So, I can't answer the original question because I have been in neither of these situations. But I am watching this thread with interest, especially after reading
@TyraaryT's post, because it appears that there may be more than one or two things that cause similar outcomes, and I am wondering if it would be helpful to define the common factors. For instance, it has recently been discovered that the same part of the brain is affected by both physical and emotional pain - to the brain the result is the same.
My therapist has asked me, based on some of my responses, whether I was in an incubator as a baby. Nope. But for some other, as yet unknown reason, the same responses are recorded in my brain.
I wonder, if it were possible to distill the experience of the effects of adoption or foster care into a few categories, what would those be? Some that come to mind are trust issues, attachment disorders, feeling a lack of foundation, and being robbed of a childhood. I'm sure there are lots more. But what is happening in the brain, and what happens physiologically as a result? How do people adapt physically, emotionally, cognitively, etc.? Are those experiences the same in, say, prolonged early hospitalization, as in
@notsurewheretoturn's post?
There were a few things
@TyraaryT mentions that I strongly relate to, despite having had a very different childhood. Namely, these:
I notice today that I'm afraid of doing anything because I fear I might not be allowed
Rules are very confusing and I just can't seem to be able to trust that a rule that applies today will also apply tomorrow.
parental figures are chaotic
I didn't have one stable adult present all the time, and the one that was supposed to be my primary caregiver most of the time (my mother.. ugh) wasn't stable at all.
I think it confused me a lot and then made me more vulnerable and poorly equipped for coping with other bad stuff.
I had and have no foundation. There's no rock under me. I'm just floating around and if I fall I never stop, because I've got nothing to land on
So much am I not sure what rules apply where, that I'm not sure whether I am intruding on this thread by branching off from the original topic.
Anyway, I'm just wondering to what degree certain kinds of developmental trauma cause predictable outcomes that are distinguishable from other kinds, vs. to what degree similar outcomes can be traced back to the experience of early rejection, interrupted bonding, inconsistency of care, etc., without regard to the particulars of how those things happened.