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How this free online test helped my marriage

January 18, 2021 by Christina

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Something that I recently did has helped my marriage in BIG ways. Disclaimer: My husband and I are not having marital troubles nor are we a couple that disagrees very often. We were getting on just fine. Fine being the troublesome word there. Who wants to get on just fine when you can be great?

Our struggles with pregnancy loss

A little backstory, about a month ago we had our fourth miscarriage. Things felt a little rocky on my end. I was feeling a little out of control and found myself getting frustrated with little things around the house and in our relationship.

I was and have been recently in a very vulnerable state. The 3 miscarriages in the past year had thrown my hormones on a roller coaster ride. I was feeling unseen and misunderstood in my marriage. I can’t blame my husband for all of it. As it turns out he was “giving me space” which I was interpreting as uncaring and oblivious. The house was feeling constantly cluttered and in disarray despite my continuous tidying and cleaning efforts.

It was driving me nuts.

Our Differences were driving our daily interactions…

I am the type of person that thrives when there is outer order. So the saying “outer order, inner calm” really embodies how I feel in any given situation. That being said my husband is the organized chaos type. He couldn’t care less about how things look or appear as long as its functional and/or not inhibiting the task at hand. So he does not see clutter the same way that I do. It literally does not register with him.

That’s just one example of how different we are as individuals. The personalities and traits that make us who we are differ so greatly. Sometimes the action, or inaction, gets interpreted as something completely different than its original intention.

I feel like my husband and I were having the same conversations over and over again. We were trying to communicate but the messages were getting garbled and tensions were rising.

One evening we were talking about personality traits and how they differ so much person to person. We had both taken the Myers Briggs assessment for employers or jobs in the past. We realized neither of us know our enneagram type. So we promptly looked up a free assessment online and found one on truity.com.

What followed was exactly what we needed but didn’t know we had needed.

After taking the test the lines of communication opened before us. I think that just having an assessment describe our strengths and weaknesses was easier to process in a less judged way vs when a person describes your traits (good and bad) to you.

My results as a Korean Adoptee

My results matched type 4 (98%) and type 1 (95%).

FOUR | 98% MATCH

Fours are defined by their belief that they are different from other people, and by their feelings of envy for what others have. Fours have the sense that something is missing from their lives, and they worry that they will never have the happiness that other people experience. At their core, Fours passionately long for the type of deep connection that will make them feel whole and accepted.

ONE | 95% MATCH

Ones are defined by their belief that everything must be in order, and by their feeling that they must always be “right.” They show great commitment and determination to improve conditions that they find need improvement, and they are forward in encouraging others to improve their performance, too.

I feel my assessment results are very accurate. My husband matched to type 9.

NINE | 55% MATCH

Nines are defined by a desire to live in peaceful harmony with their environment. They want a sense of balance and calm, and aspire to a kind of homeostasis where nothing disturbs their inner peace. They tend to be easygoing and accepting of what is happening around them, but can become resistant and willfully oblivious when something in the environment threatens to throw them off balance.

Once our types were revealed to us by the test we really got to talking about how these characteristics drive our lives. Since that discussion we developed an actionable plan to address our problem areas.

Let’s dig a little deeper into type 4 because I’m curious if other adoptees out there can relate to this type more than others.

Adoptee connections to Type 4

Things that stuck out to me:

  1. Fours are defined by their belief that they are different from other people.
  2. They sense that something is missing from their lives
  3. Fours feel they are fundamentally flawed and will never be able to be truly understood by other people.
  4. At the same time, they passionately long for the type of deep connection that will make them feel whole and accepted. Many Fours romanticize and idealize their relationships, hoping that each new connection will be the one that finally makes them feel understood and appreciated.
  5. They see themselves as special and want to express their individualism. Being different from other people is a double-edged sword for Fours: both a badge of honor, as well as a source of suffering.
  6. Core Belief “I am different and misunderstood.”
  7. In childhood, most Fours experienced a sense of loss or abandonment…early sense of something missing.
  8. In relation to their families, Fours often feel like the black sheep or the outsider. They may not identify as being much like either parent, and tend to feel that the people closest to them don’t understand them very well at all.

Everyone should try this

As I said in the beginning my partner and I were not fighting terribly nor were we under true marital stress. We were going through a tough time and were not communicating effectively.

Taking this assessment I believe really helped our marriage get out of a rut. As simple and silly as it might seem to some it helped us. If nothing else it was just a fun activity to do together over a few glasses of wine.

If you want to understand yourself and how you operate then I recommend everyone take the enneagram assessment. Do it with a partner. Do it by yourself. It’s free and accessible and it helped us improve our communication.

Thanks for reading.

-Christina

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: adoptee voice, enneagram, Korean Adoptee, Korean adoptee voice, Korean Adoption, marriage

Grief as an Adoptee

January 11, 2021 by Christina

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Pregnancy is a beautiful and truly unique experience. There is nothing else like it. I have been blessed with my two beautiful children both of whom had normal pregnancies and complication-free deliveries. On the flip side of that I have now experienced four miscarriages at varying stages of development. The grief process is a complex one and I think one that’s further complicated as an adoptee.

Let’s back up. My first pregnancy was normal and effortless in every way. From conception to delivery everything went as planned and was dare I say…easy? I realize how that sounds and my current self hates my younger self a little for having thought that about pregnancy even for a moment. I am now getting a taste of how not easy it can be in so many ways.

Our daughter was born in spring of 2015 and life felt so sweet. When my daughter was about 18 months old I found out I was pregnant again. I miscarried at 7 weeks.

We conceived again when she was about 2.5 years and had our second successful pregnancy. Our baby boy was born in summer of 2018! There is nothing like the newborn stage. The wonder and excitement of a new family member is such a special time.

During our son’s first year of life my husband and I had lots of conversations about having a third child and what that meant on every level. Ultimately, we agreed that a bigger family was something we both wanted.

We conceived in Fall of 2019 and miscarried at about 8 weeks.

We conceived in June of 2020 and miscarried at about 8 weeks.

We conceived this last time in September 2020 and miscarried at the end of my 1st trimester.

The Progression of Pregnancy Loss

I think pregnancy loss has been a progression for me. The first miscarriage happened between my two children’s births. We were shocked. After everything had gone so beautifully with our daughter we almost felt invincible like all of the pregnancy horrors and infertility nightmares you hear about are someone else’s story not yours.

So that first miscarriage rocked us a bit. We were devastated but hopeful that it was a fluke and the likelihood of it happening again seemed low. And then we had our second (and last) successful pregnancy.

Since our son was born the middle of 2018 I have had 3 consecutive miscarriages. Pregnancy has gone from this magical experience to one filled with fear and skepticism.

This last pregnancy I was so skeptical and full of disbelief that it would be okay. And low and behold I was right to be afraid. Now it is to a point where I wonder if my own stress and anxiety surrounding pregnancy is what’s hurting the pregnancies.

How this 4th miscarriage was different from the others

The grieving process this last time was the worst in many ways.

  1. I was the furthest along nearing the end of my 1st trimester.
  2. Historically, if I made it past 8 weeks in a pregnancy the fetus was healthy
  3. Given the last point my hopes were sky high
  4. I had a healthy, normal ultrasound at 6.5 weeks (I don’t recommend confirming by ultrasound if you have a history like mine)
  5. I had the misfortune of finding out my baby had passed away and seeing his/her still body via ultrasound
  6. Here is the cake topper… The end of our first trimester landed the middle of December and we had already ordered Christmas cards announcing the pregnancy since the timing would have been right to share with friends and family.

Adoptee complications

This grieving process was so much harder than for my other miscarriages for all of the reasons listed above. But this was also the first time that my adoptee baggage peeked its ugly head out.

Depending on who you are and what your story is will determine how this whole post will come off.

If you are someone who has never experienced loss or pregnancy loss or infertility then you may feel sorry for me for going through something like this multiple times…

If you are someone who has struggled with infertility and/or recurrent miscarriages like me but who have living children then you can probably relate and commiserate with me on some level…

If you are someone who has struggled with infertility and/or recurrent miscarriages but who do not have living children then you probably think I am ridiculous for writing this and should just be grateful for all that I have.

And to this I will say you are right.

I do feel a little ridiculous writing this but please know that I am so aware of my good fortune and do not take a single moment for granted. My children are my everything. Having grown up with no biological family the bonds and connections I have with them is indescribable. They are my flesh and blood and that saying never meant anything to me until I met my daughter 5 years ago and then my son 3 years later.

My adoptee complications do not end with the longing for more biological connections. There is also my Mom and my birth mother who play a part in my grief process this time around.

My Mom

I am 1 of 4 adopted children. My parents could not have biological children. My mom is dying of Alzheimer’s disease. She is with us most days but gone most nights to another time in another place in her past in her mind.

I am grieving for my Mom. I am grieving for the baby that I will never meet. I am grieving for my Mom who never got to experience pregnancy. Seeing her baby on an ultrasound. Hearing the heartbeat. Feeling those first kicks. Labor. Delivery. Breastfeeding. All. Of. It.

My Birth Mother

My birth mother had 3 living children when she conceived me. I do not know the intimate details of that decision making process nor do I want to know. One thing that I do know is the decision to carry a child to term is always a sacrifice. It is hard work for your body to create and deliver life.

I do not know my birth mother well at all. We have only spent maybe 10 hours total in each others company. In that short time I am certain of a few things. She is strong and capable and I am sure she loved the child she gave up over 30 years ago. I say that she loved the child she gave up and not that she loved me because I think there is a distinction there (but that’s a discussion for another day.)

I am grieving for my birth mother and the impossible decision she had to make all of those years ago. Now that I am a mother myself I can for the first time begin to understand the sacrifice that went into that decision. I have never been in a position where I had to choose between my unborn child and caring for my existing children and that is what she was faced with. Her strength is beyond my own.

In summary

The universe has a cruel way of distributing the gifts it seems. These two women and myself represent three different, heartbreaking scenarios. My Mom: Unable to conceive but had the financial and material means in life to support children. My Birth mother: Had the gift of fertility but limited financial and material means. Me: Blessed with two beautiful children, have financial stability but also experienced true loss and heartache.

There are no good answers for any of this. The grief process is always complicated but even more so if you’re an adoptee with identity struggles carrying unresolved baggage from the past. I hope to shed some of these bags as I continue my adoptee journey. It may never be finished but I have seen tremendous growth these past few years and so I am hopeful for resolution.

Thank you for reading. Leave a comment if you feel inclined.

-Christina

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Adoptee, Adoption, Korean Adoptee, Korean Adoption, miscarriage, New England Seoul, recurrent miscarriage

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Hi! I’m Christina,

I am a Korean Adoptee with New England Roots! Living and Loving New England Country Life while raising our babies and restoring our 1820s Farmhouse.  Homesteading and Farmhouse Inspiration. Coffee and Tea Lover. Book Addict.

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