Tag Archives: adoptive children

Karyn Purvis in Sacramento

Purvis
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place provides a monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Next group is April 8th. Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Workshop  is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Sign up online at www.attachplace.com.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment and 20 session course of treatment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Connect and learn with other parents in the same boat. 

Too Much Freedom

If your child gets into shenanigans when outside your visual supervision, then YOU have given your child too much freedom.  This is on YOU, not your child.  How can that be, you say?
 
Calibrate freedom at the level for your child’s success–shoot low to guarantee it.  
Limbo
I know this is contrary to awe-inspiring motivation posters about Aiming High, but you can rest assured your child will fail if you do so and they miss–over and over and over.  Continuous failure insures lack of confidence, low self-esteem, lack-luster motivation, and snail-speed executive function growth over time.  
Imagine what continuous success insures over time.  Yay-ah Baby.  That’s what I’m talkin’ about.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place provides a monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Next group is April 8th. Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Workshop  is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Sign up online at www.attachplace.com.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment and 20 session course of treatment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Baby steps lead to success.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

Forced Knowing

Sometimes my compassion for my son is about puddle deep.  I just want him to get things he doesn’t get. And yet, I keep trying to force the issue. When will you get that you have to rinse the food monoliths off the plates before you put them in the dishwasher?  I know you just learned how not to leave them dirty in the sink, but just add a little step.  You would think I was teaching him past participles in Hebrew.  
 
As I think about it, that sentence to him is almost acceptable, but that is because you cannot hear the tone I used when I said it and it would have been nice to truncate that humiliating, When will you get… part.
 
It is all an executive function thing.  I need to chill.  Why in the world am I getting all flummoxed about an obvious disability?  Oh, right, it isn’t that obvious, but it is a disability.  I must choose to tread lightly. I can be way too hard on this boy who comes from very difficult beginnings.  Up the compassion.  Up the empathy, Ce.  YOU can do it.  YOU want to do it. YOU have enough love in your heart to be generous.  Just do it.
 
Okay, I will. I declare my home and my mouth Compassion Zones.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Paren Workshop  is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Sign up online at www.attachplace.com.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

I could helpfully have said, Let’s work on creating a habit of rinsing the dishes before putting them in the dishwasher. 
Our dishwasher will be happier if we do.
How hard is that to say?  Sheesh.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

Dear YOU No Hashtag

Turns out it is easier to write a new Daily YOU Time late than it is to send old ones on time.  I am letting go of getting it done uniformly every day in favor of just getting on with life the way I enjoy it–one email at a time, when I find the time.  I know YOU can relate to this.  Doing it all is tough sometimes.  Just got to go with the flow, even when the flow is more like Niagara Falls after the thaw.
 
I don’t know about YOU, but I sometime feel like I am caught in some weird reverse osmosis echo chamber (Scientists, I beg you to resist telling me my science is faulty.) My echo chamber goes something (exactly really) like this on a regular basis.
 
My son: “Mom, I see you moved my computer from the garage. I was wondering when you were going to do that.”
 
Me, knowingly lighthearted:  “Because it was tempting you to break the rules?”
 
My son, emphatically: “No, I just keep seeing it when I go down there and I have to resist doing something I know I will get in trouble for.”
 
Me: “Huh,” with a V-8 smash to the forehead (mine, not his.)
 
If this unscientific reverse osmosis echo chamber happens at your house, trust this:  You child is being literal, not disrespectful.  If the words do not exactly match the thoughts, then “No” with a near identical sentiment is going to follow. It isn’t as oppositionally defiant as it feels.  It is truly more about rigidity of thought in the executive function part of the brain.  Try not to feel corrected by your Munchkin, as that is likely not your child’s intention.  
 
Our children are usually simply trying to be “exactingly” right.  Being right is important, because the alternative is being WRONG, which invokes an intolerable shame spiral.  Show compassion in the face of this kind of opposition.  YOU can take the high road.  Your child often cannot.
 
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Paren Workshop  is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Sign up online at www.attachplace.com.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Compassion. Empathy. Acceptance. Playful. Love.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

#DearMe

This is a trending YouTube campaign that speaks to our kids. I often do this in my office with teenagers and adults:  What would you tell your younger self?  It can be very healing and empowering.
 
DearMe
I sent my son to school today dressed as an Anime character for Cosplay Day.  It was kind of creepy and really kind of fun making the costume together.  He already had the neon red hair.  When my kids were younger, I shied away from letting them be outlandish on costume days.  My fear that they were going to grow into strange people on the edge of society kept me pinned in and them toned down.  As it turns out, they both couldn’t wait to turn themselves into attention grabbing characters when they turned 18.
We can’t control our children’s life trajectories.  They unfold in their own ways.  We can give them love, structure, parental role models, guidelines, support; and the rest is up to them.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

It’s okay to play.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

Brain-Washing

sky-tl.gif
Daily YOU Time:

Wisdom for Adoptive Parents
We have to help our attachment challenged children understand how to think about what they feel.  First, they need help identifying that they are even having a feeling, and then what the name of the feeling is.  Text emojis only go so far. 
 
It helps to supply thoughts they could have about the feeling, such as “Everyone has feelings like this once in a while and sometimes a lot of the while.”  You might even go so far as to suggest that this is a righteous feeling they have every right to have in this situation, by golly!   Then explain what “by golly” means. 
 
To be a super good helper, you could offer some suggestions about how to act when this feeling surfaces willy nilly.  I know this sounds silly (oh that rhymes with willy nilly), but practicing having this feeling and handling it in a few different, socially acceptable ways could be beneficial.  Practice is just like experience only you don’t have to actually give or get a black eye in the process.  
 
Some kids could use a picture chart to show the ways to identify and handle feelings. Most will think this is stupid, but do it anyway. 
 
Sharing power on picking choices for how to cope with these feelings comes in handy for oppositional types.  Some will do best by just being told the smartest ways.  
 
Look for signs that your help is being taken.  Throw out a compliment when you see some coping successes.  It’s amazing what catching kids doing something positive can do for their self-esteem.  I know they pretend it does nothing, but we parents know better, right?
 
Yep, that’s how you brain-wash a child effectively to cope with life’s little (massive) emotional ups and downs.  I didn’t say brain-washing was easy.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Life is a lesson waiting to be learned.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

Self-Hatred

With all the pompous declarations, the prideful exclamations, the self-centered attempts to win, be smarter, stronger, faster, better, it might be difficult to see the self-hatred that lies beneath.  It is there for nearly all complex traumatized and attachment challenged children.
 
The self-hatred can be seen in the raunchy notes written to peers about wanting to do the unspeakable; naked Snapchats to strangers; the words they carve into their skin in anger; the slamming of their hands and heads into walls; their collapses into withdrawal blobs; their destruction of favorite things; and their sabotaging of soon-to-be-reaped rewards and upcoming fun events.
 
When a child is harmed and then discarded, the result is almost always self-hatred at the core.  Then, the tiniest negative happenings in the present can tip that child into a self-hating shame spiral of self-loathing and self-destruction. They feel bad to the core. After all, why would they have been harmed or let go by the one or two people who should always have hung on? It must be because they are not worthy somehow. They are bad and undeserving. It’s a feeling, not a fact.
 
The “I am bad” conclusion leads to lots of bad behavior. When one thinks one is bad, one does bad things. Our children think, “I try like crazy to be good, but underneath I want to do bad (e.g. base human) things, so why not do them–they feel good while I am doing them.” And the cycle goes on.
 
Here is what you can do:
Empathize long and hard with the feelings of self-hatred and self-loathing out-loud to your child: I can see you feel horrible and sick with self-hatred. It must be awful for you sweetheart. Really, unbearably awful.  
 
Then provide the solution:
I am here to love you, no matter what. I know you don’t trust that now because of your past experiences, but in time I think you will see that I mean it. I see your inner beauty and how hard you try to do the right things. I see your true loving heart. I see it in you every day. One day, I believe you will see it in yourself. Until then, you can have mine, all of my love.
YOU will need to say this over and over and over. Did I mention years?
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Repetition will drive you crazy and your child sane.  That is the sacrifice of parenting children from difficult beginnings.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

Because YOU Matter

All you can do is your best.  And, on any given day your best may wax or wane. Perfect parenting is not necessary, or even possible.  YOU are the best thing in the life of your child.  Forgive yourself the wane.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo The Attach Place announces the beginning of our monthly no fee Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento, every 2nd Wednesday of each month.  Come join us.  Online RSVP each month required.   Child care provided.
Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a new back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples Workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to receive Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Don’t forget parents need play days, too.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

Free Trust Based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento CA

Presenting a new monthly Trust-based Adoptive Parent Support Group in Sacramento. This is absolutely free with childcare provided.  Come join us.
 
support group 1
support group 2
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a new back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to sign-up for Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Come out in support of yourself.
sunflowers-bottom.gif

 

The No Know

How many times have you heard, “I know!” from your attachment challenged child?  Can’t imagine the number, right?
 
Don’t be fooled by the ferocious nodding and insistent remarks, accompanied by eye rolling, that make it seem like you are insulting their intelligence by giving them information. Many feel stupid, shame and even fear when they experience the vulnerability of their inexperience in the world. Most of our kids know a lot about survival but little practical about social engagement and living life in a satisfying way.  
 
Stop and gently check what they tell you they know.  Often they have only part of what they need to succeed.  Be sure to do it kindly and with empathy for that shame spiral that comes with not knowing it all.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The Attach Place Logo Next Trust-based Parent Course is planned for March 14th and March 15th, 10am to 3pm each day,  in a new back-to-back, two-day format. Save the dates.
Next Hold Me Tight Couples workshop by Robin Blair, LMFT at The Attach Place is planned for April 17th, 18th and 19th.
The Attach Place supports The Wounded Warrior Project by providing free neurofeedback to veterans.  Feel free to send a soldier our way for an assessment.
Feel free to send this link to friends or family members who you would like to sign-up for Daily YOU Time: Wisdom for Adoptive Parents.

Shame is often just under the surface. Go easy.
sunflowers-bottom.gif