With enough love and affection can you really turn an adopted child's life around for the better or are they all scarred for life?
It might help you to think that we all carry scars, I don’t know anyone that’s gone through life untouched by trauma, adversity, loss or challenge. For the most part we grow around those scars, adjust and adapt. Some people have circumstances that are so challenging they live with the impact daily and some truly struggle to recover, and some don’t find healing in any meaningful way.
Love, care, stability, education, therapeutic support all play their part in enabling people to reach their potential, adoption is no different in many ways. Where it is different is in the degree and nature of the trauma - being removed from your birth family, no matter how young, represents a significant trauma and finding language to understand things that happened when you were too young to comprehend or even remember properly creates its own challenges. There’s also the issue of the unknown - the very best assessment process can’t know the full story for children pre-adoption, we see what can’t be hidden or what birth parents want us to know but there’s a gap between those two points which may never fully come to light.
The impact on narrative memory, sense of identity and security in yourself cannot be underestimated, the way children’s neurological and physiological development can be impacted by early experiences needs consideration however there’s a lot more understood about this now which can support parents in caring for their children.
So, scarred for life isn’t a term I tend to use because we all carry scars. And I’m not turning my kids life around, because they’re growing in the best way they know how given their circumstances. My job is to support and facilitate that growth so they can live the best lives possible - they may continue to face challenges and some of those challenges may be extreme. My DD has significant developmental delays, most things are very difficult for her, my hope is that as she grows she’ll develop and adapt with lots of support but there’s an uncertainty there.
In coming to adoption it’s worth considering what you’re committing to - which is parenting the child you have to the best of your ability. You’re not saving a child or being their hero - you’re giving them a home and safety and security, come what may. I know the outcomes for my kids continuing to live in care would be far worse than their chances in a warm, loving, secure family home. Most adoptive families I know are just getting on with raising their children - the folk that struggle tend to turn up in the press and on support forums.
I’d also, very cautiously, suggest that sometimes the “scarred for life” narrative is a way for adoptive parents to defend incredibly poor parenting. It’s much easier to say the child couldn’t adapt or was “too damaged” than to look at whether you met the child’s needs. I’m not saying adopted children don’t have their challenges, but sometimes parenting capacity in adopters is lacking too which is why places where folk can seek nonjudgmental support and advice are invaluable.