Marc Mercier and I are first cousins. Our birth fathers were brothers. Many people might say,
"And so what?—Your fathers were brothers and so you're first cousins."
For Marc and me, learning that our birth fathers were brothers was the breakthrough we needed to identify them—and to find our own identities. We became search angels for each other. In time, our search was successful.
We also learned about our paternal families, past and present.
In a few weeks, Paul and I are going to visit Marc in Ottawa.
We will also meet Carol, another first cousin!
Please enjoy this story about my dear first cousin and friend Marc, updated from my May 2019 blog.
The Ever-Important Attitude of Gratitude
One wintry day in February 1960, an unmarried young woman named Rose gave birth to a healthy, handsome baby boy. She named him Louis. Rose and her family lived in Verdun, a borough of Montreal. Rose could not provide for her son. She had no choice but to relinquish her parental rights. The infant was adopted by a French-speaking couple who gave him the name Marc. They raised Marc in a French-speaking community in Welland, Ontario. Welland is located on the Niagara Peninsula between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, barely 26 miles from Buffalo, New York.
Marc had a happy childhood. He lived with his parents and his brother and had a close extended family. In his career, he specialized in Information Technology (IT) and worked for a major company in Ottawa. Over time Marc's curiosity about his birth family grew and he decided to get his DNA tested. FamilyTreeDNA posted his results sometime around 2010, I believe. Unfortunately, he did not receive a high match for years and was therefore not checking his results regularly.
I had tested only with AncestryDNA until a friend recommended I branch out and test with other companies, especially because AncestryDNA was not yet available in Canada. Having been born in Montreal, I realized she had a great point.
In 2016, I tested with FamilyTreeDNA, Marc's company. My results came back with our high DNA match! I was elated, shocked and mystified—who is this person? While I waited for Marc's response to my email, I asked folks in Facebook's DNA Detectives and Free Canada Adoption/Family Search and Reunion about our match. Everyone agreed that Marc's birth father and my birth father were brothers—we were first cousins!
It was a Hallelujah moment! We were both very excited. We'd found the needle in the haystack—our shared DNA. While Marc lives in Ottawa, I was living on Long Island, New York and through DNA, we learned that our birth fathers grew up together in Verdun! It was magical. Marc speaks French and English which turned out to be invaluable as we searched for our birth fathers' identities in the Montreal area.
Adoption searches are completely unpredictable. It is best to limit one's expectations just in case the results are disappointing or worse, devastating. Marc's and my DNA match was the breakthrough we needed to find our birth families. However, my gratitude exceeds our DNA match—Marc is friendly and funny, down-to-earth, kind and smart. Everything that intimidated me in our search became a simple to-do task for Marc. I kept telling him we'd still be struggling if he hadn't followed the leads the way he did. We became partners in the search for our identities, determined to unlock the secrets in our closed adoption files. Today we message and text, FaceTime and talk on the phone for hours. He has visited us here and we got together in Montreal back in 2018 to meet our newly found biological family. Together we did it! I am forever grateful.