Transcript Slide 1

Wednesday April 25, 2012
Delores Teller, MSW, LCSW
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Objectives for Lecture
 Describe how the social construction of adoption
in our society shapes the adoptees view of self.
 List the unique developmental challenges of
compromised bonding and limited attachment
that adoptees face throughout the lifespan.
 Describe the prenatal impact of separation and
loss: how it relates to diagnostic assessment and
treatment planning.
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New Language
 Adoptees are relinquished and then adopted.
 Relinquishment and adoption are different; each
needs its own focus in order for us to understand
adoptive development. To properly appreciate
each, they must be carefully separated in theory
and language.
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Defining Relinquishment
 Relinquishment- is defined as the break in the
primary bond between an infant or child and his
or her parents of birth. It is the manner in which
this rupture in first attachments occurs, informs
and impacts psychological development.
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Relinquishment and Transition
 Relinquishment has to do with breaking a primal
connection and adoption has to do with
introducing an infant or young child to strangers
who seek to become their new parents.
 This is a much more difficult transition than
imagined. It is a wound to the heart of the child.
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Relinquishment and Transition
 New (initially strange) parents talk differently,
smell differently, behave differently.
 The degree to which adoptees “make the shift” in
attachment from birth parents to adoptive parents
is the key variable in their future emotional and
spiritual health. And that shift is not so much a
moment in time; it is more wisely thought to be a
process of grieving.
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Unresolved Grief
 Unresolved grieving can have profound affects on
an adopted persons adult attempts at closeness in
many ways.
 Issues around the primal rejection of
relinquishment can become the organizing
principle by which the adoptee enters and
manages and avoids intimate relationships.
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Secrecy, Deceit, and Shame
 Historically, in American culture relinquishment
has been accompanied by secrecy, deceit, and
shame.
 It might be said that one of the major problems in
the manner in which society has dealt with
relinquishment is that relinquishment is related
so directly with sexual shame.
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Societal Attitudes
 For many adoptees, societal attitudes towards
their conceptions have set in motion dynamics
that diminish or deny the reality and the
importance of the loss of the first two people in
their lives.
 Of the 50 United States, only 14 allow adult
adoptees a form of access to their original birth
certificates and therefore, true information about
their birthparents.
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Adoption Defined
 Adoption is a term referring to the event of initial
bonding and ongoing attachment and detachment
with adoptive parents in the formation and life of the
adoptive family.
 Adoption as a term should be used to make reference
to the blessings and the problems that are part of the
adoptee-adoptive parent relationship.
 Adoption is a separate process of connection and
disconnection to a person's adoptive family.
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Attachment
 “Intimate attachments to other human beings are
the hub around which a person’s life revolves, not
only when he is an infant or a toddler or a
schoolchild but throughout his adolescence and his
years of maturity as well, on into old age. From
these attachments a person draws his strength and
enjoyment of life and, through what he
contributes, he gives strength and enjoyment to
others.”
- John Bowlby Loss, Sadness and Depression, 1980
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Bonding and Attachment
 The power of initial bonding and attachment to
adoptive parents serves as the fuel needed to do
the grieving that healthy relinquished children
must do.
 Insufficient attachment may mean that an adopted
child shuts down inside and defensively avoids
getting the job of mourning done because, without
sufficient connection, it hurts too much to
(consciously) know the injury of rejection.
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Psychic Salvation
 Adoption as this separate process is the psychic
salvation of the relinquished child just as parental
care is the critical foundation for mental and
spiritual health for the rest of all of us.
 “The healthy adoptee is a child who can feel her
heart, be connected to the wide range of her
emotions, able to experience both sorrow and joy,
anger and peace, shame and relief, rather than
being someone who simply manipulates life in
order to survive.”
- Nydam, Adoptees Come of Age, 1999
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Primal Wound
 “When the natural evolution [of birth mother and
fetus bonding] is interrupted by a postnatal
separation, the resultant experience of
abandonment and loss is indelibly imprinted upon
the unconscious mind of these children, causing
that which I call the ‘primal wound.’”
-Verrier, The Primal Wound, 1993
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Infancy
 At birth and immediately afterwards comes the
possibility of a significant injury in parental loss to
the degree that a neonate is bonded to heartbeat,
voice, and person.
 The relinquished infant searches for the familiar
and eventually adapts to the loss, to not having, to
a compromised attachment.
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Early Childhood
 Around ages six or seven (for girls earlier than
boys), relinquished and adopted children begin to
figure out their birth stories, asking questions of
interest, wanting to know more.
 Their curiosity is sometimes accompanied by
sadness.
 With international adoptions, where “matching”
with adoptive parents is obviously not a reality,
curiosity and bewilderment may run higher.
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Adolescence
 In adolescence more grieving may occur; it often
presents itself more as anger than sadness, but
usually it has to do with further negotiations with
self about loss.
 In what sometimes looks like an angry protest, a
fiery demand that life be different, relinquished
and adopted teens may register their struggle with
the alternate but so real reality of adoption.
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Adulthood
 With adulthood and its usual challenges, there
may be yet another wave of mourning the loss of
birth parents when certain experiences trigger
grieving yet to be done.
 Medical histories that are absent or incomplete
may remind the adult adoptee once again of both
the difficulties and the injustices of
relinquishment.
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Assessment
 Loss, betrayal, trust, abandonment, rejection,
worth, separation, and identity may be
predominate themes during intake assessment.
 The adoptee may resemble antisocial personality
with impulsivity, low frustration tolerance, little
empathy, superficial charm but little intimacy.
 Complex and varied emotional patterns may be
mistaken for a mood disorder.
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Good Adoptee/Bad Adoptee
 The adoptee may present to you on a wide
emotional and psychological continuum. You may
have the compliant, non-rebellious, afraid to
express feelings adoptee dedicated to preserving
his adoptive parent relationship at all costs.
 At the other extreme are the adoptees who have
murdered their adoptive parents and have
extreme psychopathology and dissociated rage.
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Baseline Therapeutic Goals
 Building trust through a continuous, positive
alliance.
 Addressing adoption issues upfront and
consistently: loss of parents, identity, self.
 Encouraging search and reunion as much as
possible and providing support for.
 Clarifying thoroughly before confirming a
diagnosis.
 Handle termination sensitively while encouraging
autonomy and progress.
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Best Clinical Practices
 Interpret signs and symptoms that an adoptee
might present, in the light of the necessary
mourning of early losses in life.
 The process of grieving includes not only the tears
of sadness but also anger, fear, and denial, all part
of coming to terms with loss and facing an
uncertain future.
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Best Clinical Practices
 Include “Are you adopted?” (or “ Are you a
birthparent?”) on all intake forms.Consider this a
diversity issue.
 Inquire about an adoptee’s birth parents and birth
narrative as well as past and present fantasies
about both.
 Asking questions about birth parents and birth
narrative is not to be thought of as “leading the
client.”
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Best Clinical Practices
 Consider struggles with bonding and attachment
as normal responses to parental loss (as well as
possible neglect and abuse).
 Avoid pathologizing adoptees in terms of
attachment and mood/personality disorders until
a clearer picture of emotional relating takes shape.
 Relinquishment itself must be seen to some degree
as the behavior of (pathological) shame-based
decisions in society.
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Best Clinical Practices
Observe problematic patterns of intimate relating
for adoptees in the light of central struggles with
the ongoing impact of relinquishment on
development.
To whatever degree relational difficulties in adult
adoptee life emerge, they may be best understood
by way of reference not so much to adoptive parent
relations as they might to birth parent relations,
seeking the lost objects.
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Transference Concerns
 Transference issues in working with adoptees will
often be a result of their projecting onto the
therapist both sets of parents. This may result in
both a strong need for attachment by the adoptee,
along with an intense fear of rejection.
 Counter-transference can cause a therapist to
minimizing the impact of adoption, or by making
the adoptee a victim by trying to “save” them from
adoption.
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Challenges of Search & Reunion
 Expect the effects to impact the entire family
constellation, especially intimate partners and
siblings.
 Encourage support groups, taking time to get to
acquainted, family therapy, and a regression of
emotional states in the adoptee and the
birthparent.
 Be prepared for early signs of g\Genetic ( Sexual)
Attraction known as GA or GSA.
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Genetic (sexual)Attraction
 Genetic sexual attraction,” is a reference to the
eroticization of the newly experienced connection
between birth parents and birth children or
between birth siblings whereby strong feelings of
sexual attraction emerge out of reunion.
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Professional Ethics
 Ethics pertains to the beliefs we hold about what
constitutes correct or moral conduct.
 Ethical conduct is behavior that results from a
combination of knowledge and a clear set of
guiding principles underlying a code of ethics.
 In relinquishment and adoption, ethical conduct
has been widely misconstrued and interpreted
under the guise of a socially constructed view of
adoption as “normal family” formation without
consideration of the lifelong impact of
relinquishment.
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Principal Ethics
 Focus on moral issues and resolves ethical
dilemma's within a particular set of guidelines
that frame behavior and thinking.
 In relinquishment and adoption an example might
be when a birthmother changes her mind after
giving birth and decides not to place. The
adoption agency would use a set of guidelines to
support her decision. The adoptive family may
need to use principle ethics to support this
difficult change.
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Virtue Ethics
 Focus more on the personal character traits and
non-obligatory ideas to which the person or
professional aspires than on specific ethical
dilemmas.
 In relinquishment and adoption, examples
include the adoptive parent understanding that
allowing for more contact with the birthmother is
best even if it is difficult, or a reunited
birthmother not wanting to tell the name of the
birthfather even if she knows the importance that
she does.
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Virtuous Professionals
 Typically motivated to do what is right for the right
reasons
 Possess compassion for the whole adoption triad
 Consider class, race, and culture issues
 Allow enough time for adoption decision making
 Have a regard for all parties to the relinquishment
and adoption with sensitivity for their suffering
 Possess self awareness with the capacity for self
observation – knowing when they are biased!
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Information/Resources
American Adoption Congress
www.americanadoptioncongress.org
Evan B Donaldson Adoption Institute
http://www.adoptioninstitute.org
The Handbook of Adoption, Javier 2007
Journey of The Adopted Self , B. Lifton 1995
The Primal Wound, N. Verrier 1993
Adoptees Come of Age. R. Nydam 1999
Loss: Sadness, and Separation. J. Bowlby 1980
Delores Teller, LCSW : [email protected] 503-494-4161
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