Guest guest Posted April 19, 2007 Report Share Posted April 19, 2007 Hi , Thank you for your responseJ Hi Chiara! I'm new here also but just had to respond to your post! I adopted my daughter from China when she was 5. Ai…that’s a tough age…her Chinese was pretty good at that point I guess. She also had a very difficult time learning English and I remember at one point she was determined that I was going to learn Chinese to speak with her rather than she learn English! She was so cute with hands on hips telling me off in Chinese!! I can soooo picture that!:-) When we told the children 4 years ago, about our plans, my daughters first reaction was ‘but…will I then get a book with all the words!!??...with panic in her eyes’. Whilst the other two (her twin brother and her older sister) thought it was an adventure, she only saw the dark side. The first 6 months she plainly refused to learn English, and she made it very clear to us that moving to the US was something we should not have done, as far as she was concerned. Then she discovered we were not moving back and she slowly learned English. Her brother read Tolkien in English after being in the country for a year at the age of 7…whilst she still has a hard time reading books her age level. I've also been the only one to just know in my gut that things were " off " . People have told me she is different because she is so smart…but that doesn’t cover it…and people overhere say it’s because of the move that she is different…but that’s not the case either. For example; at the age of two she wandered off in the woods that belonged to a friend of ours. We knew it was fully fenced, so we were not afraid..just curious what she would do…well, after 20 minutes she saw us again, and turned around to walk away in a different direction….so independent…and not afraid at all…not looking for us….That’s not the kind of reaction I expect from a 2 yo… I had alot of various testing done on her over the past 8 years but I finally got the Asperger's last week and it all makes so much sense to me! Anyway, after 6 months my daughter lost all her Chinese and didn't have English which she had a hard time learning so there was a period of about 2 years where she was extremely frustrated by being unable to communicate. I’m so sorry to hear that; that must have been very tough on both sides….At home we still talk Dutch but the kids think in English and they switch to English as soon as I am out of sight. I want them to keep up their Dutch though, to be able to go back and communicate with family overthere. Now sometimes my ears " hurt " from all her talking!! LOL I’m glad to hear that J My daughter is talkative but her sentences are not build up well and she mixes the two languages. I have lived in other countries before, amongst others in Norway, where I learned Norwegian so I fully understand the difficulties she experiences. But by now, after 4 years one would have hoped these problems were history, and that’s not the case. If anyone has suggestions or can relate to this, I would love to hear it. Thanks, Chiara PS I apologize for possible errors in my writing, English is my second language. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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