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Parenting -- Special Concerns
Reply to "Adoption Not working"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My parents adopted my sister at age 7 in the 70's. She had been neglected - her drug addicted mother left her home alone at age 4 to babysit 2 younger brothers ages 1&2. All three were with a foster family from age 4-7, then the family adopted the youngest boy and said they couldn't take my sister and the older boy. She was "fine" until about age 12, which is also when my parents divorced. She never was able to trust and truly bond with anyone and basically did not have a conscience. She was a nightmare until age 15 - lying, stealing and very violent. I was a commuter college student and would hide the kitchen knives every night. Sometimes I came home and she had my mom pinned to the ground and wouldn't let her go. My (divorced) parents sued the state adoption agency and won in court. The state had neuro testing done that showed issues but they never informed my parents. So they wasted 5 years not getting treatment. The state was ordered to pay $30K per year for a special residential school (this was in early 80's). She was there for 3 years and they did "fix" her. She married at 19 and they are still married. She became a vet tech and has been a socially responsible person. Several other families in my parents local adoptive group also adopted older kids. Everyone dealt with the same issues. One kid tried to burn down their house, another tried to stab the mother. My sister's 2 brothers have been in prison for decades for drugs and other crimes. I believe the term now is Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD). Oprah did a show on these types of kids decades ago that I saw and I said - that's my sister! Regular counseling is not going to help. You need to find local professionals who can steer you into solutions for RAD. It's probably going to involve institutional care. Hopefully you have funds to pay for it.[/quote] I am so sorry for what your family went through. And I am so impressed with their commitment. As hard as the road was, this is an amazing success story and your family is unbelievable. [/quote] [b]This is something parents go through with a child with mental illness or other reasons. You can’t return your child due to a “defect “ whether you gave birth or adopted her. She’s your child. [/b] I don’t think too many kids in this situation would have a normal test result. I’m surprised she wasn’t tested at school including a complete neuro work up. Your mother should have insisted when she started having difficulty. The recommendation would probably be a residential school. I’m glad they got her help before it got too bad. [/quote] Actually you can. Adoptions can be overturned children can be rehomed. And schools aren’t going to do a complete neuro work up. [/quote] They aren’t overturned. It’s just a new adoption. [/quote]
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