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What does it mean to have two homes, two families, and two lives — and to love both fully?
In the latest episode of The Anna Jinja Show, host Anna Jinja sits down with Kristina Denbow, a transnational adoptee who was adopted from Kazakhstan as a child and raised in Athens, Ohio. After years of questions about her origins, Kristina made the journey back last summer — visiting the orphanage where she spent her earliest years and reuniting with her biological sister, grandmother, and niece.
What she found wasn't just closure. It was a flooding of memories, a rekindling of love, and a complicated, beautiful reckoning with identity.
Joining the conversation are Sophie Mather — Kristina's longtime friend, who chose the poem "Battery" by Anne Waldman to honor her story — and Sophie's father, Pete, who offers a parent's perspective on what Kristina's courage represents.
This episode speaks to something universal: the human need to know where we come from, and the remarkable capacity we must carry more than one home in our hearts.
Support the show
By Anna JinjaWhat does it mean to have two homes, two families, and two lives — and to love both fully?
In the latest episode of The Anna Jinja Show, host Anna Jinja sits down with Kristina Denbow, a transnational adoptee who was adopted from Kazakhstan as a child and raised in Athens, Ohio. After years of questions about her origins, Kristina made the journey back last summer — visiting the orphanage where she spent her earliest years and reuniting with her biological sister, grandmother, and niece.
What she found wasn't just closure. It was a flooding of memories, a rekindling of love, and a complicated, beautiful reckoning with identity.
Joining the conversation are Sophie Mather — Kristina's longtime friend, who chose the poem "Battery" by Anne Waldman to honor her story — and Sophie's father, Pete, who offers a parent's perspective on what Kristina's courage represents.
This episode speaks to something universal: the human need to know where we come from, and the remarkable capacity we must carry more than one home in our hearts.
Support the show