Illustrat ion by Jonatha n Carlso n parents, believing it was for the best, told her what she calls a "chosen baby story." Her father had died; her mother, pregnant, con- tracted leukemia and had to give up the baby for adop- tion. Her adoptive parents selected her. Ms. Servetter had always figured her natural parents were dead. But she began to worry. Isn't leukemia hereditary? When faced with the ques- tion directly, her adoptive mother revealed the truth. Ms. Servetter's birth mother was an unmarried, preg- nant teenager, who did not die of a fatal blood disease. Since that revelation, Ms. Servetter has been gather- ing bits and scraps of infor- mation about her biological mother. At age 18, she filed a consent form with the Michigan Adoption Central Registry — a state social ser- vices clearinghouse in Lan- sing that can potentially match biological kin separated by adoption. But no luck. She knows she was born at Crittendon Hospital on Oct. 12, 1961. She knows her birth mother was a Detroiter with reddish- brown hair and brown eyes. The family was in the scrap metal business at one time. She has some sketchy medical information. But she wants to know more. She wants resolution. For Ms. Servetter, the in- ability to get her questions answered is disheartening. "I feel I can't get on with my life. It's kind of overwhelm- ing at times. Jewish Family Service can't give me the in- formation, but somebody knows my original name." Not all searches are so dif- ficult. Susan Goodman's story has a happy ending. The 35-year-old bank ad- ministrator found her birth mother 11 years ago. Mrs. Goodman grew up in New York City as the only child of Holocaust survivors. "I always knew I was adopted, felt I was a little bit different," she says. "I wondered about my biological mother and I was open about it. But I felt kind of guilty. The last thing I would ever have wanted to do is hurt my parents by searching." The wondering was an undercurrent in Mrs. Good- man's life; like tides, the in- tensity of interest would ebb and flow, occasionally bubbl- ing to the surface. "There were times in my life when I would focus in on this and was very in- terested, but it wasn't a con- sistent interest. I would see women who looked about the right age and I found myself asking them ques- tions. At one point, I thought one of my cousins might have been my natural mother?' The birth of her first child was the turning point in Mrs. Goodman's curiosity, "because I held him, and it was the first time in my life I had ever touched anyone who had any sort of biological connection to me, who actually looked like me?' She contacted an adoption research and reunion organization in New York called the Adoptees Liberty Movement Association (ALMA). Mrs. Goodman had been given a key piece of in- formation by her adoptive parents — her birth name. She submitted it to ALMA's database, but a connection would only be made if her birth mother had submitted corresponding information. Although she made the gesture, Mrs. Goodman is unsure if she would have engaged in an all-out search if this attempt failed. The thought was too scary. "It has been ingrained in me by society at large that somehow I was doing something awful." As it turned out, Mrs. Goodman's birth mother was an ALMA member. She came to every ALMA THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29