93 [S5] David

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/93

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 93, David. I’m your host Haley Radke. David and I discuss his experiences of alcohol addiction and sobriety, how our lives as adoptees are so much more than just our adoption story, and what is working right now in the recovery field. David himself is an independent addiction consultant and clinical substance abuse counselor. So he definitely knows what’s going on. And as a side note, I almost lost my voice when we were recording this episode. And I was coughing away, which you’ll never hear because my editor is awesome. So David was really kind and just kept the interview going without much taxing on my voice. So just think of him as very kind to a very, very sick podcaster. And we wrap up with some great recommended resources for you. And as always, links to everything we’re going to be talking about are on the website adopteeson.com. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley - I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, David Bohl, welcome David!

David - Thank you Haley, glad to be here, thanks for making the time for me!

Haley – I want to tell you a little story before we get started. You are the very first person I ever met in person that came up to me and said, I listen to your podcast!

David - Oh really? Wow, I hadn’t realized that.

Haley - Yep. So I will never forget when we met. We met at the Indiana Adoptee Network Conference about a year and a half ago and that was just a really great event. And so I remember talking to you then and saying, oh you should come on my show! And you were like, no, no, I gotta finish my book first. And so here we are, here you are and you have your memoir all finished which we’ll talk about a little later on. But I’d love it if you would share your story with us.

David - Sure. Absolutely. If I can, I’ll just introduce myself real briefly.

Haley - Sure.

David - You hinted at it, but my name is David Bohl, middle initial B is Brian. I am a relinquishee and I am an adoptee. And I make that differentiation very specifically, because they’re two very different events. But that’s important for the purpose of our call today. But more than that, I am a husband of 34 years and I’m a father of two wonderful adult children. I live in the Midwest of the United States. And for a living I am an independent addiction consultant and a licensed clinical substance abuse counselor. And finally, part of that identity is that I’m a person in long term recovery from alcoholism. And saying that, I'm gonna try to combine in our discussion today, as many of those aspects as I possibly can because I think that’s most helpful to me when I listen to people on your podcast. When people are telling that integrated assimilated narrative, it’s so profound to me. So I’ll do my best to do that. But thanks for having me. I want to start out by maybe describing my traditional relinquishment or adoption story. and then maybe add to that later on just to share some learning that I've had since that time. So real simply, I was adopted as an infant. I was told from the very beginning, my earliest recollection, that I was adopted. It was never a mystery although I can say that I had no idea what it meant at the time. But that was the case. My adoptive parents were very open with telling me that I was adopted. Though they didn't really talk about much beyond that. They did share with me that my birth parents were a football player at the University of Wisconsin and my mother was a red headed cheerleader at that school. But beyond that, how they would know that without knowing more information was always a mystery to me, but that’s what the narrative was, but that’s all I knew about where I came from. But I grew up in a very supportive environment. My parents were upwardly mobile, and they wanted me of course. And I never wanted for any of the daily needs. I was fed, I was clothed, I had shelter, I was safe. So it was a great environment. And my friends knew I was adopted. It was part of the everyday conversation. My family talked about it, they didn't hide it. I mentioned it on occasion when I felt that I could trust some people. And sometimes they'd ask more questions. Sometimes they'd say, well gosh that’s interesting, do you wanna find out more about your birth family? And of course, I shut down that discussion. My thoughts at the time were wait a minute, I've got this wonderful adoptive family who’s taking care of me, I don't wanna jinx any of that. We’re not gonna do that. I just, I have no need to talk about those “people who gave me away”. That was my approach. Was very defensive about it and of course, I didn't allow myself to consider beyond that. Because the mind confounds things, the mind makes up stories. As a child I remember thinking something’s wrong with me. Something had to be wrong with me to be given away. So that was the case. And over the years I grew into a good relationship with my family and I thought I had a good childhood. Except that, it came with some struggle that I can describe a little bit to you. As a child I was timid anxious and my mother corroborates this. If someone were to ring the door I would hide behind her. Who knows that just might be my introverted personality. But it might have to do with my experiences as well. But I built a certain level of trust with this family. And grew into my teen years and by that time, I found alcohol. I was 13 years old when I found alcohol. It became a frequent routine. It didn’t seem like a big deal at the time. I grew up with a group of friends and a culture where those things didn't seem out of the ordinary. They were taboo, you shouldn’t be doing them at age 13 of course not, but so many people were doing it, it didn't seem like anything that was too scary or risky or anything else. But this culture permeated the community in which I lived and many of the communities in which us adoptees grow up. And of course the cool kids were doing these things. And I wanted to hang out with those cool kids. And I did. We went to parties, we had a life that was certainly entrenched in alcohol use throughout or school years but we made it through and I got through high school. I got to college and I really struggled. I struggled leaving my home environment I struggled leaving my core group of friends. I struggled meeting new people and I struggled with everything. I questioned everything and at first, I don't know why but at first I chose to go to a Jesuit University. And I had had no religious upbringing or training and I rationalized that, these Jesuit instructors, these professors and my counselors, they just don't understand me. Our philosophies are too different and Ieft that college. I was just so uncomfortable I had to get out of there. And I went to another college where I thrived for the most part and got through it. And I describe got through it, that’s been most of my experiences in life. There's some great times but mostly as I look back, I got through those times and shortly after college I got married. And I started building a life with my wife. And of course we’re very pragmatic although we were dreamers at the time and we decided we were gonna wait 5 years before trying to have children so that we could better get to know one another. And of course 15 months after that, my daughter was born. Great planning, my son was born 2 years after that. We were delighted. Not a lot of thought was given to what does this look like compared to my experiences, we just were together as a couple. We wanted to raise a family and they were welcomed. And of course I must say I never really thought about adopting at that time. My perception, my very narrow perception of adoption at that time was, adoption is for people who can’t have kids, right? That’s the way my thinking went. So it wasn’t even a consideration. At the time though, my wife suggested, you know David, it might really be a good idea for you to attempt to find some genetic family medical history. That’s okay that you’re not really crazy about knowing all the details but you know, we have children now and I think we owe that to them. And you know, sometimes we hate it when our spouses are right. And she was right but darn it, I wasn’t going to do anything about it at that time because I wasn’t ready to.  And by the way I rationalized, I was healthy. What’s there to talk about? As I’ve gone throughout my whole life, I've heard what many adoptee adults have done, I took that box of information, I put it on the shelf, and I just didn't wanna deal with it for a while. I couldn’t. I was emotionally overloaded by it and I couldn’t do it. And that’s the way things stayed generally for the first 20 years of my marriage. What didn't stay the same, however, was my drinking and that not only did that continue, but it increased year over year. And the consequences increased. It strained my relationship, but I never thought I was at the point where it was a problem that I couldn’t handle. But later on and as you know through my introduction, that probably wasn’t the case. But then something happened. In the year 2004, I had a second grand mal seizure in my sleep. And it was terrifying. By the time I remember coming to, my wife was there, the room was filled with paramedics, I didn't know my name, I didn't know the date, I didn't know where I was. My blood pressure was 40 over 10, it was terrifying and it terrified my wife and they put me through a battery of tests. Not only because it’s severe, but this was my second one. Which means that the origins could be very serious. But they never determined the origins of where those seizures were from. And I went to a neurologist who I really liked and I didn't always trust doctors for any number of reasons, but this neurologist was very, made an impression upon me. And he asked about my family medical history. He’s trying to get to the deep down causes of these seizures. And I said, you know, I don't have any family medical history. And you know how it goes, in the past, I’ve told doctors that and it’s a conversation ender. You know you say that and it's like they ignore they asked the question, they pretend it doesn’t happen, there’s no follow-up, there’s no, how do you feel about that, is there something we could do about it? That’s what I expected from this doctor. But his answer was different. He said, you know, I understand how that might be tough for you to deal with. But this is really important. This is important for your health and ultimately it’s important for your children’s health. So I would suggest that you do whatever’s necessary to get that genetic history. And of course my wife supported him.

Haley – Wow.

David - Not for me but for the children. And I had to reconsider my position at that time. Because my position was a rationalization, right? I was saying I didn't wanna know those people, but I also didn't wanna harm the family or feel ungrateful to the people who raised me. I didn't know how to balance all of that. I was an adoptee, I was great at adapting, right? What do I have to do to get along around here? I don't wanna upset the apple cart. Now I have to go into some areas that are not only unknown, but potentially might also bring out some emotions in some other people. So I live in a state where we have closed birth records. And the process is, one can petition the state through a form, through the Department of Child and Family Services to obtain some non-identifying information. And yes, I was a product of a closed adoption so I had to do that. And yeah, I obtained that file, and of course it was heavily redacted. As a matter of fact I remember half the pages looked like they were blacked out and of course that was emotionally frustrating. I felt like I was being manipulated. Why can't I have the information about me? But at the same time, there was a lot of trepidation. I’m now getting some information about a part of my life that I knew nothing about. And of course it described some medical history, it talked about my grandmother’s heart disease and my grandfather’s Alzheimer’s. But nothing that would point to any family history of seizures. So okay, that’s that. So what do I do about this. Do I work harder, do I press, what do I need to do? And as I was contemplating this of course I'm thinking about this very slowly. A couple months later I received a second letter from the state of Wisconsin and they informed that my birth mother had died of alcoholism in 1996, 8 years before we were corresponding at this time. And this is really strange and really scary for me. Number 1, there’s no death certificate that says someone died of alcoholism. Someone dies of cardiac arrest, they die of liver failure, they die of a horrible accident, but they don't die of “alcoholism” so that was really curious to me. And secondly, you know, I hadn’t even considered the possibility that my birth mother had passed. I’m thinking about reunion and all the things I read about it. And it never occurred to me that she had gone beyond.

Haley - Of course.

David - Yeah, it was heavy. It was heavy. Another experience to get through as an adoptee. So looking back on it I know that it was part of the process, but at the time I had no idea what to do. So I shared what I could with my wife and kids and it was better than nothing, certainly, kinda ruled out anything fatal in terms of diagnosing seizures. But it didn't really allow me to understand where those seizures were coming from. So we were cautious, I was given medication, lots of checkups and knock on wood nothing has happened since then. But again like so many times us adoptees do, I took those thoughts as best I could and a compartmentalized them. I put them on a shelf. Even that part about that little knowledge about alcoholism, I didn't really wanna get into that because I was drinking pretty heavily at that time. But it got to a point where I just couldn’t ignore those emotions anymore. Couldn’t allow the, I guess, the, what I would call the discord between what I knew what I felt and what I didn't know or what was trying to come out. So it became really clear. I had to do this work and to do this work, I wasn’t gonna be able to do it in a way I was drinking. So I had to stop drinking and clear my head and I did. I went and got some help and I was able to stop drinking and that allowed me to get serious about that work that I needed to do. To build that motivation and to get the clarity about what’s going on. And of course like many adoptees, I’m not really good at moderation. I do something full on or I don't do it at all. And that’s been my adoptee experience of course. I jumped right in and what I did is I hired an attorney to petition the state courts and the state of Wisconsin for my full adoption records. And this was unheard of but I was encouraged. I met an adoption attorney who said you know, because your mother has passed, that judge might just think okay, we don't have to protect her anonymity like we have had to before. And maybe grant you those records although it was described as a long shot because very few people actually get those records from the state. And it took many months, but the attorney went before the judge, I had to write letters, describe my situation, all kinds of things, but the judge heard how important this information could be and she granted me that access to my full birth records including my original birth certificate. And that was a big deal. And as I’m doing this I’m learning in adoptee circles just how important that is and how it’s sometimes difficult or impossible it is in some jurisdictions to get that information and here I’ve been able to do that simply by spending a few hundred dollars on an attorney. And of course using some emotional tools along the way. But here this file comes in the mail in this big, thick, fat envelope and I had no idea what to expect. What’s an adoption file, what does that look like other than my original birth certificate? But I opened it up and I devoured that information and of course it contained my family history and it listed a rudimentary family tree and described ages and relationships. But it also talked about my mother a lot. And I never expected that. It contained clinical notes from the doctors and the social workers from the home for unwed mothers, where my mother spent 5 months before she gave birth. So I was, and here I am reading notes, clinical social workers writing about my mother and I felt, oh my gosh, now I’m really behind the wall. My mother hasn’t seen these, no one outside of this clinical realm has seen these. Am I, should I, are these secret? Should I be reading this? I mean it was phenomenal and it really, took me to really weird place. And of course it listed her name and it listed her mother’s and father’s name and that to me was unbelievable. I mean it was cathartic. It was like, okay, I have this identity. I’m starting to understand that I do have a history before I was relinquished and I have a history after, since before being adopted and that’s cool. And of course all of these records are very official hospital records. They’re all on what were typewritten forms as they didn't have word processors in1960. But there was one exception. I looked at one of the social worker’s notes and there was a name scribbled in the margin in ink on one of those forms. And that name turned out to be my biological father. And that of all things, blew me away even more because his name was not on my birth certificate, only my mother’s name was. All the files related to the fact that “paternity was not established” that is, there was no legal link to me and my father. My mother may have divulged that apparently to the social worker who wrote that name down. And I’m thinking, I’m in the business, I’m thinking boy, that was either a horrible mistake or an interesting way of the social worker giving me some clues to my identity. But who knows right? I don't wanna assign motivation to these people. But it was cathartic. And wow, I mean this opened up an entirely new perspective for me. And I never even thought about my father, I was told I couldn’t. It was all about my mother and it was with that information, that the real journey began. That was just the start. That was me allowing myself to venture into some really scary, fearful territory. But now, here’s some information about the people who had conceived me, their families, and maybe even, if anything, what remained of all that today. And it’s really interesting because I learned a lot of stuff and I learned a lot of stuff not only from notes from the social worker, but what that actually led me to was to two half siblings. I actually have met and communicated with a sister from my mother’s side of the family and I have communicated with a half brother from my birth father’s side of the family. And all of this including some information was from some other relatives and I’ve been able to put together a brief narrative about my parents and my birth parents and it’s really interesting because it gave me a new sense of empathy that I never even had before. I talked about the way my father grew up in the tiny town he grew up in and how he was a popular kid and a three sport athlete and he had to go to the reserve officer training to be able to afford college because they were economically disadvantaged at the time. And how he went to the University of Wisconsin as it turns out in 1956, he played football, basketball, and lived in a fraternity and worked and when he met mother, right? There was a narrative of how the relationship started that produced me and he met my mother Karen in his senior year. And my father’s name as it turned was Dick. So then I learned about Karen. Karen grew up in Chicago and her father was an executive for a firm in Chicago and they moved all the time and she spoke to the social worker on many occasions about wondering if it was even worth the bother trying to build relationships anymore because they moved around all the time. And how lonely and isolated she was growing up and even more so now that she was forced to, “forced” to relinquish this child. And so she talked about having a nervous breakdown. And getting together with my father, her sophomore year of college and guess what, this is no secret to the readers, but you know, they got together, Karen became pregnant, Karen went to Dick my father, and said, hey I’m pregnant, we need to do something about this. Dick said, boy, I don't think I’m the father, what do you mean we need to do something about this. Karen said, you know, as a female I can tell you I know that you're the father in the way only a female can know. But he disagreed and there were stints of notes on this about the discussion going back and forth. Besides, he was quite sure that upon graduation, which was going to happen before I was born, that he was going to be drafted into the Vietnam War. He said, he reasoned, what kind of a father am I gonna be? Being in a war, what kind of a husband am I gonna be and by the way I don't know if I’m gonna make it back. So as they did in that age, 1960, that was the heart of the Baby Scoop era, the families decided to put me up for adoption. And this is really interesting because that meant that my mother like so many young mothers at the time, as Ann Fessler mentioned in her book, The Girls Who Went Away, this was the story of my mother’s life. She was shipped off to a place an hour away from her home, she stayed there for the last 5 months of her pregnancy, only her father visited her on Sundays. I don't know why her mother didn't come and see her. But while she was there, her mother unexpectedly died of a heart attack so she had to go home for that funeral, but there are no notes about did they conceal the pregnancy, what was that like, it just must have been a horrible time for my birth mother. But she stayed in this home and she worked in their laundry and she worked in the area residence hall and earned her keep. And then gave birth to me on August 12th, 1960. And she of course immediately signed those relinquish papers irrevocably terminating her parental rights and returned a few days later after going through some horrific hemorrhaging that I read the doctor’s notes about. Well her father was living at home, he was a widower but he was spending time with her mother’s best friend and it was a really awkward situation for her to go home to. But that’s where the notes ended. After that, what I do know is that, from talking with relatives, Dick was drafted, my father was drafted into the Air Force that summer and sent to Vietnam to supervise building of Air Force landing strips and he and my mother never spoke again. And that’s really interesting because years later I learned that my father actually had preceded my mother in death. My mother died of alcoholism in 1996, my birth father died of a brain tumor in 1983. And again, right, as an adoptee, oh my gosh, we never consider things like this. We don't talk about this, they're not in the realm of possibility. We think we’re gonna maybe reunite with these people as they are today. We have no idea that they have left, so we second guess everything. What was I doing that today in 1993, should I have known and all the rest of that stuff. But anyway, that’s my traditional adoptee story and of course, having said all that, I’ve had to do a lot of work since learning all of that stuff. Because we all do, right?

Haley - Just a bit.

David - Right, just a little information that we adoptees get when we open that can.

Haley - Wow.

David - And a lot has happened since then and what I did learn most of all was that I couldn’t isolate being relinquished and adopted as just one thing, it wasn’t a stand alone thing. It was a part of my identity. It was part of my narrative and I had to integrate that into my life and understand it as best I could. So I talk about, in other circles or in a more evolved way I guess I would say, my version 2.0 of my adoption experience which is inclusive of some new perspectives, including becoming more self-knowledgeable and self-aware and of course that meant that again, as I said, I wasn’t just adopted, I was relinquished at birth and I was adopted 7 days later by my adoptive family. And I don't really know where I spent those 7 days. But I likely stayed in that hospital for unwed mothers. And I was delivered to my adoptive home by a social worker and there I stayed. I’ve learned that anxiety or being anxious was my disposition and actually it shows in personally test that I take. If I really push the issue, would I maybe some attention deficit, I don't know, but that was just part of who I am from the very beginning. And it certainly see how that might play out later in life. But I started to assimilate into that family and I started to develop the ability to socialize and trust a little bit. Because obviously my basic needs were being met and that changed in a deeply profound way at age 6 and I remember this very clearly because not only is it an experience that changed my perspective on anything, it’s my first clear memory of my childhood and I remember hanging out with a couple of buddies. It was after school, they were talking about their family and their brothers and sisters and one of them was from a really large family and I of course casually mentioned to them, hey I was adopted. And I remember it was a conversation stopper just like I had described with the doctor back in the days. They stopped talking, they stopped moving and they're looking at me and of course I expected a reaction, right? Surely they were going to think was cool. Surely they were gonna think this was novel, surely they were gonna think that I was this gift. The way my parents had told me over the years that I was gonna be. But it wasn’t. As a matter of fact, by the look on their faces, I could see it was so uncool, I instantly wished with those 6 year olds that I had never said it. And they instantly called me a liar. You’re lying, there’s no way, why would you say that. And of course, what we do, what I do, is I go into that defensive survival mode and I push away. And I needed help, I needed help desperately. I said, you gotta come home to my mom, she can straighten all of this out, she’s gonna tell you. And I needed my mom to affirm me. and I took the kids home and my mom calmly and confidently told them yes I was adopted. We loved him and he’s our, part of our real family, and that’s the way it is, you guys have any questions and of course they didn't. But I looked at them and I saw in their faces, nothing but confusement and judgement. I mean, I can still picture those faces today and I’m 58 years old. And right then and there, that adoption wasn’t this cool or amazing thing or this good thing that my parents had told me that it was. I learned from my perspective right then and there that adoption was bad and that I was bad. This is something I should have kept in the closet. I shouldn’t have talked about. And it was horrific and I came upon this poem by A. A. Milne. A. A. Milne is a guy who wrote Winnie the Pooh and the series, and I also read a bunch of children’s verses and it’s this poem that talks about being 6 years old. It talks about, “when I was 1 I had just begun, and when I was 2 I was nearly new, and when I was 3 I was hardly me, when I was 4, I was not much more, and when I was 5 I was just alive, but now I’m 6 and I’m clever as ever. So now I think I’ll be 6 forever and ever.” And to me that’s the way I thought I was. I thought I was letting these guys in on something that was so magnificent, I was clever, I was gonna be this unique guy that they liked and you know what? It wasn’t that. My life was never the same before that. I felt like I was naïve before then, thinking that adoption was this great thing and that I was special and that I was chosen. And they taught me that adoption was something to be ashamed of and that was the thing that I had to deal with as I was going through and getting all this information. And of course I felt betrayed. I felt betrayed by my parents and of course I jumped to the conclusion that my parents must have lied to me because something’s wrong with me right? They're trying to save my feelings here because something really bad about me made my biological parents give up on me. And of course I immediately felt disconnected and I mean that relationally disconnected from others, from life, from myself and for a long time, for my life going forward, if you’ll bear with me, this just figures into that. The addiction component and the other component because it defines the perspective about my life. And I had to continue to grow that narrative I had to try to figure out what did that mean, how did that play out in my life, how did those perceptions at the time involve my decision making or it is. Oprah often says about trauma or advanced or adverse childhood experiences is, what happened to me, right? Not what’s wrong with me, but what experiences did I have and what did they have to look like. Looking back on it, Haley, and I hope I’m not dominating the conversation. What I know is this. I know that growing up I always felt like I was different and I didn't belong and that I lacked the very instructions to live life. And I know a lot of adoptees have this in common with me. I also struggled with my identity and I didn't know who I was, ‘cause I just didn't have the biological markers to draw from. And I truly believed that I suffered from what has been characterized as an identity crisis. And that term identity crisis was coined by a German psychologist by the name of Erik Erikson, who by the way, was adopted as well, where I fail to achieve this healthy ego strength or a self-identity during my adolescence. What ultimately happened is I struggled with a lot of relational issues like attachment and I had no idea who to trust or how to trust and that was including myself. And of course I agonized. Just like many adoptees do. I struggled. I always felt alone and isolated and misunderstood. And the problem of course as a youth is, that later developed in the same thing into adult years, I didn't have the vocabulary to describe these things, let alone trust anyone enough to talk with them about this. I shared my memoir with my adoptive mother. As soon as it was published she read it and she came to me and she said, you know, I wish you would have just told me this was going on. There was so much that could have been done. And I said mom, this is not on you, I couldn’t describe this to you if I had to at the time. It’s taken me 50 some years to figure out this narrative. And how to work through it. And of course, it was all about shame. It was what I call that trifecta of self-conscious emotions that come out in terms of abandonment and betrayal and shame. And of course as  this all going on, I’m aging and I’m dealing with this and I’m trying to go through the psychosocial development stages that Erikson talks about. And then something amazing happened. Something life changing happened to me where I saw things immediately differently. And unfortunately what that was was that, I stumbled upon alcohol. And I stumbled upon it as a solution and I differentiate that. You know many young folks say that they, when they tried alcohol, they tried drugs when they were younger, it helped them with that social discomfort that they had. It helped them to socialize a little bit and that may have been partially true for me. But it was immensely more than that. I felt that with that first drink of alcohol that I had, that I had found a connection. That I had connected with people. That those people that I was drinking with and spending time with had found a deeper level of connection than anyone else on the earth could have found. And that’s what alcohol gave me, which is a really interesting perspective at the time. But it was like a medication for what ailed me at the time even though I couldn’t define what ailed me. That’s to say that people who experience addictions stop in that psychosocial, that personal development, the moment that they begin to use alcohol and drugs in addictive ways. And when I say they, that’s what the researchers say. We stop developing because we found a very unhealthy coping mechanism from which to rely upon and then when I look back on that time, Haley, when I was 13 years old, I can now say, almost without a doubt, that I was immediately drinking alcoholically because alcohol altered my perceptions. It changed my reality, it changed the connectedness I felt.

Haley – Well I haven’t heard that before, that if you start in that addictive behavior, it can stunt your growth. Like, I didn't know that. Like, your emotional growth.

David - Absolutely. Absolutely. So without getting into the research too deeply, we go through several phases as we get socialized and develop as individuals and sometimes we have to have challenges and we have to overcome challenges. We have to find resources for those challenges. But what happens is, if I find alcohol and every time I have a problem or every time I’m emotionally overwhelmed I turn to alcohol, I don't learn those healthy coping mechanisms to get through life so I’m stuck in that time before all of these things started to happen and throughout the time that I’m using chemicals or alcohol in a very unhealthy way.

Haley - Oh.

David - And it makes sense actually, right?

Haley - Yeah.

David - I think it makes sense for a lot of people. And that’s what happened for me. Of course what happened like it happens with many other people is that, it stopped becoming a medicine. It was no longer that magic elixir that it was when I was 13 years old, it was progressive. And it caused health problems for me and it caused more emotional problems for me and actually turned into a poison for me. I became a full blown alcoholic. I had alcohol use disorder, there’s no doubt. So no longer is it a solution to my problems, it is now one of my bigger problems and I can't do any of the work on my adoption because I’m now fighting this emotional psychological nightmare that became this alcohol addiction. And it didn't happen overnight of course, it took many many years, but it did. So back to the other story. I knew I had to get sober, I knew I had to stop drinking if I was ever able going to delve into this emotional journey that I had to take that related to my relinquishment and adoptions. And to do that, I did. As I said before, I got clean and sober, I had to go to treatment to do that and I had to do a ton of work just to do it, but it was exactly what I needed to do to continue this process.

Haley – And then what brought you to your career now as an independent addiction consultant and abuse counselor?

David - Yeah, clinical substance abuse counselor.

Haley - Thank you.

David - Well I, you’re welcome. Well initially what I did, I was doing this work, I actually trained as a life coach and I had a private practice life coaching business. And it helped me to not only do my own work and it reminded me to do my own work because I totally believe that as someone who’s in the helping profession, if one hasn’t done their own work, they don't have any business working with others. It led me to some things, and ultimately to make a long story really short, I ran into a gentleman who turned out to be a mentor. And he invited me to speak about my experiences in front of a group of people that he was treating. And ultimately after I chatted with him, he said, you know, David if you don't do this for a living, you’re missing your true calling. And it was, within a 2 months I was enrolled in graduate school, I was starting to earn my master’s degree in addiction counseling and I started a profession in that world. But it meant that  I had to keep doing my own work and of course that work means always questioning your perceptions because they developed in a time when we were under acute chronic stress of that adoption trauma. And again like you asked a moment ago, I had to pick up on that process of personal development including learning those healthy coping mechanisms for all the challenges that come in life and all the new challenges that sometimes do that. And ultimately it’s about better understanding ourselves and how do I more completely answer that question, who am I, right? And that’s one of those lifelong gifts of adoption isn’t it?

Haley - Right.

David - It’s giving, right? We have to constantly work on ourselves and be diligent about, what do I know about myself today, what is true, what is reality here? And what may be derailing me in turns of my own perceptions or my own way of looking at life? And I know I have to do this. As a professional but also as an adoptee, to stay healthy and I mean physically, psychologically, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually healthy. I have to do this work, diligently. So I did that. I did that and part of that is not just figuring out the facts, figuring out the facts of my family tree. And a lot of people talk about closure and any number of things in grieving. And adoption practice and then they talk about closure. And I gave up on that term a long time ago. Because as an adoptee, I have realized that I have, I won't say that I’ll never get closure, but seeking closure is not a healthy place for me to be. What I need to be looking for is context, Haley. I need to understand the situation that occurred to make me think and perceive things a certain way so that I could deconstruct them and see what reality is really all about. And to that, it’s not just about finding out about my birth family and socializing with half brothers and a half aunt all those things, it’s about looking at other dynamics that are in play, right? hat other dynamics are in play in the adoption world that are playing out here and what other dynamics should I know about addiction that are going on here, right? I mean if I look at, when I finally started to do the research and all the work I should have been doing for decades, I learn the things that you know and that some of your listeners know, but many of the people you’ve had on your show as experts now and that’s simply adult adoptees have a higher degree of mental health issues. And both adults and adolescents who are adopted are more likely to get counseling. And adopted persons have a much increased risk of having a substance use disorder or some other type of addiction. But not only do they have problems with drug and alcohol use, they might have higher rates of eating disorders or attention deficit disorder or suicide attempts and completions and the one that really blew my mind when I read about this was, adoptees ultimately have higher risks of untimely pregnancies. Then I looked into the personality disorders and guess what, adoptees are more likely to have antisocial personality disorder and borderline personality disorder and all of this. So I had to look at that and however we wanna quantify this, I don't wanna over diagnose, I don't wanna scare anybody into saying that adoption caused all these mental health issues but ultimately even though on the outside, sometimes I look like anyone else, right? I look like a non-adopted person, I experience things that needed to be overcome just like many of your listeners and you have experienced. I experienced loss, I experienced grief, I had identity development issues, I lacked self-esteem, I didn't have any information about my medical background and that included mental health and addiction predispositions that might have existed in my bloodlines. Then I had to do that work and say okay, now I know a little bit about adoption. I’ve been working hard and I’ve been studying addiction. Is there a relationship between the two. And what I could tell you today unequivocally, there’s absolutely a relationship between the two. There’s a cause and effect, although the research is still out on that. I can't really say because again, these are really complex presentations. People’s lives are complex and adoption is complex and addiction is complex. But there’s some work in this and there’s this psychologist out there by the name of Paul Sunderland who talks about the intersection between adoption and addiction. And if anyone’s listening, if you just google Paul Sunderland, or you google adoption addiction, he’s the first thing to pop up. And his YouTube talk talks about all this and ultimately what he says is what I know to be true today and what I can certainly support the research is, that those who have been relinquished and those who have been adopted, who also have addiction should be looked at as having a co-occurring mental health disorder of trauma and addiction. Some type of PTSD, might be developmental PTSD and addiction. And that’s really important because that means we have to work all the harder to look at this and develop that coherent narrative that helps inform, I guess healthy behaviors going forward. So what we know is that this combination produces an immense amount of chronic stress for an individual. We know that 50- 66% or half to two thirds of the people who have trauma also have an addiction. That’s off the charts, right?

Haley - Wow.

David - People who have PTSD that one form of trauma, are 2 to 4 times more likely to battle addiction than people without PTSD. I mean these are important facts that I had no idea about. Right here I’m living my life and I just didn't have the info because I didn't allow myself to go into this territory. Now I’m into this territory ‘cause I have to be. I have to be to survive. Existentially, to be happy and safe and sound, I have to do this work now. And I’m glad that I did. It’s not like I felt like I wasn’t going to do the work, it just, you know, it can be overwhelming sometimes. What I found out ultimately is that adoption and alcoholism is really complex just like trauma and substance use disorders are and it means that there's a really complex and costly clinical course when dealing with either of those other two things alone. So what that means is that there is increased chronic physical health problems and we tend to socialize, we have higher rates of suicide, we have more legal problems, we have an increased risk of violence we have worst treatment adherence because we have both trauma and addiction. And they have less improvement in treatment than people who either have just addiction or have just the trauma. And of course better, what ultimately, I’m telling here that may be of interest to you and your listeners is that better rates of abstinence from any chemicals or behaviors and lower levels of mental health systems are obtained when you treat the trauma and the addiction concurrently, and in an integrated way. You have to take care of them at the same time. Like I said before, I can't compartmentalize addiction separately that I can from my adoption. You can't compartmentalize for example depression separately from an eating disorder. If that’s what one is dealing with. So it made perfect sense but I didn't allow myself to see that and now I know and now that means that I’ve identified a problem and I can do something about it. So of course, you know you’re smart and your listeners are smart so they're asking, wait a minute, are you saying David that trauma of being relinquished as a newborn caused your alcohol addiction, the alcoholism, and I‘m gonna say I don't know. The answer’s I don't know. The jury is still out. What we know is that alcoholism is a primary disorder. It has biological and psychological and environmental components to it. How they combine I don't know. But I can tell you that my mother died of alcoholism so I have the gene that might predispose me to alcohol at some point. I had some environmental situations where I had chronic stress all the time, I didn't feel safe, might that have contributed to it? Yes, but did it cause it? I don't know, I have to let time and researchers determine if that’s true or not. But what I do know is this. That you know also, because I've listened to many of your podcasts is that, not thinking about this, or not talking about relinquishment and adoption in a safe space, in a meaningful way, that is, not looking at these causes and conditions that have formed my perceptions as I grew up, continue to feed the shame that’s so inherent in me. And that’s ultimately what happens. From an addiction standpoint, it really complicates things, there’s a doctor in your wonderful country by the name of Dr. Gabor Maté. He has done an immense amount of work addicted individuals who have also had real trauma. They tend to be socioeconomically, greatly disadvantaged and often times homeless on the eastside of Vancouver, Canada and he basically in his book, The Realm of Hungry Ghosts said, I’m gonna paraphrase because I don't have the exact quote is that, addiction is really complex and it’s a complex interaction between human beings and their environment and their perceptions. And we can’t just look at it from one perspective. We need the other things in mind and that’s exactly what I’m describing is the process here. Addiction is biological and chemical and psychological and medical and neurological and emotional and it is social and sometimes it can be political and economic and it certainly has spiritual underpinnings and that’s what Dr. Maté basically talks about. He says, to get anywhere, to get a complete picture of this, we have to shake that kaleidoscope and see what other patterns emerge. And I think we do that as adoptees, it’s not, doesn’t have to be just about addiction and adoption and that combination. It’s about all the aspects of our life and its cohesive narrative that we’re trying to develop, because our stories are very complex and it’s sometimes very difficult to get our arms around them. But for me, that combination of that intersection between relinquishment and adoption and addiction has to be part of the examination. So to say that I’m an alcoholic and nothing else matters, is incomplete, right? it compartmentalizes things. Or to say that I am this disease with these genetic predispositions, it may be true, but new science says that I have a chronic brain disease that produces these dopaminergic dysregulations that cause me to make bad, unhealthy decisions sometimes. Well that may be true but that’s incomplete unless I bring the rest of what’s going on in there. The adoption and the relinquishment. And the flip side, and to say that I had a trauma as a result of being relinquished caused all my ills in life, is only a partial way of looking at it. It may have caused some perceptions that I need to reexamine but it’s not that straightforward. And of course to say I have attachment and identity issues as a result of this chronic development and relational trauma, this chronic stress, that I talked about, it’s true. But I think it’s only a fraction of that kaleidoscope that Dr. Maté describes. So again we have to keep working towards this coherent narrative. All these things are accurate but I need to consider all of them together. And sometimes Haley, that is an immense amount of work. It’s exhausting. I can’t always do it alone, I need others who can be accountability partners to hold me, to keep me to that reality. But that’s what I continue to do, I’m so glad I’ve done it.

Haley - Thank you. My goodness. That is like, we could talk for hours about this, right? It’s so complex and I love how you just call us back to that realization that we’re more than just being adopted, like there’s so many different parts of our lives. And when we’re looking at healing in any aspect if it’s addiction, or other aspects like, there’s more than one thing to kinda look at. So thank you.

David - Well you’re welcome. Isn’t that interesting you know, for people who hang out in recovery fellowships, there’s a standard way of introducing yourself and you’ve seen it in the movies, right? I’m David and I’m an alcoholic. And I did that for many years when I went to those meetings. But it occurred to me that it is immensely reductionist, right? There’s so much more about me than just being an alcoholic. So I’ve actually changed my language and I say my name is David and I’m a person with alcoholism. And that really taught me a lot about adoption, right? Because I used to say I’m a relinquishee and I’m an adoptee and that may be true, but again, that is really limiting. That’s not only who I am, it’s only part of what I am. Part of who I am. So now I say, I’m David, and I was relinquished and I was adopted. It’s not who I am, it’s what hurt, it’s the experience.

Haley - Well, let me lighten this up before we do our recommended resources. So I recently did my very first ever standup comedy set.

David - Yay!

Haley - And my very first line is, I’m Haley Radke and I’m adopted. And it killed. Like, everybody laughed and I wrote that and I wasn’t like, writing it as a joke, it was just, this is how I’m introducing myself. And so later looking back on that I’m like, wow, okay.

David - That was incredibly insightful. As we talked about, there’s so many parallels between recovery from some type of substance abuse and some type of behavioral disorder and recovery from grief and relinquishment and trauma and all of that. The parallels are infinite and you were brilliant to do that. So good for you. I had no idea that you had done that.

Haley - I did, I did. And speaking of parallels, let’s go, let's do our recommended resources. And so your memoir is called Parallel Universes, the Story of Rebirth. And I had the immense privilege of reading it and I just wanna read just a little quote from it here. “There are so many more things to sobriety other than just putting alcohol away. It’s a total revolt. The whole process feels like coming out of a blackout. One that lasted years instead of one night.” And your story, you know, you share all parts of your life. And I remember reading it and thinking, some along the same things that you were just describing to us like, this is your life story and it’s not just about being adopted. You know, you talk so much about your children, and your wife, and your relationships with them and this other beautiful line I really liked. I can’t get it out of my head. You’re talking bout your daughter being born and it says, “Every time a baby is born, a universe is created.” And yeah, try and get that out of your head.

David - And it of course, I’m sorry to interrupt, it obviously means that we have a bigger responsibility to those who come after us, right? I feel an immense responsibility without putting pressure on them to my children to get this right, to build a foundational cohesive narrative that I can pass down to them so they can do the same thing, so they can be emotionally mature as well.

Haley - Absolutely. Yeah. So anyway, I really enjoyed your book and you have such good perspectives on all the different things that kind of led you to where you are now. And so I definitely recommend people pick up a copy. So yeah, again it's called Parallel Universes. And so you can hear more of David’s story. You know he shared what he could in the time we had together. But I would really recommend you pick this up.

David - Thank you.

Haley - Okay David, what did you wanna recommend to us.

David - First and foremost, I think there’s a great resource for any number of adoptees and relinquishees and there are also some resources for some people in that constellation and that’s the Adoption Search Resource Connection, ASRC. You can find them online and you know, their methods and their mission are really straightforward. They try to heal and build community and offer resources to those who have been impacted by what they call separation from ancestral connections. And I love that. We’re not pigeonholing anyone, we’re not calling anyone orphaned or fostered or adopted or all some of the language those who live this life trip over, right? talk about separation from ancestral connections and I think that’s brilliant and that informs all of the resources and what’s going on there. They have support groups and conferences and they list blogs and social media and podcasts and I noticed the other day that I saw your podcast there. So I know that they have some great things going on for adoptees there. So I would, that is a wonderful resource to anyone listening to your call here.

Haley - Yeah, there are so many links on their website for sure for all kinds of things. Yes.

David - Absolutely. Couple of books I would recommend as well and one your listeners may be very familiar with but my, I often hear about The Primal Wound and I have read that book many times. But for me, the way I described my narrative earlier, the most important book I’ve ever read was Coming Home to Self by Nancy Verrier. And it of course it talks about becoming aware and ultimately that’s the shortest version I could give to my story. It’s becoming self-aware and becoming aware of the world around us and it really talks about how false beliefs create that fear that I talked about and it perpetuates having those perceptions rule our everyday life in the moment and going forward. So it is a brilliant book. And the other book right along those lines but it isn’t written specifically to adoptees, but it is I think really important to adoptees. It’s called the Insight Cure. And it’s called Change Your Story, Transform Your Life and it’s written by Dr. John Sharp who’s an MD at Harvard Medical School. And he basically says everybody has a personal narrative that informs their life and makes decisions upon that. But what if part of your assumptions about your narrative were wrong. What if there's that one thing that’s keeping you from really seeing things the way they are and ultimately that hit me right between the eyes. The one thing that held me back for most of my life was that I thought something was wrong with me. It informed my narrative it informed my behavior, it informed my fears, my relationships and everything. And he shows a way that identified that one thing that holding us, that one perception that’s holding us back, and he gives a very wonderful 8 step process of working through that. Not an overnight process and sometimes it requires support but he was brilliant in the way he structured it in lay person’s terms without being a psychologist. A matter of fact I’m remembering in his forward he said, you don't need a psychologist to do this. There may be times when you do, but to do this work, from his book, you don't need to do it. So I would recommend that as a resource as well.

Haley - Oh, that sounds great. I of course, Coming Home to Self is one of my favorites. And I haven’t heard of Insight Cure so I will definitely check that out. Thank you.

David - That’s relatively new, yes.

Haley - Okay, so where can we connect with you online, David?

David - I guess the easiest way is to find me on the web, I’m at davidbbohl.com. David, middle initial B, B-O-H-L.com. and from there you can see about my book, you can link to my social media accounts, you can read the short versions of Who Am I and many of the things we talked about here today.

Haley - And you have a blog on there as well.

David - I do!

Haley - I was reading through some of your writings and they're really insightful. So definitely go check that out.

David - Thank you!

Haley - Thanks so much for our conversation today, it was wonderful to hear some more of your story.

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Haley - Like just behind the scenes, I think my voice sounds so squeaky and just, oh yikes. Anyway, I hope that you could look past that and just enjoy David’s story and really there’s so much wisdom in the things that he has shared. So I hope that you find this episode helpful. As always, I would love to connect with you via my newsletter, adopteeson.com/newsletter and it’s mostly monthly where I send out some essays about things I’m thinking about or working on or things about the show. So if you wanna be in the know, that is the place to be. Adopteeson.com/newsletter. And I want to send once again, a gigantic thank you to my Patreon supporters. I could not do this without your monthly support. As I mentioned at the beginning of the episode, I have an editor who works so hard to make these episodes sound fantastic and I wouldn't be able to have that without your support. And so if you find the podcast valuable, if you want to give me a end-of-year gift, I would love for you to sign up to be a monthly supporter and stand with the other adoptees who are supporting this show and adoptive parents and first parents. I have multiple people from every side of the constellation who are supporting the work of Adoptees On. That’s adopteeson.com/partner to find out more details of how you can stand with us as we produce this show for you every single week. Thanks so much for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

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92 [S5] Stuart

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/92

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 92, Stuart. I’m your host Haley Radke. We are in a series focusing on adoptees and addiction and today my guest is Stuart Watson. Stu shares his stories of how he used his investigative journalist skills to find his his biological parents at age 45. And this discovery that alcoholism and trauma was inextricably linked in his DNA. We wrap up with some recommended resources and as always links to everything well be talking about today will be on adopteeson.com. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley - I'm so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Stuart Watson. Welcome Stuart!

Stuart - Thank you! I appreciate this!

Haley - It’s so good to chat with you in real life almost.

Stuart - Well Haley I’ve heard your voice many times.

Haley - Well I’d love it if you would start the way we always do, would you share your story with us please Stuart?

Stuart - Oh my word. I was born April the 8th 1959 in Macon Georgia at a hospital. My biological mother was a nursing student and my biological father was a marine corps veteran of the south pacific in world war II. He was wounded in action, came home, and became an alcoholic. And he was a lawyer by trade, he went from 10th grade in the US to law school. And so he got a GED and went off to law school. And as part of his alcoholism, he was sent to prison. He would forge checks to keep the drinking going. Even though he was sworn to uphold the law, he wound up in trouble with the law, and went to jail repeatedly over these property crimes. Over a whole series of property crimes and he was given the choice of going to jail and in Atlanta Georgia. Or going to the state mental hospital to dry out. And that mental hospital is in a place called Milledgeville. Which is just like Bellevue in new York and bedlam in London. In Georgia, the United States, if you wanted to say someone was sent to a mental institution, you said they were sent to Milledgeville. Well my mother was a nursing student and she met my father and this mental hospital which was the only one in the state of Georgia and so it was one of the largest in the United States. And next to Piligram Hospital in the state of new York, the central state hospital was founded, built by slaves, and originally called the lunatic asylum. And on the cornerstone it still says lunatic asylum. So they met there where he was a patient and she was a nurse. And they began dating shortly after he got out of this drying out. And she actually said that she sat in on his commitment proceedings and that his diagnosis was acute alcoholism without any kind of mental disorder to go along with it. And so he was not what they would call nowadays dual diagnosed. But at any rate, long story short, she got pregnant and he disappeared. Which is a familiar story in the adoption universe, the constellation. She got pregnant, they weren’t married in 1959 and so I’m a baby boomer. I’m a little white boy who was born in the south. And so I’m a part of what they call, I believe they call it the baby scoop era. The era between the early 1940s roughly between world war II and the early 1970s when the pill became more popular and also when abortion became legal and also when curiously enough, the number of single female white head of households in the US spiked. And so what happened was, a lot of folks, just 17 years after I was born, chose to keep the baby. And so there was a huge shift particularly among caucasian Americans. It was a big shift. And so I am part of an entire generation, well over a million, at least a million and a half of white infants who were placed for adoption. And I was sent to foster care for four months where they called me William and then four months later I was adopted by another attorney whose very, kinda strait laced by the book and his wife and they became my mom and dad. And I love them very dearly. And got along great with them. But along about the age I was 45 years old, and I did the research to get what they call here the non-identifying information and that led me to some clues. And by profession, I was an investigative reporter. So I knew how to use public records. And so I took, I expected that non-identifying information to be very sketchy. And in fact I got 8 single spaced pages which were prepared by a social worker plus some original documents which told about for instance, and IQ test they did with me, and also what my birth weight was and some initial, what time I was born etc. and so there was some clues in there, and the biggest clue, I’ll kinda give it away, was that my father was a lawyer who went to prison. Now there are a lot of lawyers who probably belong in prison, but my father, he actually went there. In June of 1004 I went down to the state archives at the age of 45 and I began looking through a big book with the handwritten names, it’s called The Book of Convicts. Was the handwritten names of every person, male or female, black or white, who went to prison in the state of Georgia during those years. And I wrote down the names of every white male probably from the Atlanta area, so we’re talking Dekalb or Fulton county who went to prison for like bad checks, basically. you know, forgery or some sort of fraudulent check writing. And I had a list of about 2 dozen names and I began just googling them. I began just fishing around and I found a man and you know, his name was Henry Scott Schmidt Jr. And he was an attorney in the state database it said, for the Georgia bar association it said that he was deceased but he was an attorney, he had passed the bar and also he had been to prison. And so then I began looking at him and I saw that he married a nurse who was 12 years younger than him. Well, in the non-identifying information it said that my birth mother was a nurse and that she was 12 years younger than him. And I thought surely he did not marry my mother after he got her pregnant and then abandoned her and abandoned his child. Well that’s exactly what he did. He came back 9 months after he was out of prison and out of the state mental hospital. He had detoxed and he shows back up in her life and she took him back but she refused to take him back until he would agree to marry her. And so 8 months, 8 and a half months after I was born, December the 31st, New Year’s Eve, 1959, they snuck across state lines into Alabama where there was a friendly justice of the peace who married my mother and father. And what this means, Haley, is that I have a full blood brother and a full blood sister. And I am in reunion with my birth mom, my brother, and also my sister who I see. And so we have a wonderful reunion. So I not only had you know, relationships with my mom and dad and with my adopted sister, but I have relationships with them. And so also to kinda the point to my story is, my biological father was an alcoholic who drank himself to death. I became and alcoholic, I was 10 years sober when I found my biological family and then my full blood brother and my full blood sister both became alcoholics and you know, substance abusers and addicts just like me. and so what I surmised from all this is that, the notion that addiction, whatever you wanna call it, substance use disorder, addiction, alcoholism, has a very strong family component. A very strong genetic DNA lineage. We don't exactly know what genes those are. I don't think we’ve narrowed in on em, but we know that it exists, it’s not just anecdotal. And also we know there’s a strong environmental component and so I’m busy researching and writing and trying to understand as a lay person what my own biological history and what my upbringing and what my culture and what my life, you know, means in terms of these really pretty fundamental facts about myself that I was taken away from my birth mother on day 1. She never held me, she never nursed me, she never even saw me. she wasn’t even supposed to know whether I was a little boy or a little girl. And that, so you have that profound separation but then you also have the addiction component. So that’s the long and the short of it.

Haley - Oh my goodness, there’s a lot there. Okay, I wanna go just to, you said you were 45 years old when you decided to look for this non identifying information.

Stuart - Correct.

Haley - What brought you to that point of decision, like I’m gonna search?

Stuart - I had made some little baby steps. I had 10 years before that, sent a letter and a check for $250 and they said, oh we’re developing this registry and blah blah blah and we don’t need your $250, but we’ll put your name on the registry. Well these registries in my experience are very passive. And they depend upon a social worker, in my case, not working for a church, but working for the state of Georgia. Because I was adopted through the department of public welfare, so I was basically a ward of the state. And so the state placed me into foster care and then the state handled the adoption. Not a church, not a private agency, not an international agency, the state. So the state sanctioned the adoption and the state sanctions the secrecy and the state acting on behalf of the culture, promotes the lies. And here’s the lie. I have a birth certificate which says I was born in Albany, Georgia. Well I was not born there, I was born in Macon. So that is a fiction, that is an inaccuracy which was promoted by the state. So then another agency of the state decides what information you can have about your own biology, about your own origins. About your origin story. and that agency is interested in promoting other fictions. They will put in, into your non identifying information, they throw several red herrings. And these are designed so that you cannot locate, you cannot circumvent the process of having these intermediaries go to you. But the net result was, both myself, my cousin who’s adopted and my sister, found all of us, all three of us adopted in the state of Georgia, we found that the Georgia system at the time, did not act to facilitate reunion, it acted as an impediment to reunion. In other words, the state cooked up this whole process and so the state had no really vested interest. You know, they like to tell themselves a little bit of a feel good story about how they were helping these biological families reunite. But they really had no interest in it. And as a matter of fact, the way that they handle these notifications did not facilitate, like my birth mother had an interest in knowing who I was and knowing what happened to me. she had a very strong interest in reunion. But she was never contacted. So you would have to have, you know, I pictured at the time as like a joining hotel rooms where both doors are locked. So as an adoptee, I could join the registry and all that meant was, they would unlock and open my door on my hotel room. But they would not knock on the adjacent hotel room so she could open her door or so she could even decide whether she wanted to open her door. So they didn't know at the time, well these laws evolve. And over that time, I became older, I have four children of my own, biological children so I became keenly interested in knowing who my biological parents were. you know, for a whole host of reasons. And so that led me to writing another letter, getting the non-identifying information and then just, it was embarrassingly easy to go to the state archives and figure this out. you know, once I sat down to do it, it just took a few months’ worth of pulling newspaper clips, etc., etc., to piece together that, oh my god, they got married. This is who it was. And then I wrote my birth mother a letter.

Haley - Wow, and you say that’s embarrassingly easy, but a couple months of detective work – my province, I’m fortunate enough to have open records. When I applied I got both their names.

Stuart - Wow.

Haley - So there’s like levels of easy I guess. And then there’s the DNA people who are searching and oh my goodness. Let’s not get too far into that. I’m curious about you said you had 10 years sober already when you connected with your family. Do you wanna tell us about that, about I guess that part of your life and how you came to become sober and any influences you think you already mentioned genetic influence of alcoholism in your family, but I’ll leave you to kind of share that part of your story.

Stuart – Oh sure, the long and the short of it is, is that drinking alcohol did something for me that I don't think it does for about 87-90% of the population. And that is, it has a kind of magical effect. Most people, cannot, well first off, there are more people in the United States who never take a drink than there are who are alcoholic. And that’s something that we forget about a lot. For religious reasons or just personal preference or health, they never drink like I drank. And so drinking for me, was an incredible social lubricant. It connected me to other people. You know, I could talk to the girls, I could go to parties, it just really connected me in a way that I don't think it works for a lot of people. And drinking primarily for a lot of people is a social thing, let’s go have a drink, let’s grab a beer, lemme buy you, lets have a glass of wine and we’ll relax and we’ll talk. Well the net difference for an alcoholic such as myself is that drinking goes from social to nonsocial to antisocial. And here’s what that looks like. It goes from the life of the party, just a lot of fun, this is a big blast, this is great, to I’d really rather drink alone, to leave me alone. Which is okay, until I realize that I was slowly drinking myself to death. And that this was not going to be a quick process. And this doesn’t have anything to do with whether I got drunk driving charges, I did not. With whether I lost jobs, I did not. With whether I went to prison, I did not. With whether I got divorced, I did not. But it has everything to do with slowly deteriorating mental and physical health. And that began to advance in my, in my 30s. and I began to realize it wasn’t until I had every reason, baby girls at home, my wife, a good job, I had every reason to not drink to excess and yet I did anyway. And then I determined that there was no way that I could not drink to excess. If I drank, I drank to excess and I did it on virtually a daily basis. And so I did things that should have round me up in jail like drive under the influence which is completely morally and legally indefensible, you know. And yet, it caused harm to me, it caused harm to my relationships, it cut me off form my baby girls and so I had every interest in seeking help. Now people find this kind of help for addition usually one of about three ways. They find it by going back to church or some other religious institution, they seek help through the enforcement of their faith or their religious beliefs, they have a spiritual conversion. Or they go to, let’s say a detox, a rehab, a group therapy, the Veterans Administration hospital, they find a group of similarly situated people that in this kind of therapeutic approach, they can find the kind of support they need to stay away from a social connection at a bar. Or they work through some kind of 12 step program, the granddaddy of them is Alcoholics Anonymous but now there are dozens if not hundreds of these programs. They address everything from a physical dependence on a chemical or a drug, cocaine or heroine or methamphetamines or alcohol or any of the other heroine, the opioids or nowadays, a process. you know, the use of pornography or video games or food or even smoking is a process, is a whole romance and a culture around it. So smoking and food involve substances but they also involved a process. Well all these means of recovery, they all have one thing in common. And that is a connection. They provide a new try. They provide a new family if you will, a new community and that community has an incredibly strong bond. But what are adoptees looking for? A community. A connection. A sense of family. And so the secret sauce, I’m convinced whether it’s a 12 step program or your church or your synagogue or your temple or your mosque or your ashram, wherever you go, or at the VA, or at the group of veterans at the local McDonald’s or the Starbucks for coffee the secret sauce is community, is a popular, I don't mean to turn this into a lecture, but there’s a very popular YouTube video in which the premise, I think it’s a TED talk from a guy in Europe is that the opposite of addiction is not being clean or sober, the opposite of addiction is being in community, is being connected. Because there’s no person who is more cut off than the person who is completely addicted. They are completely antisocial but you know you are talking directly to an addiction when you hear three magic words, leave me alone.

Haley - Wow, that’s really interesting. I haven’t ever heard it put that way before. And how profound when you say, what are adoptees looking for? We’re looking for family and connection. Oh my goodness. That’s like, wow. Okay, so you, how did you find your community and connection and your new tribe? How was that exactly for you?

Stuart – I’m a big 12 step person. It worked for me. but I completely acknowledge my brother, he goes to the VA and he hangs out with fellow veterans. He was a marine. Our biological father was a marine who was wounded in action by the way, we can talk about trauma and wounding and what it’s connection is to addiction. Because that connection, I’m convinced, is just as large as is the genetic connection. And my sister, she goes to church, and so neither one of them go to 12 step meetings that often. I go to 12 step meetings very often, never go to church, and I don't think I’ve ever really been to group therapy for addiction. And so, we each have sort of found our own way and I, you know, I just think that people need to find the community that works for them. And you know, keep looking until they find that community. But just because if somebody goes to church and they go, I don't believe that, I don't like it. Then go find another community. And it really doesn’t matter where that community meets, it just matters that it’s somebody who will accept you no matter what, you know. They’ve got your back.

Haley – Let’s talk about the trauma. You said you love your adoptive parents and your adopted sister and plus you can love your biological mom and siblings. And yet there’s still a trauma there. And you were in foster care for 4 months. That’s a big stretch of time before going to your adoptive family. So you’ve got that and then your biological father had trauma from the war and yeah, like, what are those connections that you’ve made from that to alcoholism?

Stuart - Until the last several years, I did not feel like I was allowed to have trauma. Because I thought, unless you were a concentration camp survivor, then you should just shut up. Unless you were in Rwanda and survived a genocide, you should just be quiet. Because I thought trauma was a big competition. And I thought well, Stuart, you were never shot and you were never sexually assaulted and you know, you’ve never been to war and so you should just be quiet. You’re not allowed to have trauma. It’s not trauma unless you’ve got a scar to show and an incredibly story to tell. And so it wasn’t until I had a friend who did go to war and he was shot multiple times and he was lucky to survive that he said, trauma is not a contest. And I can’t even tell you what that did for me. because he gave me permission. He said, I’m not gonna compare my gunshot wounds to your being torn away from your birth mother’s arms on day one. you know, I never even got to her arms. I never even lay on her chest. And I had a therapist who said to me, well, if trauma was a contest, you would win. He said, because being torn away from your mother is more traumatic than being shot. Okay, so my biological father got a piece of shrapnel in his back which remained there until he drank himself to death at the age of 46. And on his death certificate it says acute alcoholism. Well the easy to thing, the layup is to say, oh I get it, he’s PTSD, veteran of a horrific battle in the South Pacific in WWII, so there’s the trauma. The huge insight I had was, the trauma was, before he joined the Marine Corp, the trauma was that his father rejected him. And sent him away. That was the trauma. The wound from the shrapnel is a layup. That’s easy. The more difficult thing is to be back up before the soldier becomes a soldier and to see what the trauma is. ‘Cause sometimes the trauma is not the gunshot. That’s what we see. Sometimes the trauma is the rejection. The trauma is you know, we call it, we have all these words for it, relinquishment and surrender and adoption and blah blah blah. No, it’s an amputation. It’s a missing limb. It’s phantom pain. It’s the nerve endings are still there. What happened? What was that? And we have no memory but we have the experience. It’s written into the neurons and we keep saying why do I feel this way, why do I feel this amorphous, this grief, this terrible loss and missingness that I can't explain it. I had a great life, my parents were wonderful to me. they took me Europe, they put me into one of the best schools. They paid for everything, I never went without. So what do I have to complain about? I’m nothing but being a victim. I’m a big whiner. And then you start to read books like, the Body Keeps the Score, the Vandercook book. And you start to understand the physiology of how pretrauma, prememory, the memory’s still growing. I mean that skull is still growing together. So they have no memory to record what happened. That means I can't go into deep hypnosis and take sodium pentanol and go into a trance and work real hard and recover this memory. The memory’s not there, I can’t tell you the smells or the sounds or whatever, that memory is written, that feeling is written in. so it is a trauma that is a somatic experience it is in the body, it is visceral, I feel it. It is not something that I can tell you what color clothes was the nurse dressed in all white or you know, how bright was the light. I can’t tell you any of that. What I can tell you is what I feel in my bones, I feel in my nerve endings because that’s where it’s written.

Haley – That is such an interesting observation about even about how society looks at trauma. What’s the visible trauma or the things like, you can see, you know? That a war happened and you participated and yet this adoption thing is hidden. It’s a hidden trauma from society and to have that acknowledged is so important in community. Now have you experienced you know, going to recovery groups, have you ever shared about adoption issues? And then, have people understood that? Or have you had other experiences when you share about adoption trauma with people who are not necessarily adopted?

Stuart - Well first of all, the recovery community’s extraordinarily supportive. And so because of, it’s a tight knit group, it’s 12 people in a lifeboat. And so the 12 people in the lifeboat are all depending upon one another for their very survival. So yes, the recovery community’s extraordinarily giving and loving and supportive. people who have not had the experience may not understand it, but that doesn’t mean they're not supportive. But you also need to know that people in who treat recovering addicts and alcoholics of all stripes, they are pretty much, they’ve caught on and adoptees are significantly overrepresented in treatment centers. you know, I don't know about prisons, but certainly in treatment centers, and so what you will find is that there are treatment centers where just like the question of, what’s your drug of choice and when did you use and when did you last use and how much did you use and how often, amongst this, the question is, are you adopted or you know, tell us about your infancy or how you were born or how you grew up. They get al it. And when they do, they see when they begin to collect these numbers, you see adoptees or motherless children of all varieties because face it, we’re also talking about the child was removed for its own health, right? and placed in some kind of isolation in which the mother was never able to touch the child while the child was covered in wires or was fighting for life. I’ll tell you a really quick story. a very good friend of mine in recovery took his own life a year ago. And he and I were sharing stories and he was not adopted. But he abused alcohol, abused drugs, had long term recovery just like me. I have over 25 years of sobriety. He had over 30 years of sobriety. And he took his own life. Well, he and I were comparing notes and he said he was removed from his mother and placed in a bassinet where he fought for his life for several months so he’s not laying at her breast. He doesn’t have the physical contact. And next to his computer was a little yellow sticky note which he put next to the monitor. And what it says was, what am I grieving. What am I grieving? Here is the amorphous grief. you know, here is the ambivalent grief that we can’t put our finger on. Why am I so sad, I don't have anything to be sad about. And what does anybody who doesn’t understand, what do they say to you? Buck up, put a smile on your face, come on you’ll feel better. You got nothing to complain about, stop being such a victim. Well that’s because you can’t point to it. It’s because you don't know and it’s not just like if you’re raped, everyone can understand how you would have PTSD from being raped. If you’re shot, everyone can understand how, if you see your best friend die, everyone can understand that. How you would have PTSD but if you say, oh this thing happened to me. and it happened in the first four months of life and I don't even have any memory of it. Well what are you whining about? Well what have you got to complain about? Go get some real troubles, get back to me when you’ve got a real problem. And it’s not until now that people are starting to see, oh, it doesn’t matter the reason the infant was separated from the mother, it just matters that the infant was separated from the mother. Adoption is a smokescreen. The problem is, the amputation. The problem is not the adoption. The problem is not the bassinet or the neonatal intensive care unit, the problem is the severing of this tie from the mother. That’s the problem. Adoption is, foster care, orphanages, whatever, they're just a hacked together solution. you know, they're just patchwork until we acknowledge the fundamental problem. This amputation. We’re not getting anywhere, we’re just getting back into a blame and shame spiral and finger pointing, oh it was the crack or it was the, you know disease or it was the mother who got pregnant without, or it was the father who ran away and abandoned her. No, let’s just talk about what the fundamental trauma is, it’s not from the person who picked the baby up. It’s from the separation, it’s from the separation.

Haley - Well I haven’t heard that before. That people that are like addiction therapists and things are really picking up on this adoption trauma that this is starting to get noticed. That this initial separation can cause all of these issues for this. This is great to hear, great to hear that the larger community is starting to understand that. What do you think, I don't know, anecdotally I guess, because we’re both lay people here speculating. What do you think is gonna happen with that? If seeing adoptees overrepresented in addictions facilities in particular, that’s a huge red flag, so it’s neat that they’re noticing I guess, but what are they gonna do about it?

Stuart - Well what they are doing is treating it. And the noticing as we say the first step is admitting there’s a problem. So when we notice it, that’s a huge, because it means they begin to address this. So  there’s a tendency, when you’re talking about particularly a substance, to place a great deal of focus on that substance, right? we know this so we think that the, the answer to opioids is the answer to heroine is methadone. So we just need to get these folks some methadone. No no no no, methadone’s not the answer. Savoxon. So the answer is savoxon, no no no no, so the next drug, we have to treat and certainly we have to treat the physiology of this. Because there is one component. But that’s only one component. There are multiple other components and trauma is one of them. So if you treat the physiological component, right, so you detox the alcoholic and there’s no longer any more alcohol in the system, problem solved, spit em back out, send em back out on the street. Well if the trauma still exists, then they’ll be right back in the door. Now I must say that the language of 12 step programs deal with a great many things. And it’s wonderful. You do not see two words very often. Well three. You do not see trauma, you do not see, or wound. You do not see grief. And you do not see abandonment. It’s like these things are not addressed by name. the things that you see are rage, or resentment, fear, sexual shame, you’ll see addressed. But shame per se, you don't see addressed. That’s where you know, Brene Brown talks about this. You’ll see outside but if you bring that language into traditional orthodox 12 step, you will find blank looks. Because there’s not a tool to deal directly with trauma, wounding, shame, abandonment, grieving, profound grieving, ambivalent or amorphous grief. you know there’s not a tool for that. So thank god for outside help. Thank god for the therapists, the treatment centers, the rehabs, that are getting with the program and starting to recognize this connection and it’s not just this neonatal abandonment. It’s this amputation, it’s also a whole host of other things like a sexual assault victim who deals with her overwhelming shame and grief and rage by numbing it out with whatever, by whatever means necessary, food or bottles and bottles of wine, or whatever. That person needs some help specific to this sexual assault and trauma. Well so does the adoptee. And the more forward thinking rehabs, I don't care if it’s south Florida, southern California, whatever, the more forward looking rehabs they're on it. They look for it and they are on it. They’re dialed in. but a lot of folks aren’t. well that’s, I don't know, I find some of that news kind of encouraging to know that more adoptees will be supported in that way.

Haley - Stuart is there anything I didn't ask you about that you wanna make sure we talk about before we do recommended resources.

Stuart - My mom and dad died the same day in the same room of the same disease and they both had Alzheimer’s and they had a lifelong together and it was, oh my god, it was tough. But it was not until after they died that I realized that I developed a sense of compassion for them. Because my dad, my adopted dad, his birth mother died when he was 2 years old. And so he was raised by another woman. And he loved her and everything but he had something in common with me. and we never spoke of this. And my mom her father was an alcoholic and she was the little girl who kept the secrets. So she was by definition, an adult child of an alcoholic. And she knew of my recovery, she knew of 12 step work, she knew of my getting sober. We never spoke of this. And so after they died, I developed a sense of compassion for them. That I did not have when they were alive. And I just see and hear so much vitriol from the various portions of the adoption constellation who have gone to their separate rooms, they’ve retreated to their corners and now they hurl insults at each other and I just, for every motherless child, there’s also a childless mother, you know? A childless father who cannot conceive and who is suffering. And I’ll just say that I have tremendous compassion for them. I don't know that getting a baby from the other side of the world will reduce that shame of infertility. I don't know that it will even lessen the shame of not being able to conceive. However, I have just a tremendous compassion for parents who cannot conceive. They cannot conceive their own biological children. And I just, I do not blame them I guess for trying to want to be parents. To respond to a really, a primal urge of their own. That’s all.

Haley - Okay. Thank you for sharing that. Alright. Let’s transition and go ahead and talk about our recommended resources. And first I would like to recommend this podcast that I binge and I really enjoy, it’s Season 3 of The Offshore Podcast. And the season is called The Blood Calls. And it is, following an adopted person who is searching for their biological family and it’s also looking at the ethics and troublesome practices of adoptions from the Marshall Islands. And so while you’re following a reunion story of a very young man, I think he’s I don't remember exactly, he may be early 20s. He was adopted from The Marshall Islands to the United States and while you’re following his story of searching out his biological family, the reporters are doing a really great job of finding out some of the very sketchy adoption practices. Ad so I brought this today because I know Stuart, you are an experienced investigative journalist and you know, the series has got some problematic language for me, you know instead of saying expectant mother they use the term birth mother even for women who haven’t officially decided to place. And they then cover some things that we know are even happening in the United States, even happening in Canada. And it’s very interesting. So even though I’m not gonna give it like my full endorsement, I really did enjoy it, and it’s one of those ways where adoption is being exposed to the wider culture. This would be something that lots of people would be interested into. It’s an interesting story. it’s captivating, you wanna know what happens next. And the whole season is out so you can binge it. But it shows some of the really shady practices that are still going on right now. So yeah, I would recommend you check that out if that sounds interesting.

Stuart – I will!

Haley - Yeah, it’s season 3 of Offshore and yeah, check it out, let me know what you think.

Stuart - Yeah, I love podcasts, I love your podcast and yeah, I binge listen, absolutely.

Haley - Well there's only 8 episodes, so it’s a quick listen. What did you wanna share with us today, Stuart?

Stuart – Well you limited me to one resource, Haley.

Haley - Yes, I did, yes I did.

Stuart - Now are you gonna be that mean, are you gonna be that restricting here or can I mention other resources.

Haley - Well, let’s see how you do with the first one, and I’ll give you a pass fail and then we’ll see.

Stuart – The first one I’ll take 5 seconds, it’s Warming the Stone Child. It’s an audiobook which you can get from Audible, you can probably get if you can download audiobooks from your library. You can get it in CDs if you’re old school. And it’s Clarissa Pinkola Estes, Warming the Stone Child. And what appealed to me most, she’s a youngian and so a lot of it is her telling stories. And so it’s only appropriate that you hear her voice in telling these stories which are essentially fables or parables which allow you to see the incredible super powers developed by motherless children as they grow up. And you know, the whole I don't care whether it’s Harry Potter or Batman or Superman, that it is the motherless child who grows up to be the superhero and spoiler alert, the superheroes’ super strength among adoptees is as healers. And how often do you get together with a group of adoptees and oh my goodness, everybody’s in the healing profession, right? everybody’s a therapist or they're a nurse or they're a doctor or in some ways, they’re out healing people. Well I’m not in the healing professions, but there are plenty of people that I hope can help to heal wounds and bring people together. And she talks about you know, cultivating and acknowledging that, with our greatest trauma came our greatest super power, which we need to go forth and exercise.

Haley - And I think, Dr. Estes, I think she’s adopted as well, so.

Stuart - Yeah. It’s very meaningful to her, these stories, these universal stories of the motherless child. I don't care if it’s Little Red Riding Hood or whoever, these stories.

Haley - Okay, you get a pass, so I will allow. I’ll allow one more, go ahead.

Stuart - If you want to understand the history of adoption, there’s a woman named, and she’s a PhD too, and her name is Ricky Solinger. S-O-L-I-N-G-E-R. Ricky is R-I-C-K-I-E. and she’s written 11 books about women’s reproductive rights in the United States. And she determined that she could not write about Roe V Wade and the history of abortion in the United States legal or illegal until she first wrote about single pregnancy and race before Roe v Wade and essentially until she wrote about the phenomena, the historic phenomena of adoption in the United States. And So the book is called Wake Up Little Susie. And it is not a story, it contains many stories, hundreds of stories. But it is primarily a history and it has an extensive bibliography. But it explains the social phenomena, the historical phenomena, which was the Baby Scoop, which was almost exclusively, there were some Native Americans, but it was almost exclusively a white phenomenon. That is, African American babies were kept within the community. They were kept by and large with the birth mother or the birth grandmother, auntie, somebody. But little white babies, there was a market, there was a great demand of these soldiers coming home from WWII who along with the house and the picket fence, they wanted a little baby or two, a little boy and a little girl to go along with it. Ans she explores all of this. Rickie Solinger, Wake Up Little Susie.

Haley - Great! Thank you so much, Stuart. Thanks for sharing your story with us, thanks for sharing some of your thoughts on recovery and the links to addiction for adoptees. And I’d love to be able to share your information so people can connect with you. Where can we find you online?

Stuart – On Twitter, @stuartclt, Charlotte North Carolina is where I am, and so Stuart is S-T-U-A-R-T-C-L-T, that’s stuartclt, that’s Twitter I’m on Facebook, Stuart Watson, I’m on LinkedIn, Stuart Watson, W-A-T-S-O-N. and there are a lots of Stuart Watsons, I’m the one who’s the investigative reporter in Charlotte. I thought I had something else. Oh yeah, and I’m making a film with my birth mom and my biological brother and sister and with my adopted sister and with tons of other people who are experts and not experts. And there’s a little trailer to the film. The film has evolved in the three years since the trailer, but the trailer’s at Helen, that’s my birth mother’s name, H-E-L-E-N dot movie. Not .com, but helen.movie. so you can see a little three minute trailer.

Haley – Awesome. Well I’m excited, I’m gonna check that out.

Stuart - I’m excited!

Haley - Thank you so much Stuart, it was just an honor talking with you today.

(upbeat music)

Haley - Oh my goodness I had so many things I wanted to ask Stuart about and we just totally ran out of time. And he missed sharing with you that he is working on a memoir and so make sure you go and follow him on social media so you can learn when that’s gonna be coming out, how exciting, I can’t wait to read it. I’d love to stay connected with you so make sure you’re signed up for the monthly newsletter. You can do that at adopteeson.com/newsletter. And I usually share a little essay about something I’m learning or just a quick note about updates about the show or what’s coming up next. So you can expect about once a month to hear from me, no more frequently than that, I promise. So I won't spam your inbox. And yeah, I’d love to connect with you there. So adopteeson.com/newsletter. And I just wanna say a big thank you as always to my supporters of the show. You know who you are, I’m so grateful for your monthly support and I couldn’t do this show without your ongoing support. If you wanna stand with me and other adoptees and help spread message of Adoptees On, please go to adopteeson.com/partner and find out how you can support the show. Thanks so much for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

(exit music)

91 [S5] Harris

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/91

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You are listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. This is episode 91, Harris. I’m your host, Haley Radke. Welcome to the newest series of Adoptees On, where we’ll be discussing addiction and recovery. Today Harris Coltrain shares his story of alcohol and drug addiction. And how fatherhood was his motivation to get clean and sober. Harris and I also talk about how challenging mainstream recovery programs can be for adopted people because their experiences as adoptees with adoption trauma can be invalidated. We wrap up with some recommended resources, and as always, links to everything we’ll be talking about today are at adopteeson.com. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley - I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Harris Coltrain. Welcome Harris!

Harris – Haley, thanks so much for having me on the show.

Haley - I can’t wait to hear your story! I don't know any of it, it’s all gonna be a surprise to me!

Harris - Well where would you like me to start?

Haley - Right at the beginning, go for it!

Harris - Alright, well I was adopted, or I was born in December of 1970 and I was adopted about I think it was the third week of March in 1971 by a family in Richmond, Virginia. I was born in Bethesda Naval Hospital. And it was a closed adoption for the most part. My adopted parents did actually know my name, my birth name, but I didn't find that out til later on, probably I guess I was 18 or 19 years old when I uncovered that. And then about 11 years ago, actually last month, I found my biological family, both my biological mother and biological father’s side. So I went from being the oldest of three to being the oldest of 11.

Haley - Whoa.

Harris - Yes. So I don't talk to all of them all of the time, it’s just too much. But I have good relationships with both brothers and sisters as well as my biological father. On both sides of the family, my mother that raised me as well as my biological mother, unfortunately they both passed away the same year.

Haley - I’m sorry.

Harris - Yeah, that was back in 2011 and 2012. But I did get to spend some time with her initially and it was, so far it’s been a very positive experience.

Haley - That’s great! That’s great, so you have been in reunion for 11 years.

Harris - Correct.

Haley - With different people on both sides. Okay.

Harris - Yeah. Not everyone has spoken to me. I do have a few members of the family that have chosen not to speak to me, but a majority of them have and over the years I’ve been able to establish good relationships and I really, it’s great, it’s been a wonderful experience.

Haley - Oh that’s awesome. Okay, well let’s pause there, well let’s rewind a bit I guess.

Harris - Okay.

Haley - Why don't you talk us through a little bit about growing up and then what sort of happened into young adulthood, etc.

Harris - Sure. I think that I was 7 years old when I first was told that it was adopted. The way that it was presented to me, was I guess this would have been 19, gosh, 77, pretty standard, you know, the way that it was told to me. And that they had gotten some books and a few other things and sat me down and tried to explain what adoption was and what all this meant. But unfortunately at such a young age, I guess your intellect has a difficult time processing some of these things and it was very difficult for me to understand. I think there’s a disconnect between sort of, understanding and then how you felt about it, right? So I think I understood what they meant but it didn't make me feel very good. So, but even before then, I’d had some I think, glaring adoptee issues as a young child. My mother did a lot of work to try and assist with that. And was always very supportive, even when I went to find my biological family. Was always very supportive of me, and in fact, she even met some of them. So it wasn’t something that they were trying to hide per se.

Haley – And so when you say the glaring adoptee issues, what sorts of things do you mean by that?

Harris - Well, I was connected with sort of a profound sadness. I look at pictures of myself when I was 4 and 5 and 6 years old and you can kind of see that, I think, in me. obviously I had some behavioral issues that were promptly misdiagnosed by many, many people back then. They never addressed the adoption issue directly. It was mostly about my relationship with my adopted parents and I guess other diagnosis that they thought was the case. So, but it wasn’t until recently that I connected obviously with Pam at Adoptees Connect and have started going over some literature that it’s been very beneficial. I can now look back on my life and see the problems that I had.

Haley - So you’re talking about Pamela Karanova, and Adoptees Connect is a peer led support group that she started out, and now there’s, we have one in my city. I co lead that with a friend.

Harris - Excellent.

Haley - And they’re all over. So adopteesconnect.com has links to all of those adoptee support groups. Okay, sorry, let’s go back.

Harris - Yeah, sure.

Haley - I just wanted to make sure everybody knew who you were talking about there. Okay, so you have been able to look back with the lens of new information from connecting with other adoptees.

Harris - Yeah, absolutely. obviously I read some of the books, The Primal Wound, Journey of the Adopted Self, fantastic books. And they really gave me a new perspective on life in general. And it allowed me to step back and like you said, look through the lens and see some of the problems that I had throughout my life, not just when I was a young child. And see that most of them were directly related to adoptee related issues.

Haley - That’s interesting. So what happened for you as a teen and young adult then? You’ve got this profound sadness and some behavioral things. What sort of stuff started showing up for you?

Harris - In a general way, I think what happened is I never just, I perceived life, the world was sort of a hostile place that you know, people weren’t to be trusted. And that just kind of came natural for me. Now I understand why. But at 8 or 9 years old, it’s very difficult to articulate that and sort of explain what’s going on in your insides to other people. But having gone through the trauma of being separated from the birth mother and some of the things and how it kind of shapes self, some of those feelings and the way that I looked at the world kind of drove my behavior as a young child, up until my early teen years. So as far as the recovery part of this goes, I would say, I think I started self-medicating, drinking, initially at around 11 years old. And then got into drugs later on in high school.

Haley - You started drinking when you were 11, you said?

Harris - Yes.

Haley - Oh my goodness.

Harris - Yeah, I didn’t give myself much time, did I?

Haley - Wow, so my goodness, that’s like shocking to me. I guess, I'm sort of innocent in these things. So what did that look like day to day I guess, as a teenager?

Harris - Well, what I found is, when you’re going through life and you don't really feel good about yourself, obviously you know you have self-worth issues. I dealt with a lot of anger, some depression, some sadness. And on a day to day basis, deep down inside, I knew something was wrong, but I could never put my finger on it. But the result, the outcome of that was that I generally felt bad about just life in general. And so when you find alcohol and drugs, in my case alcohol first, and you find something that makes you feel good for once, it’s very easy to latch on to. Because if you go through a large portion of your life always wondering what’s going on, and why I do I feel this way, and why can’t I change the way I feel. And then all of a sudden you find this magic elixir, and it takes all your fear away, liquid courage and makes you feel better about yourself and kind of “normal”. Not too hard to take off with it.

Haley – And so did you like, I mean, I know it’s a problem at 11 if you’re drinking, but did you find it impeding things for you? What did that look like?

Harris - It started off pretty slowly. When I say started drinking, it might have been every other month, having a little bit. Here and there. But by the time I was 13 years old, I would say that had narrowed to maybe every 2 weeks. And I had at that time starting smoking marijuana as well. And then once I got into high school it kind of accelerated a little bit and I was doing cocaine by 15 years old and then heroine at 20.

Haley - I don't understand how you can get that stuff when you’re so little. I don't know, is this, I’m like, maybe I’m like switching to mom mode and thinking about my kids. I was like, don't tell us like, exactly how you, I don't wanna give tips.

Harris - No, it was, well, I grew up in an area in Richmond, Virginia where unfortunately it was, drugs and alcohol were readily available.

Haley – And so were your friends using as well?

Harris - Some of them yes.

Haley - Okay. Yep.

Harris - I had friends with older brothers, so that made it pretty easy to obtain a lot of these things. And I guess at the time, the environment I was in, that was unfortunately kind of the status quo, a lot of people did it.

Haley - Okay. So what does life look for you, like for you as a young adult. Were you planning on going to college, what was on the radar for you when you’re going through this, using?

Harris - Well I did fairly well in high school surprisingly, and I preferred to work. I did do some college early on there in Richmond, Virginia, but I got started working when I was 15 years old, actively. And then when I was 19 years old, I worked for Applebee’s Corporation and I became a corporate trainer. And at that time, what that meant was, is they would send you around the southeast to open up new stores. And I really enjoyed that, I liked the travel, I liked meeting new people, I liked the job that I had. So I worked with those guys for quite a few years and that’s actually how I ended up out here in Louisville, Kentucky from Richmond, Virginia, is opening up stores. So my focus at that time was to work within the restaurant business, specifically Applebee’s, and try to move on from there. That didn't work out over time because of my addiction. As my addiction accelerated and I got to the point where it was difficult for me to function and I started to lose these jobs. And not be able to make it to work and things like that.

Haley - Is that when you figured out maybe this is not helpful?

Harris - Well I think I knew at 17 or 18 years old that I had a pretty significant issue.

Haley - Okay.

Harris - But like most alcoholics and drug addicts, you say things to yourself and you put stuff off and you procrastinate and there comes a point where you have to have an epiphany. And you have to hit that bottom for things to change. And that bottom for me was when I was really 24 or 25 years old. So I have a son who is now 25 years old. And he was out here in Kentucky. And I was going through my addiction when he was very, very young. Like a year, a year and a half old. And being a father to him really helped motivate me to change my life. So that’s when I made the change, back in 1996. So it was really stepping back and taking a look at being a father. And what was going on in my life and realizing that I had to do something. So I went to The Healing Place, here in Louisville Kentucky. And it is a long term, free at the time, I think it still is free, drug and alcohol treatment center and I stayed there for 15 months. They really did everything they could. It’s a great organization, it’s a great facility to go to, they have a high recovery rate. And got me clean and sober.

Haley - Wow. So, talk to us a little about that. What was that like, what were those 15 months like, what were you learning, what were you doing?

Harris - Well at the time I was homeless. So The Healing Place at that time, they’ve made some changes over the years, but it was a homeless shelter coupled with a recovery center. So when you initially went there you went to a detox. It was a nonmedical detox. And you’re usually there for about 3 to 5 days. Depending on what was going on with you.  And then once the 3 to 5 days were done, you went into the program, they called it Off the Street. And Off the Street is where you lived in the portion of The Healing Place that had the homeless shelter in it. And it was called OTS1 which is Off the Street 1. And you would stay there typically for I don't know, 4 to 6 weeks. And then you would move on through the program and so the initial program itself for me was 7 and a half months at the actual main facility and then another 7 and a half months at a halfway house. And what that really allows you to do, especially with individuals that have severe addiction, a lot of the 30 days treatment programs just simply don't work for people anymore and they need an environment and longer term care to get these problems rectified. And that’s, at the time it was perfect for me and that’s what I needed. So it worked out great. I’ve got 22 years clean and sober so far.

Haley - Since leaving there?

Harris - I’m sorry, 21 years.

Haley - So you went into that program. And you’ve been sober since.

Harris - That is correct.

Haley - Wow, so one of your motivations for going in was having your son. And you said earlier, Harris, that you can look back and see a lot of these things are adoptee issues that caused you to go into addiction kind of in the first place. So can you talk a little bit about that? How motivating it was for your son to like, just choosing, like, I gotta show up for him.

Harris - Yeah, absolutely. So I was so happy to have him and I actually moved from Richmond, Virginia out here. The young lady that I met, she lived out here and I met her when I was working with Applebee’s. And so I had moved out here to be with them. And I was in a very bad time in my addiction. And I just realized that I had to do something to get better. And I would look at him and know that I just had to be a better father and I had to make a change. And so I did. And it was the best thing I ever did.

Haley - That’s, it’s so inspiring. And I also think unusual. Because I don't know like, cold turkey is not the right word for that. But just like you went into recovery and you worked on it and you’ve stayed sober, that’s just seems really unusual.

Harris - Well the recovery rate unfortunately for individuals, especially with drugs, typically long term recovery, 5 years or more, I think hovers around 6 or 7%.

Haley - Wow.

Harris - Gratefully, The Healing Place, I think, has a much higher recovery rate. I don't wanna quote it because I don't know exactly what it is, but they have a model that works, that’s actually being duplicated all over the country from Raleigh, North Carolina to Richmond, Virginia. They have Healing Places now in many other cities. Because they do understand that people that have addiction issues, drinking issues, a lot of times they need more than just 30 or 45 days somewhere. Yeah it was challenging at first. Absolutely. In the first 2 years I think of recovery, is challenging for anybody.

Haley - Well what did that, what was that like for you? Because you said you went in and you were homeless and you had lost jobs and I mean, how do you get back to you know, working and having a home and you said that they had some residential part of their program. So you had somewhere. But once you were done, where did you go?

Harris - Right, so gratefully, I met some wonderful friends. And The Healing Place also had some great resources. And so I was able to go to the University of Louisville for computer science, after I had finished the program and I also had some individuals that helped me while I was in school both financially and just helped me out in other ways as well. And then I was able to do that, and then kind of get out in the job market, out here, I guess I wanna say 1999. And I’ve just been going ever since.

Haley - Alright so you were in IT for Y2K, that’s fun!

Harris – And it wasn’t. But yeah, that was early on. I’ve been working in IT really since 1999.

Haley - So what is fatherhood looked like to you now, Harris?

Harris - Well I have three children now. I’ve got a 25 year old, a 6 year old, and a 1 year old. So fatherhood is busy.

Haley - Wow.

Harris - Which I’m sure you understand.

Haley - I do. So I have 2 boys and they’re, right when we’re recording, they’re 4 and 6. So I’m very busy too.

Harris - So between my job and my kids, yeah, I stay pretty busy for sure.

Haley - Yep. So recovery for that long, I mean, have there been points where you were tempted or were you just so focused on, I have to be a good dad and that is not a part of what that looks like?

Harris – Well let me jump back a little bit to adoptee issues in recovery. So one of the benefits that I found in recovery is they lay a great foundation for dealing with issues. Whether that’s working the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous or learning about support groups, or learning some of the techniques that you use to deal with your emotional landscape per se on a daily basis. So how it relates to adoption is, even when I got into recovery, I still had the adoptee issues. And one of the downsides to that is when I did try to share that and explain that to individuals within my support group, they still didn't understand. And I think adoptees and people with other issues as well, when they go in, some things you can relate to and then other things you can't. But the good part of this is that the tools that I took away from recovery helped me manage, whether that’s, like I said, sharing with a support group, journaling, writing, doing things that you know, help you deal with your emotions. And adoptee related issues. So recovery really laid the foundation for that and that has helped me very much over the years. The downside, like I said, the downside was that you’re dealing with people that still don't understand adoptee issues. So if those issues come up, even when I was in recovery, it was very difficult for me to get any help with that because people didn't understand what was going on.

Haley - Right, so you were probably still hearing the like, well, you should still be grateful or you know, those kind of things?

Harris - Well a little bit. But you know, sometimes when you’re trying to articulate what’s going on in your insides and you pass that along to people who don’t share that same experience, they don't really pick up on what’s going on. And they try to attribute it to other things.

Haley - Okay.

Harris - Because they simply don't know.

Haley - Right, right.

Harris - And a lot of adoptees, and truth be told, I didn't know, you know? I didn't know why I felt the way I did about certain things or why I looked at life a certain way or why I had, have trouble with relationships. Or why you may have anger issues. Reuniting with my biological family did help with some of that.

Haley - Well that’s what it was gonna ask you about actually. Because that’s about, you said that was 11 years ago, so you’re about halfway through your clean and sober to this point years, what spurred you on to search for them? And were you worried that searching might trigger something for you?

Harris – Well I was initially not interested when I was younger. It wasn’t something, although my adoption sort of linger in the background most of my life. I was not interested in finding my biological family. I have a sister that was also adopted, that I grew up with and she found her biological family 12 years before I did. And she, in Virginia, when you’re 18 years old, you’re allowed, I don't know if they’ve changed the law, but in the 90s you were allowed to get what’s called a heritage summary. Which gives you a brief overview of what they can, by law, share about your biological family. In her case, her mother had gone to the adoption agency and actually left a note in there that had said, pay them whatever they want and come find me. And she had a wonderful experience as well. So when I got into my 30s there and just decided, I guess I was 37 at the time, decided it was time to go ahead and take a look. So I took what information I had and I found them.

Haley - And were you worried that any of this would bring up feelings that were too big? Or were you just kind of like, well maybe I should look and you weren’t even really thinking about the implications this could have?

Harris – Well a little bit of both. I mean, there’s a lot of nervousness but at the same time, there was a lot of excitement. I was very interested in finding brothers, sisters, parents, etc. And although I knew there were gonna be some problems, I thought they would be overcome and they were. Yes. So everybody on both sides of the family was very ingratiating they were nice to me, like I said, for the most part. And it couldn’t have gone better.

Haley - That’s great. Well let’s go back to talking about recovery plus adoptee issues. And because you’ve had you know, so many years of living the recovery life, and understanding the tools that you need to stay sober, it seems like the adoptee kind of piece is fairly recent for you to look back through that lens. So now can you kind of combine those and kind of talk about what you think might be more challenging for adopted people who are having addiction issues or are in recovery and might be struggling?

Harris - Yeah. Well I think one of the first things we need to kind of overcome on the adoptee side of things, is understanding that there are people in the rooms that are not gonna be able to relate to your adoptee issues. And then finding people in recovery perhaps that are adopted. That you can share with. And kind of open up with.

Haley – So people that are likely going to maybe an AA meeting or something like that, may not find, as you said before, like they don't get it.

Harris - Let’s call it complete relief. Well I think some of the adoptee issues are things that need to be worked on over time in the program of Alcoholics Anonymous, you do do a fourth and fifth step where you take a searching personal inventory of yourself but that’s a one time thing. Many people do work the steps, multiple times over multiple years and I think that’s a fine idea. But like with many traumatic events, whether it’s different types of abuse or adoptee issues or PTSD, you just can't go through these things one time and do it, it’s something that is ongoing. And so with adoptee issues, although you may have “worked the steps” and done everything you’ve needed to do, you still find that you have these things cropping up all the time. Whether that, like I said, whether that’s issues with relationships with other things that go on. So with adoptees, they’re gonna need to address those perhaps outside of the rooms.

Haley - Okay.

Harris - Whether that’s therapy or different types of support groups or a combination of all of those I think would probably be best.

Haley - And what would you say, I guess, I don't know. This might just be a rhetorical question, but like, what’s the most invalidating thing that people could say in, if you’re sharing in a, like I don’t know, I’ve never been in an AA meeting. But if you’re sharing something about being adopted, like what are the invalidating things that you might have heard that could trigger someone?

Harris – Well when you’re dealing with individuals that unfortunately aren’t experienced in, you know, and haven’t gone through what you’ve gone through, nor are they trained specialists for that matter, a lot of times you may hear something along the lines of, well perhaps you didn’t do something correctly. Which alludes to you didn't work the steps correctly.

Haley - Oh.

Harris - Right, or something along those lines. You find that unfortunately in many recovery groups, not just Alcoholics Anonymous, when individuals that don't understand different types of mental illness or traumatic, people that have been abused and stuff like that, they go through the process and they’re not “completely healed”. So you may get some feedback along those lines.

Haley - Okay, so it’s like, it’s putting the blame back on the person—

Harris - On the person, yes.

Haley - Oh.

Harris - There is a lot of focus on individual responsibility, cleaning up your side of the street, in recovery programs. And I do agree with that. I do think that people should you know, take ownership of the part that they played in something. As I like to say, everybody eats a piece of the blame pie.

Haley - Yum.

Harris - So you know, your piece might be bigger than the next person’s, you know, given the set of circumstances, but at the same time a lot of people in the rooms don't have a deeper understanding of what adoptees go through and the problems that they face. So sometimes they draw incorrect conclusions, simply because they don't have the information they need. And then the feedback that they provide can be not helpful. 

Haley - And what do you think about this? I think that there’s a lot of adoptees in the online community, which, you know, we’ll say later where we can find you online. But there’s a lot of adoptees that do figure out okay, I've got issues because of my adoption. And then that’s kind of where they stay stuck. And we, yes, adoption happened to us, but now what are we gonna do about it. Do you ever hear that from other adoptees, what are your thoughts on that?

Harris - Sometimes. I have, like I said just recently gotten into the material myself. But I don't think we need to stay stuck. There are things that we can do. There is, by no means am I an expert, but I’m sure there’s things that we can do to move the healing process forward.

Haley - Yeah I think, isn’t it a combo, right, like I think it’s a combo. It’s like, we, yes we can look at our lives and see a lot of issues that stem from adoption trauma in my opinion. And then also, we can't just keep this seat of victim forever. So it’s like, both of these things.

Harris - Yeah I don’t think playing the victim for long periods of time is healthy. I think that some of the issues that adoptees may find they have when they were younger, these behaviors were adaptive. When you’re 8 and 9 years old, there may be things that you do in your mind and your psyche, whether that’s fantasizing or compartmentalization or rationalizing or justification. And you do that as a matter of survival because it’s very difficult for your mind to process. I know it was for me when I was a young child, to process the feelings and thoughts associated with now knowing that you’re adopted. The problem is when you carry that into adulthood, it now becomes a maladaptive behavior. Because you’re unable to move forward because you’re stuck. And I think that people need to get unstuck with that. Now recognizing just exactly what your particular issue is an adoptee, obviously is up to that person, everybody uses different defense mechanisms to cope. So, I look at it like this, we can get better, but I do believe a lot of times there’s always gonna be that emotional scar tissue as I like to call it. It’s always gonna be there in some regards.

Haley - Well said, I like that. Okay. Well is there anything else that you wanna touch on that you think adoptees need to know about recovery, things that maybe they should look for in themselves, if seeing if they have a problem. You already said you were 17 and you knew like, this is kind of off the rails. But like, what are some things to look out for in ourselves and any comments on that?

Harris - I guess first I would say to adoptees that are struggling with alcoholism and addiction, to take a look at some of the problems that may be related specifically to your adoption trauma and try to deal with those as you move forward in trying to get clean and sober. Because they can be stumbling blocks for sure. As for adoptees that are already clean and sober and working on issues, and maybe they're not aware like I wasn’t, as you go through life and you realize that you still have things going on inside of you that are difficult to understand, I would say to use the tools that the recovery community has provided for you. But at the same time, try to learn as much as you can and get educated about, whether that’s reading The Primal Wound or another one of these books or going to one of these Adoptees Connect groups obviously, and just sharing and learning about what’s going on inside of you so you can better cope and manage on a day to day basis.

Haley - Thank you. Yeah, those are, that’s good advice. So you mentioned Adoptees Connect again, can you just share a little bit, without breaking confidentiality, what has it meant to you to be in the same space as other adopted people?

Harris – It’s been a lifesaver. I believe it was late March or April of this year, I was going through some things emotionally and I started to think to myself, is this something to do with my adoption? I am 21 years clean and sober and this stuff keeps cropping up and it just doesn’t make any sense because in my mind I’d done everything that I needed to do. So I got online and started doing some searching and guess who’s blog I ran across? Pamela’s. So I started reading what she had to say and I immediately related. And it really hit home for me. And so I ended up just giving her a call. I wanna say in April. And she suggested some reading and we met for the first time and just taking it from there.

Haley - And so Pamela Karanova, she has a couple different blogs but one of them is adopteeinrecovery.com. So is that the one that you came across?

Harris - I believe so.

Haley – She’s great, I love her. Well, it’s a lifesaver, that’s pretty good to know.

Harris - Well, you know, it just really opened my eyes. And when I was reading through some of the material, especially the Journey of the Adopted Self, where she went through and talked to different adoptees and they were able to share their experience with her which she put into her book. And I would read that it would just really hit home and I would say, you know I’ve never been able to put it exactly into words the way that she has, but that’s exactly how I feel. You know, that’s what’s going on.

Haley - Oh my goodness, when we can finally find that validation, it’s just so good. Like what is there a better moment than that? It’s like the lightbulb moment.

Harris - Yes. But it, you know, I also had to put it down a couple of times. Yes, the Primal Wound, I have definitely put that book down at least three or four times.

Haley - Yeah, it’s heavy, heavy stuff. All good. Well thanks so much for sharing your story with us, Harris. Now let’s go and do our recommended resources. And I wanna share about a new book that I actually got to read the advanced copy, this is so exciting. My name is on the inside of this book, it’s so cool. It’s not that I wrote it, I just wrote a little review. My friend Karen Pickell wrote, An Adoptee Lexicon. And it is so, it’s so different, it’s such a different book. It’s a series of micro essays, yeah, and so Karen will just pick a different word like, I’m just flipping through. Relinquish, putative father, placement, maternity home, baby scoop era, all these words that if you’ve been in adoption land for any length of time, you would hear regularly. And so Karen does micro essays on each one and sometimes she’s literally just addressing the topic and it might just be just a informative piece about that specific thing. But also she weaves in her story throughout and I really enjoyed reading it, I got to know Karen better. And also, it’s one of those things where I read it and I’m like, oh my goodness, when I hear that word, it makes me feel sick and this is why. Now I know why. So yeah, I’d recommend if you guys are interested in reading more about Karen’s story and just about the charged language in adoption. It’s called An Adoptee Lexicon and you can get it on raisedvoicepress.com or if you just look up Karen Pickell, you can find it as well. The other thing that Karen does and I’ve recommended this before, but this will be a little bonus, is she has the website adopteereading.com where she has a huge library of books there, written by adoptees. And there’s a few that aren’t, but everything on there is either written by adoptees, or themed on adoptee issues or topics that adoptees would be interested in. So when you run out of books that Pamela recommended to you, Harris, you can go to Adoptee Reading and find some more.

Harris - Absolutely,

Haley - And it’s not just like those big heavy tomes, like the Primal Wound, but it’s also memoirs and fiction books and all kinds of different styles of books that you will love, love to read.

Harris – Alright! Sounds good.

Haley - And what did you wanna recommend.

Harris - Well my resource was going to be The Healing Place which I’ve obviously talked quite a bit about here on this podcast. But they helped save my life and I’m very grateful for the services that they offered and the opportunity to have even gone through that facility. So I believe you can give donations on their website. I haven’t looked in a while, they’re going through some upgrades right now, but if anybody would like to, please go to the website and donate to help them out. They are a nonprofit organization that is run on donations only.

Haley - And what’s the website address for them?

Harris - It’s www.thehealingplace.org

Haley - And tell us one more time, what city is that in?

Harris - That is in Louisville, Kentucky.

Haley – Thank you, well when you were talking about the program earlier in the show I was like, wow, that’s amazing. Like it just sounds really amazing. And it saved your life. That’s pretty high praise. Well, thank you so much Harris, it’s been such a pleasure chatting with you and hearing your story. I can't wait to share it with my listeners. And my question for you is, where can we connect with you online?

Harris – Okay, well if anyone would like to contact me, please contact me at harrisC70@yahoo.com. And that’s H-A-R-R-I-S and C for Coltrain and then 70 at yahoo.com.

Haley - Perfect. And you’re not on social, because you’re in IT and you know better.

Harris - Yes. I do not have a Facebook account or Instagram or Twitter.

Haley - That’s alright, we will email you, email Harris if you have questions about The Healing Place, if you have, he might be maybe be able to give you some advice about where to go to find support. He can probably point you in the right direction now that you’ve had so many years of recovery and going to different support groups and a variety of things.

Harris - I’m happy to help, if anybody has any questions or just wants to chit chat, feel free.

Haley - Perfect, thanks so much Harris.

(upbeat music)

Haley - One of the best and easiest ways for you to support the work of Adoptees On, is actually just by telling one friend about the podcast. Maybe you have a favorite episode you could bring to your adoptees support group and share. Maybe there is an episode that is a really similar story to a friend of yours that’s adopted. And you can share that with them. I would love it if you would tell just one person about the podcast. That is the best way for it to grow and to help more adoptees around the world. The other amazing way people are supporting this show is by becoming a monthly financial partner with me. And that helps cover all the production costs of running the podcasts. So if you are able to do that, I would love your support, adopteeson.com/partner and you can stand with me monthly as a financial partner. That’s such a gift. And helps me grow the show as well. Thanks so much for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

(exit music)

90 [Healing Series] Adoptees Connect

Transcript

Full show notes: http://www.adopteeson.com/listen/90

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


This show is listener supported.

(intro music)

Haley - You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I’m your host Haley Radke and this is a special episode in our Healing Series. Normally I talk to therapists about the adoptee experience on our Healing Series but today I have my friend, Pamela Karanova. And Pam and I are not therapists but we are so passionate about connecting adoptees with other adoptees. So I wanna talk to her all about her amazing organization, Adoptees Connect, which is peer led adoptee support groups.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I’m so pleased to welcome back to Adoptees On, Pamela Karanova, welcome!

Pamela – Hey, thank you so much, thanks for having me on!

Haley - I’m so excited to chat with you again. Your first episode, you were way back in season 1 and you share your story in episode 11. So I want people to go back and check that out to hear a bit of your story. But I asked you today to come and chat with us because you have started this beautiful initiative called Adoptees Connect and I would love it if you would share a little bit about that. What is Adoptees Connect, why'd you start it, why don't you start there?

Pamela - Sure, absolutely I’d love to share about it. So what Adoptees Connect is, is it’s an adoptee centric support group for adult adoptees and the original group started here in Lexington, Kentucky in my city and I came to a place, I think the end of 2017, probably October-ish where I was at a really, really, really desperate place in my adoptee journey. And I would like to say it’s life or death. Life or death place of needing some kind of support and I was at a crossroad between finding a therapist or finding some other kind of resource, but I just knew there was nothing out there for adoptees. And I had come to a place where I had been in therapy my whole entire life and adoption was never talked about. I think I started therapy around 5 years old and the whole topic of adoption was just never even mentioned. And so I knew you know, going to see a therapist I would end up having to therapy the therapist and that is what kind of took me to this breaking point of starting an adoptee centric support group. And so that’s a little bit about how Adoptees Connect started. And I decided that instead of stuff just for me and my community that I was gonna kind of send a message out there seeing if any other adoptees wanted to start an Adoptees Connect in their city, in their communities and it was, the overwhelming responses were just, still take me back that so many adoptees are searching for a safe place to share their adoptee journeys. And connecting with other adoptees in real life is such a different connection than online. Even though the online ones have been wonderful and I have cherished them all these years. But when I was in my dark season last year, I couldn’t get out of bed to get on the computer. Like I didn't have anyone in my immediate life that got what I was going through. I was experiencing all these grief and loss issues from my adoption experience and I didn't have anywhere to share them. So getting out of bed on the computer was just something that I couldn’t do. And so I was left pretty isolated and alone and I knew that there were hundreds of thousands of other adoptees out there that were feeling the same way. The other thing about Adoptees Connect is you know, we want our groups to meet once a month in real life, but we also want to build relationships with them. And you know, kind of walk life out together. And check on one another and be there for one another and listen to one another and that is the overall basis of Adoptees Connect as connecting with other people that speak the same language as you. And so far we’ve planted approximately 25 groups. And two of them in Canada, one is your group.

Haley - Yay!

Pamela - Yay! So the list is growing. It’s been really miraculous to watch. So that’s kind of the starting of it.

Haley - Yeah, it’s so amazing. I’m just, I’m so excited for you. Because it is really building and building. And now I know that you have personally been in various support groups in your life before. Adoptees Connect is peer led support. But you kind of have an expertise in this area because you’ve been going to support groups and you kind of know the drill. Do you wanna kinda talk a little bit about that?

Pamela - I would love to. Yeah, I actually before, well I’m actually those that know me, I’m in recovery. I have 6 years sobriety August 13th, 2012, over 6 years. But after that, all my adoptee issues came tumbling in when I stopped drinking alcohol and so I was searching for somewhere to share what I was going through and the emotions I was feeling. And I stumbled across Celebrate Recovery which is a Christ centered recovery ministry. And this ministry in a nutshell basically saved my life. As far as being able to have somewhere to attend every week. I ended up spending 4 years being the Women’s Chemical Dependency group leader and gained a wealth of knowledge in this experience and just grew a lot in my own recovery journey. One of the things that stands out to me about my experience in Celebrate Recovery as to why adoptees need their own space is because I remember vividly the first time I ever started sharing something about my birth mother in the small group setting. And I was just, I was very emotional and I was sobbing tears because it was the first time I had ever even said the word birth mother. An adoptive mother interrupted me and cut me off and said, you don't know adoption like I know adoption. And I just immediately shut down, I didn't say another word. And I knew at that moment that even though celebrate recovery is supposed to be a safe space, it wasn’t a safe space for me being an adoptee sharing my adoptee feelings. And so I left there that day, I ended up going back, they convinced me to go back and I’m really thankful that they did. And I’m glad that they did. And the adoptive mom apologized and you know I spent the next 4 years working on bypassing all of those little things that can stop us from sharing our voice and our story. And I started to share it anyway and it really helped me build my confidence in sharing my story and getting the experience from the small group setting. And I finally got to a point where I just felt like I had been working on the recovery thing for so long, so many years, I just wanted to kind of get off of that bandwagon and go enjoy life. So I kinda stepped down from a leadership position and then it took me into a place where I still realized I needed support, I needed adoptee support. I needed support from people that understand me and that hear me and that listen to me and that speak my language. So that is when I started to put this vision together for Adoptees Connect to be an adult adoptee support group that’s adoptee only basically for our community. So that's kind of where I got my small group experience. And I’m very thankful for that, because it’s brought me to the place I am now.

Haley – Well and as you said, I have a group here in Edmonton that’s affiliated with Adoptees Connect, and so you’ve provided myself and my co leader with training manual and we have support group guidelines and a variety of different resources to help us lead the group. And for someone like me, I have been in leadership positions before. I’ve done public speaking and facilitated different workshops and those kind of things. But not in a support group setting so I wasn’t exactly sure, what does that look like. And so with your experience of being in these other support group environments, you had an idea of like, okay, one of the rules, for example, is no crosstalk. And I was like, I don't even know what that is, never heard of it.

Pamela - Right.

Haley - But so for someone like you, like you had experience with what does a support group look like and function, how does it function well and you’ve had that negative experience with that adoptive mom shutting you down, you’ve been able to help facilitators like me understand some of the intricacies of leading a support group. Because we’re not trained therapists. This is peer led.

Pamela - Right, exactly. That’s the one thing I’ve put pretty clear in the manual about it being self-help, peer led, and it’s just kind of an open model support group where, for our group personally, we don't have anything put in place where it has to be a certain way every single time, we kind of want it to flow naturally. I know for instance of myself, I wait a whole month to be able to go to my small group and share what I’m sharing. So I have something specific that I wanna share every time that I come. And so with everything like planned out to a T, I felt like it kind of steps in the way of people being able to share organically. But the groups are set up as a self-help model and it’s just a, pop in when you can. You don't have to make a commitment to attend every one. We want you to just come as you are, you know, anytime that you can come. And yeah, so basically that’s it.

Haley - What has been the importance to you personally of being with other adoptees in person? You said before, it’s different than being online together and processing things. What’s the difference for you when you’re sitting across from somebody in real life.

Pamela - I think for me personally, you can, when an adoptee is sitting with another adoptee, like I can feel their emotions. I can feel their heartbreak or their, the thing that they celebrate because I’m too in the shoes of an adoptee. And I think it brings such a deeper level of a connection. I get like, almost euphoric when I connect with other adoptees in real life. It’s like this happiness that I can't even explain, to be able to connect with them and to be able to share journeys. And I feel like it’s just such a deeper level of a connection when you can actually reach out and touch someone, you can hug them. You can you know, go and be with them when they’re going through a hard time. You can just physically be present and walk life out together. So it was just, it’s just a whole different level of you know, a connection than what you experience on line with adoptees even though that is a different kind of connection that’s just as valuable for so many of us. But that’s for me, it’s just a deeper level of connection and one that I’ve never experienced in my whole entire life until, I’m 44 now, finally experiencing a group that I can actually say feels like home should feel. Like with where people understand me and they don't shut me down and they wanna hear me and listen and learn. I think that’s pretty much it for me as far as building that deeper level of connection. And I think a lot of adoptees have never experienced it so they don't realize what it's even like. So they don't realize what they're missing out on when they have these connections in real life. Because I didn't realize what I was missing out on and now it’s like, it’s not anything close to being any type of a burden, it’s a very big part of my life and it’s something really exciting that brings joy in more ways than I can even imagine. Just the thought of next month we’re meeting, and the next month we’re meeting, and then the next month we’re meeting and it’s like, oh my god, this is gonna go on forever, it makes me so excited that we’re all gonna be meeting. And I don't know, it ends up being just a really important part of your life. And then it also creates a dynamic where me personally, I feel like my feelings about being adopted have always been a burden to people who aren’t adopted that don't understand em. And it’s really hard to articulate the feelings to people sometimes. So what these groups are creating for me, is a safer place to share my feelings about my adoptee stuff where I don't feel so pent up and like I’m gonna explode if I don't share them and then it comes out on people who are close to me that aren’t adopted that really don't know how to respond I guess or they can't really give me what I’m needing.

Haley - Right.

Pamela - And I don't mean to, they don't mean to, but anyway, so it’s just a lot of really good dynamics to the positive aspect of these connect groups.

Haley - Now let’s go into what sort of happens at them. Now let’s, without breaking confidentiality, maybe you and I can kind of give a little bit of idea of some of the things that people might bring up in a group like this. And I'm just thinking of just generic topics, Pam, that people can see that it doesn’t have to be like, a crisis situation for you to come to support group. It could just be normal everyday life stuff that triggers us or, you know what I mean?

Pamela - Right, right.

Haley - Yeah.

Pamela - I've seen a little bit of everything come through our groups. I mean I do think that a lot of the sharing is just basic experiences of comparing experiences of who has searched and who hasn’t searched and why you searched and why you decided not to search and who has medical history and who doesn’t have medical history. And you know, just basic topics for adoptees to share with one another and then other times people will come with a crisis issue going on or really just need a place to share to just be heard and validated from other adoptees. So we’ve seen a wide scenario, we’ve seen, you know, people come and just share a positive reunion story that is more of a you know, warming uplifting type of experience. And so it’s been a big variety, but like you said, it doesn’t have to be just something that is a crisis situation. It’s more about building the relationships and showing up and just you know, getting to know one another and sharing experiences.

Haley - Yeah. It’s similar in our group. I mean, sometimes people are just sharing what’s going on in their life. It’s not necessarily even adoption related. But those themes just kind of happen to come out.

Pamela - Right, right. Exactly yeah. I agree.

Haley - That’s a good picture of what some of the things are that have been talked about. Now there are a variety of different people who are facilitators. So we have, there’s a couple that are therapists but when they’re leading, they’re in a peer role. They don't have their therapist hat on. And the sizes of groups are a big range too. So do you wanna talk about that a bit?

Pamela - You said the sizes as far as the groups?

Haley - Yeah, like sometimes it’s just me and my co leader.

Pamela - Right, right. Yes, no, I totally would love to touch on that. Because I think that there have been a few times that some of our facilitators have gotten discouraged and upset and I have honestly I’ve been, January will be a year since I launched my group. And there have been numerous times where it’s just been me and one other attendee. And I like to just encourage them to not give up hope on the group growing. But at the same time, really sit back and be able to cherish the one on one time that you have with that adoptee, because you can really talk and build such a deeper connection with them and it really, truly is a gift to be able to have that one on one time. And I look at, I’ve been so thankful for the one on one time that I’ve had with each of my attendees that I know that we’re gonna grow and we are growing. But we’re not always gonna have that. And so, some of the groups have had, I mean, I don't know, like in the teens show up for the first one, I can’t remember the exact numbers. But some of them have, you know, two, three, four people show up. I like to say the smaller size groups are more intimate and you can build closer relationships than in the bigger ones, it’s a little bit harder to do that. But they still serve such a wonderful purpose in their own way. So yeah, there’s all different varieties. But I just say you know, if you’re by yourself and you don't know any other adoptees in the area, and you’re interested in even starting a group, even one other person. If you know one other person that would be interested in meeting, it’s the connection, that’s all you need is one other person.

Haley - That’s right! Yeah, so if people are interested in starting an Adoptees Connect in their area, well first of all, where we can find out where the groups are already planted and started? And then how can somebody go about starting a group if they don't already have one in their area.

Pamela - Yeah, so you would just go to adopteesconnect.com and then we have one of the tabs that is listed, Group Locations. And under that tab you’ll see all of the contact information for the groups and the facilitators that are currently having groups around. And then there is another tab that says, Starting a New Group. And just click on that tab and enter your information and we will basically correspond through email, through some various emails. It’s a little bit of a process, it’s not an overnight thing, but that is the way to get started. And we have quite a few, like as you mentioned, quite a few resources in play for new facilitators and people that are interested as far as a secret group on Facebook where all the facilitators can gather and share files and information. And it’s just a safe place for facilitators to really have a lifeline if they need any help or have any questions. And then we have the manual like you said and there’s quite a few other things that we have in play for getting someone on board to facilitate a group. So I guess I would say start by looking at the website to make sure there’s not already a group in your location. And then go to a Starting a Group tab and there’s also quite a bit of information on the website and other tabs about the group guidelines and the FAQs and testimonials, ways to volunteer and different things like that. There’s a wealth of information on the website. So that’s where I would say the starting point would be.

Haley – Definitely, now I did not ask you ahead of time if I could ask you this, but, do you wanna just talk a little bit, I don't know, you're 501(c)(3) now! That’s exciting!

Pamela - Yes! I would love to touch on that! That was actually a really big decision that I prayed about it, I’m a prayer person. I got some guidance from some of my friends that I’m really close to and really thought it out thoroughly. And I had no idea in a year that we were going to have 25 groups planted and in doing that, it has created quite a workload on top of my already workload. But I’ve actually, it’s not a bad thing, it’s a really good thing. But it’s also something that I had to make a decision and moving forward that I either had to throw in the towel on this because it’s just getting to be so much as far as the timewise of it and the work that’s put into it that it felt like I couldn’t do it the way that I wanted to do it with everything moving so fast. Or I could go the route of setting up a nonprofit and applying for the 501(c)(3) status and hopefully keep this vision alive moving forward. Because we don't wanna stop. Like, the thing with Adoptees Connect is I don't wanna stop and say hey, we’ve got enough groups I just want us to keep growing. But in order to do that, I can’t do it all by myself. And so I did make the decision to make it a nonprofit 501(c)(3) so hopefully in the next little bit of time, we will be moving along with getting some help to be able to make things move a lot smoother as they grow. And so it’s a really exciting time, you know it also makes it possible so if people want to make donations to Adoptees Connect, to be able to help us bring this mission forward. Obviously, tax deductible. And it just opened a whole new window of being able to keep this thing growing and moving and the vision alive so yeah, it’s really been pretty exciting. I’ve got 100% support so far. So that’s awesome. I appreciate everybody that’s supported this far.

Haley - Yes, yes. So if you want to, if people wanna donate they can do that at adopteesconnect.com.

Pamela - Yes ma’am. And they can do it on the Facebook page as well. I’ve got it set up there now where people can do fundraisers like for their birthdays or whatever the case may be as far as the fundraiser goes. But people can set up their own private fundraiser to raise funds for Adoptees Connect’s vision and then also through the website as well.

Haley - That’s awesome. Cool. I didn't know you could do that. That’s great.

Pamela - I know it’s so cool.

Haley - Well thanks so much for sharing, is there anything else that I didn't ask you about that you wanna make sure that you know about that about Adoptees Connect?

Pamela – I don't really think so, other than you know, we can all have so many fears about navigating waters like this, like we don't have it all together or we have too much going on or we have too many issues to be able to do something like this. And I would just like to encourage adoptees to just step out of the boat and really think about creating their own safe space in their community, not just for themselves but for their fellow adoptees because it’s overdue for all of us and we really, really, really need it. And you know, that’s basically it. Just encourage them along the way.

Haley - Well and you know, I often think about this. If there’s someone else out there, going through what I’m going through, I mean how I can reach out to them? How can I find them? How can we support each other through the good times and the bad times?

Pamela - Right, right.

Haley - I don't know about you, but you know, the friends I have in my life sometimes get a little bit tired of the adoption talk.

Pamela - Exactly!

Haley - And other adoptees they don't. They get it.

Pamela - I know. No, I’m right with you 100%. That’s exactly why I said, I feel like it’s created less of a burden on my immediate family and friends that aren’t adopted, because I can take my adoptees stuff and save it for my group and for the relationships. And I meet my adoptees in my group as much as possible through the week too. So we don't just meet once a month. Like we do go to dinner together, go to lunch together, go to walk together, go to concerts together, you know? So it’s just really changed everything about the dynamics about having friendships that are ones that you can truly connect with. So yeah.

Haley - That’s fantastic. Thanks so much, and one more time, where can we connect with you online?

Pamela - You can look me up by my Facebook, Pamela Karanova. I do my blogging at adopteeinrecovery.com and then I think I’m on Instagram as, under Pamela Karanova as well. So I’m pretty much able to be found.

Haley – You’re everywhere. And all the resources that we talked about, the links to all of the different locations for Adoptees Connect, a link to donate, or a link to, if you’re interested in starting a group in your area, are all on adopteesconnect.com.

Pamela - Yes ma’am.

Haley - Wonderful, thanks so much. So good to talk with you.

(upbeat music)

Haley - If you would like to stay informed and up to date with what’s happening with Adoptees On, please come over to adopteeson.com/connect, you can find links to all of our social media profiles there. Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, @adopteeson, you can find us any of those places. And there’s also a sign up for our Adoptees On newsletter which I try to write monthly. And I don't always succeed, so no worries, there’s not gonna be spam in your mailbox. And I’d love to connect with you there. Wanna say a big thank you to my Patreon supporters if you wanna support the show monthly and keep the work of Adoptees On going, go to adopteeson.com/partner to find out how you can partner with me. Next Friday we kick off a brand new series, where we’re gonna be talking about adoptees and addiction. Thanks for listening, let’s talk again next Friday.

(exit music)

89 [Healing Series] Somatic Therapy with Jennifer Griesbach, LCSW

Transcript

Full show notes: https://www.adopteeson.com/listen/89

Episode Transcription by Fayelle Ewuakye. Find her on Twitter at @FayelleEwuakye


(intro music)

You’re listening to Adoptees On, the podcast where adoptees discuss the adoption experience. I’m your host Haley Radke, and this is a special episode in our Healing Series, where I interview therapists who are also adoptees themselves, so they know from personal experience, what it feels like to be an adoptee. Today we are talking all about somatic therapy. Let’s listen in.

(upbeat music)

Haley – I’m so pleased to welcome to Adoptees On, Jennifer Griesbach, welcome Jennifer!

Jennifer - Hi Haley, thank you.

Haley - Jennifer is a New York based therapist, who is also an adoptee of course. She uses the mind-body connection as an avenue to help adoptees heal from adoption trauma. Okay, what is mind-body connection? You gotta break that down for us right away.

Jennifer - When we’re talking about the mind-body connection, I think we’re really talking about that the body really deserves a place at the table in therapy. That you know, our experience is actually a whole lived experience and our bodily experiences are such a large part of that. We tend, sometimes we can prioritize this thinking part of our brains and our experience. So when, the mind-body connection is one of the contemporary ways to talk about this. But it’s really talking about our whole experiences as a lived whole. And how the body is such a big part of that.

Haley - Thank you for telling us about that. Jennifer, this is your first time on Adoptees On. Can you tell us a little bit of your story?

Jennifer - Sure. So I was born in 1968 in Toronto and I was adopted in a closed adoption really soon after my birth. So I was adopted at 11 days old. And I was the first child in my adoptive family. I have a brother who is 3 years younger. He was adopted 3 years later. So that was always was a part of my history growing up. And then I am in, sort of in partial reunion at this point. So I’ve actually been in reunion with my birth mother for 17 years. And I’ve had all of the ups and downs and interesting changes in reunion that I'm, really one of things I am interested in as an adoptee and working with adoptees is, how adoption hits us in different ways over the life cycle. And that’s been the case for myself. And then my interests, my difficulties around it have come up in different ways at different points of my adult life. I think there’s obstacles in the journey of adult adoptees and I’m so glad that we’re hearing more about this and that it’s not just about the adopted child anymore.

Haley - Yes.

Jennifer - Yeah. I do feel very fortunate to have, you know, had a long stretch of time to be in reunion and to sort of work on some of the different things that have come up around that.

Haley - Thank you. Thanks for sharing a bit of your story with us. So today we are gonna be talking about somatic therapy. So I’ve heard the word somatic, am I saying that right?

Jennifer - You’re saying it perfectly, yep.

Haley - Okay. So I’ve heard that word more recently, the last few years. But I don't really know what means. So can you tell us what that means? And in the context of somatic psychotherapy or somatic therapy.

Jennifer - Soma actually comes from, the root of soma I believe means the body. But somatic therapy is a kind of way of dealing with the experience, or the lived body in its wholeness. And soma moves through time. So it’s not a static sense of this is the body, like the body as in now. But the body as a process and a kind of a becoming. So how we sink into our physical process and how that subtly changes as moves as we’re in relation with someone. Or in relation with ourselves.

Haley - Okay, that’s really interesting. I didn't realize that there’s that time aspect to it. So a lot of times, we’ve talked about how the body stores our trauma. And so I imagine that’s where this is kind of going, using the body to heal as well.

Jennifer - Absolutely. The first thing is to really start to notice at a very granular level, how the, oh my god, this is so hard to explain.

Haley - Well okay, so we have, we’ve recommended before The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel Van Der Kolk. Is somatic therapy something that addresses things he teaches in that book?

Jennifer – Absolutely. In fact that was going to be recommended resource too. I think that book really talks so clearly about the connection between the body and trauma. And especially how people who’ve had early trauma, trauma that happened in the nonverbal period, so really any time from birth through the age of 3. Although certainly trauma that happens is registered in the bodies throughout our entire lives. That book talks so beautifully about how the body stores these difficulties of trauma and how the body reacts to it. So one thing that I’m always interested when someone wants to begin therapy and has some of these issues is, how their trauma actually is held in and how their body reacts to that trauma. So are they tensing or releasing, is there a way that they move away from the trauma in their body?

Haley - Okay so somebody comes to see you, in your office, and they’re an adoptee. But what are they gonna experience differently coming to see you as a somatic therapist versus someone who’s doing talk therapy?

Jennifer - One of the main things that they’re gonna notice when they start therapy with me is that we will be speaking about but also taking some time to really feel the repercussions in their body of what they’re talking about. So when someone comes in and maybe they have a sense that what’s going on in their life has to do with their adoption and we are talking a little bit about their history, I’ll be asking them, as you tell me that, how do you actually feel that in your body? Or you’re saying that you’re feeling a little bit sad right now. Can we really get in and see what that sadness feels like in your body? So that they deepen their sense of their lived experience of that feeling.

Haley - And what kind of things would people tell you? Like would they say a specific, I don't know, a specific body part? Or I don't know, what would be an example?

Jennifer - That’s a great question. So one thing that might happen is, that we may try to locate where they feel their sadness in their body. So you know, for some people they feel a lot of emotions, they feel emotions in particular places. Other people will find that over and over again, sadness is in their throat, or sadness is in their heart or they have some fluttering in their stomach. So we’re starting to kind of, map out where their feelings live in their bodies.

Haley – Okay so you pinpoint that feeling in the body. And what does that do? Is that just like, you’re building your connection again to your brain? Or I don't know, can you like, this is probably hard to talk about because it’s so, it’s kind of out there, right? Like there’s nothing that you can say, oh yeah, then we drew a line from this to this part of your brain. It’s not like that.

Jennifer - Exactly. And I would say that you kind of hit the nail on the head. That that is really fundamental to an approach. The body is kind of like a, we live with it all the time, it’s giving us information all the time. But it’s not got one to one connections where okay, you feel your sadness and it is in this place and it always feels like this. So we’re looking at what this particular sadness or this particular movement that happens, or this relationship that’s happening between us. So I mean, I can give an example. I’ve listened to your podcast and I’ve heard your voice many times but here we are talking. And I hear your laugh and as you laugh I feel into my body, and I can feel oh a little bit of release, a little bit of dropping through my core. And I find my seat just a little bit more. And then as I do that, I feel a little energy coming up through the back of my spine. So all of those subtle movements, which aren’t exactly, they’ll sort of solidify even into emotions. But they go into this wholeness that’s happening between us of, hm, my excitement of talking with you about this, this kind of therapy that I do, and my sort of interest in us getting a little bit more deep into a way that I can explain it. So that’s the kind of level that I, that I am interested in with my clients and interested in opening up for them.

Haley – And so as your client becomes aware of that feeling in their body, what happens next for them? Like, what happens when you are able to feel the sadness in your gut or feel the anger or burning somewhere?

Jennifer - That is the question. And what is it that happens next? So the answer to that is so individual, but what happens is that we really explore that. So you might find that that let’s see, it’s an anger. That that anger really develops and becomes full and has it’s full expression and peaks and then passes away. And then that’s like an anger that you really felt. Or you might find that it gets either stuck at a certain point where you get bored with it or you move away. So we’re looking at just exactly how you, in that moment, are experiencing and moving with anger and what you do with it. And I guess, there’s a way that with the body we can get into such detail about how you are feeling your feelings and feeling them, with whatever, for in this case, it’s the therapist who’s in the room. But of course everything that’s happening in the room is also probably happening in your life. So I’m looking at the subtle ways in which we move between each other, the ways that something that too might encourage, say, you as my client to shut down to a certain point. Or to express that feeling and then that becomes information for you, in terms that might then inform you know, as something that’s happening between you and your spouse, or something that’s happening between you and your child. Or a particular feeling that you’re having in the world that you’re, that you feel is stuck in some way. So we’re really looking at, on this very basic level. How do your feelings and your, how does your lived body sort of move through something that’s coming up and how does that come to fruition?

Haley - So when you’re helping an adoptee go through this process, what would be some of the things that you would maybe ask them about, or is there anything that you’re like, oh you’re adopted, ok, we should definitely talk about such and such, I don't know, do you have any examples of that?

Jennifer – Well there are certain themes of course that do seem to come up over and over again, but really I’m trying to start with whatever is bringing you into therapy. And usually people who come into therapy with me, if they’re coming as adoptees, they usually know that I’m interested in working with adoptees, so they often already have some kind of a sense that adoption might be a piece of the issue. The thing is that I think, I think each of us processes our whole adoption journey, and I really mean that, from day one, birth, and even from maybe before birth. From in the womb. We are so unique and in terms of looking at some of this early stuff, I’m looking for, whatever is getting in the person’s way. So what that was for me, might be very different for you, might be very different from the next person who comes into my office. So I’m trying to listen to the whole story and then find the places that seem resonant to whatever the issues are that’s bringing a person in today.

Haley - So why is somatic therapy so helpful, do you think, for adoptees in particular?

Jennifer - One reason is that for adoptees, there is often, but not always, ‘cause trauma is kinda a mysterious thing and trauma really, you know, each of us will have different pieces of a story. We can have similar stories, but what is traumatic for each of us is going to be different. But for so many adoptees, there is this very early loss. And somatic therapy goes right to the heart of our earliest way of knowing the world. So when we came into this world, we came in with a body. And it could be said that movement, possibly if we add sound, but that movement is our first language. And in fact with our body and our body connection to our parents, whether those were our birth or first parents, or adoptive parents, or foster parents to whoever was parenting us, it was through our bodies that we had our first interactions with our caregivers and with the world. And there's a way that babies kind of wonder the world. We do that through our bodies. So when you invite the body even more fully into therapy, you go to a somatic therapist or you bring it body’s experience into therapy, you’re automatically calling on that very early experience. And that very early way of being in relation with the world. And so I think that’s one reason why it’s really powerful for adoptees. Also, and this, you find this in the trauma literature, I think people have spoken about this on your podcast too before. Traumas that happened before we were verbal, so we start to get language maybe at around age 1 but we’re really not speaking in full sentences until we were verbal a little while after that. But things that happened to us before we had words, often can't be processed in words. So there’s something about bringing a body forward and a lot of the modalities that work with trauma do this really well. You know, for instance, EMDR  pays attention to the body, there’s a lot of different somatic therapies that pay attention to the body and trauma. But bringing the body forward in experiences are really great way of gaining better access, clearer access to some of those early feelings and things that are hard to put into words.

Haley – And as you practice, like as your clients come in and they're practicing, right? Connecting to what does my body actually feel, how does bringing that skill into your life, I mean how does that benefit you?

Jennifer – Oh, you know, one of the things that therapy really can do for you is give you more awareness of yourself. And to have that deeper physical awareness of yourself, I just, you know, I’ve experienced that in my own life and I see that in my clients, it brings so much more awareness. So we’re all walking around with bodies and we can all feel them more and more fully. But when we’ve had early trauma, we’ve probably created a number of ways to move away from or to shield ourselves from some of these really difficult feelings. And those ways of shielding ourselves might actually be habits from very early on that we might not fully need anymore. So we may not be living in the same situation that was so traumatic when we were born. But we may still have some of those, some little ways that we have adapted to protect ourselves. And the truth of it, those things that we have learned to do were so important and may still be so important. So therapy is not about getting rid of them, but about really feeling what they’re doing for your now. And seeing if they are, if they’re really still congruent with who you are now. So when we talk about some of the things that bring people into therapy, maybe difficulties in a relationship, maybe a sense of confusion of not knowing who you are. Maybe some issues around adoption as it hits different points in the life cycle. But some of the feelings and some of the difficulties may actually be sitting on some of this early preverbal material. And how we are reacting in our bodies to these things today, can actually link back to some of the early things. So for instance, like I’m thinking about someone who had an early trauma and their response to it at that time is to kind of, to go away. To go to sleep. To move away into protecting themselves through not feeling. And how that might still be a strategy that they use today. And they might come home and use that in their marriage and find that that is now not working so clearly. So by being able to work with the body, you can see how, what you’re doing now in your body has a resonance that might lead back to some understanding. It’s like, it’s these things that are kind of incomprehensible to us that we do now. Where a somatic approach can really help us to slowly get more understanding of what our own process is. And we may find that they're not so strange when we put them in the context of what we know or what we imagine has happened to us.

Haley – Going back to what you can expect if you’re coming to see a therapist who use. this modality, is this like a 50/50 blend? Like 50% you’re doing, you know, talk therapy kind of stuff and then 50% it’s also paying attention to your body? Or like, what does it kind of look like I guess?

Jennifer - So Haley, I think that the reality is that each practitioner is gonna have such a variety of approaches. So there’s all kinds of specific therapies that will fall under the umbrella of somatic therapy or body oriented psychotherapy. And you know, those, there are a lot of, so some of the examples that I can think of, there’s dance therapy, and there’s movement therapy. There’s somatic experiencing which is a very experiential form of really paying attention to the movements of the body. Sensory motor, IFS that you talked about has a real body component. When your guest was on, Marta I think it was, was talking about IFS, she really talked about how she grounds and asks people to feel things in their bodies. EMDR, one of the four elements that we look at early on and one of the things that can be targeted in our body’s feelings. So there are a lot of different therapeutic modalities that bring the body forward as really a place to sit and to experience and to talk about and maybe even to experience nonverbally. So it’s kind of very dependent on the therapist and that’s a really good thing to ask them, is what do your sessions look like? So a dance or a movement therapist might have you up on your feet making movements and expressing through movement. And it might look like very active. Someone else it might be an EMDR practitioner, might really be paying attention to the body and asking about the body, but it might just look like you’re sitting there and you’re talking and you’re doing some EMDR. The way that I work is kind of a blend. My clients sometimes do get up on their feet. I have a variety of props around my office. It has a couch, it does not look like a yoga studio. But if you look carefully in the corners, there are yoga blocks and there are some balls, there are some stretchy bands and some blankets and we use them to experiment. You know, when someone is starting to feel maybe a little bit floaty or not grounded and perhaps they want to experience more grounding, we have different ways that we can put the blocks under their feet to feel a little bit more their ability to press into the floor, or have some support on their back. So you know, I offer things for people to experiment with as we’re working with some of this material and some of these themes that come up. Especially as they start to know more and more of what’s coming up for them. What would happen if they stood up and said to me, no one ever sees me, versus sitting down, what would happen if they had their feet on the blocks and could be more grounded with that? So I guess, all of that is to say that there is really a variety of how a session would look and it’s a good thing to be seeing someone when you’re interviewing therapists and you’re thinking about, is this an approach that’s right for me, is to get a sense of what they actually do. Is it more movement oriented, it is more paying attention to the body?

Haley - And I think, personality wise, that’s really important to know. When you were talking about the dance therapy and like, that you might be up and making movements I was like, I don't think that’s for me right now. Because, part of that would be for me, that would be really uncomfortable to have somebody watch me doing some expressive movement in some way.

Jennifer - So it's good that you know that about yourself. And the thing about somatic therapy, I was thinking about this. One of the things that’s interesting to me is that people who are drawn to it, is that some people really want to go deeply into their body and other people are drawn to somatic therapy ‘cause they have a sense that they’re not accessing their body. Maybe they have a longing to, but they have sometimes a feeling of confusion in the body or not cohering or just discomfort. And to know that this would just like with any therapeutic modality, you can go at exactly your own pace. So it’s interesting to see, you know, when people come into my office, they know that I do have a somatic approach, but some people, the work really looks like talk therapy and really the difference is that I am paying very close attention to my own body process. And noticing your body process, or my client’s body process. And I may not even say anything about it, but I’m taking it in. And that’s really informing also, another layer of not just what they’re saying, but also how their body is speaking. And how it’s speaking to me and received in my body. So there’s that level too and that’s, to me that’s a really interesting part of this work. And I think this happens, this happens in therapy of all kinds. But the, sort of, it’s another way to think about that, the tuning that happens between therapist and client. And the way in which what you do affects me and what I do affects you. And that mirrors in some way, that dyadic relationship between the parent and infant. Not that the therapy relationship is a parent infant relationship but that that connection, that can exist, and that for many of us, who were adopted at a young age, we wonder how much of that we had. That way of attuning with the body is again something that we as adoptees may long for. And that some therapy that pays attention to the body is in a good place to provide just like, I think it happens in all good therapy, is that back and forth.

Haley – I was just gonna ask you, so if you’re already going to see a therapist, but you’re listening to Jennifer and you’re thinking okay, I think I might be disconnected and this sounds kind of interesting. Can you go to your therapist, your existing therapist and say, hey, do you do any somatic stuff? Or, like how would you ask them that? And could you expect a lot of therapists to know a little bit about this?

Jennifer – I think that most therapists would be open to hearing more about what’s going on in your body, what your body processing with your feelings. And this would be a way to just deepen the work that you are already doing as to, as you're talking, is to notice more about what you’re experiencing in your body. I mean we could just, like an analogy would be, to think about walking down the street. That you can walk down the street and think the thoughts that you’re thinking, or you can walk down the street and feel your feet on the ground and feel yourself walking as you think. And so if you’re interested in doing this kind of work and you’re with someone who is not necessarily a somatic therapist, I think you can start for yourself to feel those feet a little more, metaphorically. Just feel yourself in the therapy room and I imagine that if you begin to talk about that, that that is going to become a part of the process. Just like you would with dreams or you know, some of the feelings that come up that all of this material is not necessarily logical words, is going to be part of the mix.

Haley – Well I can totally picture that, like I could be talking about something and I do this already. Talking about something and be like, oh yeah, see, now I feel sick to my stomach.

Jennifer - Yes. Even just, that’s a beautiful example, even just to say that in therapy, is, I imagine that will deepen your work and also give your therapist even more of an idea of how you’re actually experiencing what’s going on. You know and another way that you can just work on this, whether you’re in therapy or not is, is to feel yourself doing everyday things, just feel yourself as you walk down the street, as you stir the soup, as you open the car door. And as you talk, with your children, your parents, your friends, as you are in relation to people, to notice when you are drawn to words, or drawn away. Even just to notice, one thing that you can pay attention to is just how you’re feeling tension. So you know, we walk around every day. Some of us have chronic tension. But then we walk around kind of tensing and relaxing ourselves all the time. Even, I could feel that in myself as I’m talking a little bit of tension coming in right now sort of in the back of my jaw and then it releases as I move into what I’m going to say next. You can simply start to notice how you feel pressure and tension in your body and where you feel it and I’m moving my hands. Nobody can see me but you can notice is it sort of going across your body, like are you, squeezing in say, in your shoulders. Or are you stretching up or stretching down? Or is it back and forth? So there’s different dimensions of this. We need to notice that. Even in life and in therapy, when we’re talking about something and it gets difficult is how are you tensing and in what way and what’s the sort of feeling or the quality of that tension? There’s a whole body counterpoint that’s going on all the time to the talking that we are doing and that is such an integral part of the back and forth that we’re having. And it’s really, it’s another, I don't wanna say it’s another track, because it’s really part of a wholeness, but it’s another layer of what’s going on in therapy and in our lives. And to be in tune to that more and more is to have access more to that nonverbal side, that preverbal self. Which I think is so important to all of us.

Haley – Yeah, definitely I was just gonna ask you, I mean I know you’ve kind of stated it throughout, but just, maybe final thoughts on just the benefits of that for adoptees, especially over time? Over time, having more of an awareness of how your body and feelings are sort of intertwined. Can you speak to that a little bit?

Jennifer - So I think that, you know, as you say about knowing yourself, this sort of question of identity and who am I and who am I in this moment? And who am I in this world is such a big one for adoptees. You know, if we haven’t had the kind of mirroring or the kind of, whether it’s connection or just knowing sort of basic information about ourselves. In the absence of that, where there can be, people feel it in different ways, but a sense of confusion or emptiness, or of playing a part. So there’s something I think that’s really profound about tuning in to this basic, there is no denying that you are having physical feelings all the time. That you’re moving and sensing and feeling and perceiving and having emotions. And making meaning out of them. And that to feel that stream of moving, sensing, feeling, perceiving a little bit more fully, I think helps you orient yourself better and know more clearly who you are. It is a process it does take time, but to me that’s the great, the great benefit that can come for adoptees. And for others. And it’s not just adoptees.

Haley - Thank you for teaching us about somatic therapy. That was so good and so interesting. I’m totally interested in learning more about this. So how can we connect with you online?

Jennifer - The best way to connect with me at this point is through my website, which is jennifergriesbach.com. I have a small email list, I don't at this point have any way for you to just join my email list, but you can just send me a message or an email through my website. And that’s a great way to connect with me.

Haley - Wonderful, thank you so much. We learned a lot from you today, all about somatic therapy.

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Haley - So if you’re listening to this when it’s been released, we are smack in November where it’s National Adoption Awareness Month and I just wanna encourage you to do your best self-care this month. We are seeing a lot of messages about how happy and amazing adoption is, and whatever your views on adoption, I think we can agree that it’s more nuanced than that. So if you are interested in participating in the conversation, there’s lots of ways you can do that on Twitter, or Instagram, on Facebook, there’s a bunch of different hashtags going around. #NAAM2018 for National Adoption Awareness Month is one that you’ll see lots of adoptive parents using. And so it’s great to have adoptees sharing their thoughts on that hashtag as well. Another great way you can join in the conversation is, can you recommend Adoptees On? You know, there’s conversations happening and the adoptee voice is getting left out. Maybe you can post, hey, how about listening to this episode, it kind of speaks to the situation that you're talking about, and there’s a little bit more to it than that. So if you're up for sharing things about your experience, I encourage you to do that. And if it’s a little bit much, which I know it is for a lot of us, then listen, you don't have to be on social media for November. Just take the month off, take a break, get Instagram off your phone, take Facebook off. Take a break. It is okay to disengage for your own sanity. So either way, I respect your decision, I support you, I have been posting quite a bit because I wanna make sure the adoptee voice is out there, but some of the questions that I’m getting from prospective adoptive parents really challenging. So if you see a question like that on any of the Adoptees On feel free to chime in and tell them what you think. And thank you. Thank you so much to my very amazing and generous monthly partners of the show, I would not be able to do this show every single week without your support. So thank you. If you wanna stand with me and say adoptee voices are important and if you want to help this show spread around the world, go to adopteeson.com/partner and you can find out how to join up with me and almost 100 other supporters to share the message of Adoptees On and how adoptees connecting and can really bring each other healing in community. So thank you so much for your support and thanks for listening and let’s talk again next Friday.

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