Why adoption makes us parent differently
What pops into your head when you hear “attachment parenting”? What about adoption attachment parenting? You might be asking “Is that even a thing?”
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
When you think of attachment parenting you might think of babywearing, cosleeping or extended breast feeding.
Attachment parenting is a parenting style that promotes maternal-child bonding between mother and baby as early as possible in a child’s life. Infants are vulnerable, needy little creatures and ideally, new moms are ready to nurture them. The goal is to establish trust right off the bat, setting the tone of the parent-child relationship. Sounds warm and fuzzy, right?
But what about adoption attachment parenting? Is that different? I mean…adoption is different, right?
Wrong.
Attachment parenting and why adoption makes us parent differently
For a child adopted as an infant, attachment parenting probably doesn’t look much different, but what about older children? Foster care adoptions and the majority of placements through non-domestic programs (e.g., China, Ethiopia, Bulgaria) usually aren’t babies. For these nontraditional families, attachment parenting sometimes looks different.
[Tweet “What attachment parenting looks like when you adopt #adoption #AdoptionTalk”]
Some approaches to post-adoption attachment parenting may seem weird or elicit disapproval from friends or family:
“I never did that and my kid turned out fine.”
“No harm ever came to a child from letting him cry it out.”
“Your 3-year-old is in an Ergo carrier? What the what?”
We adopted our son Zack when he was two. He’d been living with a foster family for 18 months. They were all he knew. He trusted them to meet his basic needs: feed him when he was hungry, comfort him when he was upset. Then my husband and I showed up. We were strangers, and it was a completely normal reaction for his secure little world to be shattered. It was important to establish a bond and make him feel safe as quickly as possible. Here are some of the things we tried to promote attachment:
1. Baby-wearing (yes, we tried it)
We attempted to use an Ergo carrier to promote skin-to-skin closeness that parents of newborns experience organically. Uh… not so much. A wiggly toddler wasn’t down with being squished against a stranger when there were so many things to see and explore. Plus, lugging around a 25-pound kid was murder on my back. The sling was a moderately helpful alternative to a stroller at times, but we pretty quickly ditched it as an attachment tool.
2. Cocooning
Cocooning means keeping a child’s world small: not venturing outside unless absolutely necessary and limiting visitors. Newly adopted kids, especially older children, might see anyone who shows them attention as a parental figure. If I child is bombarded with Mom, Grandma and Aunt Carol, confusion (and behavior problems) might stem from lack of clarity on who’s who. Some families even set limits on social interaction outside the immediate family for short periods of time, even going to such extremes as making announcements via social media asking people to stay away and setting forth rules for interacting with the adopted child once the cocooning period was finished.
While we didn’t cocoon, we did limit situations where our little guy would be overwhelmed by new people. We didn’t have company and avoided large groups of people for a few weeks, but we didn’t hunker down at home. I had limited maternal leave so our son needed to get used to other people. Besides, staying home 24/7 would have made me crazy and I decided my new kid didn’t need a crazy mom.
3. Skipping “cry it out”
Bedtimes can be rough — especially for young kids who might be struggling with the “what just happened here?” feeling. We’re at our most vulnerable when we lay down to sleep, and kids may struggle with memories of their old routine or miss their caregivers.
Letting a child whose place is established in your family “cry it out” may be something you’re OK with, but a newly adopted child might just need extra reassurance that you’re nearby and that they’re not alone in this unfamiliar place.
Parenting looks different for a new adoptive family. There's a lot to figure out as we find what the new normal is. We took our cues from our kid, applied a lot of trial and error and a little common sense and found what worked for us… and that’s no different from any family out there. Attachment parenting applied by an adoptive family may look strange if you're not familiar with some of the unique issues families formed through adoption may deal with.
And who really gets to decide what’s normal, anyway?
If adoption is part of your family makeup or it's something you're considering from any angle, please check out our linkup that happens every first and third Thursday.
Thank you for reading!
You might also like:
Great big list of adoption gifts
Why you should give an adoptive mom a baby shower
Totally agree – our son was in his “tweens” when we became a family and our parenting methods were not always understood and appreciated (especially by certain members of our family). But we’ve always maintained that our first responsibility is to our son, not our extended family. They have had to learn to deal with our differing views on parenting.