R.A.D.
Paul Poldolsky and his wife Marina adopted a cherubic, gorgeous little girl in Russia. Against the odds, they had had one child, one with “mild autism” responsive to therapy. In their attempt to add another child, they experienced heartbreaking miscarriages. Paul’s family background was Russian. He learned Russian in
college and, after graduating, became a teacher in a Russian public school. The first time he saw Marina, who was married, he was drawn to her with an extraordinary intensity. Marina’s husband left her, and thus Paul and Marina were able to celebrate their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary by the end of this memoir. But, although Podolsky is writing an autobiographical narrative of his family, it centers on their daughter, who seems to be among a subcategory of the most difficult kinds of child adoptees, often coming from bleak societal levels in Russia or Eastern Europe.
Before this second child, even though their son is “on the spectrum,” they are the beneficiaries of their own high-level abilities, deeply internalized goals, and good helpings of luck. Their story is good, not perfect, but similar to other achieving young couples in good neighborhoods, at good graduate schools, in jobs where they receive better and better pay.
When they adopt their little girl, immediately bonding to her with a strong parental love, they find themselves having to accept, bit by bit, year after year, the unlooked for truth that their cherished daughter is definitely deeply disturbed; finally the diagnosis “Reactive Attachment Disorder” comes the closest to describing what they see. That is when their life as a family diverges from any kind of mainstream. This is the story of parenting and loving a young child who seems to have no authentic feelings. No conscience. No reciprocal love. She grows up with profound pathological disorders involving unremitting lying and stealing.
Paul and Marina can afford any therapeutic consultation or program in the U.S. for their daughter or for their family. They are highly intelligent, committed and loving. The story of their almost unbearably difficult journey and of their commitment to changing their own relationship and offering years of the most effective and thorough healing help to their daughter while not knowing where instinctive hope will bring them is ASTOUNDING.
Anyone with psychological insight into and caring about children and family will receive “untold riches” in reading this honest, intimate, harrowing AND beautifully-written true story.