32
What I Wish I Knew Then: Understanding the Brain Behavior Connection Barb Clark NACAC Parent Support & Training Specialist

What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

What I Wish I Knew Then: Understanding the Brain Behavior Connection

Barb ClarkNACAC Parent Support & Training Specialist

Page 2: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

• Advocacy• Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support

• Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support• Connecting families with local support

• Leadership Development• Education & Information

North American Council on Adoptable Children- NACAC

Page 3: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

3 Types of Trauma-Dr. Bruce Perry

1. Intrauterine insult; prenatal alcohol or drug exposure, stress during pregnancy

2. Early neglect; mother who is inattentive due to stress, depression, domestic violence, postpartum depression, orphanage, etc.

3. Classic trauma; abuse, molestation, witnessing violence, car accident, medical trauma, etc.

Page 4: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders- FASD

• FASDs are a set of physical, behavioral and cognitive disorders affecting people who were prenatally exposed to alcohol.

• FASDs are permanent disabilities that result in lifetime brain injury/damage. Below are the main diagnosis’s that fall under the spectrum:

• Fetal Alcohol Syndrome -FAS. (1973): 3 facial features, growth deficits, meet the cognitive profile

• Partial Fetal Alcohol Syndrome- pFAS (1996): Have some of the physical features but not all. Match the cognitive profile

• Alcohol Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder- ARND (1996)- new name for FAE (Fetal Alcohol Effect): No physical features but brain was impacted by the alcohol. Must have confirmation of alcohol exposure in utero and match the cognitive profile.

Page 5: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Prevalence of FASD

u 2018 research estimates that 1 out of 20 children have an FASD, but mostly go undiagnosed or are misdiagnosed. (May, 2018). *

u 1 out of 40 children have an Autism diagnosis according to 2018 research.** Autism and FASD have many similarities.

*May, P.A., et al. Prevalence of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders in 4 US Communities. JAMA. Online February 6, 2018.

**Guifeng Xu et al. Prevalence and Treatment Patterns of Autism Spectrum Disorder in the United States, JAMA, December 3, 2016

Page 6: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Red Flags for FASD-questions to consider

• Was the child in foster care or is he/she adopted?• NOFAS estimates that 70-80% of children in foster care

were prenatally exposed to alcohol and have an FASD.• 29-68% of Russian adoptions are estimated to show severe

alcohol-related damage• Is there history of chemical dependency issues for child

or for their parents?• Is child easily distracted, hyperactive, inattentive and

impulsive?• Does the individual have an average IQ but functions at

a much lower capacity?• Does the child continue to make the same mistakes?• Does the child appear to not learn from consequences?

Page 7: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Trauma Informed/Therapeutic/Connected/Relational

ParentingWhat is it and how do you do it?

Page 8: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

The “Blankie”

Page 9: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Trauma Informed Parenting

Consequence Based Parenting

§ Often causes further trauma to the child

§ Slows down and often stops attachment

§ Can impede felt safety for the child

§ Increases anxiety

So many of these kids have

ALREADY experienced some of the

most severe consequences imaginable

Page 10: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Slow down, let the dishes & laundry pile up- and play with your kids!!!!

PLAY WITH YOUR KIDS!!!!!!

Page 11: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Justin Bieber’s Cell Phone

Page 12: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Reframe

§ Move away from constant consequences which produce stress & anxiety

§ Child is more likely to learn skills when not anxious & stressed

Page 13: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Confabulation(otherwise referred to as “lying”)

• “a memory disturbance, defined as the production of fabricated, distorted or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world, without the conscious intention to deceive”

• When under pressure, it is almost a given the correct story will not come out (when in trouble,trying to fit in socially, etc.)

• Teach the child how their brain gets confused and is almost trying to trick them and to let adults help them to know when it is confused.

Page 14: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Polly Pocket Airplane -thinking out of the box

Where does Polly

want to travel to?

Page 15: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Never in the history of calming down

has anyone ever calmed down

by being told to calm down.

Page 16: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Escalations/Raging- What not to do

§ Do not tell the child to calm down more than once if even once!!!

§ Stay calm, and try to talk as little as possible

§ Avoid using the child’s name over & over

§ Do not point out consequences- perceived as threat when child is in the red zone

§ Do not respond to cursing or threats

Page 17: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Escalations/Raging- What to do

§ Remember that when a child is on the way to the red zone, or is already there, their auditory processing disappears.

§ Talk as little as possible and in a calm voice.

§ Use phrases like;

§ What do you need from me right now?

§ How can I help you?

§ Know that often once a rage has started, it is just a matter of waiting it out and keeping yourself calm

Page 18: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Recovering from a rage or escalation

§ It takes at least 2 hours for our bodies and brains to recover from an escalation to the point where we are calm and can process the situation.

§ It takes 24 hours or more for a child with an FASD to recover from an escalation to the point where they are calm and can process the situation.

Neuro-typical person Neuro-diverse person

We are often expecting the child to process and make amends for an escalation when they are not yet capable of doing so.

Page 19: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Last serny, Fingledobe and Pribinwere in the nerd-link trepperinggloopy caples and cleaming burly greps.

Suddently a ditty strezzleboofed into Fingledobe’s tresk. Pribinglaped and glaped.

“Oh Fingledobe!” He Chifed, “That ditty strezzle is tunning in your grep!”

Page 20: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

-- Walter Barbee

“If you’ve told a child a thousand times, and the child still hasn’t learned- it is not

the child who is the slow learner”

Page 21: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Forgive yourself

§ You will mess up

§ This stuff is not natural, …at first

Page 22: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Ask for Forgiveness & Forgive

Do not hold a grudge or expect apology Do not force or expect apology

§ Know that kids with trauma history often struggle with this.

§ Dig deep and you can sometimes find the non-verbal apology or thank you

Page 23: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Get SUPPORT!!!!!!!!

§ Crucial to success is connecting to other

parents who are parenting similar type of

teens

Page 24: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

A foster/adoptive/kinship parent fell in a hole…

Page 25: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Family member said,

§ “You chose to fall in the

hole”

Page 26: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Neighbor said

§ “I’ve never seen a hole

like that before”

Page 27: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Therapist said:

§ “Can you document what happened right before you fell in the

hole, what the potential triggers might be, & how to prevent yourself from

falling in the hole again?”

Page 28: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Case manager said:

§ “We will watch to see if the hole gets

bigger over the next 12 months. What do you need to help you

live in the hole? Ladders are expensive.”

Page 29: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Police said:

“What do you expect

us to do?”

Page 30: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Charity/Non-Profit said:

“Here is a form to fill out to be

put on the waitlist for a

ladder”

Page 31: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Another foster/adoptive/kinship parent said:

“I’m getting in there with you.

I have been here before,

We will work on getting out of here together.

I won’t let you do it alone”

Page 32: What I Wish I Knew Then - CYFD• Advocacy • Foster/Adoption/Kinship Support • Adoption Assistance & Tax Credit Support • Connecting families with local support • Leadership

Barb ClarkNACAC Parent Support & Training [email protected]

www.NACAC.org- become a member of NACAC and sign up for our E-news!