I needed this
My heart needed this book so badly. I found it recommended by another parent of a child of trauma. Until that point, I had been reading "normal" parenting books about brain development, parenting techniques, how to handle xyz. All seemed spot on with my biological kids... and completely unhelpful with the foster child of trauma who i needed help with. "We DO that... it isn't helping." Nothing I did seemed to help. Our home often felt like a war zone, with everyone a victim.
And we got very little support. I now understand that therapists we saw were not equipped for a child of this background. Friends and family would often stare at me as though I was crazy, ungrateful, or even downright horrible as I'd try to share or vent my hurt and frustration. "But he's such a good kid!" So I stopped sharing. Which meant I was alone. The only people who seemed to understand were those who had been through the same thing. Those brief moments of connection were so validating... that this wasn't a normal parenting situation. But while they understood, they described their experiences more as survival too. There doesn't seem to be adequate recognition or education for foster parents/guardians/adoptive parents that these are *not* normal parenting situations. So we're all left in the dark, alone, trying to reinvent the wheel.
This book shares the very real experiences and challenges. Jennie shares the toll it took on her and her marriage. She shares what she did well... and what she did not do well. But she kept getting up, learning, and trying again.
Reading this book was incredibly validating that I'm not insane, haha. Mommy shopping is real. The manipulation of relationships is real. The parent triangulation is real. The need to constantly "correct the narrative" after hyperbole and lies is real. The hypervigilance is real and needed. Having health issues because of the daily stress is real. Jennie validates all of this while also keeping in perspective that it isnt kid against adult causing this... it's kid and adult against past trauma.
At times this book really glossed over some aspects... and I understand why. This isn't Parker or Stephen or Bri's story of their journey. It's Jennie's. But sometimes she foreshadows how much something helped, but doesn't go into how in any level of detail. She doesn't mention a lot of the deep challenges she surely faced as they were teens. The book kind of goes in waves of how much it'll share from a period... many chapters focused on one month of time, then years pass in a paragraph. I definitely didn't feel the need for excruciating day-to-day challenges, as I feel those myself. But when she hints at more complex problems (Bri's destructive relationships with guys), I wish she'd offer more insight into her journey as a parent at those points.
Mostly I'd say this book isn't a how-to guide. It's more of a "sit with a warm cup of tea, let the load off, and finally feel heard." While also offering hope and light for our own care of self.