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Parenting Help

Adopted children searching for Birth Parents

This is a question that many adopted parents including experts have mixed opinions on. Should we tell them and encourage them to search their birth parents? If so, when and how. How can we encourage them to search for their birth parents if we don’t even know how and where ourselves. If you happened to have adopted your child from China, where do you start the search?

Normally adopted children don’t have the urge to start questioning until they reach adolescence. A time that’s challenging even with your birth children. Parents are often tempted to escape perhaps by abandoning their teenagers who are having toddler-like tantrums, but you and your family will benefit more if you remain calm, stand up for the values you have taught, and continue communication efforts.

For some adolescents, searching can be useful, while for many, the urgent activities and decisions of daily life are so pressing that they feel uninterested in or unable to confront such a heavy emotional undertaking. Waiting till they have reached adulthood when their lives will be more settled may be better for the latter group.

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Don’t be afraid to ask for help with your adopted child

Many adopting parents feel strongly that it’s their duty to take good care of their adopted children. And they are afraid to ask for help when they need some. Parents, will sometimes all feel overwhelmed when it comes to child rearing. Especially if this is their first time being parents. Every parent needs help once in awhile. Adopted children just make things a little more complicated especially if the children were adopted older.

If you feel overwhelmed and see behavior problems, seek help. You can get help from organizations, support groups, other adopted parents, and grandparents. Talk to other parents and teachers.

When do you need help with parenting

In recent years, there are more organizations and sources offering adopted parents in parenting. Usually it’s the parent who first notices something is not right. Or sometimes a family member might point out something is wrong with the adopted child. Don’t feel that you’re a bad parent if you feel overwhelmed in parenting. Being a parent is exciting and challenging enough.

Educate yourself as much as possible on child development stages. Sometimes children’s certain behaviors are part of the developing stage, sometime not. You may see behavior that is unusual or not characteristic of your child; sometimes it is the increasing degree of a certain behavior that is troubling. Asking for help is healthy, for you and the child.

Source: Child Welfare Information Gateway