Exploring the Messy, Imperfect Joy of Queer Foster-to-Adopt Parenting

We were supposed to be a one night stand. It was snowing. Kristan was wearing these big pearl earrings and It threw me off. Was she even a little bit queer? I wasn’t sure. Eventually I just went for it, figuring we’d probably never see each other again because she was living in New Jersey and I in Mexico. Six years later, we’re married and raising a kid. Neither of us felt strongly about having a biological connection to our child and ended up creating the docuseries The F Word about our experience adopting through the foster care system. Don’t get me wrong, a little mini Kristan would be the absolute cutest, but that just wasn’t a priority for us. When we started on this adoption journey we didn’t see it reflected anywhere, and we would have taken comfort in hearing other people’s stories, especially other queer people’s. We decided to turn the camera on ourselves in the hopes of filling that void.

We signed up to work with an agency that works with foster youth, foster parents and foster parents hoping to adopt. We enrolled in the required P.R.I.D.E. classes (which have nothing to do with LGBTQ issues… I guess they missed the memo that pride belongs to queers). The teaching style was rote and when students answered “correctly” they got a sticker. By the end Kristan had amassed a huge collection of Hello Kitty stickers and my folder was bare, but they passed me anyway. Once we graduated we started in on the stacks and stacks of paperwork: the criminal background checks, the CPR and First Aid training, and probably-for-the-first-time-ever-bought-ourselves renter’s insurance (only because it’s required). We did our best to childproof our place with the help of two small inspectors (who you’ll meet in the series), and settled in to answer awkward personal questions about our lifestyle, our relationship, our family history and our coming out story. (Are straight couples ever asked by the social workers when they knew they were straight?)

Once the home study was done, the real waiting period began. We could go months without hearing anything; we pictured our home study covered in dust in a locked filing cabinet in some abandoned warehouse.

When we finally got the call about J, we thought it was going to be about two siblings we had just asked our social worker about. After waiting for over a year we had just expanded our search to include siblings and children over the age of 4, which seems foolish if you’ve seen the size of the apartment we live in. Our hearts sank when she told us the siblings had been matched with another family. And then she told us there was another child — a baby — at a nearby hospital. Were we interested? We said yes even though we had a thousand questions and just as many concerns (why was he in the hospital? Where were his birth parents? Who was holding him when he cried?).

That baby turned out to be our son.

Throughout the process of making this docu-series we tried to be as honest as possible; it made us feel vulnerable, but the outpouring of support we’ve received from nice people on the internet has been truly overwhelming. Still, we really just represent one voice in the system — the prospective adoptive parent’s voice — and frankly this is the voice that has held the most power historically, and is the voice that’s framed the adoption narrative for so long. On top of that we’re white, as are many (but definitely not all) fost-adopt parents, and our white privilege is part of what enables us to make this creative work in the first place.

There aren’t a lot of platforms for the lesser-heard voices that truly deserve to be amplified — such as foster parents who work to help bio parents reunify with their kids, or who take teens in just to help them prepare for college. Or bio/first/birth parents themselves who have been able to reunify or who have healthy, open adoption arrangements with their child’s adoptive family. We’ve also met social entrepreneurs from Massachusetts to Silicon Valley working to re-envision foster care as we know it so that kids aren’t lost to the system. We want to make space for these narratives and more in the next season of The F Word, and most importantly we’ll be speaking with adoptees and former foster youth themselves. Those are the voices we really need to hear from if we’re going to repair this broken system.

People often want the picture of adoption to be a fairy tale, and the truth is it’s messy. We are very much in the “honeymoon period” with our sweet kid, but we know that adoption stories are rooted in grief and loss, and that should be acknowledged. It does a disservice to everyone when we ignore that. But that’s no reason not to adopt, because it also happens to be profoundly beautiful, deeply meaningful and ultimately, transformative for everyone involved. We’ve found that the foster care system can be incredibly divisive, and the more we open up spaces to hear from voices that are too often silenced (youth who’ve aged out, parents who’ve reunified), the more compassion and empathy we’ll all have for everyone involved. I think adoptive parents need these conversations a lot more than we need strangers telling us we’re heroic. That savior rhetoric can be really damaging to adopted youth, and frankly, it’s just untrue. We are people who want to raise children. People have been doing this since the dawn of time and there’s nothing heroic about it.

As for queers adopting from care, when we were locking picture on the series, South Dakota had just passed a “religious liberty” law (Senate Bill 149) allowing adoption agencies to discriminate against same-sex couples trying to adopt from foster care. Since then it’s ballooned to Alabama, Texas, North Dakota, Virginia, and Mississippi. It was tempting for us to adopt the thinking that “Oh this would never touch California, we live in a gay paradise,” but Prop 8 happened not too long ago; we didn’t think we’d have a racist reality tv star for a president either. Progress can reverse in the blink of an eye, as we’re seeing every day in Trump’s America.

OK, I know what you’re thinking. None of this sounds funny or entertaining. But just trust me, we can do it.


The F Word Season 1 revealed the story of one queer couple adopting from foster care in Oakland, CA. Season 2 will continue our story while amplifying other voices in the foster care world: birth/first families, foster youth, adoptees and social entrepreneurs working to make things better.

If you want to help us make Season Two, we’re crowdfunding on Seed & Spark for the entire month of November, which is Adoption Awareness Month. Please check out our campaign!

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

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Nicole

Nicole Opper is the Emmy®-nominated filmmaker of Off and Running (POV, 2010) and Visitor’s Day. Their work has screened at Tribeca Film Festival, AFI Docs, Guadalajara, Frameline, Outfest and 70 other festivals internationally, and has been supported by ITVS, Chicken & Egg Pictures, NYSCA, Black Public Media and a Fulbright Fellowship. They were one of Filmmaker Magazine’s annual “25 New Faces of Independent Film”. The F Word is a featured story of Indie Lens Storycast, a new channel created by ITVS and PBS Digital Studios. Social media handles: @thefwordseries @nicoleopper

Nicole has written 1 article for us.

22 Comments

  1. Funny how the universe works, my wife & I just went to an orientation for a local Foster/Adoption agency last night. Can’t wait to share this with her & finish watching!

  2. Oh my goodness! I am so excited for this! My wife and I have been foster parents for 8 months now. I’ve shared some of this on Autostraddle in various posts. We live in the midwest. My wife is trans* and we are definitely queer. The foster care training and licensing is very personal and invasive. But we did get licensed.

    We were told about our first placement as we were getting ready to sign the agreement to become foster parents. She came to our house several days later. We were able to support her reunification with her bio mom and from what I’ve heard are doing well. We are working on getting our second placement back with her bio mom and family. There was also a sweet baby who was placed with us for 10 hours before going to his grandmom.

    I have so many feelings about foster parenting!

    • Our little one gets visits with her bio family. Their transportation is unreliable so I’ve been trying to help out as much as possible transporting for visits, including picking up the mom from where she is staying and driving an extra hour + to get her home so she can spend time with her kid.

      On one drive she asked me if I watch the 700 Club and I replied that we don’t have TV. She said they were talking about how gays and lesbians could not foster or adopt at the time in Texas. She added that she was glad that in our state gays are allowed to foster so that way her little one could be placed with us.

      Our little one should be back with her family, and the whole situation is odd to say the least, but it was so sweet.

  3. I read this article, then binge-watched all 6 episodes. You guys are the actual sweetest. Wishing nothing but wonderful-ness coming your way ❤️

  4. I am so glad to see this covered! It is such an important thing, and as a parent I️ am just really happy to see other queer folks raising kids. I am in a hetero marriage and my sexuality and past partners came up in our home study. It was through a catholic agency (long story, it was the only agency that would work for us) and they didn’t blink an eye. So that was good.

    Also of note- I️ am in a midwestern county that I️ would guess is 35% Black? The major city that’s in the county is 50% but I’m not sure what the statistics are for the county (and placement is by county here). My class was majority Black, and the one family I know who did foster to adopt and made it to adoption was a mixed race lesbian couple. I️ don’t know what the overall statistics are but my anecdata says that race might look different based on location.

    Most importantly, LOOK AT YOUR UTTERLY ADORABLE CHUNKER HE’S SO STINKING PRECIOUS

  5. just cried my way through the end of the first episode! you guys! gahhhhhhhhhhhh!! i can’t wait to watch more. you’re such wonderful parents already! also – the kiddos who came to check out your child proofing scenario? i LOLed.

    as a queer human who wants to have a kiddo in the near future, i really appreciate any and all info about the ways in which we can parents successfully. thank you for putting this out into the world, and mazel tov on the new addition to your family <3

  6. I just watched all of the first season of The F Word – well done! This was such a lovely series to watch, and it’s so wonderful of you both to let the world experience this process with you, both the ups and the downs. I’m not even close to being in a place to consider being a parent yet, but when I am, fostering and adoption is definitely something I’d like to look into more. I have no idea what the process is like in Ontario, where I live.

    I hope you and your foster child are all doing well, and I look forward to the second season of The F Word – please keep us all at Autostraddle updated!

  7. It’s not where you come from, It’s where you belong.
    Nothin’ I would trade. I wouldn’t have it any other way.
    You’ re surrounded By love and you’re wanted.
    So never feel alone.
    You are home with me, Right where you belong

  8. Also a newish foster-to-adopt parent in the east bay. My wife and I are 6 months into fostering a 7 y/o boy. We are now starting adoption paperwork. So much of the F-word resonated with us!

    • Hi Yanet, how is it going? We have had two four year old girls so far, and it is so hard when they get sad and angry. How is your kiddo? Best wishes to you and yours!

  9. Thank you for sharing your story and holding the door open for folx whose stories have been ignored!

    PS THE BABE. THE CUTEST.

  10. Guys that picture of the baby in a hat and sunglasses makes me want a baby and a wife YESTERDAY.

    Someone please create a baby rental service. Seems very safe and like nothing would go wrong.

  11. it’s so great that you guys are using the show as a way to talk about a variety of stories in the foster care system. It’s good to see a self awareness about centering other stories. I work sometimes with a group home for teenage girls and some of them just break my heart. Even though they are the hardest cases, they still need someone to nurture them. I know that there is the right support system out there for so many of these kids with more open hearts. Fostering is a unique challenge. Wishing you the best of luck!

  12. I watched all of season 1 last night. We are also considering fostering but don’t know anyone who has done it. This was so real!

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