Sunday, September 30, 2012

Baby Steps

Hello again. Wow! This week has been crazy! I'd like to respond to a couple of comments that I have received.

Lisa:
You are not alone. Day after endless day of rejection, out-of-control behaviors, and verbal as well as physical abuse takes it's toll on even the strongest of humans. The fact that you have hung in there for 8 years speaks volumes about the type of person you are. Committed, persistent (I would say stubborn, but it has such negative connotations!), and a heart for love, even if you feel like you have no love there anymore. I would say these are characteristics of most adoptive parents whose children suffer from Reactive Attachment Disorder. Please know that I understand your feelings of exhaustion and hopelessness! I have gone through times of not only doubting that I love my boys, but that I might actually hate them. This will sound terrible to those people out there that have not lived with a RAD child, but let me assure you that it is not unusual when you are on the receiving end of days filled with turmoil. There were days I would be angry with the boys just because they were there. It is hard to not be angry when 5 minutes after they assault you, they are giggling and laughing over some trivial thing while you feel you are dying inside.

You found somewhere you can share and be understood! Please feel free to comment anytime you need to have someone "get it".

Terrandipity:
I am so grateful that you have chosen to follow my blog and use it as a tool. Please don't think that the behaviors my boys have will be absolutes for your foster child. My boys were six and seven when they came to our home. They had experienced several caregivers over the years as well as abuse inflicted by their birth parents. Even with the fact that they are biological siblings with the same background, they are nothing alike. Their manifestations of RAD are the same in some areas, but at opposite ends of the spectrum with others. One can become aggressive and vocal when agitated, while the other will shut down immediately and not speak at all. Consequences do not work the same for both either, which is not unlike any biological siblings. For one we take away video games, while the other is not allowed to go outside. I am hopeful that your foster child was removed from his biological parents before too much trauma was allowed to occur and that he is young enough to still have the critical time to attach to a caregiver.

I hope you continue to follow my blog and ask if you have any questions for me. I cannot guarantee an answer, but I will do my best to be as open and honest as possible!

THANKS TO EVERYONE THAT HAS READ AND FOLLOWED MY POSTS!  I appreciate each and every one of you.

                                   Life is so much easier with support from your friends. 

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Family Photos

It's been a long week this week. Lots of homework issues! I must say I hate homework time, if not for that we would have significantly less confrontations!

Anyway, I need to think of something positive tonight and so I am going to post some pictures of my family. My family has always been the center of my universe and everything has revolved around them. When the boys moved in the universe shifted some and they became the the entity that affected all else. I will admit that there have been dark times when not only did I feel that I didn't love them, but that I actually hated them. Of course, if that were truly the case wouldn't I have ended this battle years ago? Deep down there must be a core of feeling that even I cannot access on really bad days.

 And then there are days when I feel that we are almost like other families, almost normal. There are days filled with sunshine and laughter. Those are the days I must remind myself of when I am frustrated. I will write myself a post-it and place on my bathroom mirror before I go to bed; it will remind me that there is a reason for everything and tomorrow is a new day, plan to enjoy it.

 This is my family- my husband & I, six kids, two daughter-in-laws, and our twin grandchildren.  I really am blessed!

                                                     Dancing with T
                                     
                                                                T & D
 
                                                             With D

                                             Okay, I feel better. Time for bed!

Sunday, September 16, 2012

"It's Just Bad Parenting"

Our first week of transitioning the boys back home went pretty well all-in-all. We are doing 5/2's, which means that the boys come home Sunday evenings and then return to residential care on Friday evening where they spend the weekend. This is done for transitioning purposes to allow the boys continued access to group therapy as well as one-on-one therapy with their therapist to discuss any specific problems they may have encountered at school or at home during the week. The 5/2's will only last two weeks and final graduation will be September 27th.

Things went smoothly the first couple of days, which most RAD parents know contain a level of the famous "honeymoon period", which occurs whenever the kids have been gone for a while and return. Wednesday was a rough day for all of us. There were issues with not wanting to do homework and some minor escalation from D in which he received an hour of grounding and utilized a coping skill to turn his behavior around and finish his work. (Homework will be discussed in a post all of it's own.) After dinner we received news that there was a traumatic event in our family. It upset all of us and the boys became very anxious over the fear of losing another person from their lives. As I sat at the counter later that evening, T came in and sat beside me. He looked at me, my eyes red from crying, and said with true sincerity the most change-acknowledging statement, "Mom, we'll get through this together". That may not sound like much, but for a child that has engaged in a primal fight within himself to stay unattached to anyone, it was nothing short of a miracle.

Perhaps it was this that angered me so much on Friday, when a random and otherwise irrelevant statement was uttered that felt like I had been slapped. Perhaps it was the fact that I had already had a highly emotional week and had been left vulnerable. Perhaps it was just the ignorance of it all.

As my profile states, I am a full-time non-traditional student in my last semester at a very traditional state university. On Friday, I sat in my class as a presentation on customer perceptions was being given by a classmate. He showed a great video clip that showed what outstanding customer service was. He then showed a video of very poor customer service that involved a 911 call from a mother whose 12-year-old child was out of control and she needed the police. The dispatcher makes a joke that while funny to many, is extremely inappropriate. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzgu3uAfjrc Of course, he pointed out that the second was poor customer service, but why?  I'll bet you right now that the parents with RAD kids at home are reading this shouting "oo, oo, pick me, I know" ala Horshack from Welcome Back, Kotter. Yep, you guessed it, another student raised his hand and with a combined snort and laugh stated this, "Well, it obviously wasn't an emergency. IT'S JUST BAD PARENTING". Slap, I could feel the pain as sure as if he had gotten out of his chair and actually hit me. The anger in me couldn't help but mumble that "it wasn't always bad parenting" before the tears came. Now, this student, nor any in my class, know that I am an adoptive parent of children with RAD and he is young and incredibly naive. But what about the countless adults that we hear the same type of response from? Those that have no idea what it is like to be in the position that mother on the phone was? I know, I've been in that exact spot and there is nothing funny about it.

I stood at the door of his room, senses heightened, poised to protect myself if need be. My son was raging, disconnected from the 'real' world. His "thinking brain" had shut down, he was no longer able to think clearly, he could not process the words I was trying to say to calm him. Finally, I stopped speaking as it was only serving to increase his escalation and his anger. He methodically punched the walls in his room until there was a hole he could reach into and pull chunks of the sheetrock off of the studs. He would take each piece and smash it onto the floor until it was broken into many smaller pieces. The entire time he was spewing curse words that would make a Marine blush. He moved to the bookcase, picked it up, and flung it to the floor. He continued until it broke into individual pieces that he could continue to slam to the ground or use to hit the wall or any other object he desired, at times resorting to placing shelves at an angle, braced against the wall, and jumping on it until the shelf broke. I watched, my goal to keep him within the confines of his room, to minimize the area of destruction. He picked up a Nerf gun- which I acknowledge cannot kill anyone, and pointed it at me. His eyes were black as night and dull as death. He looked at me and asked me if I could imagine what it would feel like with bullets going through my heart. How would I feel when I was dead and dad was dead? Then he stated "and I will be happy". This is the scenario that preceded my own phone call to the police department. He was out of control, and while not as big as me (yet), and armed only with a gun that shot foam bullets, I was frightened.

 This is the incident that forced our family to make the decision to place our son in residential care. The same son that reassured me this past week that we can get through our hard times together as a family. That miracle statement is the remark resulting from our parenting. The prior incident was the result of neglect and abuse from biological parents that left terrible scars inside my child.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

RAD Diagnostic Checklist

Hello again!

In this post I am including a link to the Randolph Attachment Order Questionaire. This describes a list of behaviors common to kids with reactive attachment. While some of them appear to be behaviors that most kids have at some point, RAD kids do them to an extreme. I have to say that between my two boys, we experience every single one of these behaviors except (thankfully) "My child teases, hurts, or is cruel to animals".

Over the past five years, the boy's behaviors have evolved and thankfully we don't experience some of the behaviors that we did at the beginning. I remember sitting with T during one of the first months; he would be sitting on the floor alternately screaming (literally) for me to put his pajamas on him (he was 7) and to "don't touch me" while slamming anything he could find on the floor. There was the time he deliberately urinated on the living room carpet and in a fit of anger kicked the windshield of my car and broke it and he was barefoot. I remember the first year that we found cheese slice wrappers hidden in the Christmas tree as we took it down and I still find food wrappers and sometimes food itself hidden in the oddest places, for example, the day I found a peanut butter and jelly sandwich under the bathroom sink or the opened jar of frosting hidden in the storeroom. Last, but certainly not least, are the death threats that are made. At first the "I'm going to kill you" doesn't seem too disconcerting when it comes from the mouth of an enraged 6 year-old and you are reassured by everyone that he is "just mimicking" what he's heard, but when you hear it from an enraged and disengaged from reality 12 year-old it holds a whole different meaning.

Our boys have spent the last 6 & 4 months respectively in a residential care facility an hour from our home. We made countless visits attending family therapy and having home visits with the boys. T has worked very hard and made great advances in his behavior. D did terrific there too even being a great role model for the other kids in his unit, but only because he was comfortable there. His problem lies with us, his parents, specifically. He was not faced daily with parents trying to form a bond with him and while he formed superficial bonds with staff, they are still only staff and easy to keep at a distance emotionally.

Both boys are transitioning home right now and my blog will cover how things are going. My husband and I have had time to rejuvenate over the summer, to refill our reserves, and to reconnect with each other. This time we are going back in with hearts full of hope and our eyes wide open with no illusions of what we are dealing with. Pray for us!

Talk to you next time!

Thursday, September 6, 2012

An Introduction to Reactive Attachment Disorder

This is my first blog post and I'm nervous. I am about to share my thoughts and feelings- both good and bad, with anyone that chooses to visit my blog. Five and a half years ago my family added two young brothers to our family. They were adopted from the state department of social services. It has been a long and not entirely enjoyable journey and will continue to be for years to come. But it is a journey that we have committed ourselves to, the same as hundreds of other families around the globe. I need to clarify up front that I am not a therapist, nor do I have any type of degree that would label me an expert. I am a parent, that is all, that is enough.  This blog is for all of us. A place to find support and comfort, to be able to voice our frustrations without judgement, and a place where you can find other people that can truly understand your situation. Welcome.

A little background on my family: I have been married to my wonderful husband for 27 years. We have four adult children (3 boys, 1 girl) as well as the two younger boys. Our oldest son is 28, married and father of a set of adorable twins- 1 boy and 1 girl. Son #2 is 25, married, and lives in Austin, TX. Son #3 and our only daughter are 21-year-old twins. He is in the Marine Corps, just finished a tour in Afghanistan, and is stationed in Twenty-nine Palms, CA. Our daughter is a college student, full-time polysomnographic (sleep study) technician studying for her boards, and lives close to home. Our two youngest are biological brothers and are now 13 & 12 years old. Of course our family would not be complete without our two dogs, Hallie- a Boston terrier, and Chili- a miniature Dachshund (kudos to those of you that can figure out the reason for that name!). Quiet is never an adjective used to describe our home!

For those of you  that do not understand  what Reactive Attachment Disorder is or came looking for information, here is a short overview. The Mayo Clinic (http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/reactive-attachment-disorder/DS00988) defines it as a "rare but serious condition in which infants and young children don't establish healthy bonds with parents or caregivers". The most commonly associated cause of RAD is trauma, abuse, and neglect as an infant or young child. But there are many other situations that can interrupt the bonding process between infant and caregiver: premature birth, postpartum depression of mom after birth, early separation from mother, frequent changes in caregivers, severe illness or chronic pain (e.g., severe colic), caregivers that ignore the infant, and hospitalization or extensive medical procedures. This lack of bonding gives rise to a host of negative behaviors, which I will talk about in a later post. The Mayo Clinic states it is "rare", but I haven't seen one foster or older adoptive child that doesn't have some level of attachment issue caused by their past.

This is going to be my story, but I welcome your  input, comments, and support. So often we as parents or family members, feel so alone. There is a wonderful video made by the Attachment and Trauma Network that helps describe our lives to others, take the time to listen, you will be enlightened. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JuIbWu6-Tg

Talk to you next time!