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Adoption & Adopted Children
Better Family Relationships © Martyn Carruthers

Online Coaching & Mentorship


Sometimes, adopting children can be wonderful and sometimes adopting a child can upset family relationships and create huge problems. We offer coaching and solutions.

Were you adopted?

Coping with Adoption

Many couples who wish to experience or extend parenthood, want to adopt a child. Perhaps one partner is infertile. Or maybe they were always too busy ... until they were too late. Or maybe they kept having miscarriages. Adopting a child can be joyous and exciting - it can also be frustrating and uncertain. Many potential adoptive parents seeking joy find confusion and disappointments.

Some people who want to adopt children may be searching for themselves. An adult with a rejected inner child (a split-off part resulting from trauma) may feel strongly motivated to adopt an abandoned child. We suggest that potential adoptive parents clarify their emotions before adopting a real child.

I wanted to adopt a child. I am 45, and I had a HUGE urge to find and help a child who was abused or abandoned. When you coached me to explore my feelings, I discovered that I was searching for an abused and abandoned child-part of myself! Zagreb, Croatia

Adopting children creates special problems for both children and their adoptive families. Common problems include unmet expectations and poor adjustment. A key issue is how well the adoptive parents can cope solve the problems presented by adopted children.

Adopted children need endless support to adjust to their new family, school and community. They may have more mental health problems than other children. Failure to support adopted children can disrupt adoptive families and return the adopted children to state care with more emotional burdens than before.

Adopted children may have pervasive health and emotional problems, attachment disorders, nightmares, adjustment disorders and learning disabilities. Adopted children may have histories of multiple foster placements, abuse and neglect, rejection and abandonment as well as disjointed education. Adopted teenagers with poor social skills and delayed emotional development can be especially problematic, often showing signs of passive aggression ... or plain aggression.

Systemic Family Coaching

Adopted children may not discuss their early family, yet reflect them in every action as relationship bonds. Adopting a child can be a blessing - or can result in chaos for the family and the separation of the adoptive parents. A key is that potential adoptive parents enjoy a stable and happy partnership ... adopted children will test all theories.

We help adoptive parents evaluate partnership and resolve identity issues:

  • If a parent acts guilty, children may try to express the parent's guilt
  • If a parent acts like a failure, children may respond with chronic fear
  • If a parent acts resourceless, children may try to grow up too quickly
  • If a parent acts like a victim, children may respond with chronic anger
  • If a parent is dead or absent, children may respond with chronic sadness
  • If a parent blames them unjustly, children may act out to reveal what is true
  • If a parent forces children to take sides in parental conflicts, children will suffer

Suggestions for Adoptive Parents

Talk about adoption early and often. Pace the child’s developing emotions with a gradual introduction. Perhaps mention adoption around age 3, and discuss it throughout your child’s childhood. Do you want Parent Coaching?

1. Respect the Genetic Parents

Following adoption, some adoptive parents pretend to be the biological parents. Some criticize the biological parents. We suggest that you talk to your children about their genetic parents with respect ... even if - or especially if - one or both genetic parents are missing, alcoholic, dead, in prison, or avoid meeting their children.

2. Love the Children

Adopted children are often super-sensitive to the emotions, moods and conflicts of the adoptive parents. Take time to express love to adopted children, regardless of whether they are well behaved, polite, have tidy bedrooms or eat their broccoli. (Most children spell LOVE as T-I-M-E)!

3. Children need Mature Parents

Many adopted children try to take sides between real and substitute parents. Repeatedly reassure children that they do not have to choose any parent as being better in any way than any other parent. Reassure adopted children that the adoptive parents are substitutes for the biological parents.

4. Do not blame the Children

The genetic parents may have blamed their children for their own problems. The children may dream of reuniting their family. They may show learning disabilities or psychosomatic symptoms. Explain to the children that you are substitutes for their parents - and that they cannot bring Mom and Dad together.

5. Fight Fair - away from the Children

Adoption is an intense time for any family and often raises conflicts. Avoid arguing near adopted children - or any children. Organize times and places away from the children to resolve conflicts. If a talk becomes an argument, STOP, TAKE TIME and RESCHEDULE your discussion.

6. Minimize Change

Although adopting a child will create many changes for your family, continuity is important. Make the children's environment as familiar as possible, including their favorite things, photographs, toys, blankets, etc. Offer children a home - not a building.

7. Encourage Meetings

Discuss how your children can have maximum benefit and happiness if or when they meet a genetic parent. Avoid asking children to deliver messages, to spy or to obtain information. Compliment the genetic parents as much as appropriately possible.

8. Get Adult Support

Adoption can be a difficult time for everybody. Adoptive parents need mature emotional support from family, friends, counselors, clergy, etc. Avoid asking children to support you. Support your children.

9. Talk about Feelings

During stressful times, children may misbehave. They may age-regress (act much younger) or they may try to grow up quickly and act in an overly mature fashion. Ask children how they feel, and what they think or imagine is going on. Help children express THEIR feelings ... don't complain about yours!

10. Make an Appointment ... Take the initiative and contact us

Online Coaching & Adoption

We assist adults who are considering adoption or who have adopted children. We coach adoptive parents stay focused on their goals and move forward. We also coach step-parents to coach their adopted children and the biological parents of adopted children to cope with their loss.

We often recommend that parents take our couple coaching to resolve outstanding emotional issues and sort out partnership issues - including conflicts and limiting beliefs. We help partners appreciate and support each other's perspectives, motivations and goals.

Feedback

I have been updating my skills to practice as a professional life coach and decided to attend Soulwork training. It turned out to be well worth the effort. The training Martyn Carruthers offers in clarifying and resolving even the most entangled and traumatic family situations is by far the most effective I have experienced.

He builds on the work of well-known figures such as Virginia Satir in a powerfully intuitive manner and his use of such tools as family mapping, family rules, accessing the unconscious and psychodrama would be particularly appropriate and effective in the area of post adoption work.

In situations where children are behaving according to dysfunctional birth-family rules they learnt for survival, there will be a clash if this behaviour is misinterpreted in the adoptive family. Martyn Carruthers' systemic coaching brings clarity, enabling individuals to become conscious of their emotional and mental habits and inappropriate coping mechanisms that affect their relationships. His work enables individuals to diffuse and dissolve these patterns and make healthier choices.

These processes are demonstrated wherever possible rather than relying on an academic approach of only teaching theory. I find this particularly effective.


Pamela Vass MA (Devon, UK) Professional Coach OneonOnecoaching

Do you want to dissolve emotional and relationship blocks?

Online Coaching concerning Adoption

Plagiarism is theft. Copyright © Martyn Carruthers 2004-2012 All rights reserved


 

 
 

 

Coaching & Training Programs

Good Questions

Good Answers

Good Training

1. Where are you now? Assess fixations, bonds and enmeshments Systems 1
2. What do you want?  Define life goals ... and blocks to success Systems 2
3. Do you have a plan?  Use conscious and unconscious resources Systems 3
4. Do your emotions limit you?  Dissolve abuse, trauma and mentor damage Systems 4
5. Do your beliefs block you? Change limiting beliefs and end dependence Systems 5
6. Do you feel empty? Resolve identity loss to recover lost qualities Systems 6
7. Is your partner happy? Build healthy partnership (or separate peacefully) Systems 7
8. Are your children happy? Parents can resolve family problems Systems 8
9. Do you want team success? Develop team leaders and top teams together Systems 9
10. Do you want community? Coach community leaders and communities Systems 10
**   Do you have unusual goals? Specialty coaching & training Specialty

Plagiarism is theft. Copyright © Martyn Carruthers 1996-2012 All rights reserved. Soulwork Systemic Coaching was primarily developed by Martyn Carruthers
to help people dissolve emotional blocks, improve relationships and achieve goals. These concepts and strategies are for general knowledge only. Consult a physician about medical conditions and before changing medical treatment. Don't steal intellectual property ... ask for permission to post, publish or teach this work.