Update from an old visitor

   / Update from an old visitor
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Hi Dan! Good to hear from you again! Sorry I took so long to reply.. I'm in the midst of switching to Linux, and there have been a few mis-steps, a few reinstalls, a few "Are you sure this is a good idea?" moments. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

I appreciate your kind and generous thoughts more than you can know. Yes, maybe I did instictively do the right thing at that moment where I presumed I had messed up. Maybe what they needed was humanity rather than psychology at that moment.

They're at a difficult age, especially for a guy who never had kids, and his wife who had two exceptional kids. I wish I could be doing what dads normally do with kids in there early teens. But I have to keep reminding myself that they are really somewhere around 4-6 and always keep that in mind.

We have a book and some good tapes (well, a DVD) to listen to.. and from all appearances so far they should be a lot of help. Other people actually *have* been here and done this.

I'll post an update in the coming weeks to let you all know how it's going.

Thanks again for the kind words and thoughts, Dan!

Best,
Bob
 
   / Update from an old visitor #32  
Trev,
After you have read the book and watched the DVD, when you feel like reaching out again next, can you kindly share with us what you took away from the material?

You know Bob, all kids disapoint their parents sometimes, all of them even Vivians "exlempary" kids; during their growing up years disapointed her.

It appears to me that you had high expectaions of having a nice family, with children with the woman that you love, and being happy together.

Buy now, several years later you have had many "hurts". It would be totally normal to think back on previous "hurts" when experiencing yet another. So much of the focus on your life, and disappointingly, is the behaviour if your children. When you find yourself doing that you might employ some self talk, specifically these words, "It's okay to feel like this but I am going to think about it less and less."

"It's okay to feel like this but I am going to think about it less and less."

Just keep repeating that, out loud if necessary, as you reflect back on negative situations.

Probably yuo have not realized it but you know, you never mentioned one good thing about either of your children, not one. Is there anything you love about them? Anything?

I think CT guy is very insightfull.

I also agree with the poster who wrtoe that you and your wife need some time off and need a vacation together.

I know I will be in the very small minority, but I don't think that stealing panties and money from Vivian's daughter is that bad. Ok it wasn't great, but the kids are young. Believe me ALL kids do bad things, fortunately most parents dont' find out about it until the kids grow up. BTW- do you give your kids money, just give them some, not money that they have to earn? Or do they have to "earn" everything by helping with chores or by having behaviour you and Vivian approve of?

As for the pantie raid at Christmas, could you have said, "Son you shouldn't have done that I'm really disapointed in you, but it is Christmas and we are just going to let this one go." The point being that sometimes we just let things go as parents. Not every issue is worth the fight. Here is what I ahve tried to live by, the definitian of a good marriage, "Doing what your spouce wants even though you know that YOU are right" Point being sometimes you just let it go, even when you are right. Now I bet this will be contrary to what is in you self help materials, but that is what I believe.

They are not a For Loop -For x = 1 to 1,000 and at the end of the loop they end up o be murderers, and the boy just passed loop number 543 well on his way to 1,000. A For Loop never ends until it reahes the end point, people, especially young people can walk outside the loop before it ends at 1,000. The For Loop can end early, it really can.

The next time you feel like sharing, if you can let us know what insights you gained out ot the material and other help you have received I would be interested in hearing.
 
   / Update from an old visitor
  • Thread Starter
#34  
Thanks, Dan! We'll check it out....

Rox, I'm at work now.. and your post raised a lot of interesting points. I need to assimilate them before replying. I'm not ignoring you, and thank you for your input!

BTW, the material, which my wife Viviane (note spelling) and I will be reviewing this weekend, is from a site called http://www.attachment.org/ by a lady named Nancy Thomas. The woman I spoke to referred to her as a friend and as the best she's ever dealt with at dealing with RAD type kids.

Best,
Bob
 
   / Update from an old visitor
  • Thread Starter
#35  
Hi Roz,

It's odd the way life works. I was waiting to have some time to give your thoughtful reply the attention it deserved, and in the meantime life went on.. one of our cats just had his eye surgically removed due to glaucoma, and he's lying in my lap as I (try to) type. And V and I got a couple of hours of time to ourselves today, which is rare. I also got time to listen to three CDs by this Nancy Thomas, and need/want to listen to them at least ten more times.. in addition to buying a set of them for our Social Services agency. This agency has NO idea whatsoever, nor do their counselors, of what we're dealing with here. That's one thing I got from the tapes. The counselors who are trained and experienced in this are few, and widely scattered.. and alas there isn't one within hundreds of miles of us.

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( After you have read the book and watched the DVD, when you feel like reaching out again next, can you kindly share with us what you took away from the material?)</font>

First, that kids with attachment disorder are a whole 'nother breed.. nothing that works with "normal" kids works with them. (Please forgive the use of the term "normal" from here on out.. it's just a handy shorthand for referring to kids who do NOT have attachment disorder.)

It turned out to be a three-CD set, rather than a DVD.. and a book that I haven't read yet. The CDs blew me away enough for a start. I'll read the book, probably tomorrow.

Anyway, what I came away with is that we are NOT unique.. this is a common problem.. if not one which is officially recognized and widely accepted or understood. If kids suffer severe enough trauma at an early age, they detach from humanity. They can't trust it. They simply "opt out" of the whole thing. They have NO conscience, NO ability to trust or love, NO empathy for any other creature. Nancy says that of the kids she's taken in over the last twenty years or so, 80% of them had already killed someone. She takes the toughest ones.

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( You know Bob, all kids disappoint their parents sometimes, all of them even Vivian's "exemplary" kids; during their growing up years disappointed her.)</font>

We understand that, truly. And V's kids were not without problems.. including drugs. But they are now married and have kids and good jobs and are doing fine. I see this as the normal progression.. teenaged children tend to run over every speed bump in the road at high speed. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

No, we are talking about a whole other level of problem here. Nancy is pretty funny, and if you have the interest you appear to have in these things, I highly recommend her materials. At one point she said something to the effect of "Do you want to know if you're an awesome parent? It's easy to check. Look at the child. Are their head and four limbs still attached? If they are then you're an AWESOME parent! Most people dealing with attachment kids want to rip their heads off at some point!" She makes reference to the number of people who call her for help, and calls them "Abused Parents." They had no idea what they were getting into, and they have no real support, and few if any of the usual "good parenting" rules work with these kids. So they call, bewildered, feeling guilty and ashamed and inadequate.. saying basically "What are we doing wrong??" Usually they are in tears, utterly burned out, angry, hopeless, confused, and with absolutely NOWHERE to turn.

You sensed that in me, in the fact that I had nothing good to say about these kids. That was perceptive and helpful to me.. and I pondered it. They are cute kids, and they have a great and ingratiating act they can put on at any time. I often fell for it, and was then horrified to discover that it was only an act. I was and still am angry at them. They had promised us they wanted to be a part of our family. They were lying. They don't want that, and never did. I'm not saying that in a perjurative way, merely as an observation. It's what Nancy and others have told us, after the fact, to expect. They've fallen through the ice so many times (in being abandoned early in life) that they will fight to the death to not be dragged out onto the ice again (i.e., to not be put in the position of trusting or loving again.)

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( It appears to me that you had high expectations of having a nice family, with children with the woman that you love, and being happy together.)</font>

Yes, I went into this quite naive.. and was being guided by people who were equally naive (Social Services, Child Protective Services, lawyers, judges, etc.) This isn't to cast aspirations upon these good people.. they just didn't know. That's one thing we intend to remedy, at least in our own local area. We're going to make sure these people fully understand the syndrome, and that their counselors are *required* to learn about all of this..

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Buy now, several years later you have had many "hurts". It would be totally normal to think back on previous "hurts" when experiencing yet another. So much of the focus on your life, and disappointingly, is the behaviour if your children. When you find yourself doing that you might employ some self talk, specifically these words, "It's okay to feel like this but I am going to think about it less and less.")</font>

I will do that.. in fact am aleady doing it.. thank you. That's good advice. But of course we also need to begin fresh, as it were, by starting out all over again using *appropriate* parenting techniques for kids with Reactive Attachment Disorder.

Interjecting a couple of my own thoughts in here, and this is me and not Nancy, I feel that sociopathy probably stems from RAD. For decades we've puzzled over the sociopath. Why are they like this? Why is it generally agreed that there is absolutely no cure for this? I think the insights from the work on attachment disorders provides the missing insight here.

Another of my own thoughts.. ADHD and the various other acronyms used for "hyperactive" kids was long thought to be a problem in the ascending reticular activating system.. the part of the brain that allows us to "tune out" irrelevant stimuli. We aren't normally aware of the feeling of the seat pressing against our back as we sit.. or the sounds of traffic going by.. we tune these out. ADHD kids can't tune them out. So we end up in the somewhat odd position of giving the hyperactive kid a *stimulant* like Ritalin to "calm them down." Well, RAD is often disagnosed as ADHD, because the presenting symptoms look so much alike.

And my third thought is.. should we take this to private mail.. assuming you wish to pursue it any further? The moderators have been unbelievably tolerant, but this thread may start to become annoying to others. I know some people have expressed interest (not to mention incredible kindness) about this situation, but the ones we don't hear from may be quite annoyed..

I guess I'm asking.. to all who have read this to this point (and we're eating up a lot of our host's disk also!) ... should we continue or move this to a private conversation?

Oh, and one last though.. yes, of course we love the kids.. nobody would ever put up with a RAD kid if they didn't. Trust me! /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

Best,
Bob
 
   / Update from an old visitor #36  
Bob, the title and front-page description of this forum encourage discussion of family life. I hope you keep posting your thoughts here.

I'm sure there are several of us here, perhaps quite a few among the 1000 + readers of this thread who care, but don't know how to contribute anything more than encouragement.

We wish you well in whatever approach you take to deal with this most difficult situation.

If these kids never come back as adults to thank you, you will still know you did everything you could.
 
   / Update from an old visitor #37  
Trev,
I took the time to follow the link you provided and all I can say is, WOW!

Guess I'll take back a whole lotta what I wrote in my previous post.

I think the forum you have selected is the right one, and I think what you are sharing is fine for the forum, no need to PM me.

From the links on reactive attachment disorder I see that you have a long row to hoe, a very long row. I can feel your enthusiasm in the materials you are exploring, at least now you have some guidence, a place to start.

I wonder if the brother and sister have bonded to each other, and that is all they are capable of giving?

I wish you and your wife, and your son and daughter success as you start this journey. Courage my friend, courage. Drop back back by from time to time any time you need to unload.

~rox
 
   / Update from an old visitor #38  
<font color="blue"> ...but this thread may start to become annoying to others. I know some people have expressed interest (not to mention incredible kindness) about this situation, but the ones we don't hear from may be quite annoyed..</font>

Bob,

I would hope this is not the case and I don't think it is.

I am sure that most of us "silent ones" simply are not able to offer any helpful advice. But we do wish you the best and hope that things work out...

No doubt in my mind that most of your fellow TBNers appreciate your difficult situation and wish they could be of some help to you.

I doubt I would have the strength to do what you are doing to help those kids. Many positive thoughts are being sent your way from a lot of us out here in TBN land.

Hope things work out for the best...I know you are doing your best to make that happen.
 
   / Update from an old visitor #39  
I can relate to so many things you have said. It wasn't until we had gotten our youngest daughter into a treatment program (behavior and drugs), not only for her but for us as well that you realize that your not the only ones that have ever gone through things like this. This made us realize that there is a lot of help out there, not all of it will benefit you, you just have to be able to open up and talk and try and find something that seems to help in some way. At first I thought it was embarassing to have problems kids, but you find out your not alone. We first used a physcologist (hope thats right) and that was a waste of money as far as I was concerned. He just took our money and wouldn't tell us anything about the conversations with her, which I thought may give some insight to what was the problem. Anyway now I'm babbling. Long story short we got through it and she is living with (thats the alternative to marriage now-a-days isn't it) her boyfriend and they have provided us with a beautiful grand-daughter. Our daughter came full circle with time and patience (a lot of time) but in the end it was worth every minute as the rewards are now priceless. I have to give my wife all the credit though as she was the one to never give up where I probably would have, whatever she was willing to do I stood behind her and supported her however I could. There are so many things I would like to say but I would have to write a novel. Sorry, I'm done now, hope this can help in any little way possible.

Steve
 
   / Update from an old visitor #40  
Thanks for sharing, I know that is harder to do for men than for women. You didn't write too much, in fact you were very supportive by sharing enough so that others know that lots of families have problems, as well as offering hope that things can get better. Many thanks for sharing.
 

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