11.05.2014

They assumed their adopted son was Chinese. They were wrong.

Parents raised their adopted son to appreciate his Chinese roots, only to realize the kid is Korean.



This Reddit post has been making the rounds and getting people rather riled up... TIFU stands for "Today, I Fucked Up," a subreddit under which people profess ways in which they have really really messed up. If this post is to be believed, it's definitely one epic mistake.

It's Reddit, so take this with a grain of salt, but basically: A white couple adopts a baby boy from an Asian American family and raises him to embrace his Chinese roots and identity. Great. Seventeen years later, the father takes a belated moment to look at the kid's adoption records and discovers his son is actually Korean.

If this is real, then what the fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck.

Here's the confession, posted by the father:

TIFU by making a stupid assumption about my adopted son.

by mysonisnotchinese

Well, I suppose this fuck up has happened today, and has been happening everyday for the past seventeen years.

About seventeen years ago my wife and I adopted a baby from an Asian American family. While we knew very little details, basically what happened with them is that we learned they were too young for children. I made very little inquiries as (they seemed embarrassed/I didn't want to pry). I was just excited to have a son and couldn't have cared less about the parent's history, besides their current and future well being. So as long as they were healthy and willing to gift me with their child, I really did not go too much into their histories. This was my major fuck up. My wife and I choose to adopt this baby because we felt for the parents and anyone that has been through the adoption process knows that it is much easier to get a non-white baby than it is to get a white one (which is fucked up IMO) and we wanted one NOW and didn't want to be on a wait list.

Anyway we adopt this beautiful, loving, affectionate and incredible baby. It's truly love at first sight for all of us. Around about eight months we start to feel a little bit of guilt about not raising him in his on ethnic culture and given that we live in an area with a major Chinese population, it would be very easy to introduce him to his roots. So for the next seventeen years we do everything we can to honor his ethnicity. We send him to Chinese language courses and by five he's fluent in Mandarin and English, he gets an "adopted" by a Chinese aunt and uncle (they taught him cultural things and celebrate certain holidays and take him for dim sum every couple of weeks). We've been taking him to China every two years since he was eight. We weren't trying to force him to take up his culture as an "other" in our family, but we didn't want to rob him of it or completely whitewash him either. We try and be PC as possible and we thought we were doing the right thing.

He's the best thing that has ever happened to me and my wife. There is not a day were I don't just look at him and smile warmly. I love him.

Anyway we are filling out his college apps/financial aid applications and doing that whole thing. I go to my home office and go through some files and find his old adoption records. I'm not really paying much attention to them and then his biological parents surnames pop out and basically punch me in the face. His parent's last names were PARK AND KIM. FUCK. FUCK. FUCK.

For those of you that do not know, those are Korean last names. My son is not Chinese. Not even a little bit.

He's Korean.

I suppose I just assumed it because we live in an area on the west coast where there are a lot of Chinese immigrants and Chinese-Americans have been living for generations and generations. I don't always assume every Asian is Chinese, but I did assume this for my son. Now I have a seventeen year old Korean son that thinks he's Chinese. Now that I look at him, he looks INCREDIBLY Korean in comparassion to all of the photos of Korean men that I have just googled. Very square jaw, less hooded eyes, very broad build. None of this ever crossed my mind. I've dedicated nearly two decades to helping my son be close to roots that aren't even his. I realize that I've just been fucking up. I feel like a complete asshole to the nth degree. I'm that dumb liberal white dickhead. Fuck.

I have yet to disclose this to my son or wife.

I honestly don't even know if I will.

TL;DR: Assumed my son was Chinese and I've spent his whole life playing homage to his roots, he's Korean.

Predictably, many of the comments directed at this guy have been exceptionally harsh, while other reactions seem to be the equivalent of a shrug, unable to grasp the magnitude of this mistake. The part that gets me is the incredible laziness and blind assuredness that goes into just plain assuming that your little Asian baby must be Chinese, because sure why not, then sending him down that path for the rest of his life.

I can't tell anyone how to raise their kid, and other transracial adoptees and adoptive parents might have a different perspective, but shit, the assumptions that led this family here feel like a middle finger to common sense. The original poster definitely realizes how much he's messed up, calling himself a "dumb liberal white dickhead." It doesn't seem like anyone needs to beat him up any further. He's doing that fine by himself.

In the end, I just hope the kid is okay. According to this follow-up post, the parents broke the news to their son -- So... guess what? You're really Korean! -- and they're working through it. Good luck.

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