Category Archives: Uncategorized

The Privilege of Attachment

I never once thought about my attachment to my family. It never occurred to me that there was a word for the inherent trust I felt that they would take care of me. It never occurred to me that there was a word for our mutual affection. It never once occurred to me that the unspoken elements of our relationship even needed a descriptive word.

I know now how privileged I was, and am, to have that experience.

Wikipedia defines privilege as “the sociological concept that some groups of people have advantages relative to other groups. The term is commonly used in the context of social inequality, particularly with regards to social class, race, age, sexual orientation, gender, and disability.”

I’ve written about social privilege before, as well as other social diversity dimensions I’ve tripped over on my adoption journey. Chalk attachment up as another privilege of intact biological families that are, at least, reasonably functional.

I now know what it is like to not have the privilege of attachment with my daughter. I mean, we’re working on it and I would say we are more attached than not. But oy, it is tough.

I can’t and wouldn’t speak for Hope, but the range of emotions I feel as I try to form a healthy attachment with my daughter are powerful, overwhelming and, honestly, often unpleasant. When it gets rough, which it has been lately, I spend a lot of time willing myself not to miss my pre-Hope life, willing myself not to be resentful, willing myself not to just practice avoidance. I often have to force myself to spend even more time with my daughter because I know that’s what she needs even though none of my emotional needs will be met…not one.  I have to swallow my feelings when my feelings are hurt because our attachments are weak and because, as a teen, Hope’s narcissism game is real. A lot of the time, I feel emotionally starved.

Dang. Yappy and I have a stronger attachment, I think. Well, I know he does…#separationanxiety.

I cry. A lot. I go for walks. A lot. I cuddle with Yappy. I go to therapy…more frequently than we go to family therapy.

I try to check my emotions. I try to curb my anger. I try to hold back my tears, because well, when my emotions betray me and Hope sees the outburst, it only serves to push her further away. I actually find that honest emotion from me that is not anything but sparkles and rainbows is detrimental to our relationship. That is an enormous burden to shoulder; it’s heavy and it’s painful.

At nearly 43, I can still sit on the couch with my mom or dad and curl up and put my head on their shoulders or lap and feel loved and safe. Hope doesn’t and won’t do that. It is like she can’t, not just that she won’t. It is so painfully rare for her to just run up and hug me, a long, lingering hug. Those moments are so incredibly precious. I don’t want them to end because at least for that moment, I’m really mom and I can save her world. I feel like my mothering is making a difference. Those moments are rare.

Don’t get me wrong, we have come so very far on our journey. The reality though is that we struggle with attachment. We don’t enjoy that privilege. It is something we are fighting for; something I know we both want even if we can’t always articulate it. But it really is something that we don’t have in large supply.

I am hopeful that we’ll get there. In the grand scheme we haven’t been at this mom-daughter thing very long. We’re not even 2 years old yet. We’re barely toddlers. It is a journey. Wishing for a speedier process is like being 7 and wishing I could get a driver’s license. Not going to happen.

I am thankful for how far we have come, but I can’t help wishing that we were able to move things along and that both of us, me and Hope, could make and sustain the emotional connection that we both desperately long for. I think that is probably my greatest wish as I begin considering my wishes for 2016.


Communication Problems

When I was in elementary school I was enrolled in a program called TAG. It was a program for “gifted” (yeah, right) kids who needed a bit more intellectual stimulation to nurture them. For the first couple of years it was cool; TAG was fun.  We did lots of puzzles, logic games, stock market games, brain teasers and the like. By the time I got to middle school TAG was a drag. I was being pulled out of my classes to go, and the activities weren’t really entertaining anymore. They felt more like work.

The big kicker, though, was that being in TAG in middle school made me different; it put me firmly in the “nerd” social caste, which was akin to being untouchable unless someone wanted to copy your homework.

Nerd coming this way!NERD ALERT!

I enjoyed writing even back then. So, I wrote a pretty passive-aggressive play for the fall festival. It was all about how TAG had become socially stigmatizing for me, how I hated it, and that I really didn’t want to go anymore.

My TAG teacher was basically like, “Oh, ok….sooooo, you want us to perform *this* play at the fall festival?”

Yep.

In hindsight, I’m guessing that she probably called my parents to give them a heads up that I was using my “talent” to say “Screw this program, I’m dunzo!”

My parents sat and watched the play that fall night, and we drove home in near silence. I don’t know if they were embarrassed or proud or what they were feeling, but I distinctly remember the energy in the car being kind of thick. Frankly, I’d gone through all of the trouble of writing a play, convincing my teacher that I wanted to do it and dragging some classmates into the performance—I wanted a response dang it.

I got one.

Eventually Dad said something like, “Sooooo, you don’t want to go to TAG anymore? You could have just said so. You don’t have to go anymore.”

And that was the end of TAG.

Looking back all those years, I don’t know why I couldn’t just tell my folks I wanted to quit the program. I just remember that talking to them didn’t even really seem like a viable option to getting to my desired goal.

I also don’t remember considering whether they might be embarrassed by my elaborate “messaging.” In many ways we’re a down to earth family, but I’ve always, always felt like we were concerned with our image. Or maybe it was really just me. My family was very involved in church; I always felt like I needed to behave in a way that would honor their positions for fear someone might see me acting out. I don’t know if that was me or if it really was a family thing, but it was an enormous amount of pressure I put on myself way back when, at such a young age. Ironically, I would never have dreamed of doing that kind of play at our church; gosh, parishioners would have talked about me forever. We couldn’t have them saying bad things about me. Nope.

I’ve carried that pressure to perform with me always, so it’s probably more internally driven, I guess. Achievement means a lot to me; a lot a lot. I have failed, but I’ve succeeded more than I’ve failed—which in hindsight is probably a bad thing.

I live in an area of the US where status is a cultural touchstone. We meet someone new, learn their name and ask what they do for a living. Sure we may be genuinely interested, but many also do some social sorting based on the response.

It’s a rat race of keeping up, at least for me, it’s always been that way. I guess it is hard wired as I describe it here.

So, as a new mom, this image conscious, high achieving, control freak has met her match, and I. Am. Losing.

I can’t even say I fear failure anymore because me and failure are like…BFFs now. Probably not, but it feels like it so it might as well be so.

Every one of my magical super powers of problem solving, Olivia Pope-fixing, being a total badass with a sterling reputation that I prided myself in have all come crashing down like a mirror around me. And I’m sure there’s a black cat somewhere lurking about (no offense to black cats…).

I have internalized the need to “fix” Hope, to be validated as a mom by the people who mean the most to me, to want to feel like I am totally winning at life. And well, I might not be able to do those things and that reality is settling over me such that I seem like a shadow of my former self.

The one thing I want to do the most, help Hope, seems to be the one thing I can’t do. Now intellectually I know that this is a long haul process, and that in the cosmic scheme of things, we *are* winning, but it doesn’t feel like it. And intellectually I know how this is all supposed to work, but see…my imagined reality is soooooo off, it’s not even funny.

I am not ashamed of my little family, on the contrary, I’m so proud of me and Hope and our naughty pup, Yappy, but our success is so radically different than how I saw and defined success before. It’s different than how my social and professional circles defined success. It’s like I tripped and fell into an alternative universe.

I’m on Star Trek, and well…I never really was into Star Trek.

It’s so different and hard to describe and explain that it’s easier to be somewhat self-isolating rather than to try to build bridges back to my pre-mom life.

Right now, I can’t keep up with the Jones’ of my pre-mom life, and so I feel like I’m slowly drifting away from so many of those connections. I am so insecure about how my new brand of success will be viewed. It’s awful, and it’s really not fair. It feels so very shallow because I am giving up on relationships, things, people that were once important to me because I can’t fix my mouth to just explain that my life is so different now, and I need people, I need emotional connections, I need reassurance, I need to get my cup filled. I’m guessing it’s probably offensive to my dear friends because I have convinced myself that they just won’t understand.

Oh, look there’s that self-loathing again!

I’m going through a lot of mental and social gymnastics rather than just calling up pals and saying,

“Hey, how are you? I miss you. My life is so different now,

you really cannot imagine,

no, really, you have NO EFFIN IDEA!

I don’t want to bore you to tears with the ups and downs

(besides I might breakdown in tears, snot and whatnot),

but there are massive ups and downs and some days it’s just soul crushing,

mind-erasing, and earth shattering in good and bad ways,

and I don’t feel like I can talk about it because so many folks

(but not everyone) assume it’s just “Add Water and Stir.”

I could really use a bourbon; don’t you want a bourbon too?

Can we grab a drink and catch up?

Yeah, I’ll bring Hope next time, but right now,

I just need some grown folks’ time to hang out like we used to…”

Instead, I’m writing 1300 word essays that echo a “quit” play I wrote in 6th grade.

Sigh.

At least I’m consistent, right? Consistency is supposed to be good for parenting…Ha!

Local peeps…if you’re reading, get at ya girl because I’m not sure I can break out of my rut to reach out first.

He Ain’t Heavy by Gilbert Young


How Adoptive Parents Can Help Adoptees #flipthescript

I’ll be back to writing really soon.  Still babying my hand a bit.  But in the meantime, catch this great post by No Bohns About it on National Adoption Awareness Month and flipping the script with adoptees!

 

————————————–

As adoptive parents, let’s help adoptees #flipthescript

Source: How Adoptive Parents Can Help Adoptees #flipthescript


Let’s All Grow Up

Excellent post.  I’m am too emotional to blog on this incident, especially in light of my recent post on Living While Black.  This post provides a good challenge to us all to remember that we are grown,  and kids are not. Being being grown comes with responsibilities.

Get into it.

ABM

Ben Fields and Many White Adults Need A Refresher Course in Being Adults – http://wp.me/p2h2UO-30o


Recuperating

image

Carpal tunnel surgery. 

Will be back soon!

These drugs got that good-good tho! 😉

Zzzzzz…


240 Calories of Bonding

So, without telling *alla* Hope’s business, we are deep, deep I say, into the throws of teenage girl-dom.

As Hope and I endured the last 18 months of middle school, I can’t say I remember much about my own middle school experience—somethings about crushes and such, but middle school was such an emotional drag that I just seemed to have blocked out a lot of it.

I can honestly say that once I think back to high school I am able to call up all kinds of memories about my social struggles. This is a good thing because I can really relate to some of the things that Hope is going through—insecurity about my own beauty, self-consciousness, desire to be liked, desire to have friends, desire to be cool—the kind that doesn’t get in trouble, but the kind that seems to have an easy life and eternal happiness. There is a desire to get the hair just so, experiment with makeup and clothes, and to just get to dating already!

There is a lot going on and it doesn’t take much to upset the apple cart.

In my day the friend consultations happened by phone, you know, like people actually *called* each other, spread gossip, discussed crushes and how to manipulate boy situations to your advantage—you know, on the walkway outside his class at just the right time, or oh, hey? I didn’t know you ate at this cafeteria? Have you always been here? I must’ve missed you. Today, it’s just texting…texting and emoji wars (I have no effing idea what purpose emoji wars serve, but there ya go…).

So, this weekend, a social situation involving a crush came to a head like a big ‘ole white head pimple, and then the dang thing went splat all over the mirror. #youknowwhatImtalkingabout And life as we know it came to a screeching halt.

There were the lyrics to sad dirges written down, gnashing of teeth and instant replaying of the event to the point that I feel like I was texting it in real time too. I’m happy to report that my little scientist can also deconstruct a conversation for “real” meaning just like her mama. There was epic emotion at Casa d’ABM this weekend.

Before Hope and long before one of my besties got married, we had a deal for dealing with social upheaval in our lives. We would get together and then drive to the nearest Krispy Kreme and the one who was not enduring the crisis of the millennium would eat one Krispy Kreme donut. We called it, “Taking one for the team.” We didn’t want the actual sufferer to add emotional eating to her litany of woes (although it probably was already there, along with a lot of wine consumption), so the non-suffering bestie would consume the donut.

So, yesterday as we were headed to get Hope a haircut, I swerved into the Krispy Kreme bakery near the house. Hope was like, “Why are we here?” I shushed her, got out of the car, walked us to the end of the line, ordered myself a donut and texted Hope’s godmother an SOS: Crisis! We are at Krispy Kreme. Because Hope didn’t quite understand what was happening I allowed her to get a donut, since she doesn’t yet have an appreciation for this womanhood ritual.

Light Fluffy Goodness...

Light Fluffy Goodness…

We grabbed a booth and I snarfed the donut in, like, 3 bites. Hope’s godmother texts me back.

“Tell her that won’t be the last donut, shake it off…those donuts have been comforting women for years.”

True dat.

Hope giggled as I explained why we were at the donut shop and how this thing was supposed to work. If I’m the one experiencing the upheaval and she knows about it, then she has to take one for the team. But, today I was taking one for her because I knew she was sad. Sometimes it feels like I should buy donuts by the dozen, but I explained that this specific womanhood ritual is reserved exclusively for crisis situations. No way I’m just eating donuts for any old body.

We had a nice time bonding. Hope thought it was all funny; I hopefully reinforced that I love her and would do just about anything for her; and hopefully, she got the point about sista friends who ride for you during dark times and have your back. I love my bestie and I hope I never have to eat another donut for her—which is more a testament to her happiness than my waistline.

I ended up taking an extra long walk and doing an exercise video to make up for the extra 240 calories consumed on Hope’s behalf yesterday.

Totally worth it.


Why I Find #ShoutYourAdoption Problematic

This!  This! This hashtag is a problem in its current usage.  It is also unnecessarily divisive as its also been used to silence the voice of adoptees.  No bueno.

See a great post from No Bohn’s About It.

 

The #shoutyourabortion movement was quickly greeted by the #shoutyouradoption movement in the adoptive community. I don’t plan on shouting.

Source: Why I Find #ShoutYourAdoption Problematic


Black Parenting in a Time of Crisis

This.

That is all.

blackmillennials's avatarBlack Millennials

As the Baltimore Uprising consumes hearts, minds, and souls, I could only imagine what it’s like to be a Black parent in this time of chaos and Revolution.

Black traditions are rooted in protecting the innocence and safety of our children. Our culture — in some ways — encourages a type of subservience to white racial hierarchy as a means for survival and familial longevity. While some Black families push back against this racist caste system, others reinforce it through choices motivated by fear — fear of retaliation and ultimate extermination.

That’s what I’m seeing now.

When Allen Bullock’s mother Bobbi Smallwood, and stepfather Maurice Hawkins, encouraged their 18-year-old son to turn himself in after the front page of the local Baltimore Sun showed him attacking a police vehicle with a traffic cone, they did so out of fear.

“Hawkins, 44, said Bullock had agreed to surrender to the police after…

View original post 339 more words


Lessons Learned: Vacation Edition #1

So, Hope and I are in Montreal, Quebec for a few days on spring break.  I had several revelations that I figured I better chronicle before I keeled over from a new level of exhaustion.

______________

I think I’m becoming my mother.  OMG, on the escalator yesterday morning I realized that some of my reactions over the last 24 hours resemble things my mom would say/do/feel or some such thing.

So, this trip would appear to be thrown together despite planning it for more than a month.  I *thought* I booked a trip to Quebec City and only 4 days ago realized that I had booked a trip to Montreal.  So much for the haphazard loose itinerary I had put together.  I have been so busy the last few weeks that I hadn’t paid close enough attention.  Additionally I didn’t put my whole name on my plane ticket and had to spend nearly 2 hours on the phone getting it straightened out (always get travel insurance).

Anyways, I was anxious and fretful and spastic about taking care of EVERYTHING necessary to get us out the door, on a plane and through immigration.  Somewhere along the way, it dawned on me that I am fully aware of moments when my mom seemed to feel that way when we were traveling as kids.  Further I remember my grandmother being anxious and fretful when I was a kid as well.

I am becoming them.  I love them both madly, but hmmmm.  Am I really going to have to carry these anxiety meds around in my purse forever?  And more importantly, should I just put a few of them in some foil, old school style???  #nopillboxes #nervepills #justneedstartlightmintsontheside

Is it bad to be happy that Hope might not assume these behavioral traits because of our lack of biological ties??  Maybe these traits are hereditary and not just learned behavior? Does she stand a change of sliding into middle age not being anxious? Maybe?

Just going to let that marinate for a while.

Vacations with kids are some BS. I am exhausted.  Exhausted like when I first went back to grad school at 37ish.  I just always was tired.  The last month of work has been draining.  So I was looking forward to my vacation until a few days ago I realized that I was not going to be getting any rest on this trip.

I still have to do Hope’s hair. I am her personal, walking Google with all of the GD questions she asks.  I swear the questions alone stump me–seriously, the stuff she asks is so effing random and then she gets offended when I tell her to go look it up.  Yeah, I know it’s sweet that she asks and apparently thinks I’m all knowing, but this is supposed to be my vacation! #nomorequestions #nomoretalking #shhhhhhhhh

I just want throw a bit of cash to her and run from this hotel room for like 12 3 hours.  I don’t even want to sightsee; I just want to check in two doors down the hall and take a much needed nap.

When people don’t take time to breathe, they are mean.  I have never asked someone to move on a plane; I never needed to before yesterday. Somehow the airline put Hope and I on the same row but window seats on opposite ends.  I asked the lady next to Hope would she mind taking my window seat so I could sit next to Hope.  She rudely said NO and went on to say she hates window seats and she wasn’t giving up her aisle seat.  I was stunned but just smiled and told Hope it was a short flight and we would be ok.

I took my seat, twiddled my thumbs and sighed.

Then as we rolled down the runway, the tears started.

Hope didn’t cry.  I did.

I cried.  I did it silently while I leaned forward and watched to make sure Hope was ok.

color-purple-hand-clap-o

I got out my hanky and mopped my slow, silent tears.

Despite wanting a respite; I didn’t want to be separated  from Hope. And I was desperate about that ish.

I tried not to make a big deal, but I was soooo sad.

After we took off and leveled off, the woman breathed, softened and gave up her seat so I could sit near Hope.

Seriously, I was singing “And I will always love you,” Whitney Houston-style like I hadn’t seen my kid in weeks. I think everyone around us appreciated the need to just take a moment before we react to things. It was a good lesson for me too to try to just practice kindness more and to remember just how much I love my daughter.

The world is a better place because of jacuzzi tubs.  We are staying in a very nice hotel.  As one of my good pals would say, “FANCY!”  Hope just can’t stop saying how much she loves our room.

Lawd, I’m raising her to be so bougie!

Anyhoo, the room has a jacuzzi tub.

Hallelujah.

Now I don’t know about you or what you believe, but listen, the Holy Homeboy is alright with me.  Jumping Jehovah. when I opened the bathroom door and saw the tub I silently said, “Praise Him!”

Yasssssss!

So last night I loaded that puppy up and soaked in the hot water.

Ahhhh.

I’d put something on Netflix for Hope to watch (never travel without an HDMI cord!) since despite telling everyone that she speaks French she is frustrated that nearly everything here is IN French including local TV.  I digress, she was set up with something to keep her occupied and I soaked until my toes pruned.  i also contorted myself so that every achy joint got dedicated jet time.

What a delightfully, decadent thing to do, and I so enjoyed it!  It almost makes up for my fatigue. Almost.

Thirteen is such a hard age. Ok, so Hope is a teenager, but 13 is like make-believe teenager.  She still can be entertained for hours and hours watching Nickelodeon and Disney.  Despite being shuttled around so much and having been exposed to so much in her short life, she is blissfully naive about so very much.

Hope is still very much a little kid trying to blossom into a young woman.

I’m aware that our adoption has given her the freedom to settle back into childlike moments that she missed.  We’ve done an enormous amount of kiddie do-overs in the last year trying to create childhood memories that she can better use to scaffold teen stuff on to.

I’m not that much of a fan of Iyanla Vanzant, but I remember years ago seeing her on Oprah talking about how you can skip any developmental phases; you just get stuck.  You keep doing stuff, but you do it from the mindset/framework of that phase.

So, Hope and I have been working on nudging her development along so she can catch up, yet she’s still a “young” 13.  In some ways it’s charming; in others it feels really, really hard.

Add to that the fact that Hope’s body looks like a 16-17 year old—tall and developed–and it’s hard to remember and sit with the fact that she’s 13 sometimes. I know I’m guilty of unrealistic expectations sometimes, and that does neither of us any favors.

I find myself periodically having to stop and think that if it is hard for me to deal with her at 13; what must it be like to be her at 13.  I am clear that you couldn’t pay me to go back to middle school; those years are awful and I swear I want to go up to her school and take some kids over my knee on the regular. #badarses

In short, this in between phase of not a little kid and not a full on teen is some BS.  Necessary evil and all that, but it sucks.

______________

Today Hope and I will do some more wandering of the city.  I’m trying to decide if we will go to Quebec City tomorrow.  There’s really more than enough to do here in Montreal.  The way she’s still throwing up zzzz’s at 8:07am lets me know she’s still sleepy, so I’m going to hit the gym and contemplate my need to…ugh…change my eating habits.  #40sarehardtoo


Say What Now? Peri-who?

So, after the epic showdown from New Year’s Day I swore I wouldn’t read another dang parenting book this year.

Nope.  Nope. Nope.

The last parenting book–which I refuse to name here–at least helped me figure out where a couple of my non-negotiables are. ( A clean room is a non-negotiable at Casa d’ABM.)  But beyond that, that book was a set up for failure and fail I did.

So no more parenting books for a minute.

So, recently I turned to podcasts on parenting.  Hey, I do a podcast with Complicated Melodi’s Mimi every two weeks (Add Water and Stir — #shamelessplug for tonight’s episode!), and Mimi often mentions her love of podcasts during her daily commute.  So, I figured why not; it seemed a bit more passive than the whole book thing.

So, as luck would have it, @MomCasts starting following me on Twitter. I clicked follow, downloaded a new podcast app and started searching for something to listen to.  I chose a couple of podcasts for subscription and started listening this morning.

For reals, I’m going to quit taking in information at all at this rate. So in my feels…sigh.

... Got An Itch Full Of Feels In The Lion King 2 Simba’s Pride Gif

So I tuned into Power Your Parenting this morning…episode 008 to be exact.  I listened to a snippets of others before settling into this one. The episode is about hormones.  (In defense of the podcast, it was really interesting.  I will keep listening)

Oh yeah, I was all settled to into hear about Hope’s brain chemistry and how that has made my kid bat schnit cray.

Whomp! Whomp!

The episode is about how mom’s are often experiencing perimenopause as their daughters slide into adolescence.

Peri-who?  Pause-what?

Ahhh hells naw.

boo hiss

By the time I got to my office parking garage,I was coming undone.  I started to think about our last podcast, during which Mimi raised the issue of Advanced Maternal Age, at which I sniffed my “all kinds of in denial” nose.

So this morning, I couldn’t help having the following revelations:

  1. There is a deep part of me that still mourns not having biological children.  Man, it’s deep and this perimenopause thing got right up in that space, quick. It’s funny, because I don’t even think I would ever want to try to have a child at this point, but the notion that the choice to do so is clearly, unequivocally slipping away is hard to swallow. Jeesch this cuts right to the core of my womanhood, and I did not take that ish well at all.
  2. We might turn into WWE at Casa d’ABM.  Hope and I have serious tempers, and the few times it’s really, really, really gone down between us it’s like we are spitting hot grease in hell.  It is sooo not pretty. You mean to tell me that it’s not just my temper, but hormonally I can’t keep my ish together?  Oh, sweet hey-zeus…I cannot. Oh we work on lots of strategies for positive conflict resolution and anger management, but it’s almost like a valve has to be released ever so often.  #messy
  3. I started really thinking about my own mortality and being….old.  Ugh.  Now, I usually tell folks that I like being my age because the alternative of being my age is to not exist.  I am usually unbothered by the notion of growing older.  I gave up dying my hair; Elihu affectionately calls me his silver fox.  I think myself still pretty hip and fly.  And even though I intellectually know that I’m getting older and that perimenopause isn’t that big of a deal, um, well, it kinda is.  Me no likey.

So this knowledge is something else for me to consider and ruminate on as I try to figure out how to navigate this teen thing. It’s easy to think that problems are extrinsic and need external solutions.  I guess I need to look even more inward…of course I think I’ll be doing that on the homeopathic remedy aisle of the local Whole Paycheck.


K E Garland

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