Hi W.,
I'm an adoptee too, and though my holiday woes with parents are quite different, I can understand some of the emotional hurt that the adoptive thing can add to dealings with parents, or has with mine. For me, I found my birth parents over many years and have had a relationship with them -- we certainly do NOT spend holidays together or in any other way try to act like they were the family that raised me, but I am in touch with them and see them in person maybe every 2 years per side, and I do love them. Then there's my husband's family, who he loves and my daughter loves and who are fairly easy to spend time with. I have moved a lot in my life and my parents are divorced and were, while my mom was alive, living in different states and my brother, also adopted, and I mostly don't get along, so the question of when to spend time with who is EXHAUSTING -- and recently my father and his long-time partner, who are now living next door to my brother, responded to a photo I sent in a spirit of love, of me with my birth mother and birth father in the same place for the first time since before I was born, as a statement that I have acquired a new family and don't need them anymore. Anyway, I think where adoption and old, childhood pain are concerned things get very complicated and people can easily feel hurt and blaming easily feel very guilty. I agree with everyone who says stick to your guns -- you are doing the right thing. But I also just wanted to add that I think icky-prickly feelings are especially easy to have come up in adoptive situations for a range of reasons and perhaps most simply because wherever one feels torn between two identities or affiliations, for some reason that produces guilt. As i told my students the other day in a discussion of immigration and American ethnicity and identity, "everyone I know is bicultural and they all feel guilty!"
have wonderful holidays. Also, in terms of tactics -- next time you don't come, just give one good reason -- many reasons somehow invite the idea that the problem can be solved logistically, as Aunt Yaya tried to do.
MB