The Ups and Downs of Independence

May 20th, 2013

algebraSo I gave my seventeen-year-old son the driver's wheel on his high school education. Not because I wanted to, but because what I was doing wasn't working. Supervising him closely and catching all his missing assignments for him to complete just caused him to lie to me and let me be his safety net. With the counselor's agreement, I took my hands off the wheel, and he is succeeding or failing on his own. Initially he became uber-responsible, skipping lunch at Arby's with his friends so that he could go to the library and catch up on work. He came home a week ago saying he no longer had an F in History. I asked him how he managed that. He said he… [more]

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When Your Child Hands You A Lie…

February 24th, 2012

iStock_000014014823XSmall…Buy yourself a cupcake. The start of this New Year has not been an easy one around our house.  With two daughters in full-blown RAD mode, our family life has not been chaos-free. One prevalent behavior of Reactive Attachment Disorder is lying.  All children fib and stretch the truth, but children suffering from RAD have perfected the art of lying to such a level, the lies should be hanging in a museum. Elle, my 13 year old RADish, is so proficient at lying I’m not sure she knows how to tell the truth.  The hard part about the lying is you know they are doing it because your built-in lie detector is flashing red.  But how are you going to prove it?  Should you try? … [more]

Bucketful ‘O Feelings

November 1st, 2011

bucketEmotions and feelings shouldn’t be a hard thing, although ask any man in an all-female household and he will tell you he is screwed when it comes to feelings and emotions. My husband once questioned our six-year-old daughter, Bunny, about the outfit she chose to wear for picture day.  His question was less about what he asked and more about how he asked the question.  Bunny took immediate offense to his question and burst into tears. Oh, brother! But, as much as Bunny has no problem expressing some emotions, others are locked deep inside her. Bunny has Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD), and as I’ve written before, RAD is a disorder of relationships.  At some point during Bunny’s development, a trauma occurred.  Her particular trauma came from… [more]

The Carrot Peeler

September 29th, 2011

iStock_000000331847XSmallSometimes the smallest things can speak volumes. In my house, the disappearance of a carrot peeler doesn’t mean that I’ve misplaced it in the wrong drawer.  It is a red flag that one of my daughters is angry.  Angry at me. Parenting a child with reactive attachment disorder (RAD.) is not easy.  Parenting is not easy, but when your child has attachment issues that result in a lack of trust, simply loving your child is often not enough. RAD is a disorder of relationships, and the root cause of the disorder is the broken mother/child relationship.  Until this basic, fundamental relationship is restored with the adoptive mother, the child will be incapable of forging normal, healthy relationships. I have spent years trying to repair my relationship… [more]

RADish Hugs

September 13th, 2011

iStock_000013729296XSmallRadishes really can’t hug, but then neither can RADishes. Reactive Attachment Disorder is a disorder of relationships, so it isn’t surprising that children with RAD aren’t warm and fuzzy huggers.  I never really noticed this with my daughters.  I am a hugger, so I was always hugging them.  I didn’t realize they weren’t hugging back.  Especially Elle. There are all kinds of hugs, hugs between married couples, hugs between best girlfriends, hugs between work colleagues, and the air kiss hugs between the Real Housewives of New York. When we first started RAD therapy, we learned that Elle really wasn’t hugging us.  It was sort of hugging, but it never reached the level of a loving exchange, and we always initiated it. Elle would lead with her… [more]

Healing Hands of a Sister

September 1st, 2011

Helping HandsYou can never truly understand a person until you have walked a mile in their shoes.  I don’t know what it’s like to be adopted, or to be given up at birth, and I don’t know what it’s like to have reactive attachment disorder (RAD). I know what it’s like to be an adoptive parent, and I know what it’s like to be a parent of a child with RAD, but I don’t understand what goes on in her head when she is raging out of control. I take Bunny to therapy once a week, I’ve taken Elle to RAD camp, and I am an AWESOME RAD mom, but as much as I say the right things and parent in a strong and… [more]

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Finding Respite Care

August 23rd, 2011

iStock_000007706240XSmallWe have been experiencing hard times in our house lately.  Bunny has been struggling with the anger of RAD, and we have been trying to manage her rage.  Sometimes, being the parent of a child with reactive attachment disorder just becomes too difficult, and the entire family needs a break. This is when respite care plays a role. As much as grandparents want to help and think they understand, they really don't get it.  They try to apply the same parenting principles they used as parents, but we didn't have RAD, and spanking and yelling just doesn't work. So, when grandparents aren't really an option for a family break, where else do you turn? We've only had to use respite care once, a year ago, when… [more]

Overwhelming Anger For A Birthmother

July 21st, 2011

Bomb in old style with a burning wickAs an adoptive mother, I have always walked a fine line when discussing my daughter's birthmothers.  Both girls were given up for adoption at birth, by teenage mothers.  Elle was a first child, and Bunny has a sister that is two years older. Coming from Russia and Guatemala, it is a fair assumption that poverty was the main reason both girls were given up for adoption. As the girl's forever mom, I have tried to be ready to answer any questions the girls might have regarding their births and adoptions.  I hold nothing but gratitude to both women, because it was their ultimate sacrifice that provided me with children.  I never fail to recognize them on the… [more]

Coyotes and Copperheads

May 17th, 2011

iStock_000015009652XSmallWe had Bunny in therapy last Friday and we were discussing her recent round of temper tantrums and struggles for control.  Lately, she has been sneaking out of the house and not telling anyone where she is going or what she is doing.  On 20 acres of pasture and woodland, a little six year old is likely to get into a lot of trouble, so you see why we’ve been getting upset. Especially now that the coyotes have had their spring pups, and we have killed two copperhead snakes in the last two weeks.  We don’t worry so much about Elle, because she always has her dog as her constant companion and she wears a pair of leather cowboy boots to protect her… [more]

Parenting the Rollercoaster

April 28th, 2011

rollercoasterWhen I became a parent, I never knew a useful skill would be managing a rollercoaster ride.  One day Elle is having a bad day and she is at the bottom, but Bunny is riding at the top.  Twenty-four hours later, Bunny is scraping the bottom and Elle is flying high. But, it’s not only the ups and downs of one child versus the other; it’s the pendulum swing back and forth in a single child.  For seven years, we’ve dealt with RAD’s effect on Elle.  There were times that we were so far down on the bottom of the rollercoaster; I thought we had permanently derailed.  There was a time I was convinced we would only see her during weekly visits to… [more]