When I asked you how things were going, you started to cry. Through your tears, you told me how great your new son’s eye contact is, how he likes to be held, how he lets you know what he wants. You told me how everything is really so good, so much better than you were prepared for. But, you were still crying when you said that.
I imagine you were your social worker’s dream family. You dotted all your Is and crossed all your Ts. Not only was every form filled out completely and perfectly, but you didn’t fuss about any of the training required. You were your agency’s star student, soaking up every minute of every training with paper and pen in hand, taking notes lest you forget something. Every recommended book is now part of your library with broken bindings and yellow highlights throughout. You can channel your inner Dan Siegel and Karyn Purvis and explain the attachment cycle and define time-ins to any captive audience. You’re it—the well-prepared, ready-to-go adoptive mom equipped with a full holster of every attachment-building tool there is.
And, then you adopted your son.
You remind me a little of that friend we all have, the one who went to Lamaze classes or the like and somehow heard the message—or simply chose to hear it—that if you learn all the breathing tricks and positions that labor and delivery would be relatively painless, that somehow her own learned skills and oxygen-inhaling prowess would trump the reality of biology.
Yeah…it doesn’t that work that way.
Here’s what just happened. You and your husband, quite comfortable and relatively confident in your parenthood experience to the one biological child you already had, grew your family again. That’s always hard. And, since you did that through this incredible adventure of adoption, you multiplied that hard exponentially. While it’s normal for a mom to feel overwhelmed and tired and totally consumed by her new child who needs her all the time, you feel all that and your new child is not a sleepy infant and your child doesn’t understand English and you are scared to death that all the anxiety and growing sense of oxygen-inhaling failure on your part is going to break down whatever foundations of attachment have been built and that your adoption fund is going to be replaced by a therapy fund to pay for all the additional trauma you are going to bring into your child’s life.
{take a deep breath right about….now}
All those rules and tools you’ve studied and prepped for—the babywearing, the cosleeping, the skin-to-skin contact, the commitment to be the only one to meet his every need, the keeping him within several feet at all times, the cocooning, the intentional regression—they are not the end all; rather, they are the means to an end with that end being relationship. That’s the most important thing. If those good rules and tools are so binding to you right now that they are actually hindering relationship, you have the permission to step away from the books and the blogs and the webinars and experience freedom as the mother God’s called you to be to your son. It’s not forever, but for now, find what it is that you need whether that is grocery store runs sans anyone under 3 feet tall, a break to go have coffee with a friend one afternoon, going back to your weekly women’s group with a sitter in your friend’s basement, or something else entirely different. Find what it is that you need so that you can get on track with building a relationship with your son rather than falling into a pattern of going through the motions that you think you need to do but growing seeds in you of fear, questions, and resentment—all of which are enemies to relationship.
Friend, this is hard, yes. But, you can do hard; you were made for hard. You are exactly what your son and your daughter need right now—in your frailty, in your weakness, in your tears.
Dawn "Chitalian" Cerra says
Kelly…You know infinitely more about the plight of the Chinese people specifically women…but I feel exactly the way you do…don’t judge these women for giving up their babies…they were born in a country that does not support women and children…especially if their child is born with any type of deformity. I believe for the most part they have no way to help their child and that must be so painful to a mother’s heart…not to mention the social stigma’s they will face…being outcast, unemployed, uneducated and more…I had a discussion with a friend of mine… “why was I blessed by being born in this country?…I’m nothing special!” Except for the Grace of God, it could have been me born in China facing the decision of giving up my baby so she could have a chance at life…so she could have the surgery that will save her life. So I too defend the choices of the mother’s in China…the ones who live broken hearted…the ones who are never again whole because the piece of their heart that is missing…
maggie k says
Thank you so much for this post. It was exactly what I needed to hear today. My girls have been home 5 and 3 yrs respectively and I still feel guilt that I had to go back to work shortly after they came home – 6 weeks in fact. Did that affect them negatively in their bonding to my husband and me – probably not the ideal situation. But the point I take from the post is that this bonding is not over yet – we have every day to try to connect to them in small ways and big ones. So maybe we didn’t do it “by the book” in the beginning but we are trying and will continue to try each day to turn their hearts to ours.