We were a young
married couple living in Houston, both working – me full-time and my wife
part-time as she finished her degree. On alternating Saturdays, I was doing volunteer
work at a home for emotionally disturbed children. The home was called Cambio
House, and it was operated by Harris County in what at one time had been a
large residence right near downtown.
My volunteer
work was supposed to be simple and fun – taking the kids who had earned enough
points for good behavior on a two- or three-hour field trip. It might be a
movie, a visit to the park or zoo, just something fun that allowed them to
remember that they were kids.
The problem was
that the field trips turned out to be few and far between. The kids rarely had
enough points. Behavior problems were always an issue. And these were children
who were classified as mildly disturbed. All of them had been separated from
their parents and were legally wards of the county. All were under the age of 13;
teens went to a different residence program.
One little boy
liked to kill small animals, like cats and dogs.
One 8-year-old
girl had been found by police digging food out of garbage cans. She had been
taking care of her bipolar, drug-addicted mother since she was five.
A ten-year-old boy
named Henry had been separated from his brother and parents. The family had
been found living in a small, ramshackle garage. The parents were both deaf and
mute, and had themselves been abandoned as children; they had no idea how to
raise children. Henry and his brother had been adopted, but the family had
returned Henry to the court because they said they couldn’t handle more than
one child.
Henry looked and
usually acted like a normal 10-year-old. But Henry was not normal. Like many of
the other children at Cambio, he couldn’t control his anger, and when he became
angry, he would physically explode.
Field trips were
rare. My usual volunteer work involved playing games there at the home, and
sometimes having to help the staff hold down children who had gone on a
rampage. And you never knew when something would trigger an explosion.
It’s no surprise
that the staff had a high burnout rate. I outlasted almost all of them, but
then I only was there a few hours at a time.
All of these
children had suffered trauma of some kind or another. In Heart
Made Whole: Turning Your Unhealed Pain into Your Greatest Strength, Christa Black Gifford describes two
kinds of trauma – Trauma A and Trauma B. Trauma A is suffering the absence of
something you should have received. Trauma B is suffering the things that never
should have happened, like abuse, or rape, or divorce.
These children
at Cambio House, these children classified as mildly disturbed, had suffered
both Trauma A and Trauma B. Some had never been loved. Some had been abused.
Some had been sexually abused. Some had a visceral hatred for any adult. Some
believed they could never be loved, so they did things that made sure they
would never be loved.
How do you
manage that pain in a child’s life? Trauma, Gifford says, is “any place in your
heart where your pain stays greater than your joy.” How do help a suffering
child find joy, when all they may show you is hate?
The staff
director told me that the most important thing I could do – that I was doing –
was being a normal adult. These children
didn’t have much if any experience with normal adults. The only normal
adults they knew were therapists, doctors, psychologists, and social workers –
professionals who had to care for them and deal with them. They didn’t know
normal adults.
I was their
normal adult.
Led by Jason
Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’re reading Heart
Made Whole. Consider reading along and join in the discussion. To see what
others are saying about this chapter, “Managing Trauma,” please visit Jason at Connecting to Impact.
2 comments:
Oh, Glynn, your story here broke my heart! How many children in this world are suffering like this right now? What happened to those kids you interacted with once they became adults? I shudder to think, yet pray for the best!
Phew, we've seen our share of behavioral issues with foster kids, but nothing to this degree. It's incredibly sad but true that "hurt people hurt people." Sometimes we don't even know that we do it, but like you were to those kids, sometimes a person comes along who shows you something different and that can make all the difference in the world. Thanks Glynn.
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