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Personal and Professional Perspectives from an Adoptive Journey: Lessons Learned

Personal and Professional Perspectives from an Adoptive Journey: Lessons Learned. Presenters: Kathryn Biddle, LISW-S & Sharon Biddle. This presentation will share:. Kate & Sharon Biddle will describe their personal experience of what the adoptive journey has been for

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Personal and Professional Perspectives from an Adoptive Journey: Lessons Learned

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  1. Personal and Professional Perspectives from an Adoptive Journey:Lessons Learned Presenters: Kathryn Biddle, LISW-S & Sharon Biddle

  2. This presentation will share: Kate & Sharon Biddle will describe their personal experience of what the adoptive journey has been for each of their perspectives From this experience the lessons learned about: • Promoting meaningful attachment • Working with Emotional Regulation – your own and child’s • The importance and means for self care

  3. Kate’s Experience My “Her-story” that lead me to adopt • Dysfunctional family growing up • Married with 2 sons • Lead to interest in healing as professional – over 35 years as social worker focused on working with traumatized children • How adopting Sharon has shaped what I have learned about meeting the needs of these children and the families that are raising them.

  4. Sharon’s Experience • Here is my story…

  5. Why adopt?HOPE Parent’s adopt for multiple reasons: • Good hearted desire to provide a child with a loving home • To live life fully with the gift of raising, sharing and and caring for children • May not be able to have biological children • Philosophical/humanitarian reasons • Single and want a child • Fill one’s own loneliness – to have someone who will love you • All your friends are having children • Parents are pressuring for grandchildren • Feel life won’t be complete unless you have a child • “Save a child”

  6. Reasons Children Need Adoption • Biological parents were not able to raise them • Neglect • Abuse • Drug Addiction • Incarceration of parents • Mental Illness of parents • Illness • Death • Abandonment

  7. It starts with Altruistic Heart • With a birth child, there is a synchronized metronome from the start between parent and child. • With adoption you are dealing with a different DNA and the earliest of circumstances. • When it is your child from birth, you just suck up the differences and problems that are part of raising a child, but when it isn’t your biological child, you may find that you have more challenges and limits.

  8. Lessons Not Told When Adopting There is no way to be prepared for the changes you will face in adopting a child You will have no clue for how this will change your life – and whatever you think it will be like, you will be wrong! As much as it is humanly possible let of expectations when you adopt

  9. Dynamics that Impact Adoption • Reason child is not with bio-family • Age • Bio-genetic factors • Special Needs • Attachment or lack of attachment • Previous placements • Family preparedness and resources

  10. Trauma1. “The person experienced, witnessed or was confronted with an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the emotional, mental, spiritual, or physical integrity of self or others.” and 2. “The person’s response involved intense fear, helplessness or horror. In children this may be expressed by disorganized or agitated behavior.”

  11. “…Complex Trauma is the experience of multiple traumas that occur within the caregiving system. Frequently include simultaneous or sequential occurrences of child maltreatment/neglect and domestic violence that is chronic and begins in early childhood.”(NCTSN Complex Trauma in Children and Adolescence White Paper 2003)

  12. Complex Trauma Brain Development Brains of children who have been abused are 7-8% smaller than children with healthy developmentAmygdale is enlarged stimulating fight, flight, freeze responses more quicklyHippocampus (sorts memory and experience) and Cortex (judgment function- categorizes and processes info from the senses) are diminished in size and become slower to process. Broca (part of the brain responsible for speech) is smaller and deactivated. Corpus Collasum, the bridge for the brain hemispheres is less developed.

  13. Domains of Impairment • Biology • Attachment • Affective regulation • Dissociation • Behavioral Control • Cognitive • Self Concept

  14. Biology and Adoption • Subtle variation in biology between parent and child make a difference in bonding – smell, taste preferences, voice differences, eye contact, bio-rhythms • Chronic stress manifests in psycho-somatic symptoms

  15. Attachment Issues Attachment provides a model for all other relationships Children who have not had consistent, nurturing, & protective caregivers often develop problems with their how they attach to others Impacts core beliefs & relational schemata of: • Self • Others • World

  16. Problems with Poor Attachment • Child is unable manage their emotions so they rely on primitive and frequently ineffective coping skills so they act more immaturely in the face of distress • Children may become frightened by or guarded against emotional experience in general so all feelings may be perceived as overwhelming or as a threat

  17. Celebration for Child – Think Again Celebration yes, but also Grief Child has lost: • Birth family • Other placements • Sense of history/lineage disrupted • Community – friends, schools, place

  18. Parent’s Celebration? • Parent may need to grieve loss of “dream” • Problems with attunement to child because of challenging behaviors • Parent may struggle their own self concept “Well functioning” people, not functioning so well… • Cannot fix the problems • Struggle to maintain own self regulation

  19. Attunement Challenges Challenges that adopted children present • Triggered responses to caregivers • Demands for attention - Clingy/ Needy • Angry/Oppositional • Patterns of approach/avoidance • Extreme emotional responses or shut down

  20. Understanding Triggers Any stimulus that acts a reminder of past overwhelming experiences • External • Internal

  21. Common Triggers • Unpredictability or sudden change • Transition • Loss of control • Feeling vulnerable • Feeling rejected • Confrontation • Loneliness • Sensory overload • Intimacy (safety, love. Security, family) • Peace, calm, quiet

  22. Triggered Behaviors Pain based/Fear based Behavior • Avoid/withdraw from caregivers • Over clingy, but unable to take in support • Freeze • Appear “manipulative” or attempt to control caregiver • Engaging in conflicting approach/avoidance behaviors

  23. Common Caregiver Responses Emotionally • Reduced sense of efficacy – feeling rejected • Guilt and shame • Anger and Blame Behaviorally • Shutting down – ignoring or minimizing child’s needs • Punitive or authoritative over reacting - try to control or protect • Overly permissive to prevent escalation

  24. Caregiver Trouble Spots • Usually specific situations that keep being challenging • Areas of insecurity for parent • Child behaviors in past that have been associated with crisis or significant problems • Caregiver’s own trauma history & triggers • Areas of discrepancy between child and parent – values, cultural, generational • External stressors of parent

  25. Co-regulation Your modeling is essential –must walk, the walk • Must regulate self before can help child develop the capacity for regulation • Build a plan of coping strategies Understand Attention Seeking Behaviors as Attachment Seeking Behaviors

  26. Must Address: • A dysregulated nervous system- when the • children get on the fast track to fight/flight/freeze (survival mode) • 2)The need for the caregivers to be able to • support the child to feel and act safe.

  27. Spiritual Masters • Children are always teaching us about ourselves and challenging us to live up to our highest values • Challenge is how much we have to be self aware and regulate ourselves to skillfully and constructively respond to real needs of child

  28. Emotional Regulation All Feelings are OK Feelings may comfortable or uncomfortable But they are guides to us pay attention to what is needed Feelings come and go – Feelings that arise are normal given what we are dealing with We are not responsible for what we feel, but…

  29. Behavioral Regulation Our Own Behaviors can be OK and Not OK Does our behavior solve the problem and take care of the need? Must Not Do More HARM!

  30. Behavioral Control – YOURS! Self Discipline is TOP PRIORITY! Discipline should focus on safety & well being Take your time: • What is the purpose of child’s behavior? • What do you want to child to learn? • Not punitive - this is a challenge because of our own deeply engrained reactivity

  31. All behavior serves a purpose How we understand the behavior makes a big difference in our response Must : • Not Personalize • Be aware of how realistic expectations are for child’s capabilities • Tune into and show respect for child’s feelings before addressing behavior

  32. Regular Routines & Rules Creates sense of safety and predictability Decreases power struggles Must be flexible so child can be successful

  33. Self Concept Inherit web of child’s life forever May be enriching but complicated Reunification with Bio-parents?

  34. Have Fun!

  35. ABC’s of Self Care • Awareness • Balance • Connectivity

  36. Awareness • Requires time and quiet for reflection • Claim the space you need • Mindfulness • Grounding

  37. Cultivating Self Awareness • Physical sensations • Emotions • Thoughts • Limits • Resources Sets the stage for responsiveness and self care

  38. Attend to Mind ? Reality How does each statement make you feel in the body? How does each statement make you feel emotionally? How does each statement effect your ability to move through changes? Which statement is helpful? Which statement is accurate?

  39. Pessimism Optimism To change your thinking from thinking from one of pessimism to optimism you need to Notice the P’s of your thinking: - Pervasive - Permanent - Personal And look for the C’s of optimism: - Challenge - Control - Commitment So in other words, you must quit P-ing on yourself & start C-ing things in new ways!

  40. Balance is the Aim Between both life activities and within self Play Work Rest Discipline Compassion Action Reflection

  41. Practice Self Care Take Care of: • Body • Emotions • Mind • Environment

  42. What do you look for? Cultivate an Attitude of Gratitude On Purpose

  43. Connection to Others It takes a village: • Need support from our families, partners, friends, colleagues, and organizations, to maintain our commitments • Supports by showering us with encouragement and holding us accountable • We are constantly creating the culture we live in by the attitudes we hold, the choices we make. • Need to actively and regularly get together with others to buffer the challenges we face.

  44. Loving Kindness Meditation

  45. Final Thoughts The Good outweighs the Bad 10 fold! We are all enriched and grow in this process!

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