I’ve been reading blogs by Christian folks who saved an orphan and plan to do it again. Apparently
using the words “Christian” and “Orphan” somehow makes this adoption
business holy. “Doing God’s work,” some potential adoptive parents
(PAPS) are blogging... how they are so compassionate and defend it’s the
Christian thing that they adopted babies - because these babies were orphans and in need and “born in another womb” decreed by God to be adopted by them.
Really. Really?
Orphans in this day and age?
A
few PAPS were upset that no one understands how difficult it is for
them as married couples to cope with infertility... how no one feels sorry
for them. So that makes it perfectly alright for them to go out and buy adopt that baby. (Yup, it’s always a baby they want. They get angry if you argue with them.)
So adopting makes them feel
good. It doesn’t really matter a woman will have to sacrifice her baby
for them. (Some birthmothers may also feel euphoric they gave a couple a
precious baby. Maybe a few did it for cash.) It’s
a mind bender that it doesn’t enter their minds that the baby hurts and
is devastated losing their mother (or father) and this wound lasts a
lifetime…
There
are thousands upon thousands of PAPS who want only a baby and defend
their reasons why. Adoption agencies are more than happy to make their
dreams come true.
I have a new theory. It’s a crazy world out there. People want to feel better so they’ll rescue someone, in this case a baby, and this “giving” back will create euphoria in their brain chemistry. I think the adoption industry has manipulated and used “adopting babies” as the wonder drug that clouds the mind from adoption reality. (They also steer clear of the adoptee perspective or Nancy Verrier’s Primal Wound in their adoption propaganda.)
So these righteous saviors of babies are on a mission to make themselves feel better. Adopting makes them high.
Read this:
Norm at normblog quotes a piece in the New York Sun about giving:
…the surprising conclusion is that giving affects
our brain chemistry. For example, people who give often report feelings
of euphoria, which psychologists have referred to as the "Helper's
High." They believe that charitable activity induces endorphins that
produce a very mild version of the sensations people get from drugs like
morphine and heroin.
Norm
offers a thought experiment: if a pill reproduced exactly the same
brain effects, wouldn't people still give? I agree this suggests there's
more to it.
Adding to that, and reflecting on my own thought processes related to giving, I think this is a good case illustrating the interactions between levels of causes in human behavior. Proximately, I often go through with a charitable act despite fretting that it will be boring, too much trouble, too costly, or otherwise unpleasant. But upon doing it, or soon afterwards, I feel a sort of euphoria I would associate with the endorphin effect described in the NY Sun article.
I will suppose that the euphoria and the associated brain chemistry register somehow in my mind -- in behaviorist terms, an association is reinforced between the feeling and the act of giving -- and this association comes into play the next time a choice for giving arises. But even if so, the association is barely liminal, and I don't reflect along the lines of 'I'll get a nice endorphin rush if I go through with this.' Rather, I think along the lines of 'good people do things like this, and I want to be a good person despite the short-term fuss I will have to endure' -- and I think the euphoric brain chemistry is a bonus (and should be seen as a second-order cause) that keeps acts of giving on the list of thinkable, possible alternatives. The next time I am faced with a choice to give or not to, I will have inarticulate impulses pushing for it, and these impulses will be rooted in brain chemistry.
Adding to that, and reflecting on my own thought processes related to giving, I think this is a good case illustrating the interactions between levels of causes in human behavior. Proximately, I often go through with a charitable act despite fretting that it will be boring, too much trouble, too costly, or otherwise unpleasant. But upon doing it, or soon afterwards, I feel a sort of euphoria I would associate with the endorphin effect described in the NY Sun article.
I will suppose that the euphoria and the associated brain chemistry register somehow in my mind -- in behaviorist terms, an association is reinforced between the feeling and the act of giving -- and this association comes into play the next time a choice for giving arises. But even if so, the association is barely liminal, and I don't reflect along the lines of 'I'll get a nice endorphin rush if I go through with this.' Rather, I think along the lines of 'good people do things like this, and I want to be a good person despite the short-term fuss I will have to endure' -- and I think the euphoric brain chemistry is a bonus (and should be seen as a second-order cause) that keeps acts of giving on the list of thinkable, possible alternatives. The next time I am faced with a choice to give or not to, I will have inarticulate impulses pushing for it, and these impulses will be rooted in brain chemistry.
I do expect some people will disagree so please leave a comment... (Unless you are HIGH!) Trace
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