My wife and I are trying to decide where our children should go in the event of our deaths and have narrowed it down to either my brother and his wife or my wife's sister and her husband. There are pros and cons for each, but one thing in particular seems important to me. My wife is adopted. Her adopted parents adopted a boy, then her, then discovered they could conceive after all and had a girl. So, in the family, none of the siblings have the same birth parents.
To me, one of the issues in favor of our kids going to my brother is that it's blood-family. To me, her family, though they raised her and love her and are part of our lives, to me, they are not truly related. This really offends her, but to me, it's a fact. They are not genetically related to our kids. My wife is related to them in the sense that they raised her. But now we're a generation off. Our children do not have that tie. If my wife and I are gone, that connecting tie is broken.
To me, there's just something about knowing your genetic family. It teaches you things about yourself. I see traits and behaviors in common with my family and it teaches me about myself. When you look at your relatives, you see people who look like you and have the same interests and some of the same skills. My wife does not understand what that's like because she never grew up with that. She knew her whole life that she was adopted. When I see my wife's family, all of her siblings have completely different personalities. The only one that seems similar to the parents is her sister, who is the actual daughter born to them and not adopted. To me, the genetics seem to play a lot more than we sometimes realize. A few years ago, my wife found her half-sister and there are traits between them that tell me she is more like her birth family in personality than the family that raised her. As a startling for-instance, her mother was an avid reader. Always had a book in her hand. My wife is the same way and the only one in her adopted family like that. Who'd have thought love of reading was genetic? My wife hasn't really tried to get to know her birth family and will probably never understand that part of her life.
To me, even though her adopted family is family to her, to me, it's like leaving the kids in the hands of dear friends vs. their actual genetic relatives. To me, the next best thing to their parents is genetic relatives. And in both cases, though they each have pros and cons, we feel they would both be good parents to our children. And we don't have Jehovah's Witness issues since my brother has also left the faith.
Like I say, this isn't the only issue to look at. In addition, our families are seperated across the country. So, whoever the kids would end up with would mean limited time spent with the other family. What's everyone else's opinion on this? How big should genetic family factor in?