Parents of Foster Care

Real Life, Real Encouragement

  • Home
  • About
    • Privacy Policy and Disclosures
  • Consider Fostering?
  • Encouragement
  • Struggle
  • How To
    • Help Others Understand Our Children
  • Search
Home » Attachment » A Long Line of Mothers

A Long Line of Mothers

04.25.2016 by Sarah //

A Long Line of Mothers 2One more broken moment enters our home.

It was a bump on the head like any other.  The tears came.  I kissed it.  Then my child spoke words that broke my heart.

“Mommy Shelly kiss it.”

My response shows nothing of my hurt.

“Yes, Mommy Shelly kissed your booboos.  Now, Mommy kisses them.”

My little one has a far off look in his eyes.

“Booboo.  Booboo on head.  Mommy Shelly kiss it.”

“Honey, look at my eyes.  Mommy Shelly loves you, and Mommy loves you.  Mommy Shelly used to kiss your booboos.  Now Mommy kisses your booboos.  When you were a baby you lived with Mommy Shelly, but now you are a big boy and you live with Mommy.  Mommy takes care of you now.”

Now it’s his little heart that breaks.

He wails.  Sadness dripping from his eyes.  I hold him close, rocking him like a baby.

This moment is critical for our connection.  I can empathize and comfort and go deeper in my love and care for him.  I grab the milk and hold it to his lips like a baby.  I feed him like his biological mother should have.  I feed him like his first foster family did.  I feed him now as his adoptive mother, taking the place in a long line of mothers this little soul has had.

My mothering must be deepest.  My connection must be preeminent. I must be viewed by him as his permanent parent.

To do this I must recognize that he has loved and lost others- that this, his final family home, comes at the cost of the first two.

I hold him and our hearts break together.

(Note: I created the image in this post using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, read our Disclosure Policy here.)

You’ll Also Like Reading:

3 Reasons We are Beginning Attachment Therapy and Why You Might Want to Also

New Post Goodness in your E-mail? Yes, Please!

Save

Share this:

  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr

Categories // Attachment Tags // Struggle

Trackbacks

  1. Adoption Day ~ Parents of Foster Care says:
    July 30, 2016 at 6:28 pm

    […] A Long Line of Mothers […]

New Posts

New Post Goodness in your E-mail? Yes, Please!

Help Yourself and Your Family

What I’m Reading

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Studio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in