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Saturday, November 3, 2007

Preparing for Adoption

I found this wonderful article on a fellow blogger's blog. :o) I'm posting it on mine 1) because I believe the Lord might direct someone to my page to read this article (like He did for me!) 2) so that I can have it and read it again. :o)

Below is a letter from Amy Eldridge, from Love Without Boundaries,
addressing recent adoption disruptions and parental preparedness.

(If you are reading this, think about posting it on your adoption site ~
a waiting parent who reads your blog may benefit from it.)

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I have been so saddened by this situation. I most definitely wish there was a way to educate ALL adoptive parents about the truths of institutional care, however I have come to realize in my daily work that there are just as many parents who are not online reading everything they can find on adoption as are.There are hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of parents out there who have no idea what life is like for a child in an orphanage, and who head overseas to pick up their "China doll" only to be handed a baby who is unresponsive, thin, unable to eat..and on and on and on.

While adopting my son last month, I walked several times over to the White Swan to talk to parents, and over and over I spoke with moms and dads who had no clue whatsoever about the issues their kids were having. I heard so many times things like, "she won't eat solid foods" (oral aversion), "she has no muscle tone" (muscle atrophy from lying in a crib all day), "she won't smile" (pure grieving from being taken from her foster mom).

I guess since I live China 24/7, I assume everyone adopting does, too, which is not the case. I talked to at least a dozen parents who didn't even know their child's orphanage name, and while I gently said "you might want to memorize that for your child's sake", at the same time I was trying to process how many parents get all the way to China without ever reading about post-institutional issues. It was sobering to me. Babies in the NSN (non special needs) as well as the SN (special needs) path can have issues with attachment, motor skills, emotional issues and more. I think all of us on the WCC (Waiting Children China) list acknowledge that, while also acknowledging that all children (whether bio or not) can have these same issues. Living in an orphanage of course increases the odds. I think the easy out is to say that agencies have to do more, as well as social workers, but I do think that most of them do try to give information to the parents but often parents don't want to hear it or else think it won't happen to them.

Again, I am often surprised to talk to parents leaving soon and to realize they are not prepared. One family was adopting from our foster care program, and when I told them that the child was DEEPLY attached to the mom, the father said, "guess she might cry for an hour or so then?" An hour or so? She had been in foster care for over a year! I tried to explain that this little girl was about ready to lose everything she had ever known, and that they should not expect her to be sunny, happy, and full of personality after an hour. I told them to please remember the 72 hour rule.......that after 72 hours they would probably see her spark, but that she would probably grieve for a long time after that as well. I think for many adoptive parents, they just don't want to read the "bad stuff", and so I do think that ultimately it is the parents who are at fault for not doing more to educate themselves. There certainly are books galore out there about post-institutional issues. I equate this to when I was pregnant with my kids and I would read "What to Expect When Expecting", and I would get to the C-section part and always skip it. Each and every time I would jump to the next chapter as "that wasn't going to happen to me". Well, on my fifth baby, when they were rushing me in for an emergency C section, I sure was wishing I had read that section earlier! But at that point in the OR, while they were strapping my hands down to the table, it was too late, and so I felt complete panic when I could have been prepared.

I think adoption from China is very similar to giving birth...it is much more rosy to only read the happy stories on APC, but I now encourage every family I meet to read the harder ones as well, because if you are the family who is handed a child that is limp and listless and who looks autistic, what you have learned in the past will help you make the right decision for your family during those very emotional first few days.

I have been called many times in the last few years by parents in China worried about their children. I agree that having a support network to help you through the initial time is essential. Everyone should go to China with at least one phone number of someone they can call if they are panicked upon meeting their new child. I remember feeling so alone when I was handed my daughter and she was so tiny and limp. Because our foundation often helps with the kids who have been disrupted, I am aware that sometimes there are children who have much more serious issues than originally reported..and that is such a hard thing for a parent to get to China and then discover their child is truly autistic or has serious mental delays. I think everyone on both the China and international side would agree that it is absolutely wrong of an orphanage to not be honest in their reports, and no one would excuse that, but I also know without a doubt that the majority of kids who are disrupted are just suffering from institutional issues and would catch up quickly in a loving home. It is always a very sad day for the orphanage and everyone involved when a child that they know is absolutely fine, but perhaps thin and grieving, is returned by their new parents for being "delayed".

I think far too many people believe their child's life is going to begin the moment they meet them. The truth is, and everyone must realize it..a child's life is going on RIGHT NOW in China, and all of their experiences are shaping who they are. The vast majority of aunties that I have met in China are such kind and caring people, but it absolutely is not the same as having a mom and dad at your beck and call. I have had new parents call and say "we didn't think living in an orphanage would affect her at all", and those statements truly puzzle me. How could they not contemplate life in an orphanage? Walk through Babies R Us and you will see every gadget known to man to make our children's lives here as ideal as possible. Now Americans have two way video monitors, so that when baby awakens not only can mommy see when to immediately rush in and comfort him, but she can talk to baby so that he doesn't even have one single second where he feels alone. How many new parents would have a newborn and then put that baby in a crib 22 hours a day on their own? How many would only feed their baby, even if they were really crying hard, every 8 hours? Or prop the bottle in her crib and then not watch to see if she ever really ate? Of course no one would do that..we feed newborns on demand, comfort on demand, love continuously..and whether people want to recognize it or not, that is NOT the life of an orphan in an institution. ...even when the aunties are as good as gold.

I remember one night when I took some volunteers in for the night shift in an orphanage, when normally just a few aunties are working. One mom looked at me with tears in her eyes as she slowly realized that it was absolutely impossible with just two hands to feed every child, to comfort every child, to soothe every baby who was crying. She said her heart was aching to realize that her own daughter most likely had many, many times where she cried without someone to comfort her.....and she told me that for the first time she finally understood why her daughter had such a deep seated fear of being out of her mom's sight. The aunties are trying their absolute best, but that doesn't equal mother/child care.

I remember being in an orphanage in the north this past winter and the aunties were so proud of how they had 6-8 layers of clothes and blankets on every baby to keep them warm. They were swaddled so tight that they couldn't move, but it was freezing in the orphanage and so the aunties wanted the babies to stay as warm aspossible. What alternative did they have? It really was freezing there..I was cold in my wool coat, so the babies couldn't be up and about with just 1-2 layers on, with the ability to move their arms and legs. To stay warm they had to be immobile, and so of course all of those kids have weak muscle tone. But the aunties were truly trying their best, and when a parent is given one of those beautiful children on adoption day, I am sure they will go back to their room with concern and say "she can't sit up by herself..she can't put weight on her legs". That is absolutely the truth, but she also survived 10 degree weather in a very cold province and she will catch up soon enough with parents to encourage her.

To not acknowledge that living in orphanage circumstances can cause lower body weights, low muscle tone, inability to make good eye contact is very sad to me. Can it be overcome? Most definitely! The one thing I have learned over and over again about the kids in China is that they are fighters and survivors. But for some reason, people seem to want to ignore these issues in public forums. Recently, one of our medical babies that we had met several times in person was adopted, and we all knew that this child was a "spitfire". When the family arrived and spent a few days with her, they decided she was too much of a handful for them and they wanted to disrupt. She absolutely was not what they expected. When they called their agency, they were told they had two choices: adopt the child, bringher to the US, and change their expectations of what they were hoping for, or adopt the child, bring her to the US and the agency would have a family waiting at the airport to adopt her locally. Option three of leaving the child in China was never once given. I admire that agency so much, as they were thinking of the child and the child alone. The family followed through with the adoption and handed the little girl to a new family upon her arrival in the US. As horrible and tragic and emotional as it was for everyone involved...I still feel this was the right decision for the agency to make. It was done in the absolute best interest of the child, who had waited a long, long time for a family. I wish more agencies would advocate for the rights of the child, instead of always seeming to give in to the parents, especially in those cases when they know with absolute certainty that nothing is permanently wrong with the child. Recently with another disruption, the agency I spoke with told me that it was "easier" to just get the family a new baby. Sometimes easier does not equal right. The first baby who was rejected has now been labelled "mentally challenged" even though the agency knew the child was really going to be okay.

I think all of us, who do realize that delays occur and that babies can usually overcome them, should be these children's advocates by continually trying to educate new parents on what to expect in China. By helping them be better prepared, we just might help stop a disruption in the future. I love Chinese adoption with my whole heart, and it is my life's work..but I also want every family who goes to get their baby to go with their eyes open and to be as emotionally prepared as possible, for the child's sake.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Amy Eldridge, Love Without Boundaries

2 Love Like Crazy Comments:

rcxc said...

Hi --- came to this post via Google automatic email notifications "Chinese Adoption." I'm excited for you and glad you shared Amy's article. Lots of vital information contained within . . .

However . . . (and this next section is written with kindness and concern . . . ), as a parent who came through one of the more "rocky" adoptions described in this excerpt, I want to share that our family's agony (and that of others whom I came to know through attach-China) came through an ugly blame-the parent mentality, extremely prevalent in the Chinese adoptive community.

I 99% agree with what Amy says, but she, like many others, is curiously ignorant and insensitive when it comes to understanding what happens to the parents and family members when a child with serious problems comes home. Sadly, we often become marginalized pariahs at the very time we need support the most.

While I agree with Amy as to the importance of being educated about international adoption, (and can say that yes, I have met some adoptive parents of Chinese children who were uninformed), most agencies do a good job of educating their families.

But knowledge isn't everything. Parents in crisis need help, vision, compassion . . . not FAQ sheets. Someone can be educated about fire, but when their house burns to the ground, it's no use to tell them, "Hey, you knew about fires . . . what's your problem? Just deal."

Essentially, this is exactly what happens within the Chinese adoptive community. Knowledge is important, but without experience and a plan-of-action, is is NOTHING.

What Amy may not understand (or refuses to acknowledge) is that the Chinese adoptive community (parents and administrators) closes ranks as soon as someone dares to suggest a Chinese baby has serious mental/physical problems . . . and mentioning the word "disruption" seems to bring swift and cruel rejection and reprisal instead of caring and compassion.

What I would like to say to you and your readers is that while Chinese adoption can be a wonderful experience, when something goes wrong it is essential to have resources other than the Chinese adoptive community to turn to.

It's essential to have contingency plans (ones that are right for you) so you have a clear idea where you will go if your child has obvious/extreme problems.

Sadly, we didn't know this. Initially turned to our local Chinese adoption agency (home study) and the large national Chinese adoption agency who actually handled our adoption for help for the first year.

Such a mistake.

Our agencies acted like any negative anecdote about Chinese adoption was a liability to the "business" and to be squelched. They paid lip service to being concerned, but they were really quite uninterested, uncaring, and at times, cruel. We were a polite, quiet, well-educated family, so it came as a shock to us . . . and took a while for us to realize what was happening. We were good parents doing a good job, it was hard for them to villify us.

But they did.

Despite the fact that my daughter had very clear (photographic) proof of being physically abused, and had extreme symptoms of being emotionally damaged, the minimalizing and gaslighting that went on, particularly within the large national agency, was horrendous.

However, there is a happy ending :)

We turned our backs on the Chinese adoption resources (other than attach-China, which is fabulous), and turned to state Early Intervention services. We finally began to get the kind of help and compassion we needed.

At last, professionals who were used to working with autistic, abused and neglected babies!

Without exception, our support team immediately acknowledged that we were doing a fabulous job under very, very difficult circumstances. Our daughter had serious emotional problems. No one there was afraid to say that our daughter had problems. She wasn't a "liability" to their business; they just wanted to help. They did not turn away from us; in fact, one of California's top child psychiatrists acknowledged and applauded what we had done.

No one shamed us. No one hung guilt. No one accused us of entering an adoption without the right attitude or not "understanding" what could happen.

Fast forward to today . . . ~ Five years later, our daughter is thriving and truly a joy to be around.

The emotional cost to our family was enormous, but I *think* it was worth it. Boy, was it worth it.

The only thing I look back at with anger and regret is the way I was treated by the Chinese adoptive community . . .

Thank you for "listening" . . . I realize it's bad internet etiquette to post a reply longer than the original author's post . . .

:: hopeful glance ::

I hope that by offering a different perspective on Amy's article, someone out there will be spared what we went through . . . and know what to do . . . past the "educated" stage.

Best wishes to you . . .

Jenn said...

Pastilla...

I would have liked to have replied directly to you...but I'm new at this blogging thing and haven't figured that out yet. :o) Email me directly...I'd love to hear your story.

I appreciate you posting your views. I think every "side to the story" will help someone. I could "hear" your kindness and concern in your post. :o)

I'm very glad to hear that you have a happy end to your story and your daughter is doing well. Do you have a blog site for your daughter or family?

Thanks again.

Blessings!