A couple of years ago,
when I was writing a story for Working Mother magazine about a single,
professional woman who adopted a toddler from Bulgaria, I interviewed Diane
Lostrangio, Executive Director of New Hope Child and Family Agency in
Seattle. It’s a treat to talk with Diane, because she’s a wealth of information
about adoption (she’s also an adoptive mom). This two-part series includes
excerpts from our interview, in which we discussed bonding. Although we were
discussing bonding as it pertains to single parents, Diane’s comments are
equally applicable to two-parent families:
From Dream World to
Real World
With international adoption in particular, there’s so much
anticipation, buildup and so many hurdles to jump in terms of the dossier, the
paperwork, the delays, and the ups and downs of what’s happening in that
country, that a letdown comes after you come home. If you’ve traveled overseas,
the trip can be exciting in and of itself. You stay in that country; your
laundry’s getting done; you’re eating your meals out. All you do in that
country is concentrate on your new child. The job isn’t calling. And then you
get back home to reality.
Parenting has a
different rhythm than work
The adoption process can feed the sense that you’re really
well prepared to parent. You have to pass this test, so to speak. You’ve been
through the homestudy; you’ve undergone scrutiny. Adoptive parents are
typically older; they’re established professionally. They often work in spheres
where working harder and working smarter helps them overcome the difficulty. A
lot of parenting, especially in the early years, is just managing the changing
terrain.
Give yourself
permission to have a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day
One of the sad realities for adoptive parents is that they
don’t feel a lot of permission to have the normal mix of feelings that any
parent does. Typically their process is very public – everyone has been pulling
for them. They’re taking a great deal of initiative in overcoming tremendous
obstacles to become a parent. Everybody presumes that this is the answer to
prayer. We feed into the notion that somehow, a child, a relationship can
completely fulfill us. And the reality of any relationship is that no one person
is going to meet all your needs. Talk to any mother about a day home with a
child. You love them but there are times when you get very frustrated.
Devote your attention
to bonding
There needs to be high-level attentiveness to the whole
bonding piece. Even infant adoptees and newborns go through a transition in
caregivers. Everything that’s familiar – sounds, feel, smells – changes, two
days, three days post-birth. Just because infants can’t express it in the same
way as older children doesn’t mean that they’re not undergoing a change. It’s
optimal if there can be some high-level availability on the part of the primary
parent to that infant through that time.
The first year is
critical
[Parents should] devote as much time as possible to
optimizing time with their child in the early months and the first year. The
first year is a critical transition period. I think of the transition and
adjustment as being at least a full year. With older kids, you can view the
transition time as far longer than that. When you’re talking about an
infant-toddler, expect a full year where getting that child transitioned is a
high-level priority in your life.
Take time off your
job, if possible
Singles need to take off as much time as they can possibly
take after the child’s placement. Especially if the child is a little bit
older, people tend to underestimate what the child’s needs are and how much the
child will need. Kids who have been in orphanage care often make a very good
transition into day care, but you want to orient them to family life.
Plan different
scenarios
Ask yourself: How much
time can I take off before I have to go back to work? You might say: I think I can hypothetically swing two
months off and then she’ll start child care. Keep in mind that you’re going
from two months off to full time child care. Think through whether that feels
the best for you and for the child.
Another option might be to look at four weeks home and the
equivalent of those hours that you would have taken off in those four weeks of
gradually entering the child in to childcare. This is true for couples who both
work, too, but for singles it’s more critical.
Some of that will be influenced by how your child’s
adjustment goes. Some kids adjust very well and seem ready to bond. You don’t always
know what’s going to feel optimal to your child. If you get really attached to one scenario and you realize that
it is not working for your child, that’s going to deepen your sense of being overwhelmed.
Find balance
If you’re single, it’s going to be a radical shift to go
from defining all of your time outside of work to be able to do whatever you
want to, to being “on,” all the time. If you’re adopting an older child or an
internationally adopted child who’s been in orphanage care, the time you’re not
working does need to be largely devoted to building the bond and the attachment
with the child. However, if you don’t build in some time for yourself, you’ll
get burned out and you’ll feel isolated. It’s a balance.
Recognize that, in the early years of your child’s life,
you’re not going to be pursuing lots of your favorite hobbies and pursuits. You’re
going to be attending to your work. You’re going to be spending as much time
with your child and trying to build in those pockets of down time for yourself
so that you don’t get burned out. There’s a limit to quality time. Kids need
quantity time, too.
Stay tuned for Part 2,
when we’ll discuss ways for frazzled parents to cope.
Having Trouble Finding Childcare? Try Speed Babysitting
Because adopted children usually arrive on the scene without much advance notice, parents who work outside the home (particularly single parents) must scramble to find childcare.
It’s not uncommon for an adoptive parent to spend most of his or her adoption leave madly searching for a nanny, daycare, or pre-school.
Enter speed babysitting. You’ve heard of speed dating, in which singles gather at a café or pub and chat for five minutes with a bunch of other singles. Apply that concept to finding a babysitter.
Sitter Socials, a California-based program, is one of a few services around the country that matches parents with available babysitters. Clients (aka, parents in need of a sitter) pay $50 to attend a neighborhood speed meeting (okay, “speed meeting” sounds vaguely illegal, but you get my drift). Parents spend three minutes apiece interviewing about a dozen potential babysitters.
In addition, clients receive a book that contains profiles, references, and contact info for local babysitters (that, alone, would be worth 50 bucks!).
Sitter Socials also offer snacks and door prizes. After the initial speed interviews, there’s time for parents and sitters to negotiate deals.
It isn’t a perfect system, I suppose, but nothing in the I-need-childcare-right-now world is. I’m not sure whether speed babysitting applies to all-day care, or is just for parents in need of a night out. Either way, it might be worth looking into.
What do you think, readers? Have you tried speed babysitting? Did it work for you?
Source:
“Speed baby-sitting follows quickie dating,” by John Rogers, Associated Press, KnoxNews.com
Posted on Monday, January 19, 2009 in News, Issues and Commentary, Parenting, Single Parent Adoption | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)