Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Holly Thompson Was Given Hope In The Back Of A Taxi Cab.


 

Holly Thompson Was Given Hope In The Back Of A Taxi Cab.

By Kim Goldberg, ENLG 336

 

“There is no way for me to know where my birth parents are, I was left in a taxi and became an orphan.” – Holly Thompson.

Now in her second year at Frostburg State University, English major Holly Thompson reflects on her journey as an orphan and how different her life would have been if she had not been adopted. 

Zhou Bingdi, Holly Thompson’s birth name, was left in the back of a taxi cab when she was just a baby. Upon the discovery of her abandonment, she was taken to an orphanage. Due to her circumstances, her real birthday and age will never be known. Instead, doctors estimated her age and assigned her a birthday, December 17th 1996, the day she was found. When Zhou Bingdi was presumably eighteen months old, she was adopted by an American family and brought back to the United States. Mr. Thompson traveled to China with a group of fellow American families also adopting children from China. While in China, Mr. Thompson encountered some difficulties with the adoption, at which time Zhou Bingdi also contracted chicken pox, thus causing Mr. Thompson to extend his stay in China. Eventually, Mr. Thompson and Zhou Bingdi were able to come back to the U.S. and join the rest of the family.

The Thompson’s decided to change Zhou Bingdi’s name to Holly Bingdi Thompson. Thompson's adopted parents already had a daughter older than Holly, but were not able to have any more children, fueling their decision to adopt. They had always had a specific interest in helping out children from foreign countries like China. Thompson attended, Hickory Elementary in Harford County, a predominantly Caucasian elementary school and recalls being picked on because she looked different from her family, “When I was little I didn’t like being ‘THE’ Asian at an all-white school." Thompson says that, even though she was picked on, she was grateful to have been adopted by the Thompsons because it gave her a promising life style she “would never have had if [she] had stayed in China." Growing up, Thompson was told she was adopted, but she says she knew this from the start, “It wasn’t like I woke up one day and looked in the mirror and said; wait a second, I’m different. I always knew."

 


Holly Thompson (18) poses in Cumberland Hall 

 

When telling her story, Thompson is not filled with anger or remorse but rather curiosity. Thompson believes she was left in the taxi because she was a female child in China at a time when having a girl was frowned upon. She also speculates that being given up for adoption could have been due to the fact that Chinese families were only permitted to have two children, and Thompson may have been the third child in her original family. She is curious to know about her real parents and hopes to find them someday. She also wants to learn more about her Chinese heritage and hopes to visit China and teach herself the language.

Thompson's adoption has influenced her political interest as well as her personal life. Thompson hopes Ben Carson will win the election because of the special connection she has with him. “As a baby, when you are in the orphanage you don’t get held as much and you develop a flat spot on your head," Thompson said. As a result of her “flat spot”, she was taken to the doctor to be checked out. Her doctor at the time was Ben Carson. Thompson has always been interested in presidential elections but is now a dedicated follower of the elections because of her personal connection with the candidate. “How cool would it be if Ben Carson, the doctor who held me as a baby, became president!” she said. Because she was adopted, Thompson said she too would want to adopt in the future and help give another child from China a similar opportunity for a better future.




 

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