Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Differences

This is an essay I wrote for an adoption website, which is why it has a slightly different tone than my usual writing. It's gently arguing a point and it assumes that readers don't know my family at all, unlike my friends who read my thoughts on this blog and are so consistently gentle with my heart. It is, I think, my response to comments that I have read countless times around the internet when adoption disruption comes up. The comments that say: How dare she. She WOULD NEVER "give away" a biological child.

I'm posting it here because I get emails from frightened parents struggling to attach with a child. I want them to hear, over and over, that they are not alone. That if they make it, and most of them do, they have my awe, and if they don't, I know their grief.

**************************************

My daughter threw a four-hour temper tantrum the other night from midnight until four a.m.

She wasn’t sick. She wasn’t frightened. She doesn’t suffer from night terrors. She’s generally a sound sleeper. She was angry that we put her to bed fifteen minutes early (a common consequence in our house) and she knew exactly when her displeasure would make the most impact.

I don’t say that casually. I try hard not to attribute adult motives to my children’s behavior, but I know my daughter and she knew, at a four-year-old level, what she was doing. It was a long night and I worked hard, very hard, harder than I can ever convey in black and white type, to control my irritation, to react to her from love, but with consistency and firmness.

Over three hours, I gave her several options for letting out her emotions. I gave her three warnings about disrupting the sleep of her siblings and then I removed her to a safe room on a different floor of the house with a blanket and pillow where, robbed of control over our family’s sleep, she cried for a while and fell asleep.

My boys - I have three boys - My boys do not behave this way. So what, right? Your daughter is hard? She has some emotional issues? Sounds like you deal with it all right. Thanks. I try.

What if I told you that my adopted daughter threw a four-hour tantrum? My biological boys do not behave this way. Gasp. Whisper. Awful. How could she? How could she compare them that way?

Every once in while, a conversation about my family, my amazing family with birth and adopted children about the same age, will tiptoe around the question that I think about a lot. I will see it on the tip of someone’s tongue and see them swallow it. It might be the most taboo question of adoption, certainly of families with birth and adopted children.

Is it different?

You know what? Brace yourselves because this generally isn’t allowed in polite, “PC” discussions of adoption: It is different. Parenting my adopted child is different than parenting my biological children. It is more difficult. It is more delicate. It is less intuitive. It is sometimes a struggle. Bonding with my fourteen-month-old adopted daughter was very different than bonding with my infant sons. It was much slower; it involved some difficult emotions; it required deliberate choices. Three years later, though we are definitely attached, the process is still on-going in some ways.

But, that’s not the whole answer. The problem is that the comparison “adopted to biological” is useless because it isn’t my daughter’s “adoptedness” that makes her harder for me to parent. Not at all.

The word “adopted” is merely used as an incorrect, cover-all substitute for issues that often, although not exclusively, occur in adoptive families. If I unpack the word “adopted” and call the differences by their correct names, I find that adoption is not where the difference lays.

Parenting a child with a history of institutionalization is different and often more difficult than parenting a child that has never experienced an orphanage. Parenting a child with a history of trauma is different in every way than parenting a child with no trauma history. Bonding with a child who first met you at fourteen-months-old is different from bonding with a child from conception.

There’s nothing wrong with different. Parenting a child with significant medical issues is different than parenting a child without such issues. Parenting a shy child is different from parenting an aggressive child. Parenting a fourth child is different from parenting a first child.

We do, however, need to stop dancing around this question and look the differences square in the face so that adoptive parents are prepared, educated and supported. Because there is one difference that tears families apart. Parenting an unattached child. Attachment, which is a two-way process, child to parent and parent to child, makes all the differences in successful families no matter how they came to be families.

I remember the exact moment that I knew our oldest son shouldn’t stay in our home. He was five years old and he had been home just six months. We were on hour three of a four-hour screaming tantrum. My lip was puffy and bleeding where he had unintentionally smashed his head into my face, wild with fear and rage. He lay beside me, restrained as gently as I could manage to prevent injuries.

My two eighteen-month-old children, my adopted daughter, also home with us six months, and my biological son, hid behind a chair, eyes wide and bewildered. I kept my face blank so that he wouldn’t see my anger, my fear, my dislike, as I stared at my babies crouched down and huddled together. I put out a hand to my younger son and said, “it’s all right, your brother is mad, but we’ll be all right.” I didn’t fool a single person in the room. My barely walking children didn’t believe me. I could see it in their eyes.

In my heart, right at that moment – and it was not our oldest son’s worst moment, not by far – I put them first. I wanted the fear erased from their eyes and I was willing to sacrifice my son’s needs to do it. I put him in his room and shut the door that afternoon. I walked away and played with my babies while he raged and drooled and tore his bed apart and sobbed. I knew it wasn’t what he needed. I knew that the most important thing in the world was for him to bond with parents. For him to feel safe and loved through his rage and fear and I couldn’t give it to him.

For over a week, I survived the days by keeping him separated from my younger children, and also from me, and then I looked my husband in the eye and told him that I was not, in any capacity, meeting this child’s needs. I was not prioritizing him, as a mother would, not even sometimes. I was not the mother that he needed, one devoted completely to his care, his comfort and his bonding.

I could look down the road, five, ten, twenty years and see a boy, a teen, a young man, who felt marginalized and bitter, who didn’t understand the concept of family, who had a certain amount of loathing and disdain for women. I could see, clearly and painfully, the damage my choice could do.

When someone really wants to hurt me, they’ll ask or comment that they don’t understand how my daughter can ever trust me. How she can ever know that she is a part of our family forever after “what we did,” in disrupting our adoption of our oldest son and finding a home where he was prioritized, not managed. What will you do if she is difficult? If she is rageful? If she acts out?

My daughter is difficult. She does act out. She has post-institutionalized and mild attachment disorder behaviors. She is manipulative at times. She throws the occasional four-hour tantrum in the middle of the night. Tantrums that I am able to support her through, with (mostly) patience and consistency. We set calm and careful limits and enforce them with love.

The difference is that we are bonded. She is attached to us and we are attached to her. Her needs are equally important to me as those of my other children. It wasn’t always easy getting there, but it was worth it.

That is the difference that attachment makes. Attached children and parents make it. Parents finding their way through the attachment process need support and understanding. In those instances when significant barriers to the attachment process exist in a home, scathing condemnation of the family for not viewing their adopted child “the same” misses the point. Parenting an unattached child is not the same. Parent and child relationships that don’t attach aren’t necessarily the best choice for anyone involved and that is why, in some cases, adoption is not forever.

65 comments:

Anne said...

I so admire you for being able to be so candid and honest about your experiences. Not being in your shoes exactly, but having three daughters, one of which has severe learning disabilities, I understand on some level about 'differences'. Daily struggles that 'regular' parents make seem magnified when I make them, and maybe that is only through my eyes. Kudos for a wonderful written article!

Hezra said...

I was thinking of you and this story- and that it was how I "met" you. Your article was so brave, bold, yet raw and full of emotions that so many ignore. I love you! I know the pain of love and loss and I know how bad it hurts when we are so damned determined to make things work and there are things we just can't "fix." I have a three to two ratio of bio to adoption here. But my babies came to me as newborns. They are siblings, but one bonded instantly like glue. The other, not so much.I hate when people say do you love them the same? um, no, they are different why WOULD I and how could I love them all the same?! With the same intensity but in very different ways. Thank you for shedding light on the realities of adoption.

Nina said...

I love the way you write and the points you make, and the only point I want to make is that as a family therapist I see people giving away their biological children all the time.

Kari said...

I love you for writing these words that so desperately need to be written, for so many people.

~Jo~ said...

I know you didn't make that choice lightly. I can imagine the sleepless nights and the agony before reaching a decision; from reading your previous posts, you're just a TINY bit of a thinker =) Ultimately, though you had the best intentions, you were able to recognise that your home was not a healthy place for your son, your other children, you, the family. I get that; I understand you.

And here's a hug (HUG) for speaking about this taboo subject.

Rebecca said...

wow...thanks for sharing that with us. i'm sure it was so difficult to come to that decision.

growmyown said...

I think it is important for all children/people to know that they will get the help "they" need. Not equality, but meeting their need, when needed.

You did a great job in putting that into words.

Amber said...

Goosebumps...well written and answered dozens of questions that swirled my mind for the few months we were considering adoption. I don't judge you at all...to bad some people are so narrow minded.

Mom24 said...

I love your honesty. I think you do such a great service to families by your honesty. You take adoption from fantasy, which is completely unrealistic to so much more.

I hope that you are comfortable with who you are. You should be. I think you're doing a great job with your family and you have nothing to apologize for.

hokgardner said...

Well written. I know you've helped parents facing the same situation you did. THank you for posting it.

Robyn said...

Thank you so much for this post. It was poignant, simple and honest - about a complex and difficult subject.

Your children (all of them) are very lucky to have you.

Kerrie said...

I think it's really hard for people who haven't parented these kids (my particular "this kid" is having a tantrum at this very moment about the word "no." She is seven) to understand. I get that. I just wish they would recognize they don't understand and not comment. I don't think they realize what they do to the morale of a struggling parent. If they knew how they make me feel, I don't think they'd ever say it.

K.Line said...

Yet another of your "genius" posts. I am amazed by your insight and your willingness to speak honestly. That helps parents (and kids!) everywhere. Of course, as we've discussed, attachment issues aren't only there with adoptive children. Sometimes it's very hard to bond with biological ones also. I recall the 4 hour tantrums my kid used to have (midday, generally) and how I couldn't leave the house because I didn't know what she'd do. I didn't feel a lot of connectedness in those instances - or even when she was "good". I couldn't trust her.

Maybe, at times, your boys will throw you for a loop the way S sometimes does. Point is, you love them all and you have been able to commit to them on a soul level.

PS: You also showed compassion (its own kind of commitment) to your oldest son. You knew he needed something that your family environment would not be able to provide. I admire you for making a well-considered - but certainly not easy - decision.

OHmommy said...

I dislike to mimic the above comments and say that I applaud your honesty and bravery - but I can find no other words than those.

The posts that bleed honesty are those that help others. I and countless others thank you.

Christy said...

I think this was one of your most beautiful posts Stacey. Such an incredibly difficult subject handled with such grace and honesty.

Leah and Maya said...

I would think people that comment negativiely are just naive, I'm sure I would have been without full understanding of adoption and how they are handled in different countries. Its sad but I never had a pull to Haiti becasue the kids seem to have so many issues that aren't met there and have alot more RAD. We never had any problems with our adoption or attachment and I cannot imagine being in the situation you were in, there are plently of uneducated people that just think loving them and caring for them with change them, which we know is not true by any means. This is also how I came upon your blog, love that you wrote it!

Shell said...

I admire the honesty and emotion you are able to convey as you talk about such a difficult subject.

PletcherFamily said...

I can attest to the attachment piece one hundred percent. As you know - our biological daughter and adopted son are only 30 days apart. It is VERY different to parent my son and my daughter. Cainan was 14 months old when he came home. He was institutionalized - he had special needs. His needs were different. Our bonding took longer than it did with our biological child. Anyone who tells you the bond when they see their child's picture is fooling themselves.
We love him with all of our heart. He is a wonderful boy that has been with us for 3 years. But it hasn't been without struggles - his and ours. We fully admit to everyone we know that parenting him is different. Not bad or good, just different.
But we are attached. Like you with your daughter, that has made all the difference. Through all the behaviors we were not ready for, we are attached. And I can see how easily it could be much, much worse without attachment.
Thank you for this post. I have never spoke of it before because as you say, people kind of gasp. That is just because they don't understand where you are coming from!

Lauren said...

People who criticize you for this probably don't understand just how strong you had to be during that process. I'm sure it wasn't daisies and roses coming to the realization that the arrangement just wasn't right. It is admirable what you did, and most caring that you WERE able to understand that what your son needed was something more than you could give. That had to be incredibly humbling.

Mama Cas said...

I've been reading your blog for about a year and my heart breaks for you every time you speak of this topic. It must have been so painful and heartbreaking. I love that you can write so honestly about it...and I hope the writing is helping you clear your mind.

And I wholeheartedly agree with your assessment that parenting is different with EVERY kid. I have 4 kids, which means I have to be 4 different Moms. Each one of them needs something unique from me. And anyone who thinks otherwise is fooling themselves.

Sandi said...

Thank you for always being brave enough to shed the true light on adoption.

TRUTH is always the best way.

Adoption is not for everyone.

All placements are different.

All kids/babies are different.

I have had ten successful attachments.

two unsuccessful

One I relinquished my rights to.

One I with struggle everyday. Twelve years of the most difficult parenting I have ever experienced.

There is no easy way when attachment doesn't occur. You suffer either way. Whether you disrupt or parent. IT IS NOT EASY!

Headless Mom said...

Your story is so powerful. I know that each time you share it that your heart breaks a little more. ((Hugs)) friend.

TMCPhoto said...

One of my personality traits is that I empathize with the other in my quest to understand a situation. But before I became a Mommy I was one of those people who may not have said it, but would have thought "How dare she". Before I went through post Partum depression, and had intrusive thoughts about smashing my baby into a wall, or leaving her alone in our apartment and walking away from her and my family and all those other things that go along with it I would have looked at your situation, and my situation and been scornful and uppity. You sometimes have to live through something to understand, if not living through it, then to know someone who has is the next best thing.

I've said this before in a comment on one of your posts but I think it bears repeating: Thank You for sharing this difficult choice, without it those "How dare she!" comments will continue.

Keely said...

I love your posts & essays about adoption. It makes me feel like though we're only at the 'tabling the idea' stage of adoption, if we get there, that we'll be more prepared. I wish more people spoke out about the difficulties and the need for support.

butwhymommy said...

Thank you for this post. I need to be reminded of this. I think about this all the time as I wait for news of when we can bring Lion home. The longer he stays in care (7 months now), the more problems there are likely to be. He has been in three separate placements in his 14 months and it worries me.

So reading your words lets me know that I am not alone in this. Thank you.

Kate Coveny Hood said...

I've fallen so ridiculously behind on my reader, that I find I have no time to comment if I actually read everything (which is absolutely required by my OCD tendencies). BUT I did want to comment on this since it's the issue that first introduced me to your family (seriously - the first post I ever read) and it touches my heart every single time...

I saw that this was submitted for the community keynote at blogher. Excellent choice...but I'm rooting for my own submission of "Matching."

Lyndsay said...

Your children are lucky and blessed to call you their mother.

Anonymous said...

You are so brave.

I admire your courage, strength and honesty for sharing...but just as much for your ability to look yourself deep in the eye and see who you were and what was possible for you as a mother. Your oldest son's birth parents likely did the same thing for different reasons...knowing that they could not give him what he needed, they made a choice of love. No one would critique them for that. Yours was a choice of love, too, for your son and for your other children. Love and parenting are real and hard. I admire you.

Libby

mosey said...

What they said. The commenters above, I mean, not the other "how dare you" ones.

dearheart said...

I learn a lot from you, especially regarding adoption and attachment between parent and child. Thank you, a million times over. K

gamommy2two said...

I will be honest. I was the one saying "how could she"...until I read this. Now I'll never say that again without hearing the ENTIRE story. Thank you.

~Laura said...

Thank you for sharing with such openness and honesty. You are helping so many others as they contemplate this same situation and enlightening the rest of us.

Alexicographer said...

Thank you again for writing about this again. I haven't BTDT and I don't claim really to understand (in a to my bones sort of way), but your writing helps. And when I say I don't fully understand I don't mean (at all) to suggest you should have done something different. It seems to me (not that this matters) that what you did was exactly the right thing in the situation where you found yourself. But though I understand/believe that, I don't imagine I really know what the process felt like and that's why I say I don't truly understand ...

Oh a much more superficial but similar note, we pursued (but didn't complete) domestic newborn adoption with what I believe to be an ethical agency. There was an odd disconnect between that agency's language about and endorsement of building an open family that incorporated both a birth mother and perhaps a larger birth family and an adoptive family, and the (basically marketing) restrictions they put on the "Dear birthmother" letter they had us write. If we're finding the family that's going to place a child with us and with which we're going to have a lifelong connection, shouldn't we have the final say in what information we use to introduce ourselves? Oddly (it seemed to me) the answer to that question was no. Which I guess is my convoluted way of saying that I, too, wish we as a society could be more frank about the ways in which adoption is different from, and can be more difficult/complicated than, bearing and raising a child.

Shannon- said...

You rock.

merlotmom said...

That was very brave and I'm sure helpful to many who are experiencing what you did. Good for you for being publicly honest.

Amelia said...

Beautiful words for a heartwrenching subject. You wrote about such a personal and emotional issue as well as can ever be written.

Melody said...

I love that you are so open about your disrupted adoption and think it's important that people have an opportunity to see a real family who struggled with this decision and made the difficult choice you did, but I wonder if you feel like you're apologizing for it all the time. If so, I hate that for you. You don't have to apologize or justify the decision you made for your family.

Pam said...

I read your blog yesterday and saw this in today's paper. My heart goes out to all parents who've dealt with this.

http://www.startribune.com/local/east/90319512.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUycaEacyU

Tracey - Just Another Mommy Blog said...

My heart always breaks for you when I think about this situation. I honestly don't know what else you could have done. You and your husband made a brave choice to relinquish him to a family that COULD meet his needs and prioritize him. We all commend the girls and women who make the choice to relinquish their biological children when their situation doesn't allow them to raise them themselves. But for the would-be adoptive parents who face the similar situation, it is a big disgrace? I don't THINK so!

And I have 3 biological children and guess what? I don't love them the same. I don't even LIKE them the same. Because they AREN'T the same, nor would I ever pretend that they are.

*Given Much Momma* said...

One of the best posts I've ever read on this subject. Thank you.

Holly at Tropic of Mom said...

Wow, this must have been hard to write ... to experience ... to feel. You're a great mother.

rebecca said...

thank you for an honest and beautifully written post. I can only imagine what that time in your life must have been like for you and your family. As a potential adoptive mom, I appreciate being let into your world if only for a moment.

Avasmommy said...

Bravo to you for being so honest and open. It's never fair to judge someone else's actions, especially if you've not walked in their shoes.

Heather said...

I assume you posted this great post because you saw this:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_russia_adopted_boy

I wish that it wasn't an international incident, but rather that people could speak about disrupted adoption so clearly---as you do--so those of us who might once have said, "how can she do that?" can now, without a doubt, understand completely HOW that can happen. I am so sorry you had your experience with your oldest son, but I am also grateful that you can now share your knowledge with others and offer support.

Mama D.'s Dozen said...
This post has been removed by the author.
Lindsey said...

This is a wonderfully articulated article. I look forward to reading your posts as they always reveal such beauty, truth and hope. I think Ess is fortunate to have found her home where she did, with such an intuitive and compassionate mother. Thank you for sharing. You have a gift for doing so.

Also, as a sister with a biological brother as well as an adopted one, I can nod in agreement with you on this one. It is different to be a sister to them both. One of them looks and acts almost exactly like me, while the other is difficult for me to understand at times. Still, we are all well bonded and attached, and we are a family, incomplete without one or the other. And I love them both to the ends of the earth. I got lucky that way.

kristine said...

I'm confused why you had so many young children in your care at one time. I don't get it. I wish there was more emphasis on what children need.

I feel very sad for your son. I wish he had been adopted by someone who had time for him in the first place.

I wish there was more regulation so that the needs of our adopted children were placed first. So many of the disruptions I've heard of happen in homes where the newly adopted child is not the youngest in the home. Parenting adopted children is different. You can't have biological children out of birth order, for one. If a new child comes into the family as the youngest then the parents are all set to put all of their needs ahead of others in the family while you have a chance to bond.

This made me very sad. I wish you had people in your life who would have been able to advise you before you took on so much.

Bon said...

Stacey, this was one of the most powerful pieces i've read.

and i could see you on that floor, watching the two little ones. i do think you made a brave, unselfish choice.

Issas Crazy World said...

i applaud you for writing this and for putting it here in this space. most people here are used to your sweet posts and babies in pumpkins and i hope they are nice. or at least decent. lemme know if i need to kick some ass.

that being said, we one day should talk...about my oldest and your amazing daughter. very similar in some ways. different reasons but it comes out in a lot of the same ways.

anyway love you tons friend.

Boy Crazy said...

I am absolutely blown away with admiration for your honesty. I have no experience with mothering any children but my biological sons, but I can only imagine how helpful and meaningful it could be to other adoptive parents to be able to have an open, honest, frank discussion about the challenges.

elizabeth (@claritychaos)

anymommy said...

Thanks as always for your measured, respectful comments.

@Heather I wrote this before that news story broke, but I have been following it. It's devastating.

I can't condone the actions the family took, but I can find compassion for the mother. I can remember that I don't know the whole story. Outrage is so easy. Understanding is hard. Traumatized children can behave in absolutely terrifying ways. Unprepared parents can find themselves in so far over their heads that they don't know where to turn. And frankly, the anger you can feel towards a violent child is frightening as a parent. I wonder if the mother was suffering from severe depression. I wonder if the child has RAD. I wonder if she felt like she had no where to turn and felt judged at every single move she made. I wonder if she was afraid she would hurt him.

Sending him alone on a plane to Russia was not the right thing to do and I am not condoning it. It highlights for me, though, exactly how alone, without help and resources adoptive parents can feel.

And yes, @kristine, though your sanctimonious tone rankles, it is sad for everyone that adoptive parents aren't better prepared and better supported. It wouldn't help in every case, but it would make a difference.

Also, a small point, but abandoning an adopted child in his country of birth is NOT disruption of an adoption. Adoption disruption is a formal term for a legal process in which the first adoptive parents relinquish their rights to their child and a second family adopts the child.

Abandonment is leaving a child without anyone to care for them except the state (or national) government.

Disruption might have been a solution for this family, though a long and painful one for all involved. Abandonment in Russia was not a solution and unfortunately may end up being a criminal act.

blessedfamily said...

very powerful post... words to think on..

Marinka said...

Thank you for writing this post. I don't think we'll ever know how many people you've helped by telling your story, but I have no doubt that you're saving lives. Because you dare to go beyond the PC and write honestly and beautifully. love you.

MommyNamedApril said...

thank you for sharing this

Mama D.'s Dozen said...

I was so saddened by Kristine's words ... and the tone of her comment.

First of all, I had 6 children in 6 years, and I was able to "give them what they need". She has obviously made the assumption that large families are detrimental to the children.

Secondly, if every child that was adopted had to be the youngest in the family, than a lot less children would be adopted. Most parents are not wanting to adopt after their other children are grown and gone ... most want to add them to the already existing children in the home. And, unless you always adopt babies, you just might adopt a child older than one you already have.

Thirdly, I am appalled by this whole paragraph.

"I wish there was more regulation so that the needs of our adopted children were placed first. So many of the disruptions I've heard of happen in homes where the newly adopted child is not the youngest in the home. Parenting adopted children is different. You can't have biological children out of birth order, for one. If a new child comes into the family as the youngest then the parents are all set to put all of their needs ahead of others in the family while you have a chance to bond."

Why would you think it possible, even healthy, that all adopted children would get "their needs met first"? Any and all children in a home have the right to get their needs met. Even if you adopted a younger child than the ones you already have, can you imagine how they would feel if the newly adopted one always came first??? And ... how can you possibly say that "you can't have biological children out of birth order"? Why? My bio. children are BLESSED by the adopted children that are the same age and older. BLESSED!!!

So sorry that Kristine has this perspective. So sad that she hasn't seen that there are many WONDERFUL extra-large families, who do meet their children's needs, who do have adopted children that are older than some of their bio. children. It CAN work ... and it CAN be a good thing.

Now ... I will say ... YES we also had a disrupted adoption. It was NOT because we had a large family. It was NOT because we adopted out of birth order. It was because this African son had been abusing his youngest sister for years, and we had no way of knowing that until we brought them all home.

Laurel
mama of a dozen
10 bio. + 2 beauties from Ghana

just making my way said...

I am always so moved by your honesty and thoughtfulness on this subject. (Well, really on any subject.)
Your willingness to share your experiences and balanced views means a great deal.

Anonymous said...

I admire you being so candid but as an adult who was adopted as a toddler, I can tell you this--even at my adult age I don't want to read or hear that it was more difficult for my parents to love me than my biological siblings, that I was more difficult to deal with. I know I had issues as a child as a result of my beginnings but my parents never ever gave me any indication other than that I was a wonderful gift to them and that I was cherished. YOur words really may be helping other parents who are struggling but they may not be something your daughter, when she grows older, want to read or experience. As much as I know how much my parents loved me ,as an adopted child you never lose that piece of you that you do not belong and hearing that you were more difficult to love will deepen that chasm. I am not writing this to hurt you but it is something you may want to consider since you write publicly.

anymommy said...

@MamaD I understand your frustration. Many, many big families are incredibly happy families and most adoptions, including out of birth order adoptions and older child adoptions are huge successes. Pure magic. That doesn't mean they didn't take work. Most wonderful things do.

I think @Kristine's tone is annoying because it doesn't seem as though she has adopted and yet she wants to stand above us with her perfect 20/20 hindsight and point out mistakes of judgment along the way. I put it out there, and she was respectful, so okay.

I have to admit though that I agree in some limited respects. I do think adopting out of birth order in some cases can lead to difficulty. I've written about this before. I think for first time adopters, with very young, "preverbal" children in their home, especially with no other older children, that adopting out of birth order is not the best choice. I think that situation contributed to our inability to parent our son. We had never parented a five year old so we had no idea what "normal" five year old behavior looked like. It was very difficult to view him as a "baby" when he targeted our actual babies. It was terrifying to try and parent our son, once he started exhibiting aggressive behavior, and protect children that couldn't tell us if something happened to them.

So, based on our experience, I do think that first time adopters with young children should think about birth order.

On the other hand, I agree with you, there are incredible families out there and SO many older children need homes. If no one ever took a chance, wouldn't THAT be sad for the kids.

anymommy said...

@anonymous. I really appreciate that you were willing to put your thoughts here. Your perspective is not one that I get to read or hear often and I know it takes a lot of courage to express those feelings. Thank you.

I very, very respectfully, and with full realization that my daughter could one day feel exactly as you describe, disagree. I plan to be absolutely one hundred percent open about all aspects of our adoption journey with my daughter. I think that hiding things makes them seem shameful. There is absolutely no shame in my daughter's anger and grief. There is absolutely no shame in the fact that parenting a child that has her experiences is hard. I am willing to tell her right now that relationships are work and love is worth it. I am willing to have her understand that I understand that she suffered a traumatic loss in her life, the loss of her first family, and that I *know* we are different for her too.

It has nothing to do with quality or depth of love.

There are women all over the internet writing about their struggles to bond with, to feel connected to, their biological infants due to PPD, crushing health issues, and other circumstances. There are moms writing about the difficulty of blended families and raising step children.

And there are those that feel that this openness is forever damaging their children's privacy and well being. I disagree. I am comfortable with my level of openness and I don't write anything that I won't also share with my children. I don't think the emotions and struggles of adoptive families are any more delicate or any more fraught with potential future ramifications than any other parenting situation.

I guess I would say, in this way, that I don't see the difference.

dearheart said...

Dude, remind me to always circle back and read your follow up posts masquerading as comments. More honest, but respectful, stuff to be found on Any Mommy. Thanks again.

Kerry said...

thank you. As an adoptive mom I need to read "attached parents and children make it."

wilisons said...

Wow, what a powerful post.

I am an adoptive mom to 2. I love both of my children but they are VERY different. My attachment to each of daughters, and theirs to me, was so, so different. Both were adopted at the same age, 9 months and yet, one was attached in mere weeks (yes really) and the other, well 6 1/2 years later we are still working on it.

I had dark days when the attachment my daughter and I had was most difficult. I had the days when I too had to choose between comforting the raging 4-5 year old or helping her younger sister feel/stay safe. I had days when disruption entered my mind. It is not often that I feel I can express this and not get hammered for voicing it. Few and far between are those that have walked this line.

Three years of therapy and a good psychiatrist and the bonds of attachment are forming. We are becoming the ones who are making it. I hope and pray it continues.

I have heard the news all weekend. I went to work today to hear co-workers talking about this. They don't get it, not from the point of parenting the RAD child. Not from the point of the despair that can come from that feeling of being alone. Your post was the one I needed to read today. The one where someone gets it, from all sides. Thank you for writing it with total honesty!

Shanna

Marla said...

Your words so accurately describe my own experience between adopted and biological children. What a relief to see that someone else has the same struggles, and how brave of you to disrupt your older son's adoption. I am in awe of your strength and it is a great encouragement to me as we navigate a difficult path with our second adoption. Thank you, truly, thank you.

leesa said...

You are an excellent writer and I read you post with great interest, as I do all articles on adoption. My experience was different than yours, we adopted my daughter when she was 1 (from China) and our two boys were 7 and 10.
I am all for honesty with my daughter about the circumstances surrounding her birth and adoption but I believe this must be done with a huge dose of sensitivity. I want it clear to her that itshe does not bear any responsibilty for the circumstances of her birth and abandonment. A child can be told they were "difficult" and tantrumed or caused disruption to others or a child can be told "you struggled so hard with your anger or grief from the tough hand you were dealt, our hearts broke for you. We did everything we could to try and help you but I know we sometimes were not able to reach your pain and I am sad for that." I guess my point is there are different ways to present honestly.
On another note, I have a hard time when people say people don't understand what the mother who sent the boy back to Russia was dealing with if the child had RAD. That is most certainly true. However, there are no 2 ways about it, what she did, was wrong, how she handled it was wrong. She abandoned her child. Legally disrupting an adoption with the help of psychiatrists and trained professionals is vastly different from what this woman did.

imbeingheldhostage said...

I've read your story before and still feel as strongly as I did the first time-- that you are a great parent. Your writing must help so many.
My daughter is NOT adopted and yet, you described the situation in our home perfectly. Her four older brothers never did half of the things she's done by age three. She is a completely different creature. So I would NOT ever question you making a statement like that and sweeping it into the "adopted" category. Ever.