting & Families Relationships Adoption
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I loved this book. It's a beautifully written book about the lifelong impact of adoption. So much of it resonated. A must for anyone involved with adoption and actually for anyone wanting a good read.

A beautiful adoptee memoir

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This book was very informative in an easy to digest manner on the trauma caused by adoption. Very relatable story for adoptees.

excellent

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A lovely Read I enjoy this book sad time , happy time and joy and and good

Unspoken

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I felt sad she didn’t show how her non biological parents would have felt. She didn’t seem to value all they had done for her putting her through university. Obviously her brother didn’t feel like this about them as she even lost touch with him very sad indeed.

The bitterness she felt all from her side.

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