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New Roots Project … or making a couch potato

August 31, 2011 in Adoption, Marina, Uncategorized

In spring we were asked if we would like to work with the Colchester museum service to create an allotment and an installation in Castle park in collaboration with themselves nad the homeless people of Colchester. So we did.
The allotment was created on the Big garden site, in High wood park in Colchester, over 3 weeks we put up a poly tunnel and made 8 raised beds in the cusp of the spring and then started planting frantically.
Ciera the curator and creator of the project came every week with lunch and tea and coffee and taxi loads of folk ready for a few hours of gardening. Aidan worked fantastically creating and then planting then making scarecrows … and most of all Ciera listened to the stories that come out to make a series of exhibitions about the stories of these hidden people.
A key part of the project was the installation – that was to be created above ground at the back of Holytrees museum in Castle park in Colchester. I am not sure how it came about but it was decided that the containers for the plants would be furniture from Emmaus, a homeless project, and we would somehow make a room outdoors. After much thought the creative spark comes when least expected , and one hot lunch time on a playing field in a school I realised that we could plant the sofa with potatoes to make a “couch potato” once this idea was given the crew at the allotment the ideas came thick and fast. “a bed of roses”, chillis in the gas fire, leeks and peas in the toilet, marigolds in the sink, lavender in the draws.
So we gathered the furniture and in one very surreal afternoon planted the bed of roses and the couch potatoes and so on, we grew this all on for a few months and then put it all together to create a room – a kind of bed sit outdoors at the back of the museum
It looked beautiful, it made people laugh as they clocked the associations of plants and furniture, it made people realise how difficult it must be living outdoors without a home as the furniture got wet, and above all it gave the people who made it a huge buzz !

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by popmoc

Secure and Insecure Attachment – Richard Bowlby

July 22, 2011 in Adoption, Cared-for Children, Child & Family, Uncategorized

Richard Bowlby (son of John Bowlby) generously gave me permission to put his videos onto Youtube. This video is the most popular of the series.

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by Mark

Pervasive Developmental Trauma in Adopted or Cared-for Children

December 21, 2008 in Adoption, Cared-for Children, Pervasive Developmental Trauma, PTSD, Trauma

When we think of trauma and it’s effects we often think of one or several traumatic events. Neurological research is showing that some children experience a kind of ongoing ambient trauma which impacts and feedbacks through different stages of their development from conception, in the womb, at birth, and in their earlier childhood years. My understanding of brain theory is that such complex and pervasive trauma is thought to become layered in the archeology of the brain throughout development. Behavioural symptoms reflect the levels of development which are affected. For example, if language is that main system under development at the time of trauma, then language is affected.

Various psychologists are currently lobbying for Pervasive Developmental Trauma to be included as a disorder in DSM-V, as such children meet some but not all of the criteria for PTSD. This is important as there is a large tendency for adopted children and children in care, who can display a wide range of disturbing behaviours, to be seen as ‘bad’ rather than as experiencing a challenging life process.

However, as well as having it’s advantages, there are also disadvantages of thinking in terms of ‘disorders’. Such state-oriented thinking can have the tendency to become deterministic i.e. that through such developmental disturbances the child is damaged goods, destined to behave badly or become a destructive citizen. That such states are seen as static, rather than as life processes with inherent mystery and potential for unfolding.

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