• About
    • About Severance
    • From the Editor
    • Submission Guidelines: How to Contribute
    • Contact Us
  • Articles
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • Advocacy
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • DNA Surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • Family Secrets
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Interviews & Profiles
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Psychology & Therapy
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Search & Reunion
  • Essays & Fiction
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
  • Short Takes
    • Short Takes: Books
    • Short Takes: Film & Video
    • Short Takes: People, News & Research
    • Short Takes: Podcasts & Radio
  • Self Care & Coping
    • Coping Strategies
    • Self-Care
  • Speak Out
    • Micro-Memoirs
    • Your Video Stories
  • Resources
    • Start Here
    • Abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • Donor Conception
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Late-Discovery Adoptees
    • NPEs (Not parent expected) & MPEs (Misattributed parentage experience)
    • Psychology & Therapy & Coaching
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
    • Self-Care
Severance Magazine

Submission Guidelines: How to Contribute

by bkjax

Severance is a place to share your voice and speak your truth without judgment. You can contribute in a variety of ways.

A Video Story:

Tell us about your experience or sound off on a particular issue related to genetic identity or family secrets. (See suggestions for topics below.) Your video can be 2 minutes or 20. We’re not looking for great production values — a simple video selfie from your phone will do. You’ll need to first upload your video to YouTube and then send us a link.

A Micro Memoir:

Tell us your story in roughly 1,200 words or fewer. Just tell it as you’d tell it to a friend.

A First-Person Essay:

These aren’t meant to be your stories in a nutshell — send those in a micro-memoir. Essays, instead, should drill down to a particular facet of your experience or your feelings and illustrate what your experience has meant to you. For suggestions, see the list of possible topics below.

Your submission can take the form of a traditional essay, a more experimental or lyrical essay, a letter, or a list. Essays can be as short as 250 words or as long as 2,500, though preference will be given to those somewhere in the middle.

Don’t worry if you don’t consider yourself a writer. If you have a good idea, we’ll help you shape your essay. For additional inspiration and to give you a better idea of what we’re looking for, check out some essays from other magazines, for example, Modern Loss, River Teeth, The Manifest-Station, Hippocampus Magazine, and Catapult.

A Short Take:

If you’re a person of few words, address anything in the topic list below — or any topic you like — in 300 words or fewer.

Possible Topics for Essays, Videos, and Short Takes

Anything is fair game, but following are some suggestions.

  • How have you honored — or grieved the loss of — a parent you never knew?
  • What do you remember about learning about your NPE, donor-conceived, or adoptee status?
  • How did your mother or father react to your feelings about your new status?
  • Did you struggle with whether to reach out to biological family?
  • What was your experience reaching out to biological family?
  • Before you learned that a parent wasn’t your parent, did you have a sense of not fitting in?
  • Has there been a particular time when you’ve felt unheard or unseen?
  • How have you been changed by a DNA surprise?
  • How has reunion been especially rewarding or especially challenging?
  • What it was like to see a photo of a biological relative for the first time?
  • How did you “come out” about your new status with friends or family after a DNA surprise?
  • How has your experience affected your relationships with your spouse, family members, or friends?
  • What would you like to say to the parent you’ve never known?
  • What do you wish others — those who haven’t had your experience — understood?
  • What has helped you cope with your new status or the aftermath of a DNA surprise?
  • What do you wish people wouldn’t say to you?

Articles:

Readers with previous writing experience may contribute reported pieces on a range of topics from self-care and coping to genetic genealogy and psychology. These may include Q&As, reviews, lists, and how-to articles. Please send a pitch, along with a writing sample, rather than a completed article.

Suggestions:

Share your thoughts about topics you’d like to see covered in Severance or resources you’d like to see added.

Share on Social Media:

Send a tweet to @SeveranceMag or click here to comment on our Facebook page. And while you’re there, consider joining our private Facebook group to join the discussion with other adoptees, NPEs, or donor conceived people.

Comments:

Add your voice by commenting on stories. Posts, articles, and essays reflect only the viewpoint of the contributors, and all viewpoints are welcome. Because this is a space in which to lift others up, and because we promise contributors a safe place in which to speak out, we’re not inviting argument or harsh criticism, but rather comments that enlarge the discussion. We reserve the right to remove those we deem intolerant, offensive, insulting, or belittling.

Further Guidelines:

All contributions will be edited for space and clarity and to conform to our style guidelines.

Please include a brief bio and a photo (JPG) of yourself.

By submitting, you acknowledge that the material you contribute is original, hasn’t been previously published, and doesn’t infringe on any copyright or violate anyone’s privacy. You further acknowledge that you have the rights to allow us to publish any photographs you submit.

Severance is not monetized—no subscriptions, no ads, no donations—therefore, contributors are not compensated. They may, however, provide their Venmo or other money transfer account to be included in the article so readers who wish to can can tip the writers.

On Venmo

Please send all copy text in an email message or as a Word document attachment to bkjax@icloud.com.  Please do not send Google docs. Put “Submission” in the subject line.

A word final word about language:

Although we’ll curate essays and other contributions, selecting what we deem the most useful, we won’t moderate opinions or, with few exceptions (noted above) censor language. Be funny, snarky, sad, irreverent, angry, profane, or provocative. We don’t care how you say it. Just say it!

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What’s New on Severance

  • There Was a Secret
  • Should Health Care Professionals Tell the Truth About Paternity?
  • 20 Questions and a World of Stories
  • The Wizard and I
  • Rabbit Holes and Hobbits
  • We Three

After a DNA Surprise: 10 Things No One Wants to Hear

https://www.righttoknow.us

Call Right To Know’s resource hotline to talk with another MPE be paired with a mentor, get resources, or just talk.

Original Birth Certificates to California Born Adoptees

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=erHylYLHqXg&t=4s

Search

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abandonment adoptee adoptees adoptee stories adoption advocacy biological family birthmother books DNA DNA surprise DNA surprises DNA test DNA tests donor conceived donor conception essay Essays family secrets genetic genealogy genetic identity genetics grief heredity Late Discovery Adoptee late discovery adoptees Late Discovery Adoption meditation memoir MPE MPEs NPE NPEs podcasts psychology Q&A rejection research reunion search and reunion secrets and lies self care therapy transracial adoption trauma

Recommended Reading

The Lost Family: How DNA is Upending Who We Are, by Libby Copeland. Check our News & Reviews section for a review of this excellent book about the impact on the culture of direct-to-consumer DNA testing.

What Happens When Parents Wait to Tell a Child He’s Adopted

“A new study suggests that learning about one’s adoption after a certain age could lead to lower life satisfaction in the future.”

Janine Vance Searches for the Truth About Korean Adoptees

“Imagine for a minute that you don’t know who your mother is. Now imagine that you are that mother, and you don’t know what became of your daughter.”

Who’s Your Daddy? The Twisty History of Paternity Testing

“Salon talks to author Nara B. Milanich about why in the politics of paternity and science, context is everything.”

What Separation from Parents Does to Children: ‘The Effect is Catastrophic”

“This is what happens inside children when they are forcibly separated from their parents.”

Truth: A Love Story

“A scientist discovers his own family’s secret.”

Dear Therapist: The Child My Daughter Put Up for Adoption is Now Rejecting Her

“She thought that her daughter would want to meet her one day. Twenty-five years later, that’s not true.”

I’m Adopted and Pro-Choice. Stop Using My Story for the Anti-Abortion Agenda. Stephanie Drenka’s essay for the Huffington Post looks at the way adoptees have made unwilling participants in conversations about abortion.

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@2019 - Severance Magazine

Severance Magazine
  • About
    • About Severance
    • From the Editor
    • Submission Guidelines: How to Contribute
    • Contact Us
  • Articles
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • Advocacy
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • DNA Surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • Family Secrets
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Interviews & Profiles
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Psychology & Therapy
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Search & Reunion
  • Essays & Fiction
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
  • Short Takes
    • Short Takes: Books
    • Short Takes: Film & Video
    • Short Takes: People, News & Research
    • Short Takes: Podcasts & Radio
  • Self Care & Coping
    • Coping Strategies
    • Self-Care
  • Speak Out
    • Micro-Memoirs
    • Your Video Stories
  • Resources
    • Start Here
    • Abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • Donor Conception
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Late-Discovery Adoptees
    • NPEs (Not parent expected) & MPEs (Misattributed parentage experience)
    • Psychology & Therapy & Coaching
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
    • Self-Care
Severance Magazine
  • About
    • About Severance
    • From the Editor
    • Submission Guidelines: How to Contribute
    • Contact Us
  • Articles
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • Advocacy
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • DNA Surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • Family Secrets
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Interviews & Profiles
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Psychology & Therapy
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Search & Reunion
  • Essays & Fiction
    • abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA surprises
    • Donor Conception
    • NPEs/MPEs
    • Late Discovery Adoptees
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
  • Short Takes
    • Short Takes: Books
    • Short Takes: Film & Video
    • Short Takes: People, News & Research
    • Short Takes: Podcasts & Radio
  • Self Care & Coping
    • Coping Strategies
    • Self-Care
  • Speak Out
    • Micro-Memoirs
    • Your Video Stories
  • Resources
    • Start Here
    • Abandonment
    • Adoption
    • DNA & Genetic Genealogy
    • Donor Conception
    • Genetics & Heredity
    • Late-Discovery Adoptees
    • NPEs (Not parent expected) & MPEs (Misattributed parentage experience)
    • Psychology & Therapy & Coaching
    • Search & Reunion
    • Secrets & Lies
    • Self-Care
@2019 - Severance Magazine