05/07/2022
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I got together with some old friends recently. As we caught up on our lives, conversation turned to our childhood stories—specifically our childhood traumas.
We shared intergenerational stories of gross neglect, unwanted marriages, unwanted children, emotionally unavailable parents, infidelity, abuse, war, displacement, abandonment. So much pain and suffering.
But despite all that we’ve gone through and all that we carry, healing is possible. There are those that are doing the work to heal and not pass down (or pass down less of) the trauma to the next generation.
I’m encouraged and inspired by all you cycle-breaking friends! You are showing me that no matter what we’ve been through, it doesn’t have to have the last word. 💗
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Posted • We've all experienced these events at some point in our childhood. It becomes traumatic when nobody supports or protects us from it repeating, or even helps us regulate our big overwhelming feelings.
The good news is that the brain can always be rewired. No matter how old you are. Yes it takes an awful lot of practice but eventually if you stick with it, you can unlearn the trauma responses. Start with telling yourself 'It happened a long time ago. It is not happening now. I am safe now.'
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HT on IG
29/11/2020
https://www.connecting2life.net/workshop/2020-12-15/online/grieving-circles/
there is so much to grieve in this period. Join the grieving circles and give space for yourself.
Grieving circles - Connecting2Life - The Art of Dialogue
Compassionate online spaces for grieving together Grieving circles Holding pains together 15 Dec 2020, Feb 5th, April 16th, June 10th, 2021 ONLINE sharing circles in English, with Mirjam Schulpen About the Circles Practical information Registration About the circles: If we grieve, it is because we l...
16/12/2019
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This is a MUST read. My cousin is a foster parent with five children. She and her husband recently adopted four out of the five siblings! It has been a joy to watch her in this journey - just like it was a joy watching her grow up. I love how she "keeps it real" when it comes to living the life of fostering and adoption. She shared this on her personal page and I reached out to her to share it here because it is just that good and so very relevant.
Edited for privacy:
"Tonight, after 2.5 years of living here, my oldest son sat down at the table with this. He was about to chow down when I stopped him and asked what in the world he was doing.
He said, “I made myself dinner.”
“But it isn’t cooked. I can cook that you know.” (she said)
“Well, I wanted to eat something I used to eat a lot with my old family.”
So we sat down and I asked him to tell me about it. He said that they wouldn’t feed him due to being passed out (you can guess why) and he would have to make dinner for himself and his brothers (2 and 4 months when they came to us). He said that all the money they had would be spent on ci******es and other fun things (😬) and so he would find change in their van and would buy Ramen packets at the store down the street (at 6!!!!).
He said he didn’t know how to boil water, so he would eat it like this. And, he actually grew to like it. So, he would break it up for his sibling, and would try to make bottles for the baby (at 6!!!!!!).
Guys. I asked him to make me some. And, I sat there beside him and crunched it down with lots of water because it’s not great...and he just started talking about how the first time I made them Ramen, he wouldn’t eat it and I told him I remembered. He said it’s because it reminded him of his Ramen packets and he didn’t trust me (big thoughts for 9!).
He said he isn’t sad he’s not with his “old family” (his words) anymore, but that sometimes HE LIKES TO REMEMBER HOW STRONG HE HAD TO BE.
I write this so everyone knows, trauma isn’t healed quickly (sometimes never), an adoption doesn’t erase the past or the memories, kids can change, they will change with love, and to never give up on a kid because “they are hard”.
And then, I walked away in shock, in sadness, and so so so proud of how strong my baby is. He’s so wonderful. And, we love him so much."
Friends, THIS is the life experience of kids who come from hard places. THIS is living a trauma-informed life. We can't imagine what kids from hard places have lived through. It is not just about one act of abuse or neglect, it is about living in survival mode and doing it day in and day out. It is about making sure younger siblings are also surviving, even at the expense of childhood.
Trauma infuses itself into every pore. Kids just don't forget it. Their brains and bodies won't let them. Those of us privileged enough (yes, I said privileged) to enter into the lives of children with hard life experiences must be willing to sit down, eat uncooked Ramen noodles and listen. We must not give up.
Our kids didn't.
07/12/2019
"I am illiterate, and I live on daily wage, but my daughters' education is very valuable to me because there is no female doctor in our area," he says. "It is my greatest desire to educate my daughters like my sons".
Father Travels 12 Km Daily To Take Daughters To School, Wins Hearts
Mia Khan, a resident of Sharana in Afghanistan, has won social media's respect with his daily routine, which involves travelling 12 kilometers to take his daughters to school every day.
30/09/2019
Such a powerful message!
Shout out to the parents healing their own childhood wounds so they can show up in their relationships with their own kids. Shout out to ANYONE doing this work, parent or not. It isn’t easy work, but it is important work. If you want to know more about how to heal your childhood wounds, check out our episode on re-parenting. It’s the most recent episode and is available to stream from our website, Apple Podcast, Spotify, and Stitcher. If you would like to support Parenting is Political, you can sign up to become a monthly subscriber by following the link 🖤
https://app.moonclerk.com/pay/1azinsoxyfez
08/08/2019
This... all these! One of the best parenting articles I have read!
“We need to love them like our child but send them off as adults.”