Ce Eshelman, LMFT
Tag Archives: parenting attachment challenged children
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The whole Ebola situation in the U.S. tells a cautionary tale, but maybe not the one you are thinking. If you connect with the greater world via TV, Internet, newspapers, and magazines, you may have found yourself feeling a little worried about when Ebola is going to break out in your town. Of course, it could happen (and did for those in Texas), but you are far more likely to get into a deadly car accident today, than you are to catching Ebola–and that isn’t very likely either. Just to be on the safe side, go knock on some wood (if you can find something still made out of wood.)
The human brain is quirky. Much of how we think is based on pre-historic conditioning. Yep, our brains still function as though something big and scary (maybe even hairy) is plotting to eat us at any moment. So, hearing something repeated over and over–Ebola, Ebola, Ebola, Ebola, Ebola–our brains start being hyper-alert and a bit fearful to the point where someone coughing in public sends us running for our pocket-sized hazmat suits.
Don’t get me wrong. I am not making fun of Ebola. It is a terrible, deadly virus. When unchecked, like in West Africa, it is one of the worst public health crises since the Bubonic Plague. I am, however, making a point about our human brains.
If YOU are telling yourself over and over again that your attachment challenged child is going to grow up to be a criminal (because your child’s brain is pre-historically conditioned so s/he lies, steals and breaks rules), then YOU are scaring your own pre-historic brain to death, causing yourself hypervigilance and over-the-top parenting, and making the situation worse.
Pre-historic fear or love?
Fear or love?
Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love. Love.
Love Matters,
All you need is love, love.
Love is all you need.
And nerves of steel.
Hypervigilance
If something scary happens to a baby (BABY of any age–1-day-old to 3-years-old) like being taken suddenly from the mother and given to another person who is definitely not the mother, the brain goes into survival mode and the baby becomeshypervigilant, waiting for the next bad thing to happen. For most of these babies, thehypervigilance becomes the norm for life. “Felt safety” is the only cure, and getting that is extremely hard. Eventually, getting safety in an adoptive home is possible, but “felt safety” is harder, like creating a sculpture out of water–extremely elusive.
Hypervigilance can look many different ways in our kids. In my house both of my children had to know what was going on in our house at every moment. They inserted themselves into everything. When they were very young, I couldn’t clean the toilet without an audience. By the way, this did not make them excellent toilet cleaners either. I could barely pee alone.
Today, my son is 5″10″, 17.8-years-old, and still popping out of his room the minute he hears me move about the house. He comes rushing in my direction to ask a question; to tell me something random; to get food; to check on the dog; to get a hug; sometimes he can’t think of a reason and just stands awkwardly right behind me. Every day when I get home from work, the second he hears the garage door open in the basement, he runs down the stairs toward my car. He cannot help himself. His need to know persists. Before I get home he looks out the window for me dozens of times. He isn’t scared, per se, he is anxious and hypervigilant.
I feel sad for the level of anxiety he carries that makes him so alert, on edge, and intrusive with his presence. I used to feel badgered to death by little nips, but that is long over. Now I feel more for him, for his internal life, for his lack of “felt safety” despite how safe he has actually been for the past 15 years.
He takes medication and neurofeedback for his anxiety. He copes by deep breathing and thinking skills. I sooth him with hugs when he finds himself near me for no apparent reason. His brain has 10 or so more years to fully develop. I am hopeful that continued support in this way will lead him, ultimately, to a “felt sense of safety” in his own mind and body. I am hopeful.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
Believe that change can happen and it does.
Up And Down Whiplash
Our kids are in survival mode much of the time. Sometimes they seem so “normal” and even recovering nicely. Then, BOOM! A bomb drops and we are reminded that our children’s brains are different. Their stability is tentative. Our job is to stay steady, stay the course. It is our stability that saves the day and facilitates our children forward on the path to healing.
I call this the “UP and DOWN Whiplash.” My emotions are in a perpetual “rear-ender.” The whiplash is profound. Put your neck brace on and steady on.
I am a grounded, loving person and my children struggle. That is a fact.
I put my oxygen mask on before assisting others. I have to. How about YOU?
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
Breathe.
They Do Grow Up
Yes, they do grow up–eventually. While I have been gone, my daughter sent me a bittersweet text. It was 12 messages long and arrived in the middle of the night. Just like her.
She was lamenting how hard it is to be a mother with a child from difficult beginnings. Her little 11 month old daughter has been very ill since birth; the magnitude of which is only just now sinking in for her. Sadly, my daughter’s poor decision making led to my granddaughter’s permanent brain damage. This is a hard reality to swallow.
The bittersweet part was her profound epiphany that raising children (like her and her brother) was probably hard for me. Her conclusion: I don’t know how you ever did it with me. I honestly don’t know how you did it. You are the strongest Mom I know…and I love you with all my heart no matter how many fights we get in or how many times I say I don’t. I always will and will never ever be able to repay you for everything you have done for me.
You just did, sweetheart. You just did.
And I love you, too.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
Just when you think nothing matters, love does.
Love matters.
Back Off And Balance
If YOU have been helicopter parenting to the point where even just the sound of your voice is creating reactivity from your attachment challenged teen, back off and get some balance. Back way off. Let them come to you for what they need. I know that sounds counter-intuitive, but it works. When YOU give them space, and space, and space, your children come seeking contact with YOU. Be very low key about your response.
Without irony, accept the overture, and be the hero: “Sure, I will drive you to your volleyball game.”
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
Let your children seek YOU. That can turn the tables.
Grieving Is A Process
Our children grieve things they do not understand or know about. They grieve the loss they feel in their cells for their birth mother and they grieve the loss of the imaginary perfect mother who gave them away. They grieve getting YOU, because YOU are real and flawed and here every day. YOU don’t measure up to the fantasy, so there is the overwhelming grief that causes their rejection.
Your adopted child may tantrum in grief, rage in grief, cry in grief, reject in grief, defy in grief, withdraw in grief, or cling to strangers in grief. They may do this for years. It doesn’t mean they aren’t attaching to YOU. It does mean they are fundamentally changed because they have this pain like dying in their guts now because they were abandoned (and some were both abandoned and abused.) There is no worse pain on Earth for a human being than to lose connection with one’s mother forever.
In order to act as an attuned container of empathy for your child’s many permutations of grief, YOU will need to grieve your own idea of the perfectly loving child YOU thought you were adopting. When that is done, YOU will be better able to “hold” the emotional depth and upheaval of your child’s grief and loss.
Love Matters,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
When your child wants the birth mother say, “Oh my precious sweetheart, I know your heart hurts so, so much. I will help you hold the pain. Come into my arms, my circle of love. I am here for you, when you feel that terrible pain in your heart, in your whole being.”
Oh Dear Parent
It’s the middle of the week. What are YOU doing for yourself today?
Some of YOU have this down pat. Raise your hand if this is YOU. To YOU, I give maximum applause. YOU have figured out that the best way to care for your special needs child(ren) is to start with yourself. Bravissimo!
If your hand lifted a little, but not all the way: Good for YOU! YOU are on your way to better parenting through self-care.
The rest of YOU, hands still on the keyboard: YOU are not alone. Many of us have trouble making this paradigm shift. What can I do to encourage YOU?
Okay, here goes. One question: Have you lost your patience, temper, sanity with your child in the past week?
Yes?
Then take a break and do something you haven’t done in a long time that would feel good.
Need ideas?
Eat a slice of cake from that bakery you love (Ignore calories today.)
Go to the gym and work out; or don’t work out and soak in the hot tub or steam yourself in the sauna.
Mani/pedi?
New shoes?
Take a scented bath.
Chat with a friend over tea and biscuits.
Take a slow walk in a place without playgrounds.
Eat a PB&J sandwich on a park bench with good people watching opportunities.
Check out a new art or museum installation.
Make your bed, open the windows, and lay naked in the breeze (Am I the only person who loves doing that?)
Read a mindless romance novel or People Magazine will do.
Watch a R-rated movie in the middle of the day.
Make a beautiful, tasty salad for yourself, just the way YOU like it–add lots of kid-hated veggies with grown up dressing.
Clear off your messiest counter top.
Listen to music from the years you most loved music. Turn it up loud. Dance.
Make something, paint something, break something.
Nap.
YOU Matter,
Ce Eshelman, LMFT
The best parent is the one with the most rest. Rest can look a bunch of different ways. Pick one.
If Only You Were Different, I Would Love You
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Swimming In Shame
If you are swimming in shame, YOU need some help finding your vulnerability and compassion for yourself. Reclaim your childhood. Shame has a tendency to well up around parenting attachment challenged children. They have difficulty accepting parenting and we have difficulty accepting that it isn’t our fault. The shame doesn’t come directly from parenting. Likely it has been there all along, from childhood. It just gets big and overwhelming when children are added to the mix.
If this sounds like YOU, check out a little reading. Brene Brown is my favorite. She has a blog (doesn’t everyone have a blog?) YOU can watch her on TED (not everyone has a TED Talk.) Read her book. Go to a local workshop based on her work. Join a support group based on Daring Greatly (her book.) She is all the rage. YOU could be part of a movement.
Get a little inspiration here:
YOU can go to therapy, buy a workbook, find a 12-step. What YOU probably ought to avoid? Avoidance.
Because Love Matters,
YOU Still Matter.
Did YOU Come From Difficult Beginnings?
There is a bit of an ironic truth in the therapist community that many therapists came from “difficult beginnings” and end up becoming therapists on the way to fixing themselves.
Similarly, I think, many adoptive parents came from “difficult beginnings,” too. Along the way of self repair, providing a better life to an adopted child from “difficult beginnings” makes sense. Nothing wrong with that. Actually, it is quite lovely.
The problem with both of these realities is that unhealed therapists and parents from difficult beginnings can find themselves in emotional disrepair as they try to be healing forces in the lives of those they care for–client or child.
Heal thyself.
I wish I had been given, heal thyself, advice prior to adopting children so I could have done my own deep recovery before I mixed my difficult beginning with that of my children. The result was a compounded mess of entangled traumatic material bouncing off the walls. In my house, especially in the beginning, it was hard to say who was the most emotionally dysregulated–me or them.
Individuals with early trauma experience symptoms on a continuum If you answer many of the following questions with a YES, YOU might need support for your own healing. Plain and simple. Heal thyself.
Y or N Do you prefer to recharge your batteries by being alone rather than with other people?
Y or N Did you need glasses at an early age?
Y or N Do you suffer from environmental sensitivities or multiple allergies?
Y or N Do you have migraines, chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, or fibromyalgia?
Y or N Did you experience prenatal trauma such as intrauterine surgeries, prematurity with incubation, or traumatic events during gestation?
Y or N Were there complications at your birth?
Y or N Were you adopted?
Y or N Have you had problems maintaining relationships?
Y or N Do you have difficulty knowing what you are feeling?
Y or N Would others describe you as more intellectual than emotional?
Y or N Do you have disdain for people who are emotional?
Y or N Are you particularly sensitive to cold?
Y or N Do you often have the feeling that life is overwhelming and you don’t have the energy to deal with it?
Y or N Do you prefer working in situations that require theoretical skills rather than people skills?
Y or N Are you troubled by the persistent feeling that you don’t belong?
Y or N Are you always looking for the “why” of things?
Y or N Are you uncomfortable in groups or social situations?
Y or N Does the world seem like a dangerous place to you?
(Recognizing the Symptoms of Early Trauma by Laurence Heller, Ph.D.)
Heal thyself. No shame. Only love.
Because Love Matters,
YOU Matter.

