When Love Isnt Enough

[Applause]

at maturity

coastal redwood trees grow to about 350

to 370 feet tall

for context that’s roughly goal post to

goal post

on a regulation size football field it’s

as tall

as the statue of liberty if you’ve ever

wanted to be a tree hugger

a redwood’s a great place to start as

long as you’re cool with linking arms

with

12 to 15 of your best friends and kind

of doing like this

redwoods are enormous so it would stand

to reason then

that the roots must run very deep

actually the roots of a redwood tree

reach down only about three to six

feet in the sandy loamy soil in which

they grow best

three to six feet that’s about it

instead those roots grow outward in long

networks intertwining with the roots of

the trees

around it sometimes even becoming fused

it’s literally the strength of the many

that holds up the one

now when i think of what the roots of a

redwood tree look like it’s sort of what

i

imagine the brain might look like as

synapses are wiring and things are

firing and

information is passing from one side of

the brain to the next much like

food and water passes across roots of a

redwood tree

it’s a network and an infrastructure in

our brain that’s wiring for growth

all right so i’m not a doctor clearly

i’m just a mom i’m a mom

who has read books and gleaned as much

information and tried to learn as much

as i possibly can

about a child’s early brain development

so from my uh layperson’s perspective

here’s what i’ve come to learn

before a baby is born the brain stem is

the first part of the brain to develop

in utero

it’s the thing that controls involuntary

actions things like the fact that

you just do breath into your lungs

or the fact that your heart is beating

in your chest even now

without you even thinking about it the

brain stem is also responsible for our

most

primal fight or flight reaction and when

we’re faced with a threat

the brain stem literally takes over and

tells the rest of the brain

don’t even worry about it i’ve got this

the brain stem is responsible for the

core of what keeps us

alive now when a baby is born

their brain is most open to learning and

they’re gathering

information at an incredible rate about

the world around them

they’re learning cause and effect things

like i’m hungry

and i cry and someone brings me food

awesome or i’m lonely

and i cry and someone picks me up and

holds me

gives me nurturance and love

but what about when a baby uh when their

environment is not met with those same

cause and effect

situations instead what about when a

baby is met with uh

i’m hungry and i cry but there is no

food

or i’m lonely i’m scared and i cry

but no one’s coming

well a baby’s brain is gathering

information about that

as well and it’s learning really there’s

no point in crying because no one’s

coming

adults don’t take care of you you can’t

trust them

and if you’re going to survive in this

world it’s up to you

to take care of yourself that

early brain wiring is what’s responsible

for something called reactive

attachment disorder

i’d love to tell you about l elle

is vibrant and active

she is impossibly perceptive that girl

sees

everything she loves pancakes with

sprinkles in them she loves

jeep rides with the top off and if you

were downtown a few saturday nights ago

she was the one

with her bubble wand out of the top of

the jeep letting the wind

blow bubbles into the summer air behind

her

that girl is hilarious she can crack

jokes

and farts that’ll make you laugh

and groan at the exact same time much

like any eight-year-old

she’s amazing

elle came into my family’s life like

unexpectedly like a

leaf blown in on a breeze in october

of 2013.

she was the granddaughter of a former

employee and i came to know about this

little girl who needed a place to stay

and so

i just said well she can stay with me i

knew her family had some things that

they needed to get figured out and

squared away

a couple months before she had been

removed from where she was living

in a 2001 chevy impala on a gravel road

on a reservation somewhere in north

dakota

she was with our family for two and a

half months and then again

another breeze blew her along

like a leaf to be with another relative

in another zip code she was there for a

year gone from

us for a year and then tumbled her way

back in when she was removed from

that situation for unsafe living

conditions

and neglect in her formative first

36 months of her life when her brain was

gathering

all this information

she learned not to trust

her brain was wired for survival she

learned early on that cause and effect

of the world around her

and now i can say wired for survival and

on a surface level you can think you

probably know what that means but

the way the brain works in a child with

reactive attachment disorder and ptsd

is so misunderstood

it’s a disconnect that can look like an

inability to

give or receive love i call it her

dishrag hugs when she can come in

to the side for a hug and she sort of

goes through the motion

but there’s really no emotion behind it

it’s really hard as a parent when you

give your child a hug

and they bristle against you makes me

question my parenting worth like if i

can’t

have my child give or receive love

then what does that say about me

reactive attachment disorder can also

look like a compulsion to control every

situation

small situations but for instance i

might say today we’re gonna go to

the grocery store the car wash and the

bank and she’ll say we’re gonna go to

the car wash first

which you guys it doesn’t matter one

iota if we go to the car wash first

right

but what she’s doing is she’s trying to

gain control

and again what’s the big deal it doesn’t

matter

but when she gains control in those

small situations over and over and over

again

she’s proving to herself that she can

take care of herself

make the decisions and she doesn’t need

adults to survive

she’s literally fending off her own

attachment

it can also look like an inability to

handle everyday situations

from an early age say 3 we would notice

these tantrums that were deeper more

intense than

anything i’d ever experienced i’d try to

explain it to people but they’d always

say

oh that’s just how kids are she’s three

she’ll go through it

only i’ve parented three kids before her

and this was like nothing i had ever

seen

we noticed they started to be clustered

together like if she was going to have

one she was going to have two

or three they were clustered together

and it seemed like when she got off

balance it was

really hard for her to find her way back

to center

but now when adoption was finalized in

october of 2016 of course

things were going to get better she

would know that stability was here she

had a forever home

love was freely given and we were so

excited to join her on her healing

journey of course things were about to

get better

but that’s what’s so tough for people to

understand about reactive attachment

disorder

is instead of things getting better the

deeper the relationship goes

the worse it actually gets see

relationships are scary

and the more the brain fights against it

it’s like they’re trying to

sabotage the relationship because it

seems way too good to be true while at

the same time

being terrified of making a mistake

and losing it

she goes into overdrive and

everyday frustrations are really

difficult for her to handle

things that are simple like being told

that uh

you need to brush your teeth take a

shower and

uh and and comb your hair before you can

have screen time

it seems like she just can’t handle

those things

she goes into overdrive and like i said

in an instant she loses

all reason she uh goes into a tailspin

now you or i can say that uh

you know maybe we’ve had a bad day and

we can say man

i cannot handle one more thing

but even those of us who might struggle

with our patients probably have a pretty

reasonably sized window of tolerance

again the number of things that we can

accept in a day

for kiddos with reactive attachment

disorder their window of tolerance

is exponentially smaller and those

everyday little frustrations send them

into a tailspin

again after adoption instead of things

getting better they actually got worse

and in the months and years that went by

uh these tantrums would escalate and

behind closed doors people could have no

idea

what was happening

anxiety and rage would take over her

body so

fully that she would scratch the

undersides of her arms

until they’d bleed

she screamed so long and so loud one

morning that she

burst the capillaries around her eyes

and the visual reminder of that episode

lasted

long after it had finished

with a flip of a switch she was out of

her brainstem

things were getting worse after an

episode

she’s just exhausted and i remember once

as

the rage turned to tears and her little

body was just spent she started to say

owie mommy it hurts it hurts it hurts

and i said what baby tell me what hurts

tell me what hurts

i will never forget the look on her face

as she slid down the wall fully

exhausted and said

everything everything

hurts

i was completely at a loss

we had tried everything we felt helpless

she had been in counseling and play

therapy weekly

since she was three years old and again

things weren’t getting better they were

only getting worse

i talked to a friend of mine who

actually works in child protection was

really familiar with elle’s case

and she said melissa i know you’re

trying

and it’s not your fault but what you’re

doing is not helping

if she had a broken leg you wouldn’t

just

put a band-aid on it and then praise the

days be excited about the days when she

didn’t limp no if she had a broken leg

you would get her to a doctor and you

would get her the help she needed

and so in may 31st of

2018 my little one entered a

prtf so a prtf that’s a psychiatric

residential

treatment facility

see our family has learned symptoms and

diagnoses

we have learned to navigate the lingo

and learn systems we never

even knew existed

she was in residential treatment for 652

days

nearly two long years

but while she was there she worked

really really hard and

we worked to best understand her and

meet her needs and and

help her grow and thrive and she made

so much progress

she was nearing her discharge date this

spring and we were so excited to visit

the school where she would go

and uh again she was just so excited

about discharge coming up

she’d made so much progress that as we

visited visited the school this day

uh there was this lovely little girl who

came over i mean bless her nurturing

little soul

she came over and rubbed elle on the leg

and said

it seems like you’re a little scared but

you don’t have to be scared we’re all

really nice here

oh my gosh this girl i was so

compassionate

i was just really thankful

but on the way home that afternoon elle

looked out the window and she was quiet

and finally she said thoughtfully you

know what mom

sometimes i really don’t like to be

touched

you guys this was huge she was learning

to

express her needs identify what they

were to begin with

communicate them and stay on the level

it was huge we were excited she was

coming home

i’m a big fan of bose

you put a bow on something you wrap it

up neat

tidy present perfect package

i was so excited to give this ted talk

tonight

and to talk about reactive attachment

disorder

i was excited to tell you about like her

story

cause and effect and then getting help

and and and

everything being great in the end

perfect story arc right

only i’m finding bows don’t exist on

mental health packages

and many times it starts and stops lots

of

progress setbacks and sometimes it feels

like you’re right back at square one

elle was discharged on march 13th this

year into the world

of coven and all of her excitement and

expectations about

going to school and making new friends

and playing with the friends she already

had

were dashed in an instant

the therapist that was we were given a

new therapist and she was going to come

into our home once

twice weekly if needed and suddenly she

was no longer able to come

due to covid so elle went from

full inpatient therapy where every

second of her day was structured

to the world of covid where there was

very little ability to establish

any kind of routine and her

disappointments and

things like the dogs barking and loud

noises triggered

flare-ups of her ptsd she would find

herself

out of her window of tolerance back down

into her brain stem to where

things like even the doorbell ringing

would send her

diving under tables or hiding behind

chairs

she was back into her brain stem once

again

things culminated with some really scary

and harmful violence

descriptive threats of things that she

said she would do to herself

and to others

until one thursday night we found

ourselves

completely scared completely disheveled

doing an emergency admittance into

behavioral health

a few days later she was transferred

back

to her psychiatric residential treatment

facility

i felt like i’d failed her once again

it wasn’t the bow that i thought i was

going to put on this package tonight and

bring to you again cause

effect perfect story arc it’s not what i

thought we’d be talking about but still

i wanted to talk to you about reactive

attachment disorder because i need you

to understand

we need you to understand because elle

and kids like her both in

and out of the system are affected by it

and it’s affecting you and it stems

from birth parents who weren’t given the

tools that they needed to be successful

parents because their parents weren’t

given the tools and their parents

weren’t given the tools

i needed to talk to you about this

tonight and and help you understand

because

knowledge helps break chains

i need you to understand that

parents of kiddos with reactive

attachment disorder are behind closed

doors

giving everything they can

doing what they think is best even when

it’s the hardest thing they’ve ever done

and elle needs you to understand her

because kids with reactive attachment

grow up to be your kids classmates they

grow up to be your co-workers

and they grow up to be adults who will

parent children

themselves dr bruce perry is an

expert in the field of child psychiatry

and reactive attachment disorder

he says by conservative estimates 40

of american children will go through at

least one traumatizing event before age

  1. but what matters most is not the

event itself

no it’s how

the community of adults stands tall

around them

we need you to be redwoods

because even if we look like redwoods

the truth is

every single day we feel like we’re

failing and we feel like we’re falling

down

again what matters most is how we hold

each other up and can rely on one

another

he says fire can warm or consume

water can quench or drown

wind can caress or cut

and so it is with human relationships we

can both create

and destroy nurture and terrorize

traumatize

and heal one another

no this isn’t the bow that i thought i

was going to put on this package and

bring to you tonight

it’s not the story that i had hoped

because there aren’t any bows and

things are messy but still in learning

about those redwood trees

i’m learning how they hold one another

up

you know i’m learning about their roots

elle wasn’t given the roots that one

would hope in her early

early years but still those roots have

been determined they have been resilient

and they have grown outward

again they have touched the lives of so

many others

i have to believe that the roots that

are forming in her life

every single day are the ones that will

hold her up

standing tall and strong as she grows

i have to believe in her healing

and even when it’s really really hard

i have to believe in hope

so tonight i’m asking you to be a strong

redwood

and stand tall and believe in that hope

with us

you