Santa Fe New Mexican

CHILDHOOD TRAUMA, LIFELONG DAMAGE

Growing number of experts say adverse childhood experience­s, or ACEs, are one of the most profound, urgent public health challenges in the country

- By Amy Linn

her third day alone in the house, 7-year-old Linda Fritts slept in her safe place in the closet.

She arranged the shelves and fashioned a nest for herself atop a chest of drawers.

“I would take stuffed animals in there and my books in there,” she says now.

She read by flashlight, Nancy Drew or The Boxcar Children, the series about four inexplicab­ly happy orphans who live by themselves in an abandoned freight car. “I was jealous,” Linda says. “They had each other.” That was 1968 or so, when she had a puppy, “and I would take her in the closet, too. And that’s how I survived. That and alcohol.” She took her first drink at age 6. The family lived in Paradise Hills, a then-new and nearly barren developmen­t in northwest Albuquerqu­e. Linda remembers eating out of cans and scrounging for food, going to the neighbor boy’s house for refuge: “He’d sneak me in after school and feed me.”

Her mother was bipolar, a blackout drunk and drug abuser who popped amphetamin­es supplement­ed by benzos, pot, Quaaludes and speedballs.

“My mother was a pedophile,” Linda says flatly. She

remembers being pinned down and sexually abused, and the smell of her mother’s Wind Song perfume.

Her father worked as an airplane mechanic, gifted enough to rebuild singleengi­ne airplanes in the front yard. He had schizophre­nia.

“I used to tell people, ‘I don’t have parents. I was raised by wolves,’ ” she says.

Linda is 56 now, with graying closecropp­ed hair and a fierce determinat­ion to tell her story.

She’s worked for 25 years to recover from her ACEs — short for adverse childhood experience­s, the official term for what she survived. Looking at the past doesn’t scare her anymore.

“I don’t really mind talking about what happened to me,” she says. “Maybe because, when I was a kid, I never had a voice.”

Toxic stress, lasting effects

Today, everyone should be talking about ACEs. That’s the view of a growing legion of experts who regard childhood trauma as one of the most profound and urgent public health challenges in the country.

Hundreds of studies link adverse childhood experience­s to a huge array of diseases, mental illnesses and lifelong problems. An ACE is defined as one of 10 kinds of trauma, including all the things that happened in Linda’s life, and more. Among them: sexual, physical or psychologi­cal abuse; emotional or physical neglect; mental illness, drug or alcohol abuse, domestic violence; an absent parent or incarcerat­ed household member.

Exposure to these assaults at a young age can alter brain architectu­re, interrupt neurocircu­itry, damage endocrine and immune systems and have lifelong harmful impacts on health and the human condition, potentiall­y for generation­s to come.

The “toxic stress” of trauma can impair learning and emotional regulation, undermine social functionin­g and even change the signature of DNA.

The number of children affected is staggering. In 2016, an estimated 34 million children, nearly half of all U.S. kids under 18, had at least one adverse childhood experience, according to an October 2017 report from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. More than one in five had two or more ACEs. So did three-quarters of kids age 3 to 5 who got expelled from preschool.

In New Mexico, the picture is especially alarming. The study’s national and stateby-state analysis found nearly 30 percent of New Mexico’s children had two or more ACEs — the fourth highest rate in the country.

The state’s own agencies catalog long lists of adversitie­s that have profound effects on children’s lives, including some of the nation’s highest rates of alcohol abuse, opioid and other drug abuse, child abuse, domestic violence, poverty and suicide.

A 2016 study by the New Mexico Sentencing Commission establishe­d a clear connection between traumatic experience­s and juvenile delinquenc­y. Among all 220 teens held in detention in 2011:

Every one of the girls — 100 percent — had two or more ACEs; for boys the rate was 96 percent.

Nearly 90 percent of both sexes had four or more ACEs, the point at which future health risks can become dire.

Nearly 25 percent of the girls experience­d nine major traumas, almost the entire ACEs catalog. A parent beat them so hard it left marks. They saw their mother punched or threatened with a gun. They’d been raped, molested, verbally abused or constantly humiliated. Someone at home was alcoholic or drug addicted. They’d gone hungry.

The study underscore­d what could be called an ACEs-to-prison pipeline.

“You’re basically creating a group of kids who are going to have lifelong learning problems — they’re basically going to be like human roadkill on the economic highway,” says primary care physician Andy Hsi, who co-wrote the report with specialist­s like George Davis, former director of psychiatry for New Mexico’s Children, Youth and Families Department.

Hsi is the medical director of The University of New Mexico’s program, which he founded in 1990 to provide comprehens­ive medical care and support to substance-abusing pregnant women and their infants. The program helps traumatize­d mothers create nurturing bonds with their baby; an infant’s brain developmen­t suffers in the absence of loving attachment, according to exhaustive research worldwide.

Early trauma doesn’t merely devastate lives; it gets embedded in the brain and body, research shows.

The science of trauma “turns medicine on its head,” Hsi says.

‘No one is doomed’

If this picture appears unremittin­gly bleak, the bigger message is that all early childhood experience­s are powerful. Positive experience­s are as determinat­ive as negative ones. They build resilience and give children “protective factors” that help them thrive.

Resilience helps children calm themselves and bounce back from defeats. Even children who suffer severe adversity can develop it, according to Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child, a national leader in toxic stress and brain research. Resilience is built upon healthy early parenting and bonding, which make infants feel safe and nurtured.

“Loving the baby, kissing, holding, massaging, breastfeed­ing: The baby understand­s that language,” says Sanjeev Arora, a UNM physician and founder of Project ECHO, which brings high-quality medical treatment to remote parts of the state and worldwide. “The entire human experience is very intricatel­y linked to feelings of security and lack of fear.”

Resiliency therapy works, affirms Christina Bethell, lead author of the 2017 Johns Hopkins study and director of the university’s Child and Adolescent Health Measuremen­t Initiative. Her research underscore­s the capacity of the infant brain to restore itself.

“History isn’t destiny,” she says. “No one is doomed.”

Hope that brings change

If Linda Fritts had received counseling when she was a child, back in the late 1960s and early 1970s, no one would have given her trauma-informed care. The concept wasn’t born yet.

Child Protective Services didn’t investigat­e. No one paid attention. Her teachers never intervened — not when she cut class, not when she showed up drunk in middle school, not when she dropped out in ninth grade.

“I didn’t fall through the cracks,” she says.

“I blasted through them.”

When she was 14, her mother committed suicide. At 17, she married “a raging alcoholic.” By her 20s, she was living in a house with no running water and three children under the age of 12.

To make the toilet work, her oldest son would take a bucket to her in-laws’ house next door, fill it with water, walk home and pour the water into the toilet to make it flush.

Linda managed to get her GED and a nursing certificat­e. But as she neared 30, severe depression took over. Plagued by thoughts of suicide, she finally ended up in a hospital clinic.

Help came in the unlikely form of a therapist who filled out her intake papers. She offered to take Linda on as a patient.

“The most important component for successful recovery is having hope,” Linda says. It had arrived.

Slowly, she began to take stock. Her children were nearly 12, 6 and 4. For years, she believed she’d been protecting them. She’d tried not to fight with her husband in front of them. She recalled teaching herself to binge drink so she could white-knuckle-it and stay sober when they were around. But therapy lifted the veil. She moved into a battered women’s shelter and entered a 12-step program. She got a divorce. She came out as a gay woman. Jobs fell into place at an assisted living facility, a hospital and at the Milagro Program for substance-abusing pregnant women, run by Andrew Hsi.

Hsi recalls how she stopped him in his tracks one day. He and Linda had tea, and she told him how even at age 6, alcohol helped her dissociate from the abuse.

“She told me she never could have survived that amount of trauma without alcohol,” Hsi says.

He knew, of course, that people used addiction to cope. But he’d never heard someone so articulate­ly describe the need for numbness at such a young age.

Today, Linda has 26 years of sobriety, and counts 25 years in therapy. She married the woman she calls her soul mate. She can talk to her about anything.

She’s at community college now, middleaged and going for her bachelor’s degree, aiming to become a social worker. She says she wants to be a wounded healer.

Last semester, she got all A’s and B’s.

 ?? DON USNER/FOR SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO ?? From an early age, Linda Griego suffered abuse, and tried to cope with it by drinking alcohol.
DON USNER/FOR SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO From an early age, Linda Griego suffered abuse, and tried to cope with it by drinking alcohol.
 ?? DON USNER/FOR SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO ?? Glenda Chavez and Linda Griego in Albuquerqu­e. Today, Linda has 26 years of sobriety, and counts 25 years in therapy. She married the woman she calls her soul mate. She can talk to her about anything.
DON USNER/FOR SEARCHLIGH­T NEW MEXICO Glenda Chavez and Linda Griego in Albuquerqu­e. Today, Linda has 26 years of sobriety, and counts 25 years in therapy. She married the woman she calls her soul mate. She can talk to her about anything.

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