Understanding Adoption: Clinical Work with Adults, Children, and ParentsKathleen Hushion, Susan B. Sherman, Diana Siskind J. Aronson, 2006 - 259 halaman Adoption is a transformational process bringing parenthood to those who long for but cannot bear children and giving stranded children home, family, and their place in the world. But every adoption is preceded and followed by its story and when these stories are told in the offices of psychotherapists we begin to understand the impact of adoption in all its complexity. We learn from parents how their quest to have and raise a child has played out in real life, and what shadows might have fallen between the dream and the reality. And we learn from the children the many ways that being adopted shaped their development, their sense of identity; what went wrong along the way and how we may help. Clinical work with parents and children as well as with adults who were adopted is the focus of Understanding Adoption. Because adoption has become widely practiced, accepted, and accessible, and because it has greatly changed the composition of families, it is a timely subject for study. The authors of this book undertake exploration of this important terrain of loss and connection, and of the fragility and resilience of human bonds. |
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Halaman 140
... appeared . At these moments , I must have seemed to her like her biological mother , whose attempts to connect were disappoint- ing . Jill reassured me that her lack of engagement with me wasn't personal , but that she was attending ...
... appeared . At these moments , I must have seemed to her like her biological mother , whose attempts to connect were disappoint- ing . Jill reassured me that her lack of engagement with me wasn't personal , but that she was attending ...
Halaman 144
... appeared . Sara had a group of fast - paced , unruly friends , and often found herself observing them closely . When ... appearance was significant . The birthmark was rarely discussed when Sara was growing up because her parents wanted ...
... appeared . Sara had a group of fast - paced , unruly friends , and often found herself observing them closely . When ... appearance was significant . The birthmark was rarely discussed when Sara was growing up because her parents wanted ...
Halaman 220
... appearance , the judge asked Marina how she felt about being adopted . She shocked the Whites by replying , " I don't ... appeared before the judge and said , " Yes , I want to belong to the White family . " Shortly after that , she came ...
... appearance , the judge asked Marina how she felt about being adopted . She shocked the Whites by replying , " I don't ... appeared before the judge and said , " Yes , I want to belong to the White family . " Shortly after that , she came ...
Isi
An Introduction | 3 |
Projection and Externalization | 35 |
Gay and Lesbian Parents in the World of Adoption | 61 |
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able adolescence adop adopted child adopted children adoptive family adoptive mother adoptive parents adult affect agency Alison Analytic Press Anna Freud anxiety attachment Attachment Theory awareness baby become behavior Billy Billy's biological mother biological parents birth mother birth parents Bonovitz Brinich Brodzinsky Bruce caregiver caretaking clinical countertransference culture daughter depressive position described developmental early emotional ents experience experienced explore fantasies father fear feelings Felicia felt foster foster care Fraiberg friends gay or lesbian girl Hillsdale identification identity infant infertility interactions international adoption James James's Jason Aronson Jill Jill's Journal Katie Kernberg lived loss Marantz Marina ment mourning object Oedipal paranoid-schizoid position parenthood play problems projective identification protect psychological parent Psychotherapy relationship responsible rience Sara Schechter seemed sense shame Shapiro social story struggle therapeutic therapist therapy tion toddler told trauma treatment uncon unconscious Unconscious Communication understand wanted Winnicott wish York