Raising an Adopted Child #6 Adolescence Abstract Thinking.by Anna Glendenning | More from this Blogger 06 Feb 2006 01:31 PM
Our children face many different developmental stages and milestones along the way to adolescence. As little preschool children they began to understand "How" adoption happens. While in the elementary school years adopted children explored "Why" adoption happens. By the time an adopted child reaches adolescence they need to determine how adoption has shaped their lives in specific ways. Adolescence is the transition from childhood to adulthood. This is a rough time for all children as they move from being dependent to independent and separate from their parents. Adopted children face separating from two sets of parents, their adoptive and their biological parents. Most teenage children struggle to define who they are as unique individuals. Young people this age experiment with ways to assert independence while maintaining connections with their family. This is the time in life when children struggle to define themselves and become unique individuals. Adopted child face a slightly more complicated process of becoming independent. Not only do they need to move from dependency in relation to their adoptive parents but, adopted children also need to separate from their birth families. Adopted children don't always accomplish development of their personal identity consciously or communicate what they are feeling verbally. Abstract thinking allows adolescences to consider what "Is" and what "might have been". Children develop a sense of identity when they look at the people whom they are most similar, their parents and siblings. Young people evaluate how they are alike and different from their family members. Adopted children develop their identity twice. First in relation to their adoptive family and the environmental influences that have shaped their lives. Adopted children then evaluate and develop their identity based in terms of their birth family and the genetic influences their birth family played and how they shaped the child's life.
Adoptive parents can help their children move through this stage of adolescence by sharing the information they have about the biological family. Discussing the future and some of the reunion options they may or may not have. Sharing photographs of the biological family, birth parents and other siblings may help them connect with their genetic origins. Adopted children have abstract thoughts about what it means to be adopted and what does it mean to have been adopted by these parents? What is different about how I grew up? What would it have been like to grow up with my birth family? Adolescents need more information in order to develop a healthy sense of independence. photo credits:
For more information about parenting special needs children you might want to visit the Families.com Special Needs Blog and the Mental Health Blog. Or visit my personal website. Learn more about Anna Glendenning ![]() Anna Glendenning is a mother of four. Two biological children grown and out of college, and two siblings and adopted together in 2003. Anna's Personal Website http://www.adoptiveparentsnetwork. Relevantadoption tags christmas | children | parenting | holidays | Food | family | Scrapbooking | baby | pregnancy | relationships User Comments No comments on this article yet. Be the first to comment! Community Tags parenting adopted children Discuss this article
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