Education

When Your Child Chooses You Back

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Brian J Baker and Lachandra Baker made family happen three times over: Brian adopted Aujie at ten. Brian's father adopted Brian at twenty-one. Lachandra's father adopted her sister. When Your Child Chooses You Back explores how kinship adoption, blended families, and interracial marriage taught them what family truly means. When Love Needs Legal Permission For Brian, adoption came late. His biological father was absent. His adoptive father was there. At twenty-one, that father asked: can I legally adopt you? Brian said yes. In the courtroom, the judge asked if he felt safe at home. They laughed. This wasn't about safety. It was about making permanent what was already true. Choosing Each Other at Ten Lachandra raised Aujie alone for six years. Then Brian entered their lives. When Aujie was ten, they sat down and asked: do you want me to officially adopt you? Do you understand what that means? Aujie said yes. Most adoptees never get asked. They had a choice. That choice changed everything about how family felt. Standing as Allies in an Interracial Marriage Brian and Lachandra built their life on one principle: nothing about us without us. When you affect someone's life, they're at the table. When they see broken basketball hoops in their neighborhood, Lachandra knocks on the door. Brian steps back. They let families own the gift. That's real allyship.

Brian J Baker and Lachandra Baker made family happen three times over: Brian adopted Aujie at ten. Brian's father adopted Brian at twenty-one. Lachandra's father adopted her sister. When Your Child Chooses You Back explores how kinship adoption, blended families, and interracial marriage taught them what family truly means.

When Love Needs Legal Permission

For Brian, adoption came late. His biological father was absent. His adoptive father was there. At twenty-one, that father asked: can I legally adopt you? Brian said yes. In the courtroom, the judge asked if he felt safe at home. They laughed. This wasn't about safety. It was about making permanent what was already true.

Choosing Each Other at Ten

Lachandra raised Aujie alone for six years. Then Brian entered their lives. When Aujie was ten, they sat down and asked: do you want me to officially adopt you? Do you understand what that means? Aujie said yes. Most adoptees never get asked. They had a choice. That choice changed everything about how family felt.

Standing as Allies in an Interracial Marriage

Brian and Lachandra built their life on one principle: nothing about us without us. When you affect someone's life, they're at the table. When they see broken basketball hoops in their neighborhood, Lachandra knocks on the door. Brian steps back. They let families own the gift. That's real allyship.