Our classes are held outdoors under a bead-blue sky. We stretch out on the grass, a breeze blowing. I remind the group of twelve-year olds gathered not to worry about spelling or punctuation, the goal is to write as fast as they can, and produce a page or two or three of rough draft uncensored thoughts.
To jump-start the kids into writing I lead with a question. “What are a few things about yourself that you think other people don’t understand?”
Then I add, as I do every time I work with students young or old, “Don’t worry if you veer off the topic. Just write anything that comes into your mind.”
After each person has had time to write down thoughts, we go around the circle and anyone who wants to, reads what they have written. Confidentially is always a moot point. So, sometimes there are those who want to crumple up the paper after they have written, before or after reading aloud. That’s OK. The purpose is to tap into our minds, and see what might be lurking in our subconscious. We don’t need to save what we have written, or turn it into a monument.
Writers are visionaries. We routinely practice a form of faith, seeing clearly and moving toward a creative goal that shimmers in the distance. As a writer, and an instructor of creative writing, everyday I practice this form of faith. As a mother and grandmother with the goal of supporting my children's developing sense of identity of who they are, and where they come from, I also routinely practice faith by trusting that I am doing my best job of helping my kids find avenues to explore and launch their feelings. And silence is silence, and nothing about it is golden if I allow myself to believe that children, who don’t talk about race, or racial teasing or racial stereotyping, aren’t dealing with these issues.
The most effective journaling sessions are when the rules are firm. With kids and teens it’s generally best to set a “no parents allowed” rule. (Generally it is best to set a no parents allowed rule for anybody writing down their private thoughts, even for those of us who are over 50.) No criticizing, no making fun of anything anyone writes, with a focus on compassionate listening offers the best chance for kids to peel back the layers of their personalities, and figure out what they really want to say, and what questions they want to ask.
I’ve found the most successful journaling circles are when the kids have common bonds and emotional links with each other such as growing up Native American or Korean American or having been adopted transracially. I keep the majority of the writing topics open and flexible and not centered on adoption, or ethnicity and identity. Slants specific to those topic areas spring up automatically and will present themselves in a far more creative light than if I’d forced the subject. Yet usually I add one or maybe two writing topics in specific areas common to the group experience. Recently with a group of daughters adopted from China I opened by saying, “Name three ways in which you think of yourself as being typically Asian, and three ways in which you don’t.” I had a second specific theme to suggest they write on later on, except the group bent over their note pads and wrote fast, like the wind, and they spent the rest of the hour talking about a spin off comment, namely “If you could tell the kids at school exactly what you are thinking when they ask—but where are you really from?”
Since our purpose of journaling together is born of friendship, and not a therapy session where the focus is on identifying problems and finding solutions, I find it is best to let the writing flow naturally. Letting go of expectations is a must. As a lover of the written word, I want everyone to fall passionately into writing. But sometimes after a few minutes of writing everyone gets looped into a conversation. Which is why I follow journaling sessions with kids with a “Talking Circle” taken from my own American Indian oral tradition.
The traditional way, which is observed when Native people gather for the purpose of a “Talking Circle”, is for everyone to sit in a circle, of course. One person begins talking from their heart and they hold the “talking stick” while speaking, and have the opportunity to talk uninterrupted. When the person is finished speaking they pass the “talking stick” to the person next to them, and we go around the circle until everyone who wants to talk has had a chance to speak. We are supportive listeners and refrain from offering suggestions or finding fixes because this cuts off the flow of conversation, respect and trust.
When
necessary I begin the dialogue but I don’t ride herd, my role is to act as
guide, get the group going, and then let them drive. Even those kids who stay
at the fringe of the group, or appear withdrawn or quiet, are still observing
and learning from the group dynamics.
I’ve
never facilitated or sat in any of the circles my kids have participated in
because I wanted them to have a chance to figure out whom they might be without
me breathing down their neck or trying to sneak a peek into their minds. Yet
I’ve found when I gave my them the free space they needed to explore, we
effortlessly communicated on a deeper level, often when I least expected it.
For example my son liked to tell me his deepest thoughts while I sat in five
o’clock traffic, waiting to make a left turn. Looking back I know by timing it
perfectly he was guaranteed I would listen, and not interrupt what he had to
say.
As
hard as it was to let my children go off alone to teen groups (and for my kids
this also included transracial adoption groups, and cancer survivor, and
siblings of cancer survivor camp intimate discussions) and not have any idea
what they were thinking and experiencing— it was good practice for me because I
felt those exact same pangs of longing and feeling left out when I dropped my
daughter off at college and she moved into the dorm. And I felt that way again
four years later when she graduated and got her first job, and moved into her
own apartment.
Motherhood
is about loving and being able to let go, and if we do the growing up right, our
children will be blessed with opportunities to think and speak candidly about
their feelings, and will walk away from us, one baby step at a time, towards
rich and full lives of their own making. And,
I thank my lucky stars because frequently she calls home, providing me with sweet,
intimate details of her newfound independence, returning the faith and trust I
gave her so freely.
First published at Adoption Today and reprinted in a slightly different form at Speak Mom.
Copyright © 2008 Terra Trevor. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2008 Terra Trevor. All rights reserved.