Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sighs, I'm another mom with an angry 14 year old son we adopted from Ethiopia 10 years ago. He's got it in his head that we can ship him back to Ethiopia and his world will be wonderful! It's hard to deal with some one who treats me with such hate and angst. What do we do??!?
My friend adopted two girls from Ethiopia. Both would have died if they stayed there, in different ways. Can you research with him to see what his life would be like if he lived in Ethiopia so he can see the contrast? BTW, my friend aims to take her daughters back to see their birth parents every 2 to 3 years. She said it really settles them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like my DC. Lots of anger and takes it out on me, Mom. Very disregulated at times. Stick with him. Get him support. We didn't love CASE or Barker resources, so it took some time to find the right therapist. We are also in touch with other adopted families that look like ours, which is also helpful to both kids and parents.
He sounds like he's way past the explanation stage...don't fool yourself that its enough. Clearly he is working through the feelings now. Stay with him. He needs to know you're there. Prayers and GL.
We didn't love Barker or Case.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is having a tough time right now.![]()
He’s pretty angry and doesn’t really understand why.
Takes it all out on me. I can be the punching bag but I
wish I knew how to make him feel better.![]()
He’s too old to just happily accept the adoption narrative that his birth parents were unable to care for him so chose us to be his parents out of love — but too young to understand how some people might not feel equipped to be parents and would choose adoption.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sighs, I'm another mom with an angry 14 year old son we adopted from Ethiopia 10 years ago. He's got it in his head that we can ship him back to Ethiopia and his world will be wonderful! It's hard to deal with some one who treats me with such hate and angst. What do we do??!?
My friend adopted two girls from Ethiopia. Both would have died if they stayed there, in different ways. Can you research with him to see what his life would be like if he lived in Ethiopia so he can see the contrast? BTW, my friend aims to take her daughters back to see their birth parents every 2 to 3 years. She said it really settles them.

Anonymous wrote:Sighs, I'm another mom with an angry 14 year old son we adopted from Ethiopia 10 years ago. He's got it in his head that we can ship him back to Ethiopia and his world will be wonderful! It's hard to deal with some one who treats me with such hate and angst. What do we do??!?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like my DC. Lots of anger and takes it out on me, Mom. Very disregulated at times. Stick with him. Get him support. We didn't love CASE or Barker resources, so it took some time to find the right therapist. We are also in touch with other adopted families that look like ours, which is also helpful to both kids and parents.
He sounds like he's way past the explanation stage...don't fool yourself that its enough. Clearly he is working through the feelings now. Stay with him. He needs to know you're there. Prayers and GL.
Anonymous wrote:
I have three adopted kids. Oldest handled all of the adoption issues really well. Youngest is too early to tell. Middle one has had major crises over the abandonment issues. He is currently in a residential treatment program that has a specialty in adoption trauma, attachment issues and abandonment. Having a therapist and a program with these specialties has been life changing.
I have to admit pause by your adoption narrative. It sounds great for a five year old but I can’t imagine e teens buying it. Do you really know that the decision was out of love?
OP here. Just to clarify that it’s not my adoption narrative. It’s the pro-adoption narrative for little kids in this country. My point is that he doesn’t necessarily buy it (I’m not pushing it as The Truth, as we don’t actually know) but he also doesn’t really understand that raising kids is really hard and not everyone is up to it. I think we ended the night pretty ok. It’s true that being a teen can be hard for anyone, adopted or not and I shouldn’t take things personally. He told me he was feeling really angry and he didn’t even understand why, so we talked about some possible reasons and that it’s normal. Case is a good suggestion, also. Thank you for the support.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like my DC. Lots of anger and takes it out on me, Mom. Very disregulated at times. Stick with him. Get him support. We didn't love CASE or Barker resources, so it took some time to find the right therapist. We are also in touch with other adopted families that look like ours, which is also helpful to both kids and parents.
He sounds like he's way past the explanation stage...don't fool yourself that its enough. Clearly he is working through the feelings now. Stay with him. He needs to know you're there. Prayers and GL.