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Adopting Twins From South Korea Part 1

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Uploaded by on Feb 17, 2011

our adoption journey to Seoul, South Korea to bring home our twin baby girls

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Uploader Comments (SeoulmatesMama)

  • beautiful family . love

  • @marie1000ist

    Thank you! :)

  • Awesome video! We are waiting for our travel call for our Son's biological Sister!

  • @deranged731 Thank you. Congratulations and Best Wishes to you and your family! How exciting!

  • Love your video! Beautiful girls! Good luck with them growing up!

    Love from Belgium

  • @karenkittyrobbe

    Thank you!

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All Comments (25)

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  • You rock!

    God bless.

  • @71giop I'm sorry to hear that. American adoptive families do tend to be more sensitive,more respectful, more caring, and more loving than their Italian counterpart. How do I know that? Because I'm Italian myself. Italian families are old fashion, conservative, very strict, and very authoritative. I know exactly what you mean.

  • I am alredy an adult original from Korea too, I was adopted by italian family. Hope they will grown up happly not like me

  • I bet is was strange holding them the first time. I remember when I met my baby boy for the first time, I didn't pick him up b/c I didn't want him to cry. I was so scared I'd do something to make him not like me. It's so funny to think of now. From no children to two! I went from no children to 3.

  • @sskkmmaa Maybe, maybe not. Support throughout their lives is the key, no matter what. Just like any mommy and daddy would do b/c they are their parents. I've adopted 3 and my 15 yr old daughter has NO desire to see her family, yet maybe she will when she's older. We'll see.

  • @SeoulmatesMama One day they'll want to search for their birth parents -- support them in their journey... It's a natural journey many adoptees must go through to feel whole. In college, they'll want to discover their Korean identity and during teen years, they'll realize their parents don't look like them or can understand their ethnic isolation, being Korean in a white family. Don't take it as rejection or feel threatened because you will always be their parents. Understand them.

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