tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-187029812024-03-23T10:51:25.760-07:00Where There Is Shadow There Is LightMy hope lies in the Light of the World, but my days are shadowed by the mental illness and disorders that my boys battle. In the darkness, I hold tight to the fact that where there is shadow, there must also be light.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.comBlogger102125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-15976941437447665022013-06-03T08:59:00.000-07:002013-06-03T09:02:27.708-07:00Social Responsibility<br />
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Martin Luther King Jr said <em>“He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”</em><br />
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Being the mother of my oldest son puts me in a precarious position. <br />
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I know too much. <br />
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I know the darkness that dwells in his heart and mind. I know the depth of anger behind the twinkling eyes. I know the behaviors that he seeks to either allow him to feel something or to distract him from his pain, fear and anger… I know the risks he takes and the risk he places others in… <br />
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and that is my dilemma.<br />
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How much do I tell? <br />
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What is my social responsibility to society?…to individual people? Do I tell them that they are being lied to? Do I tell them that they are being used? Is it my place to tell if they are being stolen from? Should I step in if I believe someone is in danger? And if so, what type of danger? What if it is just the possibility or threat of danger? What if the threat is of emotional or psychological harm? What if that threat could become a long term trauma experience for someone…do I tell them then? What about physical threat? If there is a possibility of physical harm do I tell…what if it’s just a possibility? <br />
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What am I required to do?<br />
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What if, in the future, I am faced with the question “Why didn’t you tell me?” If I have the knowledge and can prevent harm shouldn’t I tell? And as a future counselor aren’t I required to tell?<br />
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What if I’m not believed? <br />
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He is so charming. He is so believable. He is such a victim and always appears to be the underdog struggling against the forces around him. I look insane…do I care? Does it matter if someone’s well being is at stake? Can I live with being assumed insane? Can I be the one who is “the problem?” <br />
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What about my relationship with him? <br />
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Is there one? A real two-way relationship…or am I just a tool for him to achieve his goals? If I tell does it damage a possibility of developing trust with him? Is there any hope for that? Is it too late? Is he who he will be? Is my first loyalty to my child or to my fellow (hu)man?<br />
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Is he RAD?…BPD?… sociopath? Does it matter?<br />
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Can God still heal his mind….his heart? Can he be whole? Can he be saved?<br />
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Is there any rhyme or reason for his abandonment/adoption?<br />
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I wish Mr. King had gone on to explain, step-by-step, how to stand aggressively and be uncooperative with evil but then I doubt that he ever thought his quote would be applied to parenthood.<br />
<br />Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-872559725469450122013-05-27T09:00:00.000-07:002013-05-27T09:02:41.198-07:00Living Grief<br />
Grief, according to Merriam-Webster, is a “deep and poignant distress caused by or as if by bereavement”.<br />
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Grief is the normal reaction to death. We expect to grieve in bereavement. When there is loss of life and we know a loved one if gone from this earth grief is understood and allowed… even encouraged.<br />
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In the case of a wayward child grief is often misunderstood and rejected. Comments like “Don’t let him do this to you” and “Don’t give up on him” are often offered by those who are uncomfortable with the grief for the living. <br />
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In the case of a special needs child we are told to shift our paradigm. A well known essay helps us to replace expectations and understandings by framing those things as countries we might visit. Looking at our loss as a new destination helps us to enjoy our new “normal”. But in the case of a disturbed child there don’t even seem to be replacement dreams to reframe our loss. The destination we find ourselves in is one with nightmarish qualities and distorted reality.<br />
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For parents who have adopted special needs, emotionally disturbed children, the loss and grief piles up like books on the bedside table. There may be grief if they come to adoption by way of infertility. They might face grief again if they are adjusting to special needs, older or transracial adoption. And again when they realize their child is not emotionally whole and may not ever truly be an attached part of the family. Then if that child moves in and out of the home through hospitalizations, residential treatment facilities, juvenile detention and foster placements, the grief can be never-ending.<br />
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When Ebear chose to embrace the comfort of his fears rather than continue on the hard path of healing, the only people who really understood were those who had walked that path before me. The disabling grief that shadowed my life went unrecognized by most people. Some were even irritated by it. <br />
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The stages of grief as defined by Kubler-Ross are known to many of us,<br />
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<a href="http://www.adhd-brain.com/image-files/grief-cycle.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="266" src="http://www.adhd-brain.com/image-files/grief-cycle.png" width="320" yya="true" /></a></div>
what is not known to as many is that the stages are not steps that we move through in progression. They twist and turn causing us to go back, repeat and even skip some of the stages while we process our grief. And often we find that we are thrown into a stage we had long assumed was behind us. <br />
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When we “lost” Middle-One to a long-term residential facility and had no hope left of him returning home, we grieved. At that same time a friend had lost her son to a car accident. I won’t minimize her pain but it gave me the opportunity to compare, side-by-side the responses of mutual friends to our losses. I found that we had similar thoughts and behaviors. We were both haunted by memories and empty places where our sons should be. <br />
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I observed that our mutual friends knew what to do with her grief but approached mine entirely differently. People say they don’t know what to say to the grieving but they were much more comfortable with the understood shared experience of death than they were the abstract and distant loss of hope. <br />
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No one sent us cards or brought us casseroles. No one planted trees in honor of our children and no one called us on those special days when we remember alone. Somewhere our children live and breathe and go on without us. But for us, there has been a death, a final and eternal death. Our grief is real.<br />
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<br />Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-84637661950063030592013-05-11T05:06:00.000-07:002013-05-11T05:06:01.453-07:00I Get It <br />
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<em>Through my parenting experience I have gained glimpses of the Character of God the Father. I hope to share them in these posts titled “I Get It”</em><br />
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<em>These revelations have been both enlightening and humbling. I have seen Him in a more real way than ever before but I have also seen my own sin and need for Him reflected back at me.</em><br />
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When normally developed and nurtured children are small they learn to love and listen to their parent. They trust them and become reciprocal with affections. For children with attachment disorder it all looks and feels different. A normally developed child might pick flowers and give them to mommy expecting only her approval and rejoicing in her smile. Mommy is happy so the child feels accepted and is happy and will find joy in giving again. A child who is not attached might give their mommy flowers (or rocks as Middle used to do) and they were just imitating the behavior they had seen/learned in society. They then might have an expected response (mirroring the example they are following) and any other response, like an approving smile or a joyful hug might throw them off creating more mistrust leading to a fear and anger response (we call it rage) and then to chaos. <br />
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The first time this happens it might feel confusing to both child and parent. The child believes their gift will bring about an expected response (a smile and hug might not be enough or correct). When that doesn’t happen they might try to control the response by telling the parent what they were supposed to do or just informing them that they aren’t supposed to do…whatever they did. When they don’t get their expected response they are angry. After this happens a few times the parent begins to react. The gift doesn’t bring good feelings, it begins to trigger fear and anxiety. The parent knows where this is headed and doesn’t know the expected responses to prevent it.<br />
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How often do we do the same thing? We know what we want exactly and when we pray it’s not just to please God or find his approval, it is to control and get what we want.<br />
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As that attachment disordered child grows, assuming they don’t learn to trust and engage in reciprocal affection, they might continue giving gifts. That is what our society does. However their gifts might be more about them than about the giver. <br />
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Ebear gave great gifts as a teen. He sought to be the best gift giver. He would try so hard though that the gifts were uncomfortable and outrageous. He would expect us to be pleased because any less would be a rejection (set up?). He would live day after day with us and push us away, not talking to us or behaving as a member of our family and then on a holiday he wanted his gift to be the favorite. Works without love? <br />
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But don’t I do the same? Day after day passes and I don’t talk to my Father, I don’t open up or let him in. It’s not like he isn’t aware of my life. He can see it clearly, just as a parent who lives with a child can see clearly… but I go on about my business unconnected. Then when it’s a special day and society or the culture of the Church dictates that we stop and recognize Him, I do as expected. And don’t I want my offering to be the favored one? But He doesn’t want my vain offerings. The Father, wants a relationship with us. He wants our heart. As parents, created in His image, that is all we really desire from our children too. As parents of attachment challenged children we know that is the simplest and most frightening thing a child can give.<br />
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Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-37084877187032977122013-05-08T14:04:00.000-07:002013-05-11T05:46:06.759-07:00Mother's Day ComethThe day…for me anyway… has never been as much about feeling honored as a mom as it has been about feeling accepted into that private club of motherhood. <br />
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My first 9 years of marriage were marked with an increasing struggle of infertility that prevented me from being a mom. The 16 years since have been a fight to be recognized by my own children as a mom.<br />
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During those first years I somehow just knew that if and when I could become a mom something magical would happen *cue magic wand sound effect* and I would be happy!!!<br />
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Hmmmmmm…. <br />
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So all of those Mother’s Day church services that left me out of the loop were spent longing to be among those who got to stand/come to the front/raise their hands and receive a gift etc. It just wasn’t fair that I be excluded just because my body refused to conceive & carry. But I had hope that one day I would be among the select chosen.<br />
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And, one day I was. <br />
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We brought home our first child in April. One month before Mothers day… Oh RAPTURE!!!! I would be one of those who was honored and blessed. Joy Joy!!!!! <br />
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The morning arrived and somehow fell so short of what I had envisioned… The three year old dimpled cherub who called me mommy was not at all interested in either gifting me or honoring me…in fact he wasn’t the least bit interested in even being nice to me. Truth be known, he seemed to be focused on making this day that belonged to mom a BAD day. But that couldn’t be….surely I was imagining it. It’s not like he would actually do that, would he?<br />
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We have a photo of me standing in the kitchen while Mr. T tries to convince Ebear to hand over the goods. It just wasn’t happening. I was in tears. Ebear was mad because he didn’t want to give this mommy anything and didn’t want to be forced to either. And in retrospect, who could blame him. Poor little guy, just a month before he had a different mommy and probably wished he was still with her. And that was the birth of a tradition in our house. Mother’s day has been difficult since… for both of us.<br />
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The years since then have been filled with memories; good and bad and in-between. Some good attempts at being nice to mom have been marked by Mr. T and the boys cooking breakfast or dinner for me and giving me great gifts that they gave great thought to…But some have left me wanting to either stay home alone or leave home. In fact I do remember one where I asked Mr. T if I could please just go away and we discussed me doing just that. For some reason it didn’t happen but the idea carried me through. <br />
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This year I find that my little dimpled cherub is gone. He’s 19 now. Last we heard he was living on the streets trying to hold down a job. I can’t say I feel overly successful as a mother knowing that I have a child who is homeless. But he chose this. And while I know he has attachment issues and needs to push away I wonder if I could have been just a little more “attachable” and made him want to stay. No amount of reassurance removes that doubt.<br />
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So this year, I don’t even know that I will see E. I will see the other boys. We will have a special family dinner. There will be a Mother’s Day celebration…because that’s how we roll. But I will still not quite feel that I have arrived. That special club eludes me.<br />
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Am I a mom? Yep, made it. Am I the mom I thought I would be? No. Am I the mom my kids wanted me to be? Absolutely not! I was a replacement, a substitute, a stand-in at best. Am I their mom? Yes. I have the paperwork and the scars to prove it. But do I have their hearts?… well the song says “2 out of 3 ain’t bad”, but following that early pattern of never being happy, I want the full Monty. So I’ll hold out. Maybe next year.<br />
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<br />Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-39721643488028671422013-05-03T13:59:00.002-07:002013-05-03T13:59:46.021-07:00So how is E?<br />
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The question we dread. <br />
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We can answer “Fine”, but he isn’t. We can say he is; rebelling, struggling, troubled….whatever descriptor we choose it doesn’t speak the truth or convey the loss and tragedy that is Ebear’s life. <br />
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There is no right answer. Most don’t really want to know and those that are interested don’t understand. <br />
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The attractive and charming teen boy who was reckless on the football field and won a scholarship to a private Christian college, is homeless, For the third time in 4 months. <br />
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So many are quick to judge… “Why don’t you just bring him home?” Well you assume he would willingly come home. Just because he tells you he wants to be home doesn’t make it true. He just wants you to believe that. How else can he convince you he has been abandoned? If you knew the truth…that he wants to be homeless and refuses to come home… you wouldn’t believe it. It defies logic. Why would a 19 year old boy who has no place to lay his head, refuse a roof and three hots and a cot… Why indeed?<br />
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“He is such a sweet respectful young man” Really? How nice for you. I’m glad you don’t see the other side of him. You can feel safer thinking that we are just too harsh and strict and unyielding. Go ahead, hold that thought. One day you’ll know the truth.<br />
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One thing we learned through the years as our therapist’s clients is that all behavior is for a reason. Figure out what someone is getting from their behavior and you will know what drives them.<br />
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E wants….What? …Sympathy? Pity? To throw his parents under the bus? …All of the above?<br />
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He certainly is getting a lot of help and attention from those who believe him. So we feel pretty certain he won’t starve. And that is comforting because irrationally, we love him. But he also won’t seek us out and turn to us for help. He won’t trust us or allow us to nurture him and guide him through these difficult years of finding his identity. He has successfully cut us off. Maybe that’s what wanted. Isn’t that what he spent so many years trying to do?<br />
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And maybe the answer to that question; “How is E?” is “Alone”.<br />
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Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-80110105435633074882013-05-03T13:32:00.002-07:002013-05-03T13:32:51.579-07:00It's. Not. My. Problem.It’s. Not. My. Problem (but it is my blog so this is a totally gratuitous post)<br />
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Ok, yes, it is my son who has enticed and fascinated your daughter. It is him who has used her and taken advantage of her… yes he encouraged her to lie and deceive you. It was him who; convinced her to let him live in her car and go with her on her spring break trip and loiter outside her school and place of employment. He has joined with her in sneaking around, getting high and yes they are sexually active.<br />
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Yes my son has done all of that.<br />
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But I’m sorry, I can’t fix this for you. My son is 19. He is a legal adult. He can do what he wants to do. I can’t stop him. I have no power. No authority.<br />
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So quit telling me to bring my son home as if it will fix everything!!!<br />
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This is YOUR problem. <br />
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Your child is not over 18. Your child lives in your home. Your child is dependent on you for food, shelter, clothing, her phone….and the air she breaths!!!… You. Have. The. Power.<br />
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Say “NO”<br />
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Take away her car<br />
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Ground her?<br />
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Make her stay at home.<br />
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Neither of you will die.<br />
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Parenting is a verb. Take action… NOW!!!!! … before you find yourself in my shoes praying desperately for your child to survive long enough to turn (back?) to God and family.<br />
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Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-25889292315206986252013-04-30T20:43:00.000-07:002013-04-30T20:43:24.180-07:00Coming Up For AirIt's been two years.<br />
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Two years since I wrote here. Two years since Bright-Eyes wanted to die. Two years since the court turned our lives inside out by placing Middle in the cursed foster home. Two years since Ebear was "healthy".<br />
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It's all different now.<br />
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Bright-Eyes lives and loves and grows more health daily. He is off all meds and making all As as he finishes his 7th grade year. <br />
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Middle lives at a ranch now. He is ....ready?.... FUN and better and we enjoy our visits with him. <br />
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Ebear... well.... he is gone, physically and emotionally. He lives... somewhere...anywhere. He makes his choices and lives his life as he wishes. <br />
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Mr. T and I wake up every day and move through to the next one. Along the way Mr. T found a great job (after 2 years of physical rehabilitation) and I managed to acquire my bachelors degree and find myself halfway through my masters.<br />
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Tomorrow is a new day.... maybe I'll write Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-39636279314354358842011-05-04T19:05:00.000-07:002011-05-04T19:26:52.566-07:00They are moreA song for all of our kids... Because they are more.<br /><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><iframe width="350" height="263" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/IwtcwQwgdsA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe></div>Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-81949057276395984182011-05-01T09:07:00.000-07:002011-05-01T09:35:56.456-07:00The scars of the storms<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEji8ug2PwE4HUg229dIyHyxuNiT12TCGqTvN7FAub5Zr3UzJC-DyLStq7bq9JmNZgn1Dw97xuvBuxUDYS_rc9OxqtnXZaU_spzOZ1fysz83lCY2u5IgIK-jXfgUzn9TTgvzm1Meng/s1600/stopsignstorm.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 187px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5601787038289471906" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEji8ug2PwE4HUg229dIyHyxuNiT12TCGqTvN7FAub5Zr3UzJC-DyLStq7bq9JmNZgn1Dw97xuvBuxUDYS_rc9OxqtnXZaU_spzOZ1fysz83lCY2u5IgIK-jXfgUzn9TTgvzm1Meng/s320/stopsignstorm.jpg" /></a><br /><br /><br /><div>As you all know, on Wednesday April 27, Alabama was raped and ravaged, chewed up and spit out, by storms that would challenge a Hollywood special effects department. This isn’t just high winds and thunder storms folks…this is houses, neighborhoods, communities that have been put through a blender and chopped to bits and spewed out again. It is horrific and those who lived through it and are living in it still will never forget or erase the scars it will leave on their memories and souls.<br /><br />Less than a week later this historical event has begun to fall from the headlines and other events and daily life has seeped in to replace it, but in Alabama the destroyed communities are still in search and rescue mode. They are still tallying the dead and retrieving personal property and seeking a place to stay until they have a home again. In time more of life will push this tragedy farther and farther away from the thoughts of those who are not affected. They will forget. Not so for the victims. The survivors will never forget.<br /><br />It is the same for families of children with severe emotional disturbances. Especially for those families who suffer violence, and loss at the hands of their children. To have to call the police on your child, or see a child arrested or place a child in a hospital or a residential facility, or lose a child to the system… it crushes your heart and saps your soul of life. It rips apart your dreams and hopes. As a parent you realize how short and precious a childhood is and your heart screams at the child…at God… to please stop! Just trust…please just listen… please believe that I love you and will never leave. Relax and enjoy these few years that you have. Heal and rebuild your foundation so that you can step out into the world and be a happy, responsible and functional adult.<br /><br />The day after the storms Bright-Eyes ran away. It was the third time within a couple weeks. We have had to call the police on him. He says he wants to die. He claims he does not want to be here with us. We are broken and shattered beyond comprehension. His psychiatrist and therapist are seeing him with new eyes and asking if there is some attachment issue that has been hidden.<br /><br />My soul screams “NO!” Not this child…not the one adopted as a newborn. I set out to build bonds with this one. I carried him, not in my belly but in a sling throughout his infancy. I made eye contact and built trust; I played with him and bounced him laughing and singing. He was attached… I know it…I want to believe it. He hugged us and cuddled, he sought us out when he was afraid…didn’t he? I am having trouble remembering now.<br /><br />As a toddler he always ran away. He was never bothered by our absence. He would race off in stores and playgrounds while other children clung to their parents and stayed close. As a preschooler however, he became clingy…very clingy. Was he too clingy? Throughout his childhood he had to live in the trauma-filled warzone that was created by his brothers’ struggles with their own demons. I tried to protect him, but standing in the way of flying chairs, Tonka trucks and legos is a war zone still. Either the child is the target of their mother is.<br /><br />So much anger at the older boys for harming their brother… so much guilt for even adopting him. So many questions about why God allowed this when HE knew what would happen.<br /><br />How much of this is the fault of my choice?<br /><br />Would he have been ok in another home?<br /><br />Will he be ok now?<br /><br />Will he grow up and have a life, or will he bounce in and out of hospitals trying to find help and stability?<br /><br />Like the storm victims (and forgive me for the comparison) many don’t see our loss. Most don’t acknowledge it…a few say they are sorry and offer help, but as time goes by daily life fills their thoughts and they forget.<br /><br />For a few, they don't even understand why we would be in pain and our saddness disturbs them. They find it dramatic and irritating.<br /><br />For us, this is our life. The pain is in our faces from the moment we wake up. The empty rooms and empty beds are tombstones in the graveyard of our hopes. The empty chairs at the table make us retreat to the living room to eat our meals in front of a TV that can distract us from our pain.<br /><br />We cannot forget. The tornado victims cannot forget. Loss brands the soul and marks each person as altered and different than they were. It’s a secret scar that others cannot see unless they choose to open the eyes of their hearts.<br /><br />To help the Alabama storm victims go here <a href="http://alabamapossible.org/2011/04/tornado-relief-how-you-can-help/">http://alabamapossible.org/2011/04/tornado-relief-how-you-can-help/</a></div>Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-49581329411585157032011-04-05T08:22:00.000-07:002011-04-05T08:37:20.593-07:00On DisplayLast Wednesday I was reminded of an episode of the Twighlight Zone...it was the one where two astronauts (weren't like 97.5% of shows written about aliens and space travel...Obsessive!) crashed onto an alien planet. One of them was unconscious but the other one was "helped" by the natives. He was given a custom built home that was designed according to the images in him mind... then he discovered that it wasn't a home. It was a cage...with bars...and an observation window. He was in a zoo and on display for all to watch.<br /><br />So on Wednesday, we had a visit with middle. We were meeting at the local McDonalds because we have supervised visits again...due to his aggression supposedly. This week his regular SW was sending a volunteer.<br /><br />They arrived late (no visit has ever begun on time) and middle obviously did not want to be there. The volunteer introduced herself and then kept talking... so I let middle-one go get a snack and chatted with her. She was nice and working on her degree also (so she isn't a SW yet). Then middle came back and sat down and the volunteer sat in the table across from us, turned toward us, leaned out and began actively watching, listening and taking notes on our visit. UGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!<br /><br />The regular SW sits in another part of the dining area and makes phone calls. He doesn't even listen or watch.<br /><br />I began trying to engage middle but he wouldn't talk and wouldn't make eye contact, was being rude and kept saying he was bored. I kept trying to be upbeat and encouraging.... this woman interrupted and asked <br /><br />"Would you like it if we went to the park?"<br /><br />"Ummmmmmmmmmmmm.......No!"<br /><br />I was so shocked!! He is 15 y/o and it was just him and me. Going to the park would mean he could further ignore me and not interact at all.<br /><br />But, then he was even more bored and mom was the bad guy!!!! Thanks a lot!!!<br /><br />So middle decided to end the visit early. He didn't want to just sit and talk with me (surprise!!)...and without his brothers there he said he didn't want to visit. He wouldn't talk to me about anything and I found it VERY difficult to try to make conversation when I felt like I was a lab specimen... it was humiliating too. <br /><br />I hadn't seen middle in two weeks. I may not see him next week because if Bright-Eyes decides not to go then I will need to stay home with him and Mr. T will go... Ebear refuses to see middle at all anymore.<br /><br />*sigh*Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-78622906715885960232011-03-27T16:50:00.000-07:002011-03-27T17:37:26.934-07:004 months later...Well, life is hard, filled with loss and grief.<br /><br />Middle is gone. He lives in a foster home now and (the plan is) will until he is aged out of the system. We figure he will be on our doorstep then.<br /><br />The foster home is in direct opposition to the recommendations of two therapist. Middle's long term AT and the abuse counselor the court ordered to do the Domestic Violence Assessment. On both recommendations, in <strong>BIG BOLD </strong> letters it states that this child should only be in a long term residential facility with consistent structure and ongoing treatment.<br /><br />So... he is in a regular foster home with younger children (he even shares his room with younger children!!) He walks to and from school. He is allowed to be unsupervised and has less structure than he did at home and he isn't even going to therapy yet (arrested November 1, placed in foster home on January 6)<br /><br />How did this happen, you ask... it was a DHR bait & switch. We went to court and the judge didn't want to keep Middle in juvenile any longer so released him into the clutches...err... custody of DHR, with the understanding that it was to find him an appropriate placement. They placed him in his old foster home "temporarily" until they could find a placement... silly us!! We believed them!!!<br /><br />They never even looked. We had a placement in line. There was an opening and all they needed was a DHR referral. They didn't even call. As soon as Middle was placed they declared that he was doing well in this placement and at that point he could not be moved to a moderate of intensive placement because he was functioning in a basic level placement. <br /><br />So, as long as Middle is reported to (and remember, this is very different than what might actually be happening) be doing well he will remain there.<br /><br />So... the charges have been dropped, the case was dismissed and my knife wielding child resides in a suburb surrounded by children. <br /><br />Yep...somewhere in that darkness is light. My quest is to find it......Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-32032535164642355842010-11-28T19:40:00.000-08:002010-11-28T19:51:34.284-08:00I am so stressedThe holiday is over. The weekend is ending. December 1 is approaching. Wednesday is Court.<br /><br />I can barely breath.<br /><br />We still don't know what to do or what will happen.<br /><br />We were given the past month to find a place for him to go. But without funding there was no place. The Multi-Needs team won't even talk to us because with charges pending they won't fund.<br /><br />We can let DHR take custody again, but the GAL wants to return him to the previous facility and that is NOT a good thing. <br /><br />We spent the past year and a half fighting to regain custody after refusing to bring him home because he was dangerous. <br /><br />I do not want to bring him back home (How can we even consider doing that to the other kids!?!?!). But I do not want to lose custody of him either.<br /><br />I'm his mother. I understand him. I know he is afraid and whether he admits it or not, he needs us.<br /><br />It shouldn't be this way.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-74037217003099018832010-11-06T20:41:00.000-07:002010-11-06T21:26:45.277-07:00The collapse of the coasterRoller coasters are precarious creations. They require careful engineering, balance must be exact. The speed calculated to the millisecond. The materials chosen for durability and function. Even the design must be executed scientifically. If anything is off, even a hair-breath off, it could lead to certain death.<br /><br />A month ago today we were cresting the first of a smaller hill. Three days straight of Middle-one following his goals. Good behavior! Peace!! Hope!!!<br /><br />Then we dropped into a dip... it was a short dip but a 90 degree drop. Middle went over the edge and tried to get physical with Mr. T. However, the only casualty were Mr. T's glasses and we began to ascend a new and higher crest. Eight straight days of goal following goodness!!!! Heaven in our house! My heart sored. Had we broken through I wondered... hoped...believed. Our AT cautioned not to get too excited as she wasn't seeing the necessary cause & effect thinking yet.<br /><br />Then there was a move forward in therapy. He cooperated! Middle-One opened up. He looked me in the eye and talked about his birth mom!!!!!!... now it was just for a second, but it was a move... maybe it was the beginning of healing....maybe<br /><br />Then it all began to come apart... maybe a bolt slipped... maybe the speed was too much... maybe there was a crack in the rail. I don't know, but it all began to crumble.<br /><br />His behavior began to worsen... just a little more each day. We tried to regain the balance and speed, but we couldn't get a hold on it. The ride was out of control and all we could do was watch and wait for it to come to a stop. <br /><br />It crashed on Monday evening. Middle was to do extra chores when he got home from school. It was his idea for making restitution to his brothers for some disruptive behavior on Saturday. But when he couldn't convince me he had done the chores and avoid doing them, he got angry and decided that nothing mattered anymore anyway so why try.<br /><br />After five hours of holding us hostage by doing oppositional, destructive and dangerous things (requiring that we chase him and stop him) while Bright-Eyes hid out behind my locked bedroom door, he got physical and then included knives in his antics... when he pointed a knife at Ebear I called the Sheriff's Department.<br /><br />He was arrested. We went to court on Wednesday morning. It was decided that he is too dangerous to be here and we were given the arduous task of finding a placement for him in 30 days. We return to court on December 1, hopefully with a plan.<br /><br />The roller coaster is in pieces now. It lies scattered and piled like the bone pile in a dragon's lair. Our hope twisted in the ragged railing.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-50062920867142458852010-10-11T19:47:00.000-07:002010-10-11T20:17:02.340-07:00Yzma, put your hands in the air!<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilkcZce3l4_RRwYtr9gtYXScKSZCE8Djxsk4rxs2NF6JIY_YXOCufdGfX1kR5dUqdnQYe96NxQOGpsG-1qlyn2Su4m9aN6hAAVa0EwUhKYVNORan-NH2DIQNqXislu4kgUxlvTtg/s1600/roller-coaster-300x240.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 300px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 240px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5526989370083338706" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilkcZce3l4_RRwYtr9gtYXScKSZCE8Djxsk4rxs2NF6JIY_YXOCufdGfX1kR5dUqdnQYe96NxQOGpsG-1qlyn2Su4m9aN6hAAVa0EwUhKYVNORan-NH2DIQNqXislu4kgUxlvTtg/s320/roller-coaster-300x240.jpg" /></a><br /><br />The ride has left the station... ascended to the first pinnacle and spilled over into that first breath-sucking plunge... but tonight it leveled out around a soft curve and we could see the beautiful scenery and hear the birds...<br /><br />Tonight, Middle talked to me... No, I meant REALLY talked to me!!!!! He had been horrible. Life here with him had been unbearable. He seemed to be feeding off of our misery and we were ready for him to just be gone again.<br /><br />Then, without warning, he stepped out of the RAD skin and appeared to me in his true original form. That of a boy. He began to tell me that he was afraid and it was hard not to be. He admitted to not trusting us and that it was hard to trust. He confessed that he wanted to trust us but didn't always know how.<br /><br />He talked about how he didn't want to make us feel afraid. Especially Bright-Eyes. He cried while he spoke about how he didn't want to hit any of us and how he tried and worked to keep from doing that. He said he wanted to be with us and didn't like to be separated in his room because it reminded him of the time-out room at facilities. He said that sometimes when we got mad at him that it reminded him of staff at facilities and he didn't like that, but he knew he did things to make us mad.<br /><br />He also took responsibility for the behavior he had demonstrated as of late. He talked about his feelings during the behavior but was quick to say that he was still responsible for acting like he did.<br /><br />He assured me that he does really love us and he wants to have a good life, but sometimes he acts up and gets mad and gets "lost" in the mad. He said he feels like his day is ruined then so why change.<br /><br />He said he doesn't want to be a criminal and end up in juvenile detention. He wants to trust us.<br /><br />He had burned his finger tonight on a hot pan that I had warned him about... he had to touch it when I said it was hot. He told me that if he had only trusted me he would not have burned his finger.<br /><br />So... the roller coaster took the gentle turn and began another climb... I can't see around the next bend but a friend of mine reminded me tonight that the ride isn't over. While we catch our breath on the slow curves, RADs find them the most frightening part of the ride... so throw your hands in the air and prepare... to... SCREEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAMMMMMMMM!!!!!Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-15093581826617569232010-10-09T18:00:00.000-07:002010-10-10T06:57:34.150-07:00The lowest lows and the highest highsTalk about roller coasters (and yes, we were talking about roller coasters.... RAD *is* a roller coaster!) It has been a non-stop one here, for the past week.<br /><br />Middle-One had been climbing, dropping, flipping and spiralling out of control for a while now. His behavior had escalated to an extreme state of all-the-time deregulation. Last Tuesday he spent four hours controlling the house while Bright-Eyes holed up in my room behind a locked door and I stood guard. Four... hours........... he watched TV, he played video games, he went through drawers (pulled out a long screwdriver) and ate the ice cream. It was a free for all. Until Wednesday...<br /><br />On Wednesday Middle came home from school to find that all of the TV and video game stuff had been taken out of the living room and all of his possessions had been removed from his room. No stuff, except what is essential... a blanket, one pillow, deodorant, toothpaste & brush. We told him we would give him clothes daily. We also explained that with each day that he followed his goals, he would get one item back.<br /><br />"can I pick the one item?"<br /><br />"No"<br /><br />The next three days were heavenly. It defies explanation. We had a polite, respectful, attentive, caring, remorseful child. I don't know how... but we saw it with out own eyes. He did his chores. He did extra chores. He was given little bits of privileges (10 minutes of outside time, some quiet reading time) no TV, no playing with friends or his brother. He didn't seem to mind. He actually sat and talked to us... astounding!!!!! Our AT just told us to enjoy it while it lasts.<br /><br />Today was the fourth day. The end of heaven. The day the music died.......<br /><br />Today he got bored. Oh whoa is meeeeeeeeeee...... there is nothing to do... well there is reading... well he did get to go outside for longer. But, it's not enough. He got bored. It was out fault (isn't everything really?). <br /><br />We could see things going south and we tried to talk to him and help him stay on track but there was no preventing this train from derailing.<br /><br />When he exploded he really exploded.<br /><br />He banged on a Plexiglas window until he pushed out the window frame and bent the pane. He tried to hit Mr. T (Mr. T blocked it)and grabbed Mr. T's reading glasses off his face and crumbled them (yes Really!!!) in his fist. <br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhuciTyKQm5YxJdeMuv6ntxqSb5MNyKvAFvJ01_3-UbMDppF4-G-5nUV8bQ3IWnC1myXlQq9nA1ZrmrF1ybAZWCFH0bp1taGJtURf88-eNw5CFspBvI20f2t3LGC2oYi-S8s4YX8Q/s1600/glasses.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhuciTyKQm5YxJdeMuv6ntxqSb5MNyKvAFvJ01_3-UbMDppF4-G-5nUV8bQ3IWnC1myXlQq9nA1ZrmrF1ybAZWCFH0bp1taGJtURf88-eNw5CFspBvI20f2t3LGC2oYi-S8s4YX8Q/s320/glasses.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5526293289244299474" /></a><br /><br />Mr. T ended up restraining Middle until I came arrived on the scene. <br /><br /><br />I wonder if we will climb back up now, or go into a spin... I HATE roller coasters!!!!Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-9656117778280902010-10-01T14:44:00.000-07:002010-10-01T14:59:14.402-07:00Today in Attachment TherapyMiddle-One decided he was done. At the end of his rope. Had gone as far as he could go. He came to a hurdle that is too high.<br /><br />Therapy (for him) is over.<br /><br />He can not face the emotional darkness that is his birthmother. <br /><br />Like magic, when she is discussed, he shuts down. Today AT wanted to try again to get him to talk about her and his feelings. He wouldn't. He simply said he couldn't do it.<br /><br />She explained to him that this means he doesn't want to join his family and get better. He shrugged and reiterated that he couldn't.<br /><br />You can take a horse to water... you can pour it on him, sprinkle him with it, even submerge him in it...but you can not make him drink.<br /><br />AT and i discussed ways of keeping the refreshment of the water ever present and available. Waiting for a break in his shield or a chink in his armour. We will hope that one day he will drink.<br /><br />Until then, therapy (for him) is over. He will go to session and AT will ask him if he is ready yet to work. If he says no, it's no.<br /><br />We will pray for the day that he say "yes", and hope we make it to that day.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-18253244455475693552010-09-29T07:52:00.000-07:002010-09-29T08:06:31.103-07:00Court and custodyWe went to court again yesterday, we had full custody reinstated to us. <br /><br />No, no, no... congratulatory gifts are not necessary.....really! Just donate something in our names to the Get-Rid-of-RAD foundation...What??? No such foundation exists???????? <br /><br />hmmmmmmmmmmTammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-50758593822996041052010-09-20T16:51:00.000-07:002010-09-20T17:18:30.765-07:00Random RADnessMiddle-one needed note cards for school. His teacher told them that they would need to get some for Science class. Middle was so concerned about this that he asked Ms. Teacher to email me to let me know. She did. I confirmed that they were just your average, standard, white, 3x5 index cards. She said, they were.<br /><br />That was Friday...<br /><br />All weekend we heard...<br /><br />"I need note cards for school"<br />"don't forget to get my note cards for school"<br />"My teacher said that I had to have note card Monday"<br />"Can we go get my note cards now?"<br />"If you go to the store, don't forget to get my note cards"<br /><br />:o)<br /><br />Trouble trusting son?<br /><br />So, being awesome parents and all, on Sunday, Mr. T got Middle his note cards. I put them in his backpack. <br /><br />Sunday night was filled with...<br /><br />"Did you put my note card in my backpack?"<br />"Where are my note cards?"<br />"I have to check to see if my note cards are in my backpack"<br />"I can't forget to take my note cards to school"<br /><br />ummmmmmm.......yeah.<br /><br />After school on Monday, I'm checking Middle's backpack and low&behold.....there is a lovely, multi-colored, spiral note card book in his backpack...right next to his new, unopened pack of cards that we provided...I take the bait and ask...<br /><br />"Middle, where did these note cards come from?"<br /><br />"My teacher bought some in case someone forgot to bring theirs and I asked if I could have one and she said I could"<br /><br />"Oh"<br /><br />And the colors do match the large, 5 subject, spiral notebook he conned out of her, so nicely too.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-70108835914693080532010-09-15T06:32:00.000-07:002010-09-15T07:08:52.661-07:00Heather Forbes Mom's (online) ConferenceWell there ya go! A conference I can get to!!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.beyondconsequences.com/momsconference/">http://www.beyondconsequences.com/momsconference/</a><br /><br /><br /><br /><object width="320" height="192"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/4_4_NXWXvXc&rel=0&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xd0d0d0&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/4_4_NXWXvXc&rel=0&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xd0d0d0&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always" width="320" height="192"></embed></object>Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-81966415826617511942010-09-12T08:28:00.000-07:002010-09-12T08:46:39.623-07:00An eye for an eye, a cone for a coneRestitution is a great tool for parenting RAD kids (well any kids actually). But after a while having a kid work and work ...and work............and woooooooorkkkkk, to earn money to pay for -fill in the blank-, loses it's power a bit.<br /><br />Sometimes you just need to cut to the punch.<br /><br />So this week we learned that Middle-One had been using his lunch account (which is actually the money the school district paid back to us when his free-lunch forms were finally approved) to buy rounds of ice cream in the lunch room...yeah, we're pretty proud of those social skills ;o) Now he has LOTS of friends. <br /><br />We got the printout from the cafeteria and had the proof and the amount. We could have added it to his work log and given him more chores... but ya know, we just didn't want to.<br /><br />We talked to our AT and came up with this plan... We calculated the total that he spent. We added in ice cream and cones (to equal the total spent) into the grocery shopping and brought them home.<br /><br />When it was time for ice cream, Middle said <br /><br />"I'm going to finish my chore and then have my ice cream"<br /><br />I replied with...<br /><br />"Oh I'm sorry sugar, the ice cream is for your brothers"<br /><br />"What?!?!?"<br /><br />"Yes, since you have been eating ice cream at school... a LOT of ice cream too, we felt that it was only fair for them to have ice cream too"<br /><br />"WHAT?!?!?!"<br /><br />"You have been very concerned lately about things being fair. This is only fair after all"<br /><br />"WHAT?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?"<br /><br />"And sweetie, if you would like a dessert, we have bananas and fruit cups"<br /><br />*smile*<br /><br />He left his chore undone and stomped to his room with the announcement that he was going to bed.<br /><br />Sweet dreamsTammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-74144386997686098352010-09-05T11:31:00.000-07:002010-09-05T11:39:33.746-07:00Random RADnessMost of these are humorous. This one is not.<br /><br />This morning, Middle-One woke up with a stuffy head and a scratchy throat. Normally he doesn't even let on that he doesn't feel good. So when he came in and told me while I was making breakfast I guessed that he REALLY didn't feel well. It was fairly obvious that he was feeling pretty miserable.<br /><br />We decided he would stay home from church and later, after breakfast, he just broke down in tears saying <br /><br />"I don't like not feeling good, I don't want to be sick"<br /><br />Mr. T and Ebear both looked at me and asked what was up with the tears.<br /><br />My guess.... Being sick makes you vulnerable. You lose control. If you really don't feel well you have to depend on others to take care of you. You have to trust. For a kid who can't trust it can be a pretty scary thing.<br /><br />Fortunately Middle has a good caring mom who took good care of him while everyone else went to church. ;o)Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-36308112301318860412010-09-05T07:56:00.000-07:002010-09-05T08:03:03.927-07:00Inconsistent ConsistencyIn traditional parenting it is so crucially important to be consistent. Always! Follow through with immediate consequences every time it’s needed. Developmentally normal children will eventually catch on and develop the cause and effect that is part of the natural social and emotional development that God created.<br /><br />I have memories of whole days trying to be the consistent parent while my boys would just go through the behavior chart and do everything they weren’t supposed then come and tell me what I was supposed to do because of their behavior. I was their puppet. I was a confused puppet because all I had learned about parenting was that if we were consistent in our responses to behavior then they would learn eventually.<br /><br />Guess what… they NEVER learned!! I wore myself out being consistent.<br /><br />With RAD kids, the 100% consistent and immediate response just provides another avenue of control so we have to flip that to effectively parent.<br /><br />RAD kids need consistency but they don’t need to always have predictable consequences. It helps them to think and develop cause & effect if we can keep them guessing. So RAD parents sometimes practice consistency, inconstantly.<br /><br />Simply put that means we will always do *something* but they won’t always know what we are going to do. Our therapist has said we really can do anything. We are the parents and whatever we decide on for a consequence (remaining within the legal and moral realms) is good. <br /><br />In the times that I have been on top of my game I have provided crazy and humorous consequences. “Stop, or I will tap dance!!” … That almost always elicits a laugh and it does provide cause & effect. And nurturing consequence; “You obviously need to be tickled/hugged/filled with sweetness (given something sweet to eat). During times of extreme frustration (mine) or complete deregulation (theirs) I have just reached into their room and taken something. Even a pencil lost, is a consequence. It doesn’t have to be something of value, it just has to be something that I, the mom, decided to do. The more it leaves them wondering what in the world we are doing, the better. So break the pattern, be inconsistent and make them think.<br /><br />.Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-55208951437055006212010-08-30T15:07:00.000-07:002010-08-30T15:21:50.675-07:00Random RADnessLast Friday, at therapy, Middle-One was ranting and raving about how mean I was and how I was on his case and expected so much from him (it's a good thing our AT knows both me and the disorder LOL).<br /><br />AT asked for specific examples so Middle tells her that every day, when he comes in from school I meet him at the door and give him a hug... and expect for him to hug me... he was serious. <br /><br />It really is hard to contain oneself at times, especially when accused of such horrendous acts!!! ;o)Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-91202051029686989162010-08-27T03:50:00.000-07:002010-08-27T04:36:11.439-07:00A MysteryIt was a dark and stormy night... well, ok, it wasn't stormy. But this is the tropic south so it just as easily could have been.<br /><br />I was awakened from a peaceful sleep by a sharp knock-knock-knock at my bedroom door. Rolling over, I glanced through one open eye, at the clock. 4:34.... ugh!!!<br /><br /><br />"Yes?" <br /><br />I heard Middle-One call back.<br /><br />"Mommy???"<br /><br />"Yes???" <br />(who else could it be really?)<br /><br />"Mommy the pantry light is burning."<br /><br />I stumbled to the door, flipped the hook & eye lock and opened the door. Middle-one was standing in the hallway.<br /><br />"What?"<br /><br />"Precious (the dog) was scratching at my door so I came to get the leash to tie her up and noticed that the light bulb was black"<br /><br />"Ok... (thinking... thinking...) Ok... go back to bed. you're not supposed to be up tying the dog up anyway. (Ummmmmmmm... really?... Really???)"<br /><br />Middle goes (a little too) obediently to his room and gets back in bed. I go to the kitchen to check on the light bulb. Yep, burned up alright. It's Cajun-blackened! I remove the bulb with he help of a cleaning rag. Thinking that I will have Mr. T examine it later, I slip quietly back into my room and place it on the bookcase.<br /><br />Going back out into the hall I notice that the house smells like smoke. The pantry light fixture feels hot to touch. I worry that maybe the wiring in this old house is on fire (It is the middle of the night after all so my suspicious thoughts are still asleep). As I become more conscience, I notice a "smokey" smell throughout the house.<br /><br />(Is it getting worse?)<br /><br />I begin to examine every room, feeling walls, smelling, trying lights. <br /><br />(seems ok, but what is that smell)<br /><br />I walk through again, discerning that the smell is strongest in the kitchen and the hallway. I return to the pantry and with two open eyes I begin to really look...<br /><br />(how did that box of matches get on the spice shelf?... and where are all the matches)<br /><br />I start digging around the pantry.<br /><br />(no matches. Where did they go?)<br /><br />I look into the garbage can...<br /><br />(Ebear's pill bottle?... he didn't finish these. Did he?)<br /><br />I'm getting more confused. I retrieve the pill bottle and the nearly empty box of matches and add those to the light bulb. <br /><br />Now I am fully awake and in sleuth mode. I'm seeking the clues because that's how we roll... Yeah, me and Nancy Drew, we tight dude! <br /><br />There is a Febreeze can on the dining room table<br /><br />(was that there a minute ago?)<br /><br />I pick it up...<br /><br />(Empty!?!?..... where did the Fabreeze go....)<br /><br />Added the bottle to the growing pile of clues.<br /><br />Hmmmmmmmmmm....<br />I have a suspect. I have the clues...I'm seeing a possible solution. But I don't think I really have the technology to prove it (got to refill the CSI kit). A confession is unlikely so a confrontation; useless.<br /><br />It will remain a mystery... for now.<br /><br />(I think it's time for coffee....)Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18702981.post-37088887675328735792010-08-26T07:21:00.000-07:002010-08-26T09:37:51.521-07:00RevelationsI do my best praying and praising while driving. In fact I may do my *only* praying and praising then. My children know that I often cry while I’m driving but they don’t always know what is taking place in my heart and mind. Recently, while driving in the van, feeling particularly bitter and resentful about Middle-One, and this disorder that fills our world, I cried out to the Lord…<br /><br />Lord, why does he push us away. Why won’t he trust us? We just want a relationship with him, how hard can that be? He spouts bitterness and anger every waking minute but I have not harmed him, in fact I have done nothing but love him. He won’t talk or share anything about his life. He won’t ask or listen. Doesn’t he realize that he can’t keep the secrets? He is a child, we are his parents…Doesn’t he know that we can see into his life. He won’t open up and reveal his hopes, dreams, feelings or thoughts. He won’t spend time with us. He makes petty decisions for himself living in the illusion that he is in control.<br /><br />It’s silly for a child to think he can take care of himself. He can’t go it alone… doesn’t he see all that we do for him?<br /><br />We just want to care for him. To love him and bless him. His disobedience robs him of the blessings we plan. We just want to know him. To lead him and guide him. <br /><br />We have always been here. No matter where he has gone or what he has done, we have been constant and faithful. Does that not count? <br /><br />We have laid down our lives for this child. Why can’t he see that?<br /><br />In my heart of hearts, I heard…<br /><br />Tammy… why have you pushed me away. Why don’t you trust me? I just want a relationship with you, how hard can that be? Why don’t you talk to me or share things about your life? Why do you spout bitterness and anger every waking minute. I have not harmed you, in fact, I have done nothing but love you. You don’t talk to me or share yourself with me, you don’t ask or listen. Yet, you are my child, I am your FATHER…Do you not know that I can see into your life, into the depths of your heart? Do you think you can keep secrets from me? Why don’t you reveal your hopes, dreams, feelings and thoughts to me? You won’t spend time with me. You make petty decisions for yourself, living in the illusion that you are in control.<br /><br />It is silly child, for you to believe you can care for yourself. You can’t go it alone. Don’t you see all that I do for you?<br /><br />I just want to care for you… to love you, and to bless you but your disobedience robs you of the blessing I have planned. I want to know you and lead you and guide you.<br /><br />I have always been here for you. No matter where you have gone or what you have done. I am constant and faithful. Does THAT not count?<br /><br />I have laid down my life for you, my child. Why can’t you see that?Tammyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04300142935002671214noreply@blogger.com2