After contemplating starting a new blog for a couple of years, I've decided to go live on Mother's Day 2016.
Some of you may recall the blog I started six years ago when we were in process to foster and adopt, before we had met our children. I poured so much expectancy into this online journal of sorts, hoping to inspire others to foster and adopt. What has followed in the last six years resulted in me deleting that blog shortly after our childrens' lives crashed into ours. Though it came from raw emotion and the only truth I knew at the time, the last six years have been a painful yet freeing journey in discovering and facing the privilege and saviorism that was my truth. I thought I was following God's call to adopt. Now I no longer believe in a literal deity, and know from experience and the truths voiced by adoptees and first parents that foster care and adoption are complex realities inseparable from privilege. I've also come to respect the privacy and autonomy of adoptees and my own children over the perceived need or right of adoptive parents to over-share in the name of venting or even educating. You will not see photos of my children, nor will I disclose names or any other identifying information. I will be careful to express my truths and educate in light of the fact that my children will have access to what I've written for all the world to see, so I will do so with respect. My relationship with them is more important than anything I could possibly have to say to anyone else for any reason. Furthermore, I reserve the right to remove this blog should I feel I need to be more vigilent in protecting that. However at the end of the day I've come to the realization that I do own my experiences and have the right to express my truth, and in so doing my heart is to raise awareness. I raise awareness not to vent for the sake of venting, but in hopes to be part of the growing body of research that I have to stand in hope will one day translate in real help for families like ours. Real attachment trauma informed mental health support which is currently so scarce, real awareness from society including family and friends, as well as real support and empathy for others who are in the trenches. Empathy is the connection that holds the most hope in healing Developmental Trauma.
So why did I chose Mother's Day 2016 to go live?
Because, today I learned how to sit in empathy with my own pain.
Five years into parenting my children, I had been doing better the past couple months than I had since before they came into our lives. I thought I had processed this day enough. The expectations. The grief. The acceptance. Then one child yelled at me to "shut-up" over something seemingly insignificant, then another threw something at my head over something else even more seemingly insignificant. The progress I have come to measure despite invalidation is that child #1 only yelled at me to shut-up and neither threatened to kill me nor physically attacked me, and child #2 only threw a balloon at my head instead of a hard toy to show me their intended malice. Yes, this is progress, and those living in these trenches know what I'm talking about. Still, I decided then and there that I strive to meet my childrens' behavior with emapthy 364 days per year, but today I was going to meet my own needs with empathy. I usually would try to connect and correct, but today I calmly said while walking away, "it's ok to be upset. It is NOT ok to tell me to shut up or throw things at me." When I retreated to my room, my amazing husband offered to take the kids to the zoo to give me a break today. I burst into tears. I thought I was ok, but I clearly needed respite. I know mother's day is a triggering time for children with attachment trauma. I know their behavior comes from deep pain. I am acutely aware today of all they have lost and that I am all they have now. However today, *I* needed to be taken care of to be ok.
So as soon as my husband and children left, I allowed myself to cuddle with Pup-Pup and bawl for 30 minutes. In my journey of self discovery and situational depression, I previously would have heaped guilt on top of my grief. Guilt that I can't make it all better. Guilt that I can't do it all, and effortlessly, without emotion. Guilt that how dare I have needs. Now though, thanks to an amazing therapist who is a parent to an adult adoptee, a spouse who has stuck by my side, and my virtual "trauma mama" community, I instead met myself with empathy.
For the first time I realized that I NEEDED to sit with my own pain, and meet it with empathy. What I was feeling was real, and valid. This is hard. There are no easy answers. There is often no fixing this, there is only bearing it. There is only so much deep breathing, self care and pleasure to be had before you have to simply sit with the pain and let it out. There is no going around, or over, there is only going through. After 30 minutes of letting myself feel with my faithful furry friend by my side, I felt a burden lifted off my shoulders. Not that I won't feel any more pain, or that my children will be magically cured of Developmental Trauma or that others will suddenly understand and be supportive, but that this was a necessary healing and filling experience that will allow me to better empathize with my children. It's only in sitting with my own pain that I can sit with theirs.
Ok, class.
What did we learn from the movie Frozen, "conceal, don't feel" right? No, doing so only made it worse.
What did we learn from Inside Out? Joy cannot conquer all. Pain can only be released by sitting with Sadness.
So now that I've learned how to sit with my own pain, I can better take a deep breath and find the empathy to sit with my childrens' pain. The difficult part is that it's one thing to sit with pain that looks like sadness and textbook anxiety, but it's another thing to sit with pain that takes the form of rage, defiance, disrespect, aggression, obsessiveness, jealousy, stealing, lying, regression and plain obnoxiousness. However, I know now beyond a shadow of a doubt and even though I'm human and often meet these expressions of pain with exasperation (aka yelling), it is in fact pain and I'm striving to meet it as such. I've already witnessed in amazement the breakthroughs where nothing else in five years has worked. Not the best reward and consequence systems, token economies, 123s, or rigid time out sequences. It's when I simply sit with a raging child in empathy that a storm that use to rage for 45 minutes dies down in 5 minutes. Then in this year alone have come the breakthroughs of reduced aggression, and moments we'd never previously experienced such as unsolicited notes of apology and love. We still live with a tremendous amount of disregulation, but what this blog won't turn into is a daily vent of all of my childrens' behaviors. As my blog unfolds though I will be talking more about each point in the acronym SPACE: Safety, Support, Structure, Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity and Empathy that has shifted my paradigm. I attribute this paradigm shift to attending the Parenting in SPACE conference last year hosted by House Calls Counselling in Chicago. Each of these pillars comes into play in the therapeutic parenting journey. The pillar of the day is empathy.
One of the many reasons I feel compelled to come forward with my new blog is trauma does not just journey laboriously with my family. I've come to learn that trauma is THE public health crisis. Learning to sit with pain and meet it with empathy for ourselves and others is critical not only for my family and others living with Developmental Trauma, but for the health of all of society.
Why make myself so vulnerable in this blog? I use to think this was a weakness. Society conditioned me that I was a hysterical woman who needed to learn to control my emotions. However, society has now been gifted with educated researchers who are also effective empathetic communicators whom I admire and hope to emulate. Dr. Brene Brown is one of them. Through all of her research she's found this: far from vulnerability being weakness, our very lives depend on it.
So why sit with pain this Mother's Day? Mother's Day and Father's Day are akin to Valentine's Day: they highlight the pain of lost, dysfunctional and non-existent relationships for many. So as we celebrate with those who have loving mothers, we also sit with the pain that is mother's day for many. Then from there, we learn to sit with pain every day of the year. It's only in sitting with pain will we find true connection.
Your post is about the most perfect thing I needed to read at this moment. I am a single mom to two adopted boys and mothers day was feeling quite oppressive this year. Every day I wake up and tell myself today I will be calm, stay patient and feel more empathy. I feel like most days I fail when I lose my temper because my younger son won't stop hitting his brother, digging his finger nails into him or crushing the elaborate "inventions" he has built with Lego's. When it takes me 30 minutes to get home from the store five minutes away because he unbuckles himself over and over so he can pull my hair or grab at his brother because he's mad that we didn't turn left or some such thing. He's a puzzle and I'm doing everything I can to figure him out but time ticks by and more often then not I'm just exhausted, emotionally exhausted. So nice to read your post, somebody who gets it. I look forward to more.
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and sharing, Kim. You aren't alone.
Delete