walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2]


walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlgiht Wood

Manipulation and control issues manifest differently in children with a traumatic past.

The curtain rises on a new scene. Andrey is sitting in my lap waiting for a blood draw. His veins are iffy, and a nurse and a doctor are collaborating to find a good one. The needle hasn’t touched him yet.

He starts to squirm and whimper, but I can tell from the position of his mouth that he is not afraid. He’s masking for attention. It’s an expression that we’ve learned to recognize – a cover that others take for gospel truth and adorable charm. This child wells up in crocodile tears because he sees two sympathetic, doting faces looking at him and crooning.

The crocodile tears are bait, though. He sells it, and they buy it – hook, line, and stinker. I mean, sinker.

I try to explain this to the professionals that are oohing and awwing and poor babying him. It’s awkward because he’s right there and I don’t want to sound like a mean mama to him or to them.

But I’m the one that is going to take him home, and they need to understand what’s happening.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2]

So I tell them. This isn’t genuine. Please just – no, it’s not that – do you see this facial expression? He’s not –

Oh, it’s okay, they say. They brush me off and pat his arm. They are searching for a vein, this arm, that arm, rubbing his arm, holding his hand, back to the other arm, maybe that one’s better – and they continue smiling and sympathizing. He reads, You poor baby. Your mommy just doesn’t understand, does she?

But they’re playing the game…and it’s really not okay. When they were finally done and looking the other direction, I caught him smirking.

Fifteen minutes of overstimulation and poor boundaries led to more than a week of violent acting out, upheaval, and other misbehavior in our home.

But it’s okay. They weren’t there for that.

The blood draw finished, we go to the room where he gets to pick out a small treat from an overflowing box of made-in-China trinkets. I tell him to pick one out quickly; Dad and many siblings are in the tiny waiting room and we have things to do.

“Oh, it’s okay – I told him he could have two,” the doctor says.

Oh, perfect! Thank you so much for telling my son that the limits I set do not need to be enforced! Thank you so much for showing him that you are an authority over both of us. I’m sure you’ll be happy to pay for anything that gets broken over the next three weeks and also several therapy appointments? Those must be complimentary in your services, right? And you’ll be there when it’s not just his parents that set limits, but also when there are park rules, class expectations, and traffic laws…right? Right?

Hmm. Yeah…probably not.

And you know what he did? He took three (3) trinkets from the box. My husband found them as we were leaving.

He took more than he had permission from anyone to take, because limits didn’t matter.

So. It’s not okay. If we are at the grocery store and I tell him he can only have one treat and he steals more, it’s not okay. I’m grateful that we had the teaching opportunity over some cheap plastic toys and not over candy bars from the store, or worse.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlight Wood

I spoke to them about it. We love this office and their staff, and we know that we are really on the same side. However, the week we lived through after that appointment was not acceptable and had to be addressed. Our fence had been driven though, and needed some steel reinforcements.

It was around the same time I wrote about being on the same side, and the things God impressed on me then were still very fresh:

A gentle answer brings a gentle response.

We confront successfully when we move from the mindset of someone being in trouble to being corrected in love.

We’re not perfect; we’re all learning together. We’re on the same side.

And I really tried. I tried to explain what our family went through the following week and how the boundaries that Andrey needs are essential. I acknowledged that they were not treating him any differently than our other children, but explained that he must be treated differently because his needs are different.

You don’t treat a child with cancer the same way you treat a child with a cold.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2]

image courtesy Nancy Thomas Parenting

I was met with the disturbing combination of condescension and defense, being blown off and berated. I was shocked and disappointed…and we had to go back in a few months for another blood draw. Yay.

We waited and researched. Made some phone calls and sent out some emails to people who know far more about attachment issues than we do, and they were not only a wealth of information but also full of sympathy and encouragement. Anticipating our next appointment, we took what we gleaned from our resources and wrote a letter.

It was professional. It was kind. It was…educational.

It was our line in the sand. The substance of it is below. Adoptive parents are welcome to modify and use it.

We are learning that both Andrey and Reagan respond best to a very business-like, calm manner from people in the community. As we discussed before, any “doting” that happens to them from adults other than their parents will backfire in their attachment, and our family will likely deal with outbursts of increasingly negative, disruptive behavior for days afterward. We are helping them learn to be authentic in their interactions with others instead of triangulating with other adults, and if they are able to manipulate adults with superficial, “cute,” or otherwise masking behavior, it reinforces that insincerity.

There are special challenges to dealing with attachment issues in a setting like a medical appointment. For example, we generally do not allow other adults to touch Andrey and Reagan because it is confusing for them in the bonding process, but they obviously must be touched by medical staff to have their vitals checked, blood drawn, etc. If this can be done in a very matter-of-fact, professional manner it does not usually lead to any behavioral fallout. The best case scenario is that conversation and eye contact with Andrey and Reagan be limited as much as possible (they both have often tried to seek out eye-contact with strangers while avoiding eye contact with Vince and me) and that verbal encouragement or comfort comes from their parents only.

Please let me know if you have any questions about any of this. I apologize again for not making this clear before; it has taken us many months to discover this much about them, and every week brings new challenges and experiences to learn from. We appreciate your care for our family and for working with us to help Andrey and Reagan heal in body, mind and spirit.

It was too much, apparently.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlight Wood

“We want to be a warm, welcoming place for Andrey so he feels safe and cared for,” they said.

Except…he needs to feel that from his family, not acquaintances and strangers. And he won’t feel that from his family when the boundaries are pushed by other adults who are picking his scabs off. This makes him anything but safe.

He would happily go home with any of their staff because they’re still playing and putting gas on the fire. Helping him attach to his own home and family is the issue we are concerned with.

“We can’t let our office feel like they have to walk on eggshells every time your family comes in for a visit,” they said. “Everyone would feel like, Oh no, they’re here, no one give him any eye contact!

Seriously.

Our requests did not fit the bearings of their office and would make the staff uncomfortable.

“Maybe our office just isn’t the best fit for them,” they said. “I just really want what’s best for Andrey and Reagan; they really deserve that.”

I’m convinced that condescension is the ugliest form of pretense. It is a wounded ego oozing from an unteachable heart.

In our home, I said, sometimes we walk on eggshells all. day. long. Not a day goes by that we are not walking the line.

But our odd little family with our odd little needs would cramp their style. It was time for some…pruning.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlight Wood

So, adios. Curtains.

We walked the line right out of that pretty little office and straight into a new one, and our special needs don’t cramp their style at all.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlight Wood

It’s okay. We can still root for each other.

We can be on the same side without being on the same team. Some of us are clearly playing different sports.

walk the line: some thoughts on boundaries, trust and attachment [part 2] @ Copperlight Wood

Did you miss part 1? Find it here. Part 3 is here.

always with me, everywhere

Next week marks a significant 12-month victory in our family. A year ago, we risked the ocean and stormed two castles and brought two children out of captivity and into a family. For good, forever.

It sounds nice. Victorious, glorious.

But it has been hard, and we’ve been learning to abide in ways we never thought to before. In the midst of other life happenings (because drama never has the courtesy to make an appointment), we have walked many places this year that we honestly did not want to go. We still walk to some of those places every week. Usually, every day…often, more than once.

It’s a grisly battle and there’s nothing romantic or pretty about it.

There have been mornings that I don’t want to leave the bedroom. There are chaotic afternoons that taunt and harass with the voice of the enemy saying, “I told you so.” There are middle-of-the-nights that I fight bloody hell for joy and peace.

It is hardest when I forget that He’s right there in those hard places with us. Sometimes I forget to see the beautiful, I forget that He makes quiet resting places in the chaos, and I forget that He’s holding the needle.

But He reminds me over and over and over. He’s always with me. This verse has been taped to our shower wall in a plastic sheet protector for the past several months:
You keep him in perfect peace
whose mind is stayed on You,
because he trusts in You.

– Isaiah 26:3

In the wee hours one morning recently, I gave up trying to get back to sleep. I was tired, but tired of trying, too.
 
We’d been fighting illness and there were eight loads of laundry in queue. I thought I’d get some of it done in a quiet house, drink a glass of water, and go back to bed in an hour or so once I was tired enough to fall back asleep.
Tiptoed downstairs. Two cats, one striped and one solid, came padding behind me.
One of them in particular follows me everywhere, every day. White as a cue ball, she’s everywhere I go.
Where can I go from my Sophie? Or where can I flee from her presence? If ascend up the stairs, she is there. If I make my bed in the morning, she is climbing all over the pillows. If I take the wash out of the dryer, behold, she is there. If I hide in the remotest part of the house, even there she will follow me, her right paw will lay hold of the sandwich I am trying to eat for lunch.

– Psalm 139:7-10, modified considerably 

The girl knows what it is to abide, to pursue the presence of the one she loves. To follow the person who loves her best. She loves to be with me, and I love that, too – though sometimes I’d like to keep my bowl of ice cream to myself.
Despite my grand intentions, the laundry in the dryer was still damp. I set it to running again, wondering what to do. Fold a few blankets. Wipe the counter. Tell the cats to be quiet because it’s not breakfast time yet…in this house, at least.
 I looked for my Bible but couldn’t find it. I remembered that it was by the bed, but didn’t want to risk waking up small humans by going back upstairs to get it. 
I grab another book instead, and read this:

The Spirit must break our practice of the presence of self, and He does this by forging Himself into our inner being. How often these last years have I been filled with that burning? There were times when I literally felt as though He grabbed my soul with His holy fist and lifted me up before His face with my feet dangling in midair and my tongue protesting, “No, Lord, I can’t take anymore. No more, Lord. I’m weary of the painful growth.”

And I realize that the laundry was just a ruse to get me down here to read this, today, this morning, right now. Because I need more of Him urgently.

I am learning about those flames which burn but do not consume. I am learning about that fire which releases the odor and fragrance of roses and about that Guest who inhabits the parlor of our souls, who banks the fireplace with ashes to keep the burning low or who uses the billows when the room has grown cold.

– Karen Burton Mains, Open Heart, Open Home

I check the laundry. Pull out dry things that are wadded around damp towels and reset the dryer. Fold a pillowcase and some underwear, a set of sheets. It is the Sabbath without rest right now – Jesus healed on the Sabbath, and we need healing. But it is quiet and the spirit is resting even when the body isn’t.
Sophie is here, quietly accepting the wait for breakfast, though Gus still loiters in the kitchen. It is just me and them and Him and the laundry, breathing in peace and fellowship. It is the day of Communion.
The towels are dry and another load goes in. I finish folding warm clothes in a cold room, in bare feet on a hard floor. Put away my empty glass. Stack sheets and towels and underwear, triumphant over another load of laundry, and head upstairs, two little cats following me.
He has used His billows to relight the fire, and He banks me in with a down comforter. Victorious, glorious.
Contentedly exhausted, I go back to sleep…and He is right there in that place, too.

anxious for nothing

I love bread dough. There is something instinctively comforting about warm, rising dough that is as fluffy as toddler cheeks. I love the ppfffffff sound of punching the dough down after the first rise and then dividing it into little loaf portions and tucking them into their pans.  I love folding in mozzarella and sauteed onions and so many herbs that they fall out when you lift the dough into the big loaf pan.

I love watching it rise.

And…I really love eating it. Hello, my name is Shannon, and I love, I adore, I highly esteem, I less-than-three carbs and gluten. Don’t tell our naturopath.

Baking bread used to be so intimidating to me. Silly, hmm? It was unfamiliar territory and seemed like a big process. I wasn’t sure if I really wanted to tackle it.

Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.

– Philippians 4:6

So tackle it I did, and then got a little braver. I learned to play.

I learned to make new things, and discovered the love of stretching strips of pizza dough over calzone filling, rolling long thin triangles into crescent rolls, and layering other strips of dough together with a ridiculous amount of cinnamon sugar in between. Nothing fancy, just comfort food…but I’m harboring a longing to try homemade hotdog buns soon. We’ll see.

Recently we learned to make doughnuts, and I loved cutting out floury circles, and – the best part – little floury doughnut holes. Oh, joy! Oh, bliss!

Oh, dentist!

Just kidding. No cavities so far.

Playing is messy but so necessary. We need it from the earliest of ages. When we are little and don’t have enough play and touch and interaction, many things that should just be routine are anxiety-provoking, unfamiliar territory.

Fear comes into play. Literally.
We learned a little – just a tiny bit – about this during some adoption trainings. We’ve learned quite a bit more, as usually happens, through actual experience.
Our first experience was during our first trip to Spaghettia in March of last year. We gave Reagan some playdoh – all kids like play-doh, right? – and when she squeezed it, she cried. She was scared of it.
We thought, Hmm, that’s weird, and found different toys to play with.
We’ve been home together for almost a year now, and we’re learning more and more. It’s tricky; there don’t seem to be any hard and fast rules about sensory issues. Not all symptoms or characteristics may be present. A child can be both hypersensitive and hyposensitive. And – I just love this – “Inconsistency is a hallmark of every neurological dysfunction.”
Well. Thanks so much. That’s just great.

Anyway, we’re doing lots of play. So many things are new and intimidating, and we focus on making new things familiar so they lose their fear. Messy play, creative play, textures, temperatures, movement, sound…sensory play. Of course, we never called it that before. We just called it…play. The only difference is that we don’t take it for granted anymore.

…My object is to show that the chief function of a child – his business in the world during the first six or seven years of his life – is to find out all he can, about whatever comes under his notice, by means of his five senses; that he has an insatiable appetite for knowledge got in this way; and that, therefore, the endeavor of his parents should be to put him in the way of making acquaintance freely with Nature and natural objects.

– Charlotte Mason, Home Education

She loves playdoh now. And not just for eating.
(Kidding. She’s only eaten it twice…I think…)

Tonight after bedtime, Chamberlain came downstairs with a splinter in her fingertip that, while certainly painful, somehow magically did not become so until after we tucked her in. Vince and I took turns poking with the tweezers amid her shrieks and tears, but to no avail…we can’t pinch the splinter out, the tweezers can’t grasp it, and it’s unavoidable…the dreaded implement must be used.

You know the one.

The fearsome sewing needle. (gasp!)
Say it ain’t so!
Actually, I’m not saying it at all. I’m handing her a stuffed doggie that happens to be within arm’s reach and what I do find myself saying is, “I think Pup has a splinter, too. How about you check him with the tweezers -” putting those useless things into her right hand, “while I look at your splinter a little more?”
It was a stroke of divine genius that didn’t come from me at all. And it worked.
She is engrossed in Pup’s right paw while I am holding her left paw and poking it with the needle. She has no idea I’m even holding a needle. She hardly notices that I have exposed the end of the splinter and she is jabbering to Pup about how he must be more careful in the woods around the rosebushes…
I ask her if we can trade. She looks at me with surprise and hands me the tweezers and takes the needle that she didn’t even know I had and continues Pup’s surgery. One more pinch on her rosy fingertip and the tweezers grasp the splinter…and it’s out.We look at it together. Out in the open, it’s just a tiny little thing.

Cham toddles back to bed. I toddle back to the kitchen, thinking about what just happened…and He tells me:
You are the one holding Pup.
I almost dropped the tweezers. What?
He explains. He says that as we learn about these kids…all six of them…and we look for their owies that need healed and the things they need to learn, and we kiss them and cry over them and are engrossed in their need for restoration and growth…He is holding the needle. He is working on us.

There are owies and impurities inside me, and He is calmly, carefully, quietly pulling them out as I jabber on and on to Him about the pups that I’m holding. Things that used to intimidate me are almost normal now, and I don’t even cry over other things that used to scare me, and I’ve hardly noticed because my attention has been focused on these pups.

As we teach and comfort our kids, He is pulling fears out – these little bitty things that cause so much pain – and brings them out to the open so we can look at it together.He sends us toddling off, free, showing us new ways to play so we can be anxious for nothing…because He loves to watch us rise.