Shape Sorting

Melissa & Doug Shape Sorting Cube | Ocado

And today we’re going looking through the triangular window…

Not that there was a triangular window in the BBC classic ‘Playschool’ ….

Play School (British TV series) - Wikipedia
(The options were round, square and arched if you are wondering!)

…but when it comes to adoption, negotiating the triangle shaped view is key.

What Is the Adoption Triad? | Birthmother Ministries

The theory of the Adoption Triangle was introduced early on in the council training. As prospective adoptive parents at the line we are most aware of and keen to establish the line that will connect us to our adoptive child – but what of the other two lines? You don’t get far in the process without it becoming clear that our adopted children do not come to us in a vacuum. Long gone are the days of covering up adoption, hiding it away, re-writing history – so in what way will we carry history – or in our case her-story within our family as a part of our daughter’s life?

Our children have a birth family – and always will. That line on the triangle from child to birth family is not one that is cut when the adoption papers are signed. A birth family is not a mere back story with certain therapeutic properties, some helpful medical information and a neat THE END on the final page. Our child’s birth family are an ongoing reality in our children’s lives and therefore in our lives. Which brings us to the third line of the triangle – our relationship to our child’s birth family.

In our training we were encouraged to enter into this dynamic with compassion and empathy. The focus was on our initial reactions during the matching process when we wade through reports inevitably full of negatives: failures, shortcomings, neglect, cruelty… We were also talked through the benefits of a face to face meeting with birth parents – which in our case is yet to happen – and introduced to the formal / agreed elements that are put in place with your social workers: indirect letter box contact and possibly direct sibling contact – depending on circumstance.

But what I am now (6 months in) starting to consider more deeply is the non-formal, ongoing nature of life in the triangle and what that might look like through the years. And what I am realising is that the answer to that question is largely up to me – at least for a quite a few years to come. How accessible do we make the life story book and more importantly how accessible do we make ourselves to our child on this topic? How much will we talk about birth family and what tone will we strike? Do we put pictures of them up on the wall? How much, if anything do we make of birth family birthdays?

These are just questions at this stage – no answers yet. But perhaps more important than the answers – which will inevitably vary from family to family and through various life stages – are the emotions and motives underlying them all.

Here – as in all therapeutic parenting – I need to be self-aware and self-regulate so that, in due course I can help my little one negotiate these tricky emotions .

So what’s going on with me? Well I am going to be really honest here – and these are not things that I am proud to be typing! Here goes – I feel less secure as my little one’s mum when I receive news that her birth mum is doing well. Which therefore means that I feel ‘better’ when she is not doing well. I hate that I feel that way – but I do. And I think there are various reasons behind that.

Let’s start with guilt. I think I feel less guilty for having the privilege to call this beautiful person my daughter when the circumstances in her birth family match more closely the situation that she was taken out of. It is as if I need ongoing justification for having her, reassurance that I haven’t stolen someone’s child and be required to give her back, reassurance that I am not the bad guy. Because life seems easier when there are good guys and bad guys – particularly when we can cast ourselves as one of the good guys. But that’s not life – that’s a fairy tale version of life and I need to resist buying into it. I need to resist even when people do their best to cast me as the good guy: ‘She’s such a lucky little girl!” – because it is just more messy than that. We are not the happy ending – hey join my house at dinner time and that will becomes clear in a matter of minutes – because the story is still being written and I’m just glad I am in it!

And then there’s fear. Firstly fear that I am less of a mother to my daughter the more potential for mothering her birth mother shows. And linked to that is the fear that with an improvement in birth mum’s circumstances comes an increased likelihood that I will have to share my daughter in the future.

I’m so sorry – I warned you it wasn’t pretty! Please know that I see how ugly that all is. And I deeply believe that none of my children have ever been or will ever be mine to keep. I can do my best to keep them safe, keep them sure of my love, keep them warm and fed, but it is not for me to keep them all to myself.

If I am going to be able to walk my daughter through this, to hold her hand through all this, I need to get some things straight.

I need to know – because she needs to know – that her birth family does not diminish our family. It is because of her birth family that she is who she is and that is just the way we love her to be. To love my little one is not just to tolerate the presence of her birth family in our lives, to pay lip service to it, but to embrace it.

There is not a shadow of a doubt in my mind that my little one is any less my daughter because I didn’t give birth to her. The fact that there is another woman out there who gave birth to her and who loves her does not diminish or challenge that. Indeed, the better parts of me can see that it can only be good for her to be loved by two women and all the more so if I can love that woman too! Afterall, the empathy we were encouraged to have for birth families doesn’t have an expiry date.

Of course the wobbly parts of me (and believe me these are not reserved for adoptive matters, but roam freely all over my mummying) still have some questions. “Just because I am certain that she is no less my daughter, does it follow that I am no less her mother? Or is that up to her? Is she as stuck with me as my other children are?” And the answers? All I can offer as an answer is – we’ll see. Parenting is a high risk occupation – to love that much, in that way is a costly business – but boy is it worth it.

So yes, sometimes life can be a bit triangular and sometimes that can hurt. For example – in the midst of all the fun and celebration of little one’s birthday I hurt for her birth mum, and I hurt that I couldn’t even narrate the day of my daughter’s birth to her, and I hurt that I hadn’t shared in it. And that’s OK – because that’s what love does.

And of course, most of time life isn’t triangular at all – it’s just, well…….life shaped.

Melissa & Doug Shape Sorting Cube | Ocado

Mummy has a downstairs brain too!

So I lost it. She needed me to name it to tame it, to connect and redirect, to use my calm to calm her down, to be attuned, to respond to her cries/yells with empathy, acceptance and curiosity. She needed my mature upstairs brain* to bring peace and safety to her rioting downstairs brain.

And what did I do? I lost it.

Why? Because at the time my upstairs brain was not in the driving seat. Why? Short answer – because I am human. Longer answer: it’s Covid-19 season and my base level stress is elevated, my son needed squared paper and his downstairs brain was aroused with anxiety that he would get told off and that he wouldn’t get his work done; his brother’s downstairs brain was aroused because he is trying to totally sort out all his Lego and he couldn’t get some pieces pried apart and I have no idea what was going on with the little one – teeth, developmental stage, not getting what she wanted, frustration???? There was no way I could practically sort out everyone’s problems at once – let alone investigate and regulate everyone’s emotions. So when the little one shrieked in my ear and dug her sharp finger nails into my face in a twisting pinch I failed to parent therapeutically. I failed to keep my voice calm, and I could have been much gentler as I attempted to rescue my face.

And I’m going to struggle to type this – but here goes – THAT’S OK.

And I can only say that because an expert told me! I’m currently in the middle of a training webinar on De-escalation given by Jane Mitchell and not only have I been informed with brilliant, accessible information on the brain and our emotions, the affect of trauma, and how to parent wisely to de-escalate before things get out of control, but also wonderfully empathised with Mum to Mum. I haven’t finished it yet, but I know she is coming on to talk about the positives that come from careful repair work after some of our not so brilliant Mummy moments and also to the importance of self-care.

And so I am going to attempt to use my understanding of the brain not only to challenge myself as to how I might respond differently in the future, but also to recognise that Mummy has a downstairs brain too.

* You can find more about upstairs and downstairs brain online for example search ‘Dan Siegel – Name it to Tame it’ on YouTube.

Diary of an Adoptive Family: Year 2 Part 1: Still waiting for a Match

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Year 2

We had our first ‘solo’ meeting with our new social worker who very kindly moved it forward in response to a wobbly email I had sent with various worries. This was also a chance for her to meet our children. While the news was still ‘no news’ it was a good chance to develop our relationship with her as we talked through my worries.

Year 2

The beginning of the month saw me attending an excellent training day on Attachment – for more on this do take a look the post I wrote following it.

The end of the month saw the second of our monthly ‘touching base’ meetings with our support worker – with the third one in the diary for September.

Year 2

So off we went on holiday. Just the five of us.

It was a holiday we had deliberated over booking back in November/ December as Stage 1 ended and we waited for Stage 2 to get underway. At that point it was neither completely fantastical to suppose that we might have gone through panel and have our precious new family member placed with us by the following summer, nor was it unrealistic to imagine that even if all went smoothly with approval we would still be waiting for a match. We decided to book and adapt / cancel as necessary and I am so glad we did. It was really good to get away and while I kept a close eye on my messages and adoption was a big topic of conversation (we were on holiday with two other families) I felt I had a few weeks off from the intensity of waiting and was able to focus on enjoying the now, while anticipating the different dynamics a new little one would bring when we returned in two years’ time (it is a regular destination for us!)

Year 2

I was so thankful that we had a meeting with our support worker in the diary for early September. As you’ll see from my reflections below, there was quite a lot of emotion swirling around as we started a new school year ‘still waiting’ and it was reassuring that there wasn’t a completely blank page ahead of us.

It was a really encouraging meeting – that sense of being at ease with each other which can develop quite quickly with your assessing social worker was much more obvious on this our 4th meeting together, and there seemed to be a greater sense of movement and expectation in terms of finding a match and a hint of what it would feel like to work together through that stage and on into the adoption itself.

But whilst I am hopeful and excited about what the next couple of months may bring, in the meantime I find myself experiencing a new kind of waiting.

A new season OF waiting

Re-entering ‘real’ life as the season changed and a new term began was quite hard.

To be fair this time of year always requires a bit of readjustment, but I realise now that this year it has involved an added dynamic – the beginning of a new chapter in our adoption story. It has not been an obvious scene change and although I sensed it approaching it has taken me a while to properly identify it. After all, nothing about our status has changed – ‘approved and waiting’ still sums us up nicely. What was so different now? Then it hit me – it is the status of the space in which we are waiting that has shifted.

Let me try to explain…

For the first time I am existing in a season that has never been anticipated without the strong possibility of us being a family of six.

Anticipation, of course, has been a close companion throughout this journey – indeed from the moment we started this process 18 months ago our hope to adopt has influenced the way we have looked ahead. But it is a gradual process and one that doesn’t start with a blank calendar! Instead those precious hopes and plans have been woven into an existing pattern of family life.

Increasingly plans were made with a foot firmly in each camp – ‘with or without’ our new little one. Except it was really ‘without or with’ – because we were still grafting the adoption into an existing pattern; into situations and seasons that were quite capable of standing on their own two feet as ‘without’ scenarios. Conversations looking ahead generally went something like this: “well it probably won’t have happened by then, but if…..then we’ll…..”

And so when the summer holidays hit and it was clear we wouldn’t need those contingency plans, whilst we were disappointed, we were not bereft – we had a clear handle on this version of our time away. In fact as we packed to go away it was relatively easy to temper the disappointment / impatience / worry of ‘no news’ with the obvious practical benefits of a post-summer match and the comforting reality that August isn’t exactly a month that drags its feet.

And indeed it didn’t and here I find myself half way through a September that has never really had an existence separate from our plans to adopt. Whereas plans for the preceding Spring and Summer had been made with hopeful contingency plans for a new arrival; I realise the picture I have been building up of Autumn and Christmas this year has increasingly had a sixth member of the family more present than not. It is a picture still very much covered in lots of ifs, buts and whens of course – but the contingency plans now are more to do with us not having a little one rather than the other way around. If April through to August 2019 was a season of ‘it’s possible, but’, on returning from holiday we had crossed over a mental line into a season of ‘quite possibly’.

I hope that doesn’t sound presumptuous. I certainly don’t feel presumptuous – if anything I feel a bit fearful that after all I’m kidding myself that this could happen…. it is just that as the year rolls on; as the coming months take shape in my mind, my diary and my conversations I sense the absence of our little one more keenly. I have simply left more room for our new arrival in the months that lie ahead than I have done previously.

Up until now this season of ‘probably’ has hidden quietly beyond the peak of the summer months – known simply and vaguely as ‘after the summer’. Now it stretches ahead in plain sight. The days grow shorter and the trees are starting to change. Stealthily, little by little, the shops are smuggling Christmas onto their shelves, and early feelers are being sent out by family members about plans for the festive season.

It is as though a new chunk of time has now ‘gone live’ – a chunk of time that has always held the very real possibility of introducing us to the newest member of our family.

This time last year we were about to set off along a clearly laid out route – and while the inevitable ‘traffic jams’ cropped up there was a sense of knowing where you were.

As this new season unfolds, that part of the journey lies behind us now and we wait in the knowledge that a new one could be just round the corner.

This little baby…

A Poem About Attachment

This little baby is safe and sound,

she’s quickly learning that love’s all around.

When something’s not right she lets out a cry

and a loving one tries to riddle out why.

It’s not that they always get it just right,

it’s that they try and try with all of their might.

In the cycle of trust she’s attached and secure,

life’s an adventure for her to explore.

This little baby is all safe and sound,

life is a place where love’s all around.

This little baby is not safe and sound.

She’s never quite sure just who’ll be around.

When something’s not right why bother to cry?

She’s not so sure they would want to know why.

It’s not that the grownups get it ALL wrong

but the chances of ‘right’ are just not very strong.  

No cycle of trust, unattached, insecure;

life is a minefield for her to endure.

She just about has what she needs to survive,

but she’s lacking the treasure that will help her to thrive.  

This little baby is not safe and sound.

For this little baby a new home must be found.

A Prospective Adoptive Mum

Snakes and Ladders Anyone?

So right now my experience of preparing to adopt definitely feels like that moment in a game of Snakes and Ladders just after you have landed on a snake!

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In fact – as I reflect back and imagine forward there are parts of the whole process which definitely resonate with the game.

There are those parts that just go steadily onward and upwards. The pace of the progress may vary…

For example…

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…there are times when it feels that every dice roll moves you forward only 1 or 2 spaces. Perhaps everything is waiting on someone’s manager to get back from holiday or you finally put a date in the diary for the social worker to meet your children – but the date is in three long weeks’ time…

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… and others when the 5s and 6s roll in and you feel like you are really getting somewhere. You attend the three day training course, or you get an acknowledgement of forms being received and you can almost hear the clock ticking down moving things along…

…but basically you are moving forward, counting up the spaces one by one.

Then there are the inevitable snakes along the way: paperwork gets held up significantly, there may need to be a change of Social Worker, a panel may get delayed or be inconclusive.

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And thankfully there are those parts of the Assessment process when you finally land at the bottom of a ladder or two: you move on to Stage 2, for example, or you get your date for Panel…there’s still a way to go, but a chunk of progress has been made.

Until eventually you get that approval from Panel and it’s like zooming up that big ladder that most Snakes and Ladders games have – the one that cuts right across the middle of the board and really takes you up to the final stages of the game.

Which brings us to where we are right now. To be fair we’ve been pretty lucky so far -we encountered a few low rolls at times, but pretty much avoided the snakes altogether!

So far that is! Being at the top of a ladder – even the big one that takes you to the top row – doesn’t make you immune a few more low rolls, and there are plenty of snakes still to land on.

Which brings us to my ‘sliding down a snake’ moment this week.

A moment that came about because we started the Matching Stage with our Assessing Social Worker and have only just been formally handed over to our Adoption Support Worker.

Process-wise this delay will not have effected things at all. Process-wise there has been no sliding whatsoever and I have no doubt that we are in just the right pair of hands as we move forward.. BUT emotionally it still felt like landing on one of those dreadful spaces you come across in board games – “Switch Social Worker move back 5 spaces”; or as I have said like sliding down a snake just when you felt you were getting somewhere.

I think what happened was that starting the Matching Stage with our Assessing Social Worker – with whom we had built up quite a close relationship and with whom we had shared the excitement of approval – had given an encouraging sense of momentum to those early weeks after Panel. A momentum that was rather quelled  – however necessarily and understandably – in the formalities of starting over with a new worker, signing yet another agreement and hearing all about the ‘what if’ procedures in the event of remaining unmatched in 12 months’ time…

And so here I am, dusting myself off and picking myself up and pressing on as normal life races on and adoption life waits and prepares as patiently as it can…