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Talking with Children About Difficult History
by Holly van Gulden
"How do we tell our daughter she has an older brother living with their birth mother?"
"The records state our son's birth mother was raped. Should we tell him his birth father raped his birth mother?"
"We wrote to the agency requesting more information about our son's genetic family. The agency contacted his birth mother for an update and learned David's birth father is currently in prison serving time for felonious assault. David, age 9, keeps asking if we have heard from the adoption agency. What should we do?"
Parents who have potentially painful information about their child's history and/or birth family face a number of complex and difficult decisions. These decisions include: Should we share this information with our child? If so, when, at what age or developmental stage? How do we share this information? How much should we share? Who should tell her?
I believe that children need their heritage - the good, the not so good, the fun, the painful, the easy, the difficult. In my experience as a parent and an adoption counselor, there has never yet been a single case where I supported a decision not to share. My focus has always been how to share: when, how much, and with whom if anybody besides the child. Whenever I approach this issue with a family, I emphasize the need to gather a variety of 'other' facts about the child's heritage - their birth parents as individuals and/or their racial and cultural heritage. "Negative" information needs to be presented as a part of the picture, not the whole image.
This is the age of the information highway. Children shielded from difficult information could discover the "facts" about their history or their ancestry during childhood or adulthood - even in international adoption. Discovering these carefully-kept secrets can and often does lead to a sense of betrayal by adoptive parents, shame, and/or identity confusion.
Though difficult, perhaps painful, these "facts" are crucial pieces of our children's history and heritage. Frequently, the information parents wish to withhold to protect their children from pain or from internalizing a negative self-image (my birth parents were 'bad' I'm bad) are key pieces to the puzzling question every adopted person faces: Why didn't my birth mother and father raise me? Every human being has a need and a right to the facts about heritage, ancestry and personal life journey. Withholding information because it may be painful or shameful denies our children the opportunity to develop over time (a lifetime) a clear picture of the players and the forces at work in their history, and the chance to develop coping skills to process and externalize difficult information and feelings. Keeping secrets especially between generations within a family system, implies the material withheld is shameful.
I think it's important for adoption professionals and parents to remember that there are children still living with their birth relatives who face these difficult situations successfully. Not all women who conceived during an act of rape place their children for adoption. Some birth mothers who were raped and conceived are raising their children. Professionals need to consider, "Would I, in my best professional evaluation, recommend that a mother hide the facts of conception from her child -for rape? for incest? Would I recommend that a man or woman whose spouse or partner is in prison for felonious assault or murder and has been since the children were too young to know, keep this secret? Would I recommend that a grandmother or aunt raising their daughter's or sister's or brother's child keep the secret that Mom is raising this child's siblings?" The answer to these questions is usually No! Secrets are harmful, even for children. Most professionals develop a careful plan for dealing with the negative issue which usually involves sharing the information before adulthood and usually before adolescence.
There are several critical steps in approaching How, What, and When to share difficult information.
Completing open-ended sentences can help parents identify their values and judgments about the people (your child's genetic family, or foster family) involved in these difficult situations. Try completing open ended sentences like these:
Remember that the goal of this exercise is to identify your reactions to the people involved and to clarify if and how your want to pass those reaction on to your child. Rape is not okay. It is not acceptable behavior. If your child was conceived during an act of rape, you need to challenge yourself to separate the unacceptable act of aggression from the person, your son or daughter's birth father. If you cannot begin to separate their behavior from the person - no matter how appalled and angry you feel - your child will have no modeling to separate his/her sense of birth or genetic heritage from the inappropriate or unacceptable behaviors.
Your child will need guidance and modeling to separate the situation of conception from his or her sense of value and self image. Lately I've heave professionals in adoption describe this situation using the phrase, "Your child is a product of rape (or incest)." I strongly disagree. No human being, no valuable human life is a product. Your child was conceived during an act of rape or incest. The valuable, unique human being conceived is not predetermined to repeat the behavior.
Remember that children often sense when secrets are being kept and conclude there is something wrong with them. Withholding details of a child's history and heritage can reinforce a sense of shame. In evaluating the child's readiness or preparing for sharing, identify coping skills and cognitive and emotional processing, A decision to wait until the child demonstrates positive self-image may entrap the child in "shameful" innuendo and vague perceptions, denying the child the opportunity to understand and process the realities of his/her heritage and life. Handled professionally over time, sharing difficult information, validating the child's feeling reactions and reinforcing that these were behaviors and/or choices of other people, not the child, can assist a child in overcoming a shame based or negative self image.
In conclusion: if as parents you are struggling with the question of whether to share some piece of your child's heritage or history, I encourage you to seek professional consultation to consider how and when to share. Contact your placement agency and local parent support groups for recommendations of local counselors, social workers, family therapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, and/or religious leaders. If and when you locate an adoption worker you trust who does not have experience in dealing with the potential effect of race, incest, incarceration, placement of one child while parenting a sibling (etc.), I recommend you consult a psychologist who does. I frequently consult with and am consulted by psychologists who deal with these issues in intact families. Together, our combined experience and knowledge offers families valuable input in this difficult process.
Finally, seek ongoing support if you feel overwhelmed. Sharing difficult information and guiding your child's process of these pieces of his/her heritage can bring you closer together.
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