Showing posts with label attachment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attachment. Show all posts

Reprehensible

By now, I'm sure many of you have heard about the Tennessee woman who sent her adopted son, Artyem, alone on a plane back to Russia.  As a parent of two children adopted from Russia, I feel compelled to comment on the situation.  From the title of this post, you can probably tell how I feel about this woman's actions.  For those of you who have not adopted children from traumatic backgrounds, there are some important things, which I believe the media is missing, that you need to understand.

First of all, many (if not all) of the children living in orphanages in Russia have experienced abandonment from the people on whom they most depended.  In my kids' case, it was their Russian Mama.  Some, like Eamon, were only abandoned once and at a very young age.  Others, like Vika, were taken back and abandoned by their parent multiple times before finally being placed for adoption (for clarification purposes, Vika and Eamon have the same Russian Mama, but their experiences with her were very different).  When a child loses the care of a parent at a very young age, it can cause them to become distrustful of adults and learn that there is nobody on whom they can depend except themselves.  This lesson serves them well in an orphanage setting; however, it doesn't work so well when they join a family.  If you add neglect and abuse by caregivers into the mix,  you wind up with a very confused child who is distrustful of any adult who tries to take care of him or her.

In Russia, there are many, many orphanages, and they are very crowded.  The last estimate I read was that there are over 700,000 children living in Russian orphanages today.  These kids are regarded as second-class citizens and many Russians believe there is something wrong with them (either something that made their birth-parents not want them or "bad blood" passed on from irresponsible parents).  There are not a lot of Russian families vying to adopt these children.  In fact, once they leave the Baby Home and move into a Child's Home (around the age of 3 or 4), their chances of being placed in a loving family drop dramatically.  In an orphanage, the children live with multiple caregivers who are inconsistent, both in their presence and they way they relate to the children.  My kids have told me stories of being hit with shoes and being locked in dark closets as punishment.  And I believe they were at one of the better orphanages in Russia.

Kids who are adopted often have a hard time adjusting, especially if they are adopted by a family from another country.  When we brought our kids home, they had to leave everything they knew behind.  They flew for hours in a plane to a far away place with strangers who spoke a language they did not understand (we were only allowed to visit them 4 times before the adoption was finalized).  Things sounded and smelled different, the food was different, and they no longer had a bunch of children around them all the time (I've heard the experience described as "being abducted by aliens").  They had to adjust to all these changes, in addition to learning how to be part of a family.

I'm sure it was the same for Artyem.  He was even older when he was adopted, and we don't know what kind of situation he lived in with his birth family or how he was treated at the orphanage.  What is clear is that he had difficulty attaching to his new mom.  He'd only been home for 6 months, and attachment can take a year or longer to occur.  Plus, it seems that his adoptive mother did not ask for help from either her agency or social worker.  She had not taken him in for counseling, and as of January, she reported that everything was fine.  I find myself confused at how all this could happen.  Did the boy say he was going to kill her?  Maybe.  Heck, Eamon has said that to me when he's angry!   Did he play with matches and threaten to burn down the house?  Maybe.  My kids have done and said some pretty scary things too.  Was this mother educated about the many ways attachment disorder can manifest itself, and was she prepared to deal with those issues?  Certainly not.

There are support groups out there for people who have adopted older children who come from traumatic backgrounds.  There are groups specifically designed for people who adopt from Russia and Eastern Europe.  There are plenty of places to seek advice and counseling.  It seems to me that this "mother" gave up on her son too quickly.  I'm not sure what her expectations were, but I've heard many pre-adoptive parents talk about how they just know they will instantly connect with their child and that there will be love between them from the first meeting. They have this fairy tale idea of what it will be like to bring this child into their new home, and many even think the child will be grateful to be adopted by them.  I always cringe when I hear such statements because I know that the prospective parent is most likely in for a huge disappointment.  They are not thinking about this adoption from their future child's perspective and are not considering how what was done to the child in the past will affect how he/she views their future. 

Torry Hansen clearly did not have reasonable expectations for her child, or for herself as a mother.  Would she have treated a biological child so callously?  The fact that she would send a 7 year old child alone on a plane, with him most likely not knowing what would happen when he arrived back in Russia is horrendous.  I can't imagine how scared he must have been or what was going through his head.  I can't understand why she didn't seek to disrupt the adoption in America and try to have him placed in a family better prepared to deal with his needs. It's almost as if she viewed him as damaged goods and wanted to return him to the store!  Her actions only added to the abuse, neglect and abandonment that Artyem has already suffered in his short life.  And she made his attachment to a future family even more difficult.  I hope Torry Hansen is prosecuted to the full extent of the law and that her planned adoption from the Republic of Georgia (yes, she was planning to adopt another child!) is dropped as quickly as she dropped her responsibilities towards her son.

You guys are great. Really, you are.

Thank you all for the wonderful suggestions! We have begun implementing a few of them and we'll see how they work. First of all, we've put all writing instruments up out of reach (a bit of a pain, but we'll get used to it after a while). We've also stopped making as big of an issue out of the E's. We kind of figured that the negative attention was what Eamon was after, so we're trying not to give it to him. Instead, we have done a modified version of the "time-in." Eamon sits by us and writes "E"s on a piece of paper. He's getting a lot of praise about how great his writing looks as well as comments about how nice it is to have it on paper (he can show it to his teachers or bring it to Babushka's house). He's filled up almost 2 sheets of paper with little "E"s already and is very proud of his achievement. Perhaps I should have him "graduate" to writing his entire name? He already knows how to do this, but the additional practice might help him as he goes into kindergarten. I just have to be careful because we don't want it to seem like a punishment or a chore - then he may learn to dislike writing.

Another technique we are using is called an "E Hug." It is kind of like what Maggie suggested, but with the added element that the E handshake (we hold three fingers out like an "E") ends with a hug. We've also made a "V Hug" for Vika. Both kids love this, and Eamon has been asking for "E Hugs" a lot.

One thing we haven't tried, which I think we will begin to, is the 5-minutes-of-eye-contact time-in that BT suggested. Thanks for delurking BT, and sharing your experience with us. It is a bit scary to think that attachment issues can surface after a couple years at home, but now that we know it's a possibility, we can re-think the way we approach some of these situations. Revisiting some of those attachment exercises and practicing them on a regular basis sounds like a good idea. While I wouldn't have said Eamon had attachment issues before, I have seen a definite increase in his testing of the rules and our love for him over the past 6 months (he has even taken to shouting "I hate you!" when he's really upset - something that is very out of character for him). So maybe his attachment isn't as secure as we had thought. I bet these techniques would work well with Vika too, since she was closer to their birth mom and has had more difficulty adjusting to her life with us.

Thanks again to all who offered suggestions and support. I will keep you posted on our progress.