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We start with a new therapist on Monday for our 16 yr old ASon. He has lived with us for the past 4 yrs and was in fostercare 3 1/2 yrs previous to that. As you may have read my first post about his sister moving out, you know I have been googling the net to help sort this whole drama out.
RE therapy: I've read on a few sites a parent should always be in therapy to avoid triangulation. What do you guys think? What about the times he will be working on things that happened before his arrival to our home? Does our close involvement in his therapy slow does the progress?
I would like to kind of have an idea what we should do BEFORE we meet with the therapist so we can set up our plan. I need to feel a little more in control now and our son doesn't take change very well.
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Yes, although his sympyoms are not as drama-like as our older daughter, there is no question. He was initially diagnosed as Adjustment Disorder until the therapist had a better chance to meet with him and speak to us. I failed to mention we dropped the Medicaid route for services as the agencies that see kids are they themselves like a revolving door of therapists and we figured kids with abandonment issues surely didn't need to feel abandoned every three or four months when it was time for change of the guard at the agency.
Our only other option was to use our insurance. I jumped through all the hoops to get him approved for services, but we are required to use their list of providers. What's new?? Anyway, I contacted each of the providers listed and did phone interviews with them. There were none that could claim they were AT trained, so I was left choosing one whose practice centers around teens.
I have checked online, but can't find one within our area either. I do not believe our insurance allows out of county services either.
So, with that in mind any suggestions?
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I am pretty certain my youngest son (adopted at 3 years of age) has a mild case of RAD. I am having a hard time finding a specialist in attachment therapy near my home.
I live right outside of Houston but the only place I did find was an hour away.
Anyone know how to search for a good therapist?
email Kelly@radzebra.org She has a list of therapists in different areas and may be able to help you locate one.
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YES!! BUT..he has to be aware of his difficulties and motiavted to change. My A. wants me in all his therapy and has made great progress. The beautiful, beautiful thing that I see is that his attachment work with ME has made him able to have better, healthier relationships with OTHER people as well. Less likely to form fast "fake" attachments to superficial people, and motivated to work really hard on relationships with the people he SHOULD have attachments to. That is the big goal with a kid this age...they are going to be out on their own so soon -dating, maybe having children - and are really in danger of messing up a lot of lives if they can't make the changes now. BUT -you can't make a kid this old WANT it.
itsallrelative
Any of you guys using AT therapy, find success with an older child, say 16? With years of fostercare and adopted for a number of year? It seems like most of the posts I read refer to younger children, who were placed at a much younger age.
OK We went yesterday for the first appointment. The therapist has suggested we look into a wilderness camp. Any thoughts? Anyone utilized this form of treatment? Did insurance help with the costs?
The therapist also lent me a manual she received from the last training she attended on RAD. One of the suggestions was to have a list of about five natural consequences for each offense. The idea was to keep the child from controling or manipulating the outcome. Have any of you tried this technique?
My husband and I had a lengthy talk with T(our son) last night as we have found he has a 'secret' cell phone, just like his sister. Of course his explanation was all lies.
We have actually considered what it would take to disrupt the adoption and the recourses we may face. We have a bio d left at home who is the same age as T and for the past four(4) years she has received very little attention because of T and his C, his sister whom we've adopted. Our bio d and T are the same age and I am beginning to recognize we only have two(2) years left to share her teen life before she graduates and we are concerned we are throwing it away while we continue to focus on T and recover from C's assault on our family. Any thoughts? Anyone successfully reverse an adoption after this many years of having the kids?
itsallrelative
OK We went yesterday for the first appointment. The therapist has suggested we look into a wilderness camp. Any thoughts? Anyone utilized this form of treatment? Did insurance help with the costs? The therapist also lent me a manual she received from the last training she attended on RAD. One of the suggestions was to have a list of about five natural consequences for each offense. The idea was to keep the child from controling or manipulating the outcome. Have any of you tried this technique? My husband and I had a lengthy talk with T(our son) last night as we have found he has a 'secret' cell phone, just like his sister. Of course his explanation was all lies. We have actually considered what it would take to disrupt the adoption and the recourses we may face. We have a bio d left at home who is the same age as T and for the past four(4) years she has received very little attention because of T and his C, his sister whom we've adopted. Our bio d and T are the same age and I am beginning to recognize we only have two(2) years left to share her teen life before she graduates and we are concerned we are throwing it away while we continue to focus on T and recover from C's assault on our family. Any thoughts? Anyone successfully reverse an adoption after this many years of having the kids?
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I think Wilderness Camp would be great for a teen RAD kid. At that age, the chance of healing is slim to none. Wilderness Camp isn't about healing from RAD. These camps require compliance to adults and team work with others. These are skills that the kids are severely lacking and that they desperately need in adult life. I would seriously consider it for my child once she is a teen.
I agree that a Wilderness Camp could do wonders for your boy, and get him a little distance from his sibling and bmom. Insurance may be tricky, but there are probably some that will work with you. Just Google "Wilderness Treatment Camp" and you will get lots of info. Here are a few links you can check out.
[url=http://search.camps.com/index.php?tpid=10306&tspid=2&ttid=119&st=wilderness%20therapy&bmst=wilderness%20therapy]Camps.com :: Search results for wilderness therapy[/url]
[url=http://www.nationalyouth.com/reactiveattachmentdisorder.html]Reactive Attachment Disorder[/url]
[url=http://www.ascent4teens.com/]Ascent Wilderness Program for Troubled Teens[/url]
[url]http://www.17thjudicialdistrict.com/Microsoft%20Word%20-%20Residential%20Treatment%20Center%20and%20Resid ential%20Child%20Care%20Fa%E2%80%A6.pdf[/url]
Lorraine123
I think Wilderness Camp would be great for a teen RAD kid. At that age, the chance of healing is slim to none. Wilderness Camp isn't about healing from RAD. These camps require compliance to adults and team work with others. These are skills that the kids are severely lacking and that they desperately need in adult life. I would seriously consider it for my child once she is a teen.
Our now 15 yr. as might be at the same juncture....after a year of great therapy with an AT, he has made great progress, but has hit the wall bigtime in attaching with mom - must be too painful to deal with the birthmom and the many foster moms who also abandoned him. He was removed from the home at age 3 for severe neglect & violence in the home, spent 6 years in the system in twice as many placements, was sexually abused by his sister in the birth home and his first foster placement, came to live with us at age 9. We had him in therapy with an AT as soon as we could, which was age 10. He already had refined his con artist skills enough at that age to buffalo an AT....he told her exactly what she wanted to hear! After a move to another state, we found a much better AT that wouldn't take his BS. So, all of a sudden at that point he is 14 years old..... So, at what point do you say, even though you'd like to give him every chance in the world to heal, this is as good as it gets, now the best I can do is try to teach you (and maybe that's through a RTC - he sure doesn't want to learn them at home!) life skills to make the best of your life? And if he does deal with the mom thing, he's still way behind on social skills....and virtually no time left to develop them before he's on his own. It's an extremely painful spot to be in, especially after the progress our son made this past year. He is very bright - could be an "A" student, college bound, with a great life ahead of him, and right now it seems to be OK with him to throw that all away. My dh says I'm unrealistic, but hey, I'm the mom....of course I see the best potential and want the best for my child. The other bad part of all this is that he's already worked the families to show them what a wonderful child he is.....(not that I care what the neighbors think!!!)
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itsallrelative
Any of you guys using AT therapy, find success with an older child, say 16? With years of fostercare and adopted for a number of year? It seems like most of the posts I read refer to younger children, who were placed at a much younger age.