I'm sitting at a local lunch counter with Willa. Minutes ago she was her normal giddy self, when one comment suddenly caused her eyes to fill with tears and that well-known cloud to descend over her face. She said something about when she used to speak Spanish. I chuckled and reminded her that it was Amharic. This was the wrong way to react, and there was no consoling her. "I should have never watched Dora!" she cried.
She can't remember a word of Amharic, and can only remember a fraction of what Saffron can remember about life in Ethiopia. Both girls feel somewhat helpless and scared about this inevitable loss of memory, but Willa rarely feels it so acutely. Pretty soon she was on my lap in tears. She said she doesn't wish she had never come to America--she just wishes she could have both Ethiopia and America in her mind. No matter what we've tried, the one seems to push out the other. We'll make some more video of them telling memories tomorrow, and watch some home videos of Ethiopia, but all we can do only slightly slows the flow. And I understand--if Jasper and Ruby had been adopted into an Ethiopian family I would want them to remember their old life here, too.
I'm so grateful we picked up the girls and saw their homeland with our own eyes. I can't imagine helping them through this without that perspective. I want to take them back to visit as soon as we can afford it, and get them an Amharic tutor as soon as they want it. Otherwise, they will have to deal with the loss of Ethiopia the way we all deal with all kinds of loss, and will be stronger for it.
Happy Willa is back now. But it was probably a good reminder for me to see the depth of feeling, of grieving, that a five-year-old can have. Ask anyone who's seen it--when she gets that look in her eyes, she could be a million years old.
Showing posts with label grief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grief. Show all posts
Friday, February 25, 2011
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
Emily Post, Meet Monster Mama
The past couple of days I've been pretty mean. I'm not sure why I've lost patience, and I realize it's pretty juvenile. Perhaps Christmas break did me in. Though I think we're in a very good place for just two months on, we are far from a completely comfortable family.
Because a parent must reason why, and not just do or die, here's my best shot at one possible reason for my recent venom:
Sometimes I don't want to blog about difficult aspects of this adoption, because I can't shake the feeling that there are those--albeit a small minority--who are somehow looking for us to struggle. I think this is on a very subtle level and I hate to even say it out loud: one of my dad's virtues has always been to see the best in people, assume the best of intentions despite flawed behavior, and take their apologies at face value. Especially as an adult, I have tried really hard to do the same.
So, then, why might a few people be looking for the difficulties in our situation? Rather, why might I feel that they are? I don't believe any person actually wishes us ill. Instead I've decided that, for some, our choice to adopt, and to adopt older children, and to adopt interracially, is absolutely unfathomable. They can't imagine ever wanting to do it themselves, and therefore can't understand our wanting to do it. Because it's not something they would ever naturally want or enjoy, they can't get their minds around how we could be enjoying life, or even coping, in such a situation. They look for the difficulty in it, because that's the only angle from which they can approach it.
As I said, I think this is rare, and not even conscious, and certainly doesn't pertain to any of our family or close friends. In fact, they have all wildly exceeded our expectations of support. I think the only reason I am bothered by these interactions is because they are so rare. The vast majority of people I meet, though they might not choose this themselves, are thrilled for us. If I get too down, they are talking ME back up about it.
But once in a while I find myself in a conversation going all wrong. Each time I pause, my counterpart fills in the blank with something much more negative than I was thinking. My words, and my concerns, are clearly being read all wrong. I find myself inadvertently assenting to false assertions. I try to clarify, and things get worse. I feel that, rather than defend my family, I have slipped in the mud and thrown them under the bus. It makes me doubt myself. It makes me feel utterly miserable.
This feeling of an awkward conversation gone wrong is not new to me. When I was pregnant with Charles, and after he died, people said all sorts of odd things to me. Again, the vast majority of people have the best of intentions despite their awkwardness, and you feel that from them. You hear what they mean, and don't care at all what they actually say. But every so often something really stings. What's hardest is not the comment itself, but others' defense of it. If you can't get over the hurt by yourself, and so mention that stinging comment to anyone, they always have the same response. "Oh, but you know they meant well. People just don't know what to say in these situations." And there it is--you're shut down. You're the devastated one, but you're told you are also the one who has to take the high road and let it go. And of course people are right; you should. Eventually. And you will.
What people don't realize is those comments that sting sting for a reason. They hit on some point of vulnerability that undoes a lot of hard work on your part. It's some aspect of the story you've already struggled with, a hole which you've already dug till your fingernails bled just to get out of. And their comment makes you doubt yourself again, doubt your emotional progress, and you feel yourself sliding back into that hole. I wish people would realize that they really don't need to jump to the commenter's defense. You're not really mad at that person, anyway. You're afraid of the hole. You just need someone to let you get it out: let you say why that comment, in particular, hurt your ears. You need someone to listen, and nod, and then remind you how you already felt your way out of that hole. You need someone to throw you a rope. You don't need them to point out that the person probably meant well. If you're the one receiving sympathetic words all day, chances are pretty darn good you've had practice, and are already well aware of that fact.
I hardly ever express this to people, because their inevitable response is, "that's why I usually just don't say anything at all. I don't want to risk saying the wrong thing." Please, risk it. I beg you. I ask every person I can who has been through something publicly difficult, and I've never met one who said they would rather people say nothing than say the wrong thing. Say something. Ask something.
. . . . Well. Alright. Pardon Me. Apparently I have confused my journal with my blog. I guess that's been waiting in the margins for a couple of years. But how does Emily Post's Guide to Comforting the Stricken pertain to adoption? It's a stretch. It was a few of those awkward interactions that got me down recently, made me doubt myself, and contributed to my becoming Monster Mama. We always take it out on the wrong people.
Because a parent must reason why, and not just do or die, here's my best shot at one possible reason for my recent venom:
Sometimes I don't want to blog about difficult aspects of this adoption, because I can't shake the feeling that there are those--albeit a small minority--who are somehow looking for us to struggle. I think this is on a very subtle level and I hate to even say it out loud: one of my dad's virtues has always been to see the best in people, assume the best of intentions despite flawed behavior, and take their apologies at face value. Especially as an adult, I have tried really hard to do the same.
So, then, why might a few people be looking for the difficulties in our situation? Rather, why might I feel that they are? I don't believe any person actually wishes us ill. Instead I've decided that, for some, our choice to adopt, and to adopt older children, and to adopt interracially, is absolutely unfathomable. They can't imagine ever wanting to do it themselves, and therefore can't understand our wanting to do it. Because it's not something they would ever naturally want or enjoy, they can't get their minds around how we could be enjoying life, or even coping, in such a situation. They look for the difficulty in it, because that's the only angle from which they can approach it.
As I said, I think this is rare, and not even conscious, and certainly doesn't pertain to any of our family or close friends. In fact, they have all wildly exceeded our expectations of support. I think the only reason I am bothered by these interactions is because they are so rare. The vast majority of people I meet, though they might not choose this themselves, are thrilled for us. If I get too down, they are talking ME back up about it.
But once in a while I find myself in a conversation going all wrong. Each time I pause, my counterpart fills in the blank with something much more negative than I was thinking. My words, and my concerns, are clearly being read all wrong. I find myself inadvertently assenting to false assertions. I try to clarify, and things get worse. I feel that, rather than defend my family, I have slipped in the mud and thrown them under the bus. It makes me doubt myself. It makes me feel utterly miserable.
This feeling of an awkward conversation gone wrong is not new to me. When I was pregnant with Charles, and after he died, people said all sorts of odd things to me. Again, the vast majority of people have the best of intentions despite their awkwardness, and you feel that from them. You hear what they mean, and don't care at all what they actually say. But every so often something really stings. What's hardest is not the comment itself, but others' defense of it. If you can't get over the hurt by yourself, and so mention that stinging comment to anyone, they always have the same response. "Oh, but you know they meant well. People just don't know what to say in these situations." And there it is--you're shut down. You're the devastated one, but you're told you are also the one who has to take the high road and let it go. And of course people are right; you should. Eventually. And you will.
What people don't realize is those comments that sting sting for a reason. They hit on some point of vulnerability that undoes a lot of hard work on your part. It's some aspect of the story you've already struggled with, a hole which you've already dug till your fingernails bled just to get out of. And their comment makes you doubt yourself again, doubt your emotional progress, and you feel yourself sliding back into that hole. I wish people would realize that they really don't need to jump to the commenter's defense. You're not really mad at that person, anyway. You're afraid of the hole. You just need someone to let you get it out: let you say why that comment, in particular, hurt your ears. You need someone to listen, and nod, and then remind you how you already felt your way out of that hole. You need someone to throw you a rope. You don't need them to point out that the person probably meant well. If you're the one receiving sympathetic words all day, chances are pretty darn good you've had practice, and are already well aware of that fact.
I hardly ever express this to people, because their inevitable response is, "that's why I usually just don't say anything at all. I don't want to risk saying the wrong thing." Please, risk it. I beg you. I ask every person I can who has been through something publicly difficult, and I've never met one who said they would rather people say nothing than say the wrong thing. Say something. Ask something.
. . . . Well. Alright. Pardon Me. Apparently I have confused my journal with my blog. I guess that's been waiting in the margins for a couple of years. But how does Emily Post's Guide to Comforting the Stricken pertain to adoption? It's a stretch. It was a few of those awkward interactions that got me down recently, made me doubt myself, and contributed to my becoming Monster Mama. We always take it out on the wrong people.
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