God forbid, you ever had to walk a mile in her shoes
'Cause then you really might know what it's like to have to choose.*
Adoption disruption hit the mainstream media last week. If you missed it, public attention soared when Matt Lauer interviewed An.ita T., a woman who wrote about the termination of her family's adoption of a little boy and the child's placement with a second family.
At first, I was outraged by the sound-bitiness of it all. "Woman adopted a child...(duh, dun, dun)...and gave him up." The interview was surfacy and clipped and frustrating. I gnashed my teeth and whined and whinged: It's so much more complicated than this. This is about families, real people, the child's needs and the parents' abilities, deep emotions, heart-breaking decisions, attachment and bonding, psychological damage. The hyped, sensationalized, mass media marketing, get-as-many-hits-on-the-today-show-site-as-they-can approach killed me.
I took a deep breath and read the blog post by Natalie Morales. Her first sentence comforted and impressed me: "As horrible as that headline sounds, you realize how just complicated the situation was and how agonizing the decision to give up little “D” was when you read Anita's own account. It’s a piece that will bring you to tears." The tenor of the entire post was balanced. The comments predictably reflected both compassion and outrage - sometimes vicious outrage - and though the negative comments hurt, because I've received them too, I can't call them unjustified.
Anita's original New York Times blogpost describing the disruption is moving. I identified with her struggle and her pain. I also saw (through the perfect lens of hindsight) many of the mistakes and naive assumptions that Matt and I made reflected in her mistakes.
I found myself not liking the facts of An.ita's story, trying to distinguish our situation, our family, our disruption, from Ani.ta's and I had to stop and force myself to take a good long look in the computer. We are fundamentally the same. We both adopted a child with our hearts in the right place, fully intending to make that child a part of our family forever, we both found ourselves in a place, as a parent and a person, that we couldn't handle, facing behaviors with which we couldn't cope and emotions that we knew weren't right and we both chose to find a family that better met our child's needs. We both disrupted adoptions. Same-same.
Why did it hurt so much to feel "like her." Because some people were nasty about her character, her choices and her behavior? I've written publicly about our disruption and received similar caustic criticisms. Because I'm embarrassed that I get to hide behind my relative anonymity? Because people felt it was wrong of her to write about this issue - they felt she sought only sympathy and possibly monetary gain? That made me cringe. After consideration, I strongly disagree. This is a discussion that the adoption community needs to have. I have felt for a long time that it is important to talk about the possible attachment difficulties in after-infancy adoption and all types of outcomes. I thought my motives were education, shedding some light on a difficult, painful and often hidden adoption issue. Were they? Would they be seen that way?
I guess I (mostly, okay, usually) don't care. I don't care because I receive emails from mothers living the hell of a difficult attachment and I receive emails from mothers living the hell of guilt and shame and loss after disruption and I receive emails from mothers who made it through and just appreciate communicating with someone who knows how bleak it can be in the middle. I'll leave my story "up" for them.
Reading all of the comments on Ani.ta's essay, whether uplifting, understanding, compassionate, confused, vicious, incredulous, or painfully, pointedly accusatory, was a difficult journey for me. I gratefully, but necessarily, dismissed the top 25% "good" comments that called her brave and selfless. While I understand and appreciate that sentiment and the compassion from which it springs, it isn't brave or selfless to find your family in a crisis situation of your own making and to do your best to find a solution that meets everyone's needs. It's life. I dismissed the bottom 25% "bad" comments that called her horrible names.
In the middle was an intelligent, fairly compassionate discussion of the fact that adoption doesn't always go perfectly, parenting doesn't always go perfectly, life seldom goes perfectly and what we do, how we cope, how we move forward when we find ourselves in a situation that we simply can not handle. For whatever reason. No matter how many mistakes we made or how much naivety we showed or how many stupid choices we chose on our way to that place.
After some tears, some anger, some soul-searching, I'm left feeling secure, but sad. Sad and at a loss because, as with any difficult, painful issue, either people will listen with an open heart and try to understand the complexities of the situation, or people will judge with a closed mind. Listening with an open heart doesn't mean agreeing with a person's choices, it only means recognizing the humanity in their actions and in their decisions.
I'm also left with thoughts and responses to some of the comments, some heartfelt and thoughtful, some knee-jerk and bitter, swirling and plaguing and clogging and sifting and battering at my brain. I'm putting them here, for me, so that I can lay them down and sleep better, but also for those mothers, those parents, who write to me, and finally for Ani.ta.
"How could you do this? Children aren't puppies, they aren't exchangeable!" Of course they aren't. That's cute and all and it makes you look very justifiably outraged. It's a nice sound bite. It's clever PR. But that's all it is. Of course they aren't. No one thinks they are. Not the parents who adopt and disrupt, not the second family, not the professionals involved...NO ONE thinks they are. Of all the unhelpful, asinine comments this one plagues me the most. Whatever you think of me, or An.ita, or any other family facing the horrible reality that their family is floundering and they aren't bonding with an adopted child, you can rest assured that no one thinks this. No family adopts a child thinking that they can take them back to a store, or turn them in on a shinier model. A family hits crisis mode, they talk to counselors, they agonize and cry and berate themselves and try again and hit crisis mode again and talk to professionals again and then they go through a long, well thought out, professional placement process. I would venture to guess that children caught up in bitter, difficult divorces are tossed from place to place far more casually and with far less scrutiny than a family disrupting an unattached adoption. (That statement is in no way meant to be judgmental of anyone dealing with the reality of divorce, it's only meant to make the point that there are other catastrophic family circumstances that aren't ideal for children and perhaps holding adoptive parents to a standard of perfection is unrealistic.)
You would never give away a biological child that "wasn't bonding." This misses the whole point. It isn't about biological children versus adoptive children. It is about unattached families and children versus attached families and children. You are right, no one would consider placing their child, biological or adopted, with another family if a strong parental-child attachment has formed. Whether people want to understand it or not, whether people want to admit it or not, whether we talk about it or not, whether it hurts or not, in many cases attachment (at least with a child past infancy) is difficult. It isn't always the case that a one-year-old or a five-year-old with history and trauma and ingrained behaviors walks into your home and you fall down on your knees and feel an immediate, incredible unbreakable bond to the child. Attachment takes time. It takes work. It goes both ways. The parent must attach to the child and the child must attach to the parent. When there are significant barriers it is even harder. Many children who have spent time in institutions or have experienced early neglect or trauma have psychological barriers to attachment. In addition, some families and children have dynamics that create barriers. For instance, in our case, my focus on protecting smaller children in my home from negative attachment related jealousy and acting out prevented me from bonding with our older child.
Unattached children are not happy children. Families that aren't bonding are families in crisis. There are ways of healing - therapy, hard work. But sometimes, it's not enough. And when it's not enough it can be in the best interest of the child to find a family where some of the barriers are removed. It can be in the best interest of the child.
All adopted children fear is abandonment and now you've abandoned them a second time. It's a painful fact. Adopted children have been abandoned once. There is no getting around it. I disagree that abandonment is all they fear or even that it is their greatest fear, especially older adopted children. They fear attaching to another person who might hurt them or abandon them. That resistance to attachment can be brutal, emotionally grueling, physically dangerous. Some families, for different reasons, can't cope. They can't break through. It is better in some cases for a child that is not attaching to be removed and placed in a family with more resources, emotional or otherwise, than to grow up unattached.
You are selfish. Maybe. We tried not to be. We tried hard to understand how to balance everyone's needs. But yes, our family wasn't functioning and we found a way to make things better that we hoped met all needs, including our son and our other children and ourselves.
How dare you quit when things got hard, did you think everything would be perfect? No. We didn't. We thought it would be really hard. We read about attachment and attachment disorders. We failed. We failed our son because we failed to understand how it would feel to have to deal with attachment related behaviors and parent younger children. We were naive and foolish and we fucked up. We should not have adopted out of birth order and we should certainly not have adopted an older, traumatized boy. But, we did. And we owned it and we talked to everyone we could and we read everything we could and we made a decision that we felt, therapists felt and his second family felt was the best for him, under the circumstances. We put him in those circumstances, no question. And there are legitimate questions about whether that was good or bad for him. Life in Haiti after 16 years in an orphanage is no picnic. I won't say it was unequivocally good for him, but I won't say it was the worst thing that could have possibly happened to him either.
What will you tell your other children? How will your daughter ever trust you? I will tell all of my children, and especially my daughter, the truth. The same thing I would have told her if we had adopted her alone. Love is rarely instant. It takes time. I thought her picture was beautiful. We wanted her so much. We love her so much, so equally, so fully, it takes my breath and makes me feel endlessly lucky. I'm honored to be her mother. But, we had to attach, us to her and her to us and it was a process. I wondered if she would ever stop going to other adults for comfort. I wondered if I would ever stop doubting my heart. I have and she has. We are a forever family.
I will tell her never to imagine that love is easy. I'm sorry she lost that first and more effortless (but not always instant) bond, the one that starts in the womb. That is a loss, a loss to grieve. I'm sorry we had to find our way to love a different way, over months, through rocking and eye contact and rules about others holding her. I won't make excuses for it. It was. We did the work. We're there. Things stood between our older son and I and prevented it from happening. I'm sorry for that too. He found a mommy that didn't have other babies to make him jealous to do the work with him.
Will you tell your children that there is no limit to the amount of pain and anguish a family member can cause others? Will you encourage them to stay in relationships that are emotionally or physically damaging to them? I hope when the time comes to talk to my daughter fully about our history, that she will understand that our goal was to find a solution that let everyone grow up in a safe and emotionally healthy home, without fear and with unconditional love.
I know Anita and her family made some missteps. I know with 20/20 hindsight, it seems obvious she was getting in over her head. I know our story looks the same. My heart is with Anita as she bears the brunt of public opinion, especially uninformed public opinion. I often felt like a monster while I tried to parent our son. I felt like my anger in response to his behavior was monstrous. I felt like my inability to put him before my other children was monstrous. I felt like my rage in the face of his rage was monstrous. My inability to love no matter what was monstrous. I know people thought it when we disrupted our adoption and placed our son with another family. Monsters. Who does that?
We did and we aren't monsters. Monsters feel rage towards a child and lash out, they don't sit on the front porch and cry. Monsters realize they aren't meeting a child's needs and do nothing, out of shame, or embarrassment or stubbornness. Monsters blame the child, make him a scapegoat. We did none of those things. We sought help, we learned, we found a safe and loving solution and we changed a situation that was not working. We are parents. Parents are human.
*With thanks to Everlast.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
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66 comments:
I thought of you last week and I hoped that it didn't touch you, but I knew that it would. So much for my magical thinking. Love you.
I love your last paragraph especially- you are right. And all your words to explain this, to process this, show so deeply what a disturbing, difficult, painful thing it was for you to do- something you clearly thought about in depth.
Utterly awesome post on this topic - as always. You make your position so clear. You obviously considered this brutal decision incredibly carefully and I know you`ve done what`s best for everyone. I bet your son is doing very well in his new, optimally-suited-to-his-challenges-and-needs environment. I think that`s the next focus - let`s talk about the kids who benefit tremendously when all the grown-ups who care for them think of what will best suit them. Not that it`s easy...
I thought of you too, and wondered. An on-line friend of mine is starting the disruption process after 2 long years of struggle, heartbreak, fear, everything. I did point her to your blog... and I hope she sees this post.
There are no words - that help, that mean anything - when facing a situation that we just cannot fix. There are no words.
As an adoptive parent who was shocked, despite reading and preparing, for how hard it was to bond with my 5 month old daughter who *was* and infant and *wasn't* a child with a lot of attachment issues, I think anything that brings to the forefront of the adoption discussion the reality that building a family is seldom as straightforward or nice or easy as it is often portreyed is invaluable.
Love love love you.
Every time I read someone judge her, I think of you and your family, and how that was the furthest thing from my mind when I read your posts about it. It changed the way I looked at her posts, then, too. Thank you for dealing with this and doing it so bravely and beautifully. So many of the angry comments infuriate me, so I can only imagine how they make you feel. You're right, that in talking about it, you're showing the adoption community they must.
Thank you so much for sharing your disruption. We are currently going through a very painful and private disruption with our 4 year old son. Your words are comfort to my open wounds. On days when I feel that the pain will overcome, I return to your blog. So, thank you from the bottom of my heart.
KT
I saw this happening, this conversation online about something that most of us can't understand. Something that people choose to judge instead of look at it in all ways. For you, I tried to explain. To show people, that there might be resons greater than what is being told on tv. that sometimes the best thing for everyone is making the hardest choice. But I don't think I did it any justice.
I love you for trying to explain. I hope people are kind.
Your earlier post on this topic was the first thing I ever read about adoption disruption and it helped me understand. As someone who had decided (at least at that point; the jury on the future remains out) not to become a parent through adopting, it also helped me appreciate that the qualms I had felt (not all of which were related to my own shortcomings) were real and serious and deserved attention.
When I saw the NYT stuff, I thought of you and felt for that family, too.
"I will tell her never to imagine that love is easy." If I teach my son just one thing more than that he is loved, I hope I can teach him this.
You know, it was your post about disruption that made me one of your readers. It was gripping, and completely new to me.
This was almost like a follow up to that first one, even without the news story.
Either way - I think you are very brave to write about this and allow others to pick over your emotions. In the end, you offer information. And ultimately understanding. Even if that understanding is simply that some issues are far more complicated than they initially appear.
thank you for introducing the rest of us to issues that most would be quick to judge on ... if they didn't have a "friend" in similar shoes.
it's only through discussion and realizing that parenting is never easy, that we will finally all be able to stop judging each other.
Years ago, before I became a mother, before we even started thinking about a family I would have spouted off all those nasty things and probably some more though not anonymously on a blog or in a chat forum but in conversation with friends and family.
Time and maturity and the learned skill of thinking about the other side of the situation has thankfully put a stop to that. When it comes down to it no-one can truly understand a situation until they have lived it themselves, and even then each situation is unique and comes with it's own pitfalls, highs and curve balls.
Now, please accept my apologies for being such a close minded asshole in my youth
I saw that clipand immediately thought of you. Because of your story I understood hers, though it was superficially covered. I am glad you shared it. I hope Ani.ta gets the chance to read your post.
Thank you for sharing this. I "know" that attaching is hard but I don't have that experience. I worry about it every day with our second adoption and with all the loss our child has already suffered.
People shouldn't judge others if they don't understand.
Thank you for being brave enough to bring forward this discussion. It wasn't something I'd even heard of before I read your earlier post.
When I was younger and didn't have a child of my own, I might have been one of those judgey people (though I was at least well-mannered enough not to say it out loud). Now I'm informed enough to know I don't know squat. Getting the stories out there are important.
As an adoptee, myself, I find this post so poignant.
I don't understand the need to vilify people who were making the best decision for everyone involved (and I can't even begin to imagine how difficult that decision must have been for you)
I'm always blown away by your brutal honestly on this issue and am just left speechless by the incredibly difficult situation in which you and your family found yourself.
Having never even been remotely close to such a situation, I have no perspective on it other than what I've learned from you. But I know in my heart that any other person who *has* been through something like that would read your words and weep with gratitude over the understanding, compassion and thoughtfulness you offer them with open hands. And that's why I think you're pretty incredible. I also hope you're as forgiving of yourself as you are of others.
Love you.
This post hit me particularly hard, as did Anita's, because I struggle with whether a disruption would be better for my son. I often feel that I screwed everything up for him by adopting him in the first place, but it breaks my heart to imagine my life without him.
I'm so grateful that you share your story. I hope more parents like me read it.
Honestly when I first heard about Anita's story my reaction was less than compassionate. Your post shed some light on details and facts I hadn't even considered. After reading it and the other ones you linked to, I don't know that I would've reacted any differently to such a heart wrenching situation. To think that a decision of such gravity and enormity could ever be come to lightly is just ignorance. Sharing your story has to be hard but your honesty is invaluable.
Thank-you for this thoughtful, honest post.
Ditto Maggie May.
I thought of you when I saw this story. If I didn't know you and your story, my first reaction would be to judge Ani.ta. By sharing your story, you've taught me something. I made a decision years ago in my life that still brings me pain. Still today I don't really know if I did the right thing.
My point is, you made me think a little differently before being so quick to judge. Especially since I'm too chicken to share my secret.
Before reading your blog, I'd never heard of disruption. And this points out why I absolutely love the blogging world. My eyes have been opened in many ways by reading about the experiences of others.
Most adoption stories I've heard sound like perfect, tidy, little fairy tales. "We saw your picture and knew you would be our child and we brought you home and fell in love immediately and it was so wonderful." I've never heard anyone admit that developing a bond can take time, patience, and hard work.
Thank you for the post and for your honesty. Once again, my mind has been opened to another person's experience and another layer of my formerly-judgemental self is stripped away.
Okay, I'm confused. Are those questions/comments you addressed NOT among the 25% rudest? They seem pretty harsh. And you addressed them beautifully, but seriously - ignore the haters.
Only someone who's walked in your shoes can relate. And even then, it's not the same. Every family is different. Every family is unique.
I have wondered what I would do if I had a child who physically harmed or threatened one of my other children. Even if they are all biological, how could a parent allow someone (even her own child) to hurt one of her children?
I hate to say this, but there's a point where you say, "If you do this to ME that's one thing but if you do this to my CHILD it's quite another."
I cannot even imagine how difficult your disruption was. I hope it's okay that I say, I don't want to ever find out.
I think you shared this openly and beautifully. It sounds like a very painful and difficult experience. Not only can we not know how we will react to an experience until we experience it, we also may react to a situation differently at different times in our lives. It sounds like the timing was not right for this arrangement, and that you handled it in the best way possible to give everyone a chance. Painful none the less.
You are right that these experiences aren't limited to adoption. They occur in step families and biological families as well. You defined it perfectly in your last paragraph. It's far more damaging to everyone involved when these feelings are left unexamined and undealt with.
I did not know this part of your family story and I am completely blown away. I have such a new appreciation for you, and other adoptive parents.
A couple from our church, years ago, attempted to adopt 3 siblings. The younger 2 were fine, but the older one, well, wasn't. I don't know the whole story but I think that the older one ended up with a different placement. I knew that it must have been a difficult decision, but now, after reading this, my heart breaks for them. The guilt that they must have felt-for all of the reasons that you've noted, plus breaking up siblings-I cannot even imagine.
You have a gift Stacey. Don't ever stop writing.
Thanks for the post. It's honest and it's painful and it made me think.
I have no experience with adoption (only biological children at this point), but I imagine it can be a very difficult process.
As soon as I heard this story I thought of you.
I've always admired how brave you have been to put this out there. I'm so grateful to you for giving me a much more realistic picture of what adoption is. I've always had a Pollyanna idea in my head that I've come to realize is unrealistic. You have furthered my journey as a human being and taught me things that will enable me to be much more compassionate and understanding in my life with my relationships.
Thank you.
I'm sorry for your pain. I'm sorry for your son's pain. I'm glad for all of you that you had the courage to face truths and work for a resolution.
What a thoughtful and well written post. Its a subject I don't know personally but I find it interesting that people made caustic comments to you for expressing your opinion. Forge ahead! You do it eloquently.
This is one of the most honest, thought-provoking posts I've read in quite a while. It's made me love you even more.
You beautifully expressed your opinion on this. I wish that those who judge would read what you have to say on this, as it might change their minds.
I remember reading Anita's piece and thinking she was brave to tell her story and I don't think she deserved the backlash she got. Especially if the child flourishes from the ending decision, whose right is it to point fingers at the very people who had to make the difficult decision in the first place? Even the best mother in the world will realize when something is not working and do her best to do what's best for the child even if that means the child is to be raised in a different family. I didn't know you had also experienced. I'm so sorry for the pain I can only imagine you went through and my opinion of you just went up tenfold. You're wonderful.
I didn't see this last week, I dont' watch much TV. Your post was awesome! True even some people that adopt young children have bonding issues, I didn't but I also didn't adopt a child who was institionalized and had attachment issues (and I had no other children). I had follwed a blog before yours and she too has other adopted children and one from Haiti, he has so many issues, the spitting, kicking, fighting rages,I cann't imagine tryingto deal with that with just one child let alone having others you need to protect. I started following your blog after you were featured on rainbow kids (where we found our daughter)I cannot imagine having to go thru what your family did and I hope that your son is somehow doing well in his new home.
Eek...so I am going to say something because I think it needs to be said...
I love your post, and I love your honesty, and I agree with almost everything you've said, except...
The problem with *this* story, with A's story, is that she has made it *her* story. Her story is horrifying, with not one child, but another born in the time that "D" was around. D was an infant when he was adopted. You adopted a five year old - a child that had a history of trauma in the critical period of 0-3.
I strive never to judge people's actions, but in *this* case, A's case, it is not the disruption that is the problem: it is the fact that she is putting *this* story out there as the hallmark of disruption, which really dismisses the issues of families grappling with attachment issues in older children, that she went on the Today show a short time before publishing a book, that she wrote about her other children watching TV as their brother walked away as if it was okay...ie, the aghast is not necessarily at the disruption itself. Disruption is a horrific reality in a world in which children without families, poverty, trauma, and other social injustices are a reality.
I understand your post, and actually, as I said, I love your post, but I do not see the sameness of the situations that you do.
I have to agree with Rachel. There IS a huge difference in attachment issues when looking at a child adopted under the age of one and a child adopted at five.
The Tongginator didn't give me a kiss until we'd been home eight months. She raged for over a year. We dealt with attachment-related bathroom issues during her third year home. And on and on and on. So I know: I have lived in that darkness you spoke about. I have cried for months... and months... and months.
I don't judge you, but I do judge her. There is a huge difference in the two situations because a baby/ toddler doesn't have the ability to hurt in the same way that a five-year-old does. You made a decision based upon the children. She made a decision based upon her. Period.
Blogging teaches me so much. Don't hate me, but I think I might have said that comment about the puppy before. I just never understood how someone could give away a child. But, I understand now. It isn't about love - it is about attachment. When a woman has a baby, she is relying more on instincts. In an adoption, you have to learn how to attach to someone else. Someone who might not want to be attached to you.
I know this is a tough issue for you to talk about, but you have helped me to understand. No more puppy comments from me.
Amazing post...thanks!
I totally echo the first two lines of your post. If we have not been in the same shoes, we cannot pass judgement. The End.
All I would have to know about her is that it was an attachment problem, and I would lean back and take a deep breath before proceeding.
My sister is biologically from the same parents as me, as all of us are. My mother was in a desperately unhappy situation when she was born, having already tried to flee from my dad but returning out of guilt & love for him. She was so terribly depressed that she would sit on the back porch, blank-eyed, nearly catatonic and smoking slowly, while my sister laid in her crib and screamed & screamed & screamed all day long.
I haven't blogged about it before, but my sister is in a terrible situation now. I look at her behavior as a kid, her behavior now, and I see attachment at the root of it. Inappropriate attachments to people, overwhelming attachments to people.
I also knew an adoptive mom struggling with this with an adopted child, and her stories took my breath away. The scope of her fear, her stress, her worry over this child. It had overwhelmed their entire family.
You can't let your other kids be traumatized for the sake of one that could be placed somewhere else and have better chances at life. And if you already KNOW that you can't handle it, having the wisdom & courage to back out - knowing what will be said about you - I'm glad she had it within her. And I pray that child will be blessed in the new family.
I accidentally stumbled onto a caustic article about this woman and seriously hoped you wouldn't see anything about it because, from what I saw, public opinion was downright rude and uninformed.
You are helping people to take a step back before jumping in to judge. Not just An.ita, but anyone going through this very difficult situation.
Love you, girl.
@rachel and @tonggumomma I really appreciate your input and your points of view (and your measured, compassionate way of stating them!). I really do understand your feelings about Anita's story (or mine for that matter). I was troubled by some of the facts surrounding this family's adoption and disruption, I was saddened that this was the scenario that is being presented to the media and the public. It's not the typical disruption story.
But, when I started to try and "distinguish A's case on the facts" from my own (as lawyers say), I felt ill. I know in my heart that it isn't about whether we like some one, how odious we think their motives or decisions are, at the heart of it, I have to find this: She wasn't reacting to this child the way she knew she should. Maybe it goes deeper and is more troublesome than she dared to admit in public. Maybe she was feeling resentment, anger or even rage. Maybe she was feeling an urge to punish him for his understandable and expected, but difficult, behavior. Maybe she was afraid to say, "my feelings for this child were not right and I was afraid." If that is even a tiny, small possibility, than she did the right thing.
I guess not liking her (or me) has to be beside the point.
Also, though I have no idea if it was the case in her circumstance, I don't think it works to set an age under which we think attachment problems shouldn't happen. Although it's rare and requires severe neglect, children can develop severe attachment disorders in their first six months of life. Her inability to handle D's problems (or bond) may have been the result of all the personality flaws that she is accused of, but a child is not precluded from being very difficult to bond with because he arrived home under a year of age.
Finally, TM, I can't tell you how much I respect parents that find their center, hold the line and love right through to attachment. It's awe-inspiring.
To every single one of you: Thank you for reading with an open heart.
Stacey, I have learned so much from you and your blog. I had never even heard of adoption disruption before I started reading your blog, and those posts are what pulled me in and made me care so much about you. I still care and I still hate that you, Matt, and your little boy all went through this. Thanks for sharing/teaching through the pain.
When I taught emotionally disturbed children, I once had a seriously damaged child who had become a ward of the state after trying to harm another child in his adoptive family. I never thought to wonder about the agony that must have gone into that decision to let him go.
My heart breaks for you. We all do the best we can in the situation we are in.
Stacey, this made me cry. I cannot imagine how brave you and Matt had to be to disrupt the adoption and find a situation that was better for everyone involved. You make me proud to call you my friend.
Stacey,
You provide such a service when you blog--both from a social work perspective, and from a perspective of compassion.
Forget it, I have trouble expressing myself in the face of such carefully thought out, exceptionally wise words.
I bumble and I say I support you. I so appreciate your honesty and your detailing for us the many many shades of gray.
Thank you so much.
I know I've been in la la workland but I have no idea what the deal with Anita is (and am holding fast to my Chaucer lesson planning and not googling it for fear of getting sucked in).
BUT, first, brilliantly written as ALWAYS.
Second, from one (albeit fairly lapsed) blogger to another, I give you a standing ovation for continuing to write poignantly, honestly and openly about your disruption. I feel crippled when people criticize my parenting, my choices, my beliefs...and I don't lay bare anything as raw or emotionally charged as your experience. I know the tendency is to dismiss the pandering and accolades, but please know that I truly admire your honesty.
(also I totally love that song - haven't heard it in years).
Hi again -
I'm sorry - I really didn't mean to say that there is an age where there can be attachment problems, or not. Attachment issues can result from babies separated at birth. I've worked with kids who have RAD and other attachment issues for a long time now.
So much about An.ita's story bothers me, though, that I find myself unable to step away. I agree fully and wholeheartedly that to disrupt was best for D, but then again, I think that D should have never been allowed to come to her home - the home of an essentially single mother unprepared to put the work into parenting, unprepared to put her life (and particularly childbearing) on hold while she learned. Pregnancy is hormonal and challenging! How could she have possibly been the parent D needed?
The victim in this is D, not her, but she makes it about her, and that is what I find so challenging. Also, I would really *really* question the social worker who approved the adoption.
As I said, I don't take issue with disruption; I think it is an immeasurably painful thing that no one can fully understand until they walk in those shoes. *I* don't claim to think *I* know the pain of disruption, either, even though I've worked with families in the process and have heard their stories. But I do take issue with the circumstances of this situation as being the poster child for all disruptions.
I just want to echo the idea that there can be attachment issues with a child under the age of one. My sister first stayed with us for about a month at age 9 months and stayed permanently at age 11 months. She is now 26 yo and has been continuously diagnosed with attachment disorder, something that has affected her in numerous ways throughout her life. Evaluations have pointed to her poor/missing pre-natal and post-natal care, in addition to neglect. Her biological mother was 13 yo when she gave birth, a refugee and probably dealing with her own PTSD issues during the pregnancy. Obviously our adoption was not disrupted, but I'm also not sure attachment ever occurred. I love her deeply, but also recognize that her issues have reigned over our family for 25 years.
i just stumbled on an.ita's story and, after reading, came over here knowing you must have addressed it. and of course you did. brilliantly. my heart goes out to anyone who has had to deal with this situation. i can remember having issues bonding with my colicky son. and he WASN'T adopted. i can't even imagine the hurdles involved in something as emotionally charged and historically involved as an adoption.
thanks, as always, for providing your enlightening perspective.
I grew up thinking I wanted to adopt. On hindsight it stemmed probably for my sub-concious desire to be "noble".
Somewhere down the path I realized, I probably wasn't capable of being im-partial in all ways between a child that was bilogically mine and one that wasn't. Besides my husband was totally against adoption..he just kept saying think of the in-justice you would do to the child if the child did not feel the "belonging". Having said that ...I do empathize with you....and I think I can understand the pain and heart-break that went into making the RIGHT decision.
In your shoes..I am sure I would have done the same.
I thought of you too when I read that post. Thank you for sharing all this. It needs to be said. Life is not snappy soundbites. It's about real people.
I seriously wish I could hug you right now.
And I also did not mean to give the impression that I think attachment issues only occur in older children. We didn't find that to be the case at all! We adopted our Tongginator BEFORE her first birthday, yet we still faced many, many challenges. What I meant to say is that - physically - a younger child struggling with attachment issues is less of a physical threat to a family because they are not capable of as many things as a child age four and older.
And I still see a huge difference in the way you talk about disruption and the way that she talks about her disruption of baby D. I want you to know that - had I been raising other children in the home when the Tongginator struggled through the worst of her attachment issues - I don't know if I could have done it. I like to think that I could have... but I don't know. It took everything I had... and I was only parenting one child.
Which is why I seriously wish I could hug you right now.
I must live under a rock because I haven't seen the anita story everyone else seems to be aware of. I also had never of the term adoption disruption until I started reading your blog...and I didn't even read those posts until well after I was already a fan of your lyrical prose. I noticed the adoption sidebar stories one day and then just couldn't stop reading them - they had me in tears for you and your family. I wish people wouldn't make such rash uniformed judgments (me included, sometimes)...also, I have no idea if you could, but you might want to send this post to anita -- just to let her know there are others out there who have made it through it...big hug, my friend.
Incredible post. I truly commend you for being honest about a very difficult time in your life - you are opening yourself up to a lot of potential criticism and very mean, judgmental people. I appreciate your telling your story. My husband and I have adopted two children (both were very small infants and thankfully we did not have any attachment issues), also have a 12 year old daughter, and have been considering now adopting an older child (5-7 yrs). We struggle with the reality of the issues we may face and trying to determine what is best for our current family as well as trying to find the right fit for a child who so desperately needs a family. Stories like yours do help to bring the realities of adoption to light - it isn't all rainbows and sunshine; there are some really tough times and tough decisions. Thank you for sharing your story.
I just went and read Anita's post and I do agree with others on these comments that it is difficult to feel the same about her story as I do about yours. While I'm sure it was a very difficult decision for her to make, it does seem like it was based more on her issues rather than the childs. Everyone has to make decisions that are right for them and their family so I am not going to judge whether she was right or wrong because, honestly, if that is how she felt about this child she would have been doing a huge disservice to him and much more damage in the long run by keeping him. As I mentioned in my previous comment, we have adopted children but we also have done foster care and we had to give up a child that was with us for over two years that we had hoped to adopt and it was the most heartwrenching, horrible experience for all of us and I would not wish that experience on any family.
"I will tell her never to imagine that love is easy. I'm sorry she lost that first and more effortless (but not always instant) bond, the one that starts in the womb. That is a loss, a loss to grieve."
Amen.
I've followed Anita's story for a while but had no idea of your backstory with regards to adoption. I can identify with the strong desire to adopt and can only imagine how devastating it would be to have it fall apart in such ways. My heart goes out to you both and to your families.
truly an excellent post. yours is some of the most thoughtful writing on disruption out there. thank you for cultivating some much needed understanding on this complicated issue.
Ah, Stacey. I know I don't "know" you, but I'm proud to know you.
I have been very wrapped up in my own life and can honestly say I knew nothing of this story unfolding. I'm glad I came at it through your post. You are amazingly honest and write of your emotions so well. I think you do a great service to so many others' - no matter what they're experience - by sharing this.
Thank you. So brave, so honest. Wonderful.
just wanted to say hi and let you know i'd hug you if i were next to you
Bonding is a process. I go through it every single time a baby joins our family. If you just think it is going to be automatic, you are going to be surprised!
Each child is different, and each bonding process unique.
I was sick when I heard people making comments like "what child doesn't bond with his mommy?"
Come on over, I'll show you one. RAD is real. It is difficult and it makes parenting and loving that child HARD AS HELL!
Hugs to you. I get it and I've got your back anytime. Internet people suck. Keep that in mind too.
Stacey, your story touched me beyond words when I read it for the first time and to read this post touches me in the same way. Your honesty is so raw and I really appreciate that you've shared how you address disruption with your children.
Life is not black and white. When we are dealing with hearts, souls, personalities--HUMANS--there are so many variables that contribute to what ultimately is the best choice for ALL of the family members involved. How people can make snap judgments on the agonizing choices that others make without anymore that a sound byte of information is beyond me.
I just stumbled across your blog, and have to say I was extremely moved by the story about your disruption. I adopted my daughter at 18 months, and can only imagine how difficult this must have been for your entire family. I wish there were more people brave enough to post things like this.People need to see all sides of the story.
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