Thursday, November 24, 2011

Adult RAD?

I recently saw someone I've not seen ... since we were anticipating the arrival of our "sibling group" adoptees.  I gave her the shortest synopsis of time transpired...



She encouraged me... "Don't worry it can happen when kids are your bio-kids too." 

And she went on to tell me her kids haven't spoken to her in years.

I replied, yes, I realize people can have broken relationships for a variety of reasons... but, I explained... our daughter was diagnosed at age 6 with a disorder that outlines ALL of her behavior against us... I've been amazed to find out how common this condition can be in adopted individuals. 

She asked me if I was aware she was adopted... 
No, I wasn't.
Deep breath...
Lord, I REALLY don't want to offend this woman!!!!
I back pedaled on all adoption issue conversations.

She filled me in on what's new in her life.
Estranged from adult children.
Estranged from adoptive parents since before her kids were born.
Divorced.
Estranged from siblings, (one adopted, one adoptive parents bio.)
Pretty much alone.

SHE'S SUCH A NICE WOMAN!!!!

I don't know if she's got RAD or not...
... I do know my prayers for her are the same as they are for my adopted children.

Peace, healing, and restoration.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Books on BPD... So Much Applies to RAD!

I first saw "I Hate You Don't Leave Me!" in a counselor's waiting room.  I opened it mid-way and the first thing I read was a part about how BPD individuals keep creating "lose lose" scenarios... where NOTHING the people who love them do will be right. 

I just about jumped out of my chair and said "YES!!!!! EXACTLY!!!!!!"

The Stop Walking on Eggshells book has a list of "common non-BP thinking"  and contrasting "facts" about our situation.

I'm paraphrasing....
"We (who love bpd people) often believe IF we can convince the person with BPD that we are telling the TRUTH... that we are right, these problems will disappear.  
...
The TRUTH is BPD is a serious mental illness... we can't talk our loved ones out of mental illness no matter how convincing we are."  


I have since remembered many things that remind me that my adopted children... the "officially diagnosed RAD" especially... HAVE been traumatized long before we ever knew them... they DO have brain damage... it is not their fault. 

Our "officially diagnosed" daughter once tried to jump out of our moving minivan because she "heard" Daddy yell at her to "get out NOW!" 

The whole family was in the van and our daughter was the only one who "heard" that.  

I realize that "hearing voices" is a MAJOR issue.  It is part of what led up to her getting the referral from the state-provided counselor for a psychiatric evaluation.

It helps me to realize what is "real" in our RAD's mind may IS NOT the reality most people live in. 

Whatever the issue is called... RAD or BPD...

It really sucks for us... but it sucks for them worse... The Eggshells book points out we who love people with BPD can take a break from their mental illness...

They cannot. 

1)Stop Walking on Eggshells: Taking Your Life Back When Someone You Care About Has Borderline Personality Disorder Randi Kreger, Paul Mason MS

2)The Stop Walking on Eggshells Workbook: Practical Strategies for Living with Someone Who Has Borderline Personality Disorder by Randi Kreger


3) I Hate You--Don't Leave Me: Understanding the Borderline Personality by Jerold J. Kreisman, Hal Straus

Monday, November 7, 2011

Flashback to the beginning

I  was reading how many parents to RAD find their RAD afflicted children don't handle "owning" many things well.  Many adoptive parents of RADkids find their new child is most at peace with little-to-no belongings, at least until they settle in. 

I flashed back to the very beginning of our adoption experience.  We WANTED to give these kids the world.  We tried to give our new kids everything they had lacked... They just couldn't handle it!   Frequent tantruming and destruction is what ensued when owning items (fun items that normally delight young children) would overwhelm our RAD diagnosed daughter. 

Each of our three "new" kids came to us with one brown paper grocery bag partially filled with all their worldly possessions.  (Including all their clothes!)

It turns out the foster family "our new kids" also sent along several bags of "kid-stuff" that our "new kids" said wasn't theirs.  Our new kids' social worker explained the prior foster family wouldn't need the items any more.  Three months with our kids caused that foster family to retire. 

We were told after having "our kids" for three months... the elderly couple decided they'd give up foster care for good... they had only been doing it for a couple of decades. 

Our new "special needs sibling group" of three children, 13, 6, and 2 1/2 had just disrupted from an adoption placement three months prior to joining that foster family... and after three months of our "new kids" in that veteran foster family's home was enough to shut them down... for good.  They were no longer interested in fostering.  They were done. 

Does every adopted child have Reactive Attachment Disorder... I really don't believe so. 

I do think it is highly likely for individuals separated from one or both bio-parents to have "attachment issues" but I believe attachment issues are not full-blown RAD.

Attachment issues are quite different from Reactive Attachment Disorder. 

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Adoption Awareness Month

It's Adoption Awareness month... And Focus on the Family can be an excellent source of information about Reactive Attachment Disorder, Adoption, and how to best be supportive adoptive families. 

They have a half-hour radio program they broadcast M-F and November 1 they had a program that continued into November 2nd's broadcast. 

Focus on the Family Adoption Broadcast November 1, 2011
Part II November 2, 2011


I listened to it... I was wondering if the Broadcast would mention Reactive Attachment Disorder... I was eager to hear what they might say because I have been so very impressed in how they've covered the matter on their website   Focus on the Family Adoption Resource links

And I've been especially impressed with the WRAP Around Adoptive Families information they promote encouraging Christian Church attendees to provide the kinds of practical help that would BEST serve families who have given their hearts and homes to adoption.  Free WRAP information

Well I couldn't listen to the full broadcast... Not that there was anything specifically wrong with it...

The adoptive family featured did have experience with a RAD child... it turns out the RAD child was only with their family a very short time... and Mom kind of giggled nervously as she explained that if you've never encountered a Reactive Attachment Disordered Child... they can be perceived as very-very-naughty, yet they are no-less deserving of having a family. 

We only listened a few minuets more into the first broadcast. What we heard was flowery wonderfulness of how beautiful the adoptive family was. 

My big strong hubby broke down and cried... he more than cried... he SOBBED...

We gave them the most precious of all our possessions... our hearts.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Adoption in the news

This is a lengthy reply I posted on Serious Moms most recent blog. 
http://www.seriousmoms.com/2011/11/01/looking-at-the-adopted-twins-case-from-a-rad-moms-point-of-view/

Like you Serious Moms, I don’t know one single specific about the twins nor the parents in question, nor that family’s situation… (except what the media broadcasts)

BUT…

I do know RAD.

Our adopted children have SERIOUS issues that were caused long before we ever knew them.

Anyone who has ever raised a baby of their own would NEVER want that child to go through what ours did before we knew them… even IF they could be GUARANTEED their own child would experience zero instances of abuse, neglect and trauma.

No parent would want their sweet baby to experience the multiple broken attachments alone.

I’m just talking about the oh-so-many “new family” or “new caretaker” transitions!

Hey, judgmental media-world… if we were talking about YOUR baby that you grew inside of you…
You know the baby that you were careful about how you ate, how you exercised, how you slept…
The baby that you toughed-out colds un-medicated for because you were concerned what over-the-counter cough syrup might do to your precious beloved growing child…

The baby you and your partner did all the things good parents do when they are joyfully expecting their very-much-wanted bundle of joy…

SUPPOSE then your sweet baby (for no reason at all) simply needed to move to another AWESOME-in-every-way “new family” at 21 months… then another AWESOME new family 3 months later, and was moved again, and again and again… to ONLY completely AWESOME-tender-loving-attentive-devoted families… and was moved AGAIN, and again and again every three months… until at age six… at which time your sweet beautiful child was “freed” for adoption, and adopted by yet another AWESOME-in-every-way “new family” who met your beautiful-now-six-year-old for the very first time.

Do you think it REMOTELY possible that YOUR sweet angel-faced-baby-doll that carries your DNA that you yourself incubated with only the best of everything within your own body MIGHT develop a serious issue or two in the process of not having even one consistent caregiver?

IF the ONLY maltreatment your-sweet-child ever had experienced were the frequent moves to only AWESOME-tender-loving-attentive-devoted families, WOULD IT BE POSSIBLE that the way your child thinks, acts and interacts with others MIGHT be affected?

Now for the sake of imagination… let’s throw into the mix absentee, or multiple “sperm donors” that only wanted a thrill of a moment and NEVER wanted the child created by his “passions.”

Do you think being “abandoned”, or “unwanted” by JUST ONE biological parent MIGHT possibly cause any child “angst” and hatred toward an only-loving and ever-present bio-parent at any level?

What about a child whose loving doting bio-parent desires to parent the child to adulthood, but for whatever reason their life is snuffed short causing that parent to be absent for much of the child’s childhood… Might a child in that circumstance EVER act out in anger against the loving-devoted parent who remains?

(It seems people in our culture can easily understand a child’s stance against “the step” parent. Why does it seem so difficult for the public-at-large to consider it might be possible for a child’s “anti-parent” campaign efforts to be doubled in a situation where neither parent is the “biological” one? )

Now, lets throw into the mix the hard-core realities that get kids removed from their parent’s care… hunger, stresses of an unwanted pregnancy, prenatal exposure to vast amounts of illegal drugs and alcohol, abuse, neglect, violence, a genetic predisposition to mental illness… etc etc etc…

How about now? MIGHT those experiences POSSIBLY affect even the sweetest child’s disposition?
Forget disposition… how would any the above circumstances affect a child’s brain development and mental health?

Reactive Attachment Disorder IS real… It IS NOT the child’s fault they are behaving the way they do… They only attack the ones they feel closest too! They behave with perfect charm and deception with those they cannot trust because they perceive them as too gullible, too easily manipulated, they may feign deep love and instant attachment to complete strangers, and easily manipulated adults… think about the above examples… “instant attachment” and manipulation is how they felt safe and learned to survive through the multiple traumas of early childhood!


We never needed to lock food, our kids didn’t binge and hoard… but they did frequently complain to anyone who would look at them that they hadn’t eaten ANYTHING… ALL DAY!

Their eyes their words their demeanor would scream “save me” because according to their clock of early life it was “time” for a new family! What is this “forever family” thing? Three months is the longest they’d ever had…

To echo Serious Moms’ questions…
How would YOU handle an insatiable child who binged eating EVERYTHING to the point of vomiting any time they came near food?

(The twins in question are reportedly skinny. One source reports them as “underweight” I know many people with an awesome metabolism. My own brother could eat and eat and eat and eat and remained stick skinny. I would eat half the amount he consumed and and have always remained chunky. There can also be a number of eating disorders that the children may or may not have… like Serious Moms… I do not know the specific details of this case. )


We didn’t need to remove electricity from the room to keep our children safe.

What would you do if your angel-faced-teen was endangering only himself by “playing with” electrical outlets every time he was unsupervised?

What would you do if your angel faced 8 year-old was endangering herself AND the whole family by sticking things in the sockets?

To those who are so very judgmental… I’ll tell you what…
Approach ANY adoption agency and ask to adopt a sibling group of children that were severely traumatized between conception and three years old… Try and request siblings who have a severe case of Reactive Attachment Disorder.

Open your hearts and your home to them…

Give them the absolute best you can…

We’ll talk after the “honeymoon” period ends.

See, even though our family has been horribly abused by our RAD adoptees… I’m still pro-adoption.

I want to see these kids succeed.

I want to see the families who have literally sacrificed everything for these precious children succeed.

As long as the judgmental folks are wagging their finger and flapping their gums about something they have absolutely no first-hand experience about… I’d say they have too much time on their hands.

Open your hearts and your homes to adoption… after all November is Adoption Awareness Month!