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Everyone belongs to a family. But what does that mean? The traditional family unit has changed a lot from the "Leave it to Beaver" days. But does that make it less of a family? Today's family can be any shape and size. It can include two parents, one parent, adopted children, stepchildren and foster children. Even TV shows like "Dawson's Creek" mimic society by showing how different families can exist in one small town.
In just an hour, you can get to know a traditional family that has gone through a divorce, a grandmother raising her grandchild, a single mom raising her younger sister and a baby, and a traditional family that has been split apart by the death of a son. And though life doesn't always reflect what we see on television, it's not too far from reality. Virginia Boyles, director of MAPS and My Choice program, both in Portland, deals with adoption on a regular basis, not only because it is her job but because she has two adopted children of her own.
After biological attempts to have children failed, she and her husband, Kevin Chutz, decided to adopt. For Boyles, it didn't matter if the children she raised were her biological children. She just wanted to be a parent. They adopted their first child, Jared, in , through the state Department of Human Services, where she worked at the time.
In , they adopted Briana. In both cases the process took about a year. The adoption process for Jared was a little different than it was for Briana. Jared has not met his birth mother, but Briana has. That's because Jared's adoption was a closed adoption, according to Boyles. They do write letters back and forth with his birth mother, and also with his grandmother too, but have never met. Briana's adoption was open, meaning that the birth mother wanted a lot of information about them, and they currently see her about two times a year.