Wednesday, July 25, 2012

When Love Isn’t Enough




                (For those of you who have been reading my blogs, the majority of them come from a place of strength or while in a place of learning and growth.  This blog is a little different. Today I write from a very vulnerable place and from a position of heart ache.  I am raw with grief and frustration.  Our fostering and adopting journey is real and some may disagree with what I am writing, but this is my journey and this is where I am at.)

                I have come to realize that although well intended in my beliefs about this world, I can be very naive.  Over the last couple of months so many things have unraveled before my eyes.  Chaos has crept into every part of my being and has left me really questioning if love is enough.  Don’t take this the wrong way, I still firmly believe that love is what allows healing, love conquers all, love is desired by everyone – even those who are incapable of accepting it or giving it.  Love is the essential “fatty acid” of our existence and our souls.  But in my naïve nature of believing I can “save the world” with enough love, I have landed smack on my face.  Sometimes the reality is that love isn’t enough…

                In our years of being foster parents and caring for those who are in the care of someone other than their biological parents, we have used love to help kids overcome and heal from the effects of trauma. Trauma is ugly…. Trauma is defined as “the condition that produces psychological injury.” It is the inflictor of scars on a person’s soul. Scars that cannot be masked, cannot be removed, cannot be forgotten.  Trauma can be big and it can be small but no matter the size, the details, the length of time it was inflicted or occurred, trauma changes a person.  At some point in our lives each and every one of us experiences something traumatic. It can present itself in the loss of a loved one, abandonment, war, neglect, abuse, etc. These moments are used to define who we are and who we become.  Some will use their experience to try and better themselves, help others, and grow. Others become captives of their trauma – not always by choice. Their trauma takes hold of them and imprisons them; keeping them from being able to move forward, starving them of affection, meaningful relationships, security……LOVE….and so much more. 

                Thad and I have welcomed many trauma “victims” into our lives; not only the children we have brought into our home but those we have been blessed to know through our friends that are also foster parents.  Over the years we have learned that no two children respond the same to the trauma they experience.    Some of the children have this amazing strength and resilience about them and they respond to the nurturing, love, and services of their social workers, foster parents, and even the changes that their birth parents are making.  Other children struggle for years attaching and bonding with the family they are adopted into, some need intensive therapies and never fully overcome the scars marring their soul and causing them to struggle for the rest of their lives.

                The intense scars of trauma are alive and breathing within the walls of my home.  This scarring is none like I have ever experienced before. I have heard of trauma like this, you know those ‘rare’ cases. I believed that the love we could give and pour upon children would make a drastic difference in aiding children as they fight their trauma.  I believed that loving someone enough, pushing them to be their best, pouring out myself to the point of exhaustion would somehow help that child overcome their trauma, help them to learn how to receive and accept love, help them to learn how to reciprocate love, I believed it would help them start to heal.  My heart breaks as I write this because I have hit the wall of reality, full speed ahead.  This collision of reality and hope has created a chaos within me that I can’t seem to get control of.  My love for a child cannot undo the years upon years of hurt, neglect, etc.  Loving a child who does not know how to accept love, who does not know what true love looks like, who fears love, and who has no idea how to love in return cannot overcome their trauma with love alone.  Oh how I wish love was enough. I would give anything for love to be enough right now.

                Trauma is the ugliest thing I have seen.  It rips the innocence from children and replaces the years of carefree bliss with fear, loss, pain, sorrow, and such deep-seated grief that can truly rob a child of all hope and happiness.  Trauma cannot be simply overcome by love. We have tried that, we have put forth every ounce of love we have and it isn’t enough.  I want to scream and shake those birth parents who cause this trauma for these kids, I want to plead with them to refrain from damaging the spirit of their child. I want to beg them to rethink their actions, the situations in which they place their innocent children. I want to show them the end result of what their actions will do.  My heart shatters for those who have been broken by trauma.  At this moment I feel like I have failed because I am incapable of gluing those pieces of brokenness back together. Logically I know I did not inflict this upon this child, but I desperately hoped our love would be enough. I believed that love had the power to heal all wounds; but love is only a part of that healing. Sometimes the wounds of trauma are so deep that intensive therapies are needed even more than love. Sometimes the wounds are too deep to ever reach….

Dear Heavenly Father,

 You know these children, you know their pain. I know full well that my love will never be enough but Lord your love is.  Your loved exceeds all other love and your love can heal all things.  I ask Lord that your healing takes place in the souls and spirits of these victims. I pray for the strength to continue loving without avail and for that love to have a positive impact on those it is poured out upon. I pray for the future of these children, for their protection.

In Jesus Name,

Amen

3 comments:

  1. Great job Nicole, truly inspiring. All you can do in life is show love and let that person affected by trauma to know that there is a place where they can go and be accepted. I think that is what you are providing being a foster parent. The child will learn to love but it needs to be at the childs own pace, not yours. Sometimes being accepted is all a child needs, then slowly they will allow love to come into their lives. You are very inspiring and keep up the good work girl!!

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  2. Thank you for posting Nicole, this has been our realization and our journey as well this past month. I encourage you not to feel like a failure, even though as you know I have experienced those feelings myself. I have felt anger, frustration, regret...that we did not get him sooner, three years of potential healing seemingly lost...Will he ever be able to truly unpack all the garbage life has piled on him...

    It's like he is leaning against a door that holds all the "stuff" the trauma and if he steps away everything will spill out and that is unacceptable to him, that brings fear...so he stays...a prisoner to his trauma...he reaches out as far as he can, but he can't emotionally walk to us, touch us, unless we come to him, where he wants to hold us...a prisoner with him. But we cannot stand with him there,in that place, we must walk, our other children must continue to walk and grow through their own trauma...I want to finish well, I want to stay with him as long as he needs, until he is ready...but I cannot. I know that we are not the family called to do this and I don't like how this makes me feel.

    God has reminded me through all of this that he commands us to get in the game, not win it, or even see it completed...he does that. I have had to embrace that we get to be an important and necessary part in this young man's journey, but not the stopping point. I am learning to rejoice in the fact that I am not enough, but our Savior is.

    You are an amazing lady with so much to give...I encourage you to continue giving even out of your emptiness...Our heavenly father will multiply what you bring and see his will done. My prayers are with you and the family :0)
    Love you!
    Heather

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    1. Heather I cannot thank you enough for your response. I do not wish this type of grief and trial of the heart on anyone. It is hard to not feel like a failure but I have finally come to grips with the fact that I haven't failed this child, I have done everything HUMANLY possible. The failure happened years ago and for the majority of his life. I can't take on that guilt, you can't take that on either. I am so sorry you are experiencing the same trial, but I am thankful that you truly understand. I know we were called to this placement, I don't know the reason behind it, I don't know what will come of it, but I do know it was not a mistake.

      Even though we may not be the right families for these kids, God placed them with us for a very specific purpose. It may be to help us grow, help us to support others who experience the same thing, it may be to prepare us for the next child that enters our family. Or it may not be for us at all - it could be to show the state the true needs of these kids, it could be to put them in a loving home until the right family was available to take them in, it could be that these moments in our homes will give them something they can take with them the rest of their lives.....I wish we knew. I just pray for these kids, I pray for their future, their right family, their salvation, and their ability to overcome and prevail over their imprisonment.

      Thank you so much for your prayers, they are definitely coveted! We will continue to lift your family up in prayers as well!!
      Blessings and hugs!!
      Nicole

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