Super Harper

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Harper is our 4 year old Black and Tan Coonhound. She is a rescue I brought home from the Seattle Humane Society the day before a 24+ hour road trip to Las Vegas with my husband and his 3 wonderful kids, my “Bonus” kids (pre-fosters). Another proof that I “married up.” Or proof that my husband, Mauricio, is an amazing man with an unlimited amount of patience. He’s too good to me. I need to remember this thought for the next time we are fighting over backsplash in Home Depot. Ha!

I watched videos of Harper on the Humane Society’s website for a full week, researched her breed and needs, before emailing the Humane Society. I HAD to have her. She was only 10 months old at the time and unfortunately the videos of her with a professional trainer made her out to be better behaved than she was (see video HERE). It was impulsive. Bad timing. Such a bad idea. And I’m so grateful because she’s one of the biggest blessings in our family. She’s amazing. She has so much patience for our kids, and never retaliates or growls when they are a little rough with her. And she adores them. She watches out for our kids. I’ve seen her provide comfort to so many foster kids who have come through our door – for a day, a week, a month, still here… Harper is so perceptive and knows when to comfort one of us. It’s her gift. It’s therapeutic. And at the same time she is sassy and lazy and hilarious.

Harper struggles with anxiety. She went through 5 different families before we got her. She was abused, skittish, had a hard time trusting, and she had patches of hair missing all over. 4 years later and she still has food insecurities and separation anxiety. We had to rush her to the emergency vet (side note – those emergency vet bills are no joke!) one evening last week because she had cut herself escaping her kennel, leaving a 4 inch gash along her side. She had to be put under anesthesia and cleaned up and stitched together. We are so grateful she’s back to her normal happy self, healing, and expected to make a full recovery.

Harper isn’t just our family pet. She’s a symbol of resilience. Of finding that happy ending after 5 really awful placements. Adoption. Family. Trust. Healing. Togetherness. (and a few chewed pieces of millwork)

Have a Day!

“I would tell you to ‘have a good day‘, but given the news I just gave you, ‘have a day!‘ ”

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Moments earlier on the front sidewalk of our kids’ elementary school, and following another IEP meeting, our Adoption Social Worker shared with us that the Great Grandparents of our sibling set of 3 that we are adopting (A4, J6, T7) have retained an attorney in our county and are pursuing family court. Slap in the face. These people who expressed ZERO interest in the kids while they were here in town for a two week visit (I’m talking about 6 hours of visit time TOTAL during a full two week stay in town), who didn’t engage with the kids, who have one foot in the grave (I mean this as kindly as possible. This woman can barely walk. How the HELL is she going to raise 3 high energy kids?!?), who are barely getting by financially, who ignored and blew off every attempt to engage with them… who haven’t reached out to talk to the kids, not even one call or text or email since mid October… these people have retained legal counsel and are pursing family court.

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Peace. I feel peace about this. I know I probably shouldn’t. Those damn rose colored goggles. I know these kids are with us for a reason. I know these people don’t have a leg to stand on. I know God won’t give me more than I can handle. I know each attorney for our kiddos is advocating for our kids to be adopted by us. The Department too. It’s so clearly documented.

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“Okay, so how bad is this?” I asked. Social worker replied “these kids belong with you and Mauricio and we are prepared to fight tooth and nail.” … “It was important to me that I tell you in person and that you not hear it through the grapevine. But this is happening. It may be that they are wanting to take another try at getting custody of the kids or it may mean that they want a little control – to know where the kids end up – to have a say in all of this. It’s unclear what their intentions are and all of us in the Department are a little stunned given how well documented it is that they are simply not a good fit. This will likely delay your adoption if they get any footing in family court.”

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What the F@*$?!? 

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Today is J6’s Kindergarten graduation. It’s a great day. We have fought so hard for this day. Referrals, specialists, behavioral interventions, therapy, counseling, hard work, sweat and tears… we have earned this day to celebrate. He’s been so successful this year! He feels good about himself and is settled and HAPPY now. There isn’t anything I wouldn’t do for this child, my children, so I’m going to use some skills and compartmentalize this “news”… box it up and set it aside for today. And probably tomorrow…. because today (and tomorrow) we celebrate. We’ll slay this another day.

All Rise for the Good of the Children

all rise for the good of the children

The goal for foster care is always family reunification. There are barriers preventing a child from living with their parent – drug and alcohol abuse, domestic violence, mental health, illness, child endangerment, death, prison, abandonment, etc… The child is placed with a foster family with the hope that their birth parent will get treatment, complete their sentence, parenting classes, counseling or whatever listed steps they are required to complete in order to regain custody of their child. When the State has exhausted proper channels for pursuing reunification (they usually give the parent a couple of years or more to get it together), then alternatives like adoption become the goal. This is how we became adoptive placement for our 5 kids.

“ALL RISE For the Good of the Children takes you inside the courtroom of an unconventional judge in East Texas who takes a trust-based, trauma-informed approach to healing broken families in the child welfare system. Two families share how their lives were transformed through the support and intervention offered by Judge Carole Clark and her team of lawyers, mental health experts and child advocates.”

Click HERE to watch the documentary (it’s free and really, really good!).

 

APR – Adoption Planning Review Meeting

Today we have our APR, Adoption Planning Review Meeting. This milestone happens between a child becoming legally free and adopted and it sets the table for adoption, with a timeline of usually 6 months or less.

I’m a little nervous, to be honest. Yesterday morning within an hour of J7 getting to school, he was suspended again. In situations like that I can’t help wondering if we’re adequate parents, if we’ll be able to meet his needs, what obstacles will the future hold, etc… At school he’s angry, defiant, anxious, destructive, and has a really hard time taking directions from authority, or anybody for that matter. He’s starting to experience auditory hallucinations and has no friends… not one friend. He’s starting to buy into the lie that he’s not a good kid, not smart enough, not worthy of friends, etc… It’s excruciating to see him walk through this.  At home he’s my sweet boy. He’s sensitive, kind, compassionate, an eager helper, brilliant, happy, and smart. He is worthy of happiness and success and all the good things. We want so badly for him to see that.

The State has made it very clear that support and resources become more limited post adoption. Residential care will not be an option if one of our children require a more therapeutic setting. More limitations on mental health support, etcetera.

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(later…)

Ten minutes into the meeting, the Adoption Planning Manager for the region said to us, “these kids are exactly where they need to be. You are amazing. You are helping them heal from really traumatic pasts. We can’t express our gratitude for what you’re doing.” Not fishing for a compliment here, but wow was that a nice thing to hear. To be honest, it’s been a real ass kicker of a year. Fall down 7 times, stand up 8.

For about an hour we discussed the adoption process for our five amazing foster kids, A4, J5, J6, T7, & J7. Waivers, limitations, rights, notices, etc… Attorneys fees that we need to prepare for (this will be about $5,000 – $6,000 given the number of children) and finding an attorney to retain.

It sounds like we are 6 months out from adoption. I know I said that about our 2 Js, J5 & J7, back in the summer of 2018 after they became legally free. We are choosing to adopt all 5 kids on the same day so that we have one anniversary to celebrate, and more importantly, so that no one can say “Mom and Dad love me more because they adopted us first.”

We will have a closed court hearing (meaning only invited can be in attendance. We’ll be sure to invite all family, friends, teachers, people who have helped and loved our kids) which will result in us being the legal forever parents of these amazing kids. They will have new last names, their juvenile dependency cases will be closed, and they’ll have new social security numbers and birth certificates listing us as parents. I’m excited for the future!

 

 

Principal Saves the Day

The principal of our kids’ elementary school is AMAZING. He is such a fun, cool, positive, team playing, supportive, brilliant guy and he consistently goes above and beyond. And usually with a chuckle.

Anyways, he’s been so good about touching base when one of our kids is struggling, or including us in a community school event, or checking in. He is generous with his time and is often willing to take a call on his personal cell to brainstorm or help. Today he called to let me know that the school district is going to pay for our J7 to get a neuropsych evaluation since the state insurance takes nearly forever to get approval and then scheduled. This is HUGE. He made it his mission this week to go to bat at the district for our kiddo, knowing that this kid is struggling big time and needs more support. I know this wasn’t just a one phone call thing – this was a lot of work for him to convince the district that this needs to be done.

I’m so grateful. We have so many amazing people surrounding us. Even when things are tough, we know we have a village that’s rooting for us.

What NOT to Say to Foster Parents

It goes without saying that what foster families are doing in the community is important and arduous work. Some days we are called to care for a difficult child. Some days we are put in the awful situation of letting a child get attached to us and us them, while keeping it a secret that they will be moving to yet another stranger’s house in the next week. We are loving our nation’s most vulnerable. We are juggling parenting, trauma, homework, work, teachers, therapy, lawyers, case workers, specialists, CASAs, and our lives all at the same time. Deadlines for medical check ups. Deadlines for court reports. Deadlines for licensing hours. Deadlines for monthly health and safety visits. It’s a lot. But it’s also worth it. These kids are worth every single ounce of energy and every sacrifice. My point is, as foster parents we do this out of love and not for attention or special treatment or whatever benefit there might be (and believe me, they are slim. The gold here is watching a child experience joy and develop into better, happier, healthier versions of themselves). What we don’t ask for is negative attention, but it happens daily. So I wanted to share with you a list of things you shouldn’t ask fosters.

1.) Are they all YOURS? If I had a dollar for every time someone said this to me in the last year alone… Gente chismosa! We never really know how long we will be called to serve a child, so the answer should be “yes” because for the time being and until we’re told otherwise, they are all ours.

Mother’s Day 2018 we went to brunch near our home with 6 kids. At least 5 were under the age of 6 and they were on their best behavior. Please’s. Thank you’s. Appropriate mealtime conversation. Minimal mess. My kids were AWESOME and I was so touched. So elated. So happy. It was wonderful. What a gift. And as we walked out the door to leave, some lady loudly chimes “Please don’t tell me those are all YOUR kids.” It felt like judgment. It felt like a negative label, a put down, a “you’re not worthy of this experience.” She clearly saw a white woman with a latino man and a handful of kids of every color and made an assumption about the type of person I am. About my moral compass. It was upsetting and yet a great opportunity for me to reexamine how I perceive others.

2.) Do they all have the same dad? This comment used to get me all bothered. Our first experience was getting the kids’ haircuts at a little walk in salon not too far from our house last year. The three ladies working on our kids, chatting back and forth in Vietnamese. Looking at me. Looking at my husband. Looking confused. “Is he their dad?” “Yes, he is.” “Are they twins?” “How?” “Their skin.” They kept asking question after question and I shutdown. I ignored them. I just couldn’t understand. I was mad… and still tipped 20%… Sadly, now I expect to hear it. But really… Does it matter? Are you going to call my kid unwanted if they don’t share the same dad? Will you think of me any less?

My absolute favorite response to the above two questions is this: “Yep, all mine. Still trying to figure out who the fathers are.” Then walk away.

3.) WOW. It looks like you’ve got your hands full. Hi, can we not do that? NEVER in the history of helpful has this phrase ever been helpful. And there you stand, doing nothing. It’s kind of like when you tell a person to “calm down.” Help us out. Most days we feel like we’re barely keeping our heads above water. Between the schools calling, therapy appointments, social worker visits, CASAs, attorneys, etc… we do have our hands full. REALLY full. Tell us something encouraging instead because chances are we need it!

4.) They are so lucky to have you. I know. It’s easy to think that when you see us taking them to Disneyland and making up for “lost time.” But don’t. We are the lucky ones, not them. There is nothing lucky about being in foster care. There is nothing lucky about being made to live in a stranger’s house or carrying every worldly possession in a garbage bag. I appreciate the thought and the compliment you’re intending to give us when you say that, but please don’t. The privilege is ours in the deepest sense. To experience fun adventures. To advocate for their every need. To go to court for them. To get spit on and yelled at and to put the carpet cleaner into rotation almost daily. To teach them how to ride a bike or swim or cook or drive. To say yes to the next phone call that comes in the middle of the night. These kids are forced to do hard things… the best thing I’ve ever done is walk alongside them.

5.) You must be a saint. Ha! Clearly you don’t know me. I’m a speeder and a cusser and stubborn and grumpy before my first cup of coffee. I’m no saint nor do I act like it. I’m no better than anybody else. No one tricked me into a houseful of kids, I chose this life.

6.) I could never do what you do. I’d get attached. We foster parents get attached. The government is not placing a bunch of vulnerable kids with sociopaths who feel ice cold nothing. Just sayin’. Saying goodbye to a child is hard. Not knowing what the next chapter holds for them is hard. My heart breaks literally every time. Heart-wrenching-Lifetime-Original-Movie-sobbing-until-my-head-aches cries. But that’s the beauty here – these children deserve to have people’s hearts break for them. To invest in them. To cry for them. To pray for them. To emotionally invest in them no matter the stakes.

If you believe you’d get attached to a child and your heart would ache for them if they left your care, then you would be a wonderful foster parent! Please, consider fostering so that child doesn’t have to sleep on an office floor.

7.) Don’t you want to have your own kids? I’m not even going to dignify that question with a response. We are probably not friends so I don’t have to worry about telling you {as kindly as possible} to fuck off. These kids may not have my DNA but they are just as much mine.

8.) What’s the story on this kid? That’s really private and privileged information. Oftentimes, its so classified that we foster parents may not even know. Out of respect for the child’s privacy, please don’t ask. Now, if you are a foster parent talking to someone in placement about taking a child into your care, then this is an acceptable question. We always vet our kids for two reasons: 1.) we are not equipped to take a high needs / medically fragile child 2.) we are unwilling to expose our kids to another child who has been sexually abused or exhibits sexualized behaviors. (As an undergrad at the University of WA, I worked as a social worker with SAY “sexually agressive youth”. I have the skills and knowledge to work with this population but I would never be able to have them in my home. I truly believe that youth in this category belong in residential settings because rehabilitation is extremely difficult and risk of exposure is so great).

We know kids whose parents are serving life sentences for murder. We know kids who are in foster care because their single parent died. Because their parents are drug addicts. Because their parents are in jail. Because the grandma who raised them is in hospice. Because neglect. Abuse. Deportation. Homelessness. The list goes on…

 

We Need More Spontaneity

Since having kids, we have found ourselves becoming more rigid and rule oriented. We are slaves to routine and for the most part that’s a good thing because kids, especially kids with trauma, need structure to develop. They need organization to feel secure, safe and prepared to overcome the next obstacle.

Kids also need spontaneity and adventure. I feel like we as parents often fear that spontaneity will lead to mayhem, trouble, and problems with boundaries. We end up avoiding unplanned moments altogether because it’s just easier. Because we will avoid having to enforce a tough boundary or embarrassment from a child reacting negatively…

Enough organization, we need some fun. So tonight we skipped the normal dinner and evening routine and took the kids to the movies. We let them choose the movie (Pokémon) and then filled them with sugary junky treats and bottomless popcorn. They stayed up way past their bedtime and it was great fun to see them experience a little late night fun on a school night. There was no mayhem, there was no fighting, there was no destruction or embarrassment. They giggled and smiled and felt so much joy. And the best part? When we got home around 10pm (which is about 2 hours past their bedtime), everyone slipped right back into routine and went to bed without an episode. It was divine. (We’ll see tomorrrow morning how diving things are… lol)

This week I encourage you to do something fun and unplanned. It doesn’t have to require money either. It could be attending a free community event or taking a hike or packing a picnic and going to a nearby park. Free yourself of routine and the endless list of to-dos and do something fun!