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I have inquired about a 7 yo child and found out that she has been diagnosed with RAD. I'm not at all familiar with the disorder.
Has anyone else had experience with this? What can I expect?
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I agree with this. The 24/7 nature of parenting these children is exhausting. So is living with the unimaginable. And the constant feedback from others about how "wonderful" the child.
Today I am really sad as I realize that our entire family hides and tries to stay far away from our home. When the family members come in, they go to their rooms. When our RAD child follows them into their rooms, they go to other rooms. We all try to do anything away from home that we can. Our home is no longer a safe place for any of us to be. It is kind of our horror now. That makes me realize how sad I am.
I agree with this. The 24/7 nature of parenting these children is exhausting. So is living with the unimaginable. And the constant feedback from others about how "wonderful" the child.
Today I am really sad as I realize that our entire family hides and tries to stay far away from our home. When the family members come in, they go to their rooms. When our RAD child follows them into their rooms, they go to other rooms. We all try to do anything away from home that we can. Our home is no longer a safe place for any of us to be. It is kind of our horror now. That makes me realize how sad I am.
I have parented RAD single and married. So, so way, way easier single. I would have 3 children at a time in my home single. We survived it all. Married, it is really, really hard. Mostly because of how hard it is on my husband to see me treated so badly and being continually by counselors not to react. Reacting empowers them.
An excellent, easy read (because it's written as a novel) about RAD is Building the Bonds of Attachment by Dan Hughes. I speak from experience when I say that living with a child with RAD can be debilitating and horrible. On the other hand, my daughter, adopted at age 6, healed from her RAD and has now finished her first year of college at a prestigious university. And she's fully attached! Whether or not you get picked with this little girl, you should learn about attachment and RAD. I'm a believer that every foster/adopted child has at least mild attachment issues, every one.
Susan Ward
[URL="http://therapeuticparenting.wordpress.com/"]Therapeutic Parenting[/URL]
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Whataworld
I have parented RAD single and married. So, so way, way easier single. I would have 3 children at a time in my home single. We survived it all. Married, it is really, really hard. Mostly because of how hard it is on my husband to see me treated so badly and being continually by counselors not to react. Reacting empowers them.
Reactive Attachment Disorder cannot rub off onto you. If you decide to take this on, you must strengthen your ties to family, community, school, church and belief system. You will need to. The disorder works to isolate you from these by triangulation. Sorry. I wish I could be more positive about the disorder. Having said this, the children are charming, loving, etc. They do not even know they have this disorder, and their behaviors actually work against what they really need--love and commitment. Please do research--it will definitely strenghthen you. All my prayers for your success with this most challenging path.
I parent a 18 year old with RAD and Borderline Personality Disorder, difficult yes, impossible no. Be good to yourself, take time outs for yourself. I agree with the poster that says you have to present a unified front husband and wife and the one that said "all children in FC have some form of attachment disorder". They would almost have to with as much as they are moved around. My prayers to all who work with, love, cuddle, hold, and hang in there with their RAD children. May God continually bring peace to these children and help them to know we deeply love them.
edited to correct the many speling errors :)
EllisAJ
the one that said "all children in FC have some form of attachment disorder". They would almost have to with as much as they are moved around.
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ClarinetGal
I was going to ask if RAD children ever heal?
I agree with the previous poster about being prepared for others to think you are the one with the problem. We have struggled with this a lot. Our family, who really has no reason not to believe us, seems to think we are overreacting to "normal" kid stuff. We get that a lot. "Oh, that's normal", people will say. While some of hte behaviors might seem normal, they are always done with not normal intentions. There is ALWAYS a motive with our son. Nothing is ever done innocently. That was hard to get used to. But now that we know it, we call the behaviors out. Before he would try and make me think I was crazy and would look all sad acting as if I was mean to insinuate that he was doing things on purpose. But he did actually confess some of the things that he had been doing on purpose. Asking questions to be annoying. Staring at me in the mirror (he sits behind me in the car and would stare into my mirror at me...kind odd/creepy). Our son is more passive aggressive, at least for now. He does have meltdowns but they have not been destructive in our home. In the previous home he was more destructive. So I was kind of waiting for that. He has a lot of school behaviors and his teachers really coddle him. It's nice to have teachers that care but we have to spell out why he is doing things at school. And he misbehaves a lot more at school because he gets away with it there. But overall the most frustrating thing is having family act like we are the ones who are crazy. It has also been hurtful. He will go over to my parents house and talk baby talk and try to be so cute and innocent and make us look like we are so mean or something. My mom thinks we are hard on him. But we have to be very strict with him. Any variance in the schedule or expectations and he is showing behaviors. So we very much stick to the straight and narrow for him. I was trying to explain to my mom that when she fed into his behaviors she was just being manipulated. And she told me she didn't want to feel like she couldn't be herself or change how she interacted with kids so she would just be a part of the manipulation. So in doing that, she is kind of hurting us and playing into the behaviors we are trying to stop. So we have had to limit our times over there. And I pretty much don't expect much family support anymore. Which is sad. So I think RAD can definitely be isolating unless you have understanding support.
We too found RAD very isolating. In our community and our family. Our child required such a high degree of supervision - and he was slick, so it was a HIGH degree of supervision - that we often were more concerned about keeping others safe, than keeping him safe. Our friends who had adopted RAD were aware enough that, while very, very, very supportive us, were not comfortable having us in their home with their herd of children. One side of our family just flat out accepted our explanations, no questions. No help either, but no challenges. The other side has been completely unsupportive. It is hard for family, especially insular family, to understand that these children weren't raised by us and their 'culture' looks a bit different. We are still trying to work through that. I am hoping it resolves with people speaking to each other!
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After the birth of my son which was last year, he always seemed annoyed and unhappy. When I consult the doctor regarding this, they told me it is due to Reactive Attachment Disorder. When I searched on the internet for some information regarding it, I got scared. I am attaching a website for reference Can anyone help me in explaining to me that is this disease is something that I should be worried about? Because I am very worried about my son."https://www.scientificanimations.com/3d-medical-animation-describing-reactive-attachment-disorder/"
Last update on February 26, 3:59 am by Himanshu Tiwari.
I agree with the previous poster about being prepared for others to think you are the one with the problem. We have struggled with this a lot. Our family, who really has no reason not to believe us, seems to think we are overreacting to "normal" kid stuff. We get that a lot. "Oh, that's normal", people will say. While some of hte behaviors might seem normal, they are always done with not normal intentions. There is ALWAYS a motive with our son. Nothing is ever done innocently. That was hard to get used to. But now that we know it, we call the behaviors out. Before he would try and make me think I was crazy and would look all sad acting as if I was mean to insinuate that he was doing things on purpose. But he did actually confess some of the things that he had been doing on purpose. Asking questions to be annoying. Staring at me in the mirror (he sits behind me in the car and would stare into my mirror at me...kind odd/creepy). Our son is more passive aggressive, at least for now. He does have meltdowns but they have not been destructive in our home. In the previous home he was more destructive. So I was kind of waiting for that. He has a lot of school behaviors and his teachers really coddle him. It's nice to have teachers that care but we have to spell out why he is doing things at school. And he misbehaves a lot more at school because he gets away with it there. But overall the most frustrating thing is having family act like we are the ones who are crazy. It has also been hurtful. He will go over to my parents house and talk baby talk and try to be so cute and innocent and make us look like we are so mean or something. My mom thinks we are hard on him. But we have to be very strict with him. Any variance in the schedule or expectations and he is showing behaviors. So we very much stick to the straight and narrow for him. I was trying to explain to my mom that when she fed into his behaviors she was just being manipulated. And she told me she didn't want to feel like she couldn't be herself or change how she interacted with kids so she would just be a part of the manipulation. So in doing that, she is kind of hurting us and playing into the behaviors we are trying to stop. So we have had to limit our times over there. And I pretty much don't expect much family support anymore. Which is sad. So I think RAD can definitely be isolating unless you have understanding support.