Continued from Home page...
  • Drink plenty of water.  Air travel is dehydrating, particularly for long trips.  Staying
    hydrated can help with jet-lag, which will increase your patience and level of energy
    for helping your little one adjust to his/her new home.  This is key for your time in
    the air and the first few days after arrival while your body’s “clock” adjusts.

  • Minimize the number of visitors/outings.  Other family members and friends will be
    excited to welcome this new member of your family.  Remember, however, that all
    the months you have been preparing for your child, he/she was not preparing for
    you.  The transition into your home and family is a big one, so plan to keep visitors
    to a minimum at first so that you can build the relationship with your child and allow
    them to experience you as their “safe base” before introducing others or taking
    frequent trips outside the home.

  • Get the right kind of help.  While it’s important to keep the number of visitors low, it
    is also important for you to have support.  Be sure Mom and Dad keep the role of
    “need-meeter” for your child, and ask friends and family who are available to help
    with the things that keep your household running (meals, errands, laundry, etc.).

  • Keep perspective.  While you may be nervous about how your little one is adjusting
    to your family, realize that he/she is also probably more nervous… and in most cases,
    these little ones are too young to have the language or cognitive development to
    make sense of how their lives have changed by joining your family. All they know is
    that the language sounds different, people and things smell different, and everything
    looks and feels different.  Most children need at least the first 6 months, just to adjust
    to their new surroundings.  You can help by keeping as much the same (and
    predictable) as possible.

  • Don’t let them “cry it out.”  In the early stages of adoption, it’s important that your
    child has repetitive, consistent experiences of being soothed by you.  That ritual
    between you is the springboard for a healthy attachment.  Independence can and
    will be learned – later.

  • Consult!  If something doesn't  feel right, leaves you confused, or feels (in your gut)
    outside the norm for adjustment, consult with a professional who understands
    adoption and pre-verbal trauma.  Getting the support and coaching you need will
    help you provide a regulated and calm foundation for your son’s/daughter’s
    adjustment and attachment.
Contributed by: Jennifer Winklemann, MA, LPC, NCC.
If you would like to submit a question to our " Ask Us" column, please email us:

Info@ColoradoAdoptionConsultants.com