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Adoption and PTSD - Adoptee Parents Abuse Upon Me

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Elvis, I've had communication with my birth mom after 17 years of absence. Talking about a very confusing time for me. I'd like to hear more about your search for your birth mother.

After reading your article that you posted (thanks by the way for posting it), I agree with much that was written. There is a burst of scientific studies being done about perinatal psychology. It was a field that I was interested in and thought about pursuing a degree in. I don't think you have to "remember" a trauma to be hurt by it. Many of us here have repressed memories. No recollection for a while and we were all suffering in some way, but not remembering what actually is causing the suffering. I think this applies to babies as well. How babies are treated during the birth process and how they are treated throughout the adoption (relinquishment) process makes an impression, especially if it is traumatic. I do believe that no matter how young, the scars are still there, even if the memory is beyond our recollection.

Being adopted DOES NOT HELP the healing process of PTSD. Already, before the trauma, there is trust issues, there is uncertainty about the future, and feelings of abandonment that started at the moment of adoption. Many adoptees have gone through counseling for these issues that arise. For me, I was told that everything that I remembered never happened. I was told that I was too young to remember. They didn't validate my feelings or even tried to understand my memories. I was five years old, I had plenty of memories. Since my trauma that caused my ptsd happened when I was between age three and five (I think), my adoptive parents successfully helped me repress some of these feelings and memories. I repressed even good memories because I was told they were not real.

It's obvious to me that you were relinquished (don't you just love that word? NOT), and then turned over to a family that abused you which in turn caused your PTSD. That's a pretty bad combination of events. I can't imagine the pain you are in. I don't know if your thirst for a mother's love will ever be quenched. I know that I still long for that and I have two known mothers!

One thing that helped me heal tremendously in this respect was having my own children and keeping them, loving them, and giving them what I rarely received. I also had many "substitute" mothers as I was growing up. I borrowed a friend's mom to talk to. I talked with my grandmother and I felt loved my her no matter what my flaws were. And even now, I still talk more with my mother in law than with my own mother. I don't purposefully do this, but I feel closer to others. I think she had her chance to be close to me and she decided to deny me of that attention that I needed.

After my birth mom found me (yes, she searched for me), I came to realize years later why she gave me up for adoption (She did not tell me). Now that I understand her reasoning better, helps me to heal.. It is truly a grieving process. It's a loss of a mother you wish you had. I hope that you come to terms with your pain and loss and begin to accept.
 
I'd like to hear more about your search for your birth mother.

i tried to find her about 5 years ago. have a letter on file from her (anonymous with no identifying info) SAYING "if you ever wanted to find me i would be so happy to see you." BUT because of a law that was passed almost EXACTLY a year after i was born, my records are closed, meaning, they can't tell me ANYTHING about her. because she didn't check a consent box on the form. i would have to hire a private investigator or petition the courts to get open records. i gave up at that stage, very discouraged that it was such a fight.

i do know that she didn't know the parents that adopted me (i don't think) because i was adopted from a foster home.

also. thank you for sharing about your adoption, the word to me just sounds like a handicap to me. i have much anxiety over all of that in general, and i do think it compounds the ptsd. i would be interested to hear more about your experience with both adoption and ptsd. and how it has affected your life. i am learning about articulating all that is inside, and i don't really know how or what is what.
 
Jen,

I'm so sorry I haven't responded very promptly!

ps. how do you grieve? and what did you grieve?

I grieved a lot of things. One of them was the death of my birth father. If he hadn't died, I would still have my mother and my brother. I would probably be living in Korea. Everything went bad after he died. I started to grieve for his death about thirteen years old. That was when all my questions about my past started to creep up on me. I wanted to know why I was so different from my adoptive family and where my artistic talent came from. I wanted to know why I thought the nasty thoughts I did. I truly thought I was just a sicko and that was why.

The grieving that I was talking about in my post was the grieving of a life that never came to be. Grieving is the process of accepting a loss. It's hard to accept loss whether it's a job, a family member, a body part, or a function. We lost our mothers Jen. and it was them themselves that made sure we lost them. It hurts to think that our own mothers would do that to us. For you especially, I feel sorrowful that you were adopted into such horrendous family.

Jen, if it helps you heal, contact your birth mom whatever it takes. It took me several years plus the emergence of memories to forgive my mother for "leaving" us. It does help a tormented heart to finally know why.
 
Nam.

you rock.:smoking: thank you so much for your response. perhaps we can chat more about this sometime. the mom thing. that is so ooooo painful. on top of the mean adoptive mom i had. i haven't been able to write too much on here lately. sort of on overload from the forum.
 
Overload from the forum happens to all of us early on. I've had it many times and had to take a break. The forum can be addictive in many ways. At first it feels as if it's your life saver, but it really isn't. It's not meant to save your life, just help light the way on a really tough journey. Take a break and come back refreshed. Not only will you receive the information better, but you will also be able to help others better.

Sure, we can talk sometime!
 
Very well put Nam. Sorry nothing to add as she did it so well.
 
Hi, I am new and have not made a welcome post yet. I am trying to read everything first, but I had to say this: I have memories from before the age of two, that have been confirmed as such by family members.

I am sorry for your pain. I dit quite well, for reasons that I will explain in my future postings. It hurt me quite a bit to read what you wrote.
All my best,
LF
 
Read this today from the BBC.




The general public were asked to contribute three different types of memories: earliest memories, self-defining memories and flashbulb memories.

Flashbulb memories are memories of public events that also have strong personal resonance, where the date and place can be named as well as where a person was and what they were doing at the time.

More than 10,000 were posted on bbc.co.uk/memory and Professor Martin Conway has been analysing the findings with his team at the University of Leeds.

Dr Mark Porter – one of the presenters who launched the survey last summer – announces the results today on Radio 4 at 9am.

Throughout the day on Radio 4 a number of programmes explore the fascinating subject of memory and discuss the survey results in more detail.

The survey also suggested women have earlier memories than men.

One hypothesis for this is that the female brain may develop earlier than that of the male; another, that women and their mothers may be more likely to have conversations together in which they revisit and rehearse such memories.

Of the 10,000 memories received, 6,672 were childhood memories and 1,800 of these dated to before the age of two, with 700 before the age of one.

These 1,800 pre-verbal memories are a fascinating finding, as scientific literature argues that it is not possible for adults to remember an episode from a time when they do not have language.


LF
 
LF, I talked with my husband about not being able to remember before the age of two and he was quite furious. First off how does the age two become the guideline? If you're a week shy of two, does that mean we can't remember? My husband then told me a story of a time when he was still in his crib with a huge, saggy diaper on and was angry that his mother didn't show up when he wanted. He wasn't able to to walk so he used the bars of the crib to hoist himself to a standing position and sucked on the banister as he waited. That is his earliest memory. I"m pretty sure, since he was a huge baby, that this was about a year old if not younger. I've always questioned the scientific facts about how memory before the age of two cannot be remembered. There are studies of people going into hypnosis and were able to tell how they were born without knowing before hand. One woman said that she had a tremendous headache and was squeezed terrible around the head and her jaw hurt only later to find out that forceps were used in her delivery. All of this is very interesting to me. That the treatment of babies starting from in utero, makes a marked impact on their lives.
 
Facinates me too...

Nam, hi thanks for commenting…
Remember when it was considered a “fact” that infants could not see clearly?

That “fact” had since been debunked also. I’m uneasy talking in absolutes when dealing with neurological process. There is still so much we don’t understand about the human mind.
Take care,
LF
 
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