you're welcome..........
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: DUG Nunya-Bidness 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 9:48 AM
  Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} Re: the remarkable transformation of one child


  Cool story, thanks for posting.




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  From: subana <[email protected]>
  To: net buddies <[email protected]>
  Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 7:38:37 AM
  Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} the remarkable transformation of one child


  The Remarkable Transformation Of One Child
  Feb. 17, 2009
  (CBS) "She bit, she scratched, she almost killed our dog," said Sharon 
Behrens, who had cared for many foster children. But the little girl named Mia, 
who had been brutally abused by her parents, was unlike any other, reports CBS 
News correspondent John Blackstone. 

  "In a 24-hour period of time, she could scream as much as 12 hours," Behrens 
said. "When she wasn't screaming, she growled. And it was like an animal." 

  Mia would scratch and cut herself. She'd spend much of the night crying. 

  "The level of terror, when the pediatrician saw her, the neurologist saw her, 
everyone said: 'what in the world happened to this child?'" Behrens said. 

  According to Thom Snyder, the deputy district attorney of Kings County, 
Calif., the abuse Mia suffered was ritualistic -- "Satanic in some way," he 
said. 

  Snyder knows well what happened to Mia when she was less than a year old. 

  "She was an infant, but she was grievously sexually abused in ways that I 
think for the average individual … would be incomprehensible," he said. 

  According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 3,300,000 
reports of child abuse are made every year in the United States. And more than 
80 percent of abused children carry lasting scars as an adult suffering from 
depression, anxiety, and eating disorders, according to the National 
Clearinghouse of Child Abuse and Neglect. 

  Mia's abuse was discovered after her father killed her baby sister. Mia had 
been abused since she was born. 

  "She drew biting monsters. She drew naked women lying in pools of blood - the 
most ghastly pictures you can imagine a three-and-a-half year old drawing," 
said Dr. Lenore Terr, a child psychiatrist. 

  Terr says Mia was unable to trust anyone. 

  "I felt that I couldn't teach her anything else until I could get her to feel 
safe in the world," Terr said. 

  Kids like Mia are sometimes called throwaways, too damaged to recover. But 
Sharon and Bob Behrens didn't throw Mia away - they adopted her. 

  "I would wake up every morning 'cause I would have been up half the night 
with her and I would say, 'oh, I'm keeping her 'til noon.' And then I'm calling 
and she's a goner - I can't do this," said Mia's foster mother Sharon Behrens. 

  After years of treatment for wounds both mental and physical, there's a 
different Mia. 

  She's a smiling, confident young woman. She told CBS News: "They thought I 
would never be able to socialize. They thought I would never be able to talk 
with people. I would be, like, in an animal state, like, growling, biting, 
scratching, hitting, screaming and stuff." 

  "But you're not," said Blackstone. 

  "Nope!" she said. "I'm walking on earth like every other human." 

  An important part of Mia's long recovery came when she was just 4 years old 
and visited the grave of her baby sister Samantha, whose death at her father's 
hands brought Mia to the attention of child welfare workers. 

  Blackstone asked whether she made her little sister a promise. 

  "I told her that I'd see her in heaven someday," Mia said. 

  "She went to the baby's grave and spoke to the baby. Nobody told her to do 
this. And she says to the baby, 'You died and I got to live,'" Terr said. "It 
was an incredible moment in which this child realized that she had gotten to 
survive for a purpose."

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     Learn more about the therapy that helped Mia overcome her abuse. 
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  Now Mia has started telling her story of survival publicly to help those 
considered throwaways. 

   
  (CBS)"I am definitely still a work in progress," Mia tells groups. 

  And she says: "Some people look at those kids, like, 'Oh, they're just gonna 
grow up to be, like, crazy and in mental hospitals.' That's not true because 
every kid in the world is important." 

  She feels free to speak out because her birth father is serving a long prison 
sentence. She's lost track of her birth mother. 

  Bob Behrens credits three women for Mia's recovery: wife Sharon for her 
commitment, Terr for her insights - and Mia for her will to survive. 

  Those who supported Mia through all the years of struggle got a huge reward 
last June when she graduated from high school. 

  "She was a baby when she came," said Sharon Behrens. "And now she's a young 
woman. You know, with her whole life in front of her. With lots of adventures. 
And it's been quite a ride." 

  Snyder, the deputy district attorney, said: "I get paid to use words. I'm at 
a loss for words to describe Mia - she is that phenomenal." 

  The girl who once feared everyone is now surrounded by friends. At college, 
her goal is to become a kindergarten teacher. 

  "I love children and, you know, taking time and patience and learning about 
them - they're really interesting," she said. 

  The girl who once growled and bit can now hardly keep from smiling about her 
future. 
  © MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. 

  http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/02/17/eveningnews/main4808278.shtml



  

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