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Fostering is its own world, so welcome to mine. I hope you get a picture of the real, the raw, and the beauty. It's hard, but God is gracious, and it is one of the best journeys I've pursued. I hope this gives you enough information to make a good decision for your family.

Foster care and dealing with Uncertainty

10.28.2016 by Sarah //

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Whether you are considering foster care, could never be a foster parent, or are already loving on foster kiddos in your home, this is for you. Because there is one uncomfortable thing that ties us all together – the invisible line of uncertainty.

It stretches from as far back as I remember – when I was that person who could definitely not be a foster parent – to some distant future I’ll never see. It wakes you up to a great big world you can’t control but in which you definitely have a part to play.

I’m considering fostering

Information. It’s what you’ve looked for. “But what does foster care look like? What does it feel like? Will I be able to handle it? Is it safe? Can I do it?”

And that’s what I’ve tried to give you at Parents of Foster Care, a peak into the day-to-day, ins-and-outs, and ups-and-downs of daily life with foster children. But, there won’t ever be enough information to figure out if you should or shouldn’t do this.

Uncertainty

I can’t tell you exactly what life in your home with the child you end up caring for will look like. I can’t tell you when they will arrive, where they will come from, or what their story will be. I can’t tell you if they will fit right in or not at all. I can’t tell you how you’ll handle it, what your response will be, or if you’ll get any sleep that night. There is no way to know. What I can tell you is this:

  • Be prepared to make time. Time to sit and listen, time for meltdowns or tantrums (no matter the age child), and time to find out what this kiddo loves and go after it with him or her. You’ll need time to connect, and time to listen to fears and happy moments. Time for homework, for doctor’s appointments, and therapist appointments. You’ll need time to send them out the door to visit their family and time when they return so they can transition into your home again. Plus, time in the middle of the night if they don’t sleep well (most of them don’t). You’ll just plain need time.
  • You can do it. At least once. At least to figure out if you can do it again. If it’s in your heart, then you’ve got to try. Read what Sarah has to say about this in “What if You Want to Foster but You’re Terrified?”. She’s raw and open about this very thing.

So get all the information you need. Write it down, think about it, consider it and then decide, because there is no amount of information, experience, etc. that is going to dissolve the uncertainty. There just isn’t a way to know beyond a shadow of a doubt one way or another. You just have to decide.

I could never be a foster parent

And if you can’t – you just plain can’t – that’s okay. I understand. Not everyone is made for this. I wasn’t either, until my “babies” changed my life. You can read about it here, “How our ‘babies’ came to us”. And even then uncertainty connected me to foster care. Because I just didn’t know how foster families did it, and I didn’t know how they could let go and re-attach over and over and over again, and I didn’t know how they could live with all the unknowns.

And now? Now I know that it never really goes away.

I’m Fostering Right Now

The backseat realization that you never really know. Well, anything.

You never really know the timeline – this little person you care and love for can be snatched away at any moment. Sometimes under good circumstances and sometimes under bad.

His family is doing well! They’re changing and proving they can care for him! Yeah!

But it means he goes home tomorrow.

You cry as you pack him into the social workers car. Or…

they found an extended biological family member who passed all the background checks and drug screens. That family member is going to care for him now. I’m so glad he gets to be with family, but sad ours will be different without him.

And so you rejoice while you hold back tears of grief – how can this be-these duel emotions?

Or the plain uncertainty of the facts. You never know what’s going on.

Ever.

Yes, you’ve communicated with the child’s family, with social workers, with visit coordinators. You’ve attended court, read the documents, made notes of your own. But you still just never know. You never know because the facts are always a jumbled mess.

People are in jail…then out.

Passed drug screens…then didn’t.

Visits went well then don’t.

Appointments are kept but barely.

Court is held, but only for five minutes because there are so many cases today they’ve run out of time before they’ve even begun. This case won’t be heard today; another date is set and another month passes with no answers.

What does it all mean?

How will it affect the case?

Nothing is ever straight forward.

Ever.

Life no longer fits into tidy little boxes stacked up straight.

The only constant seems to be that you love this kiddo. And while he or she is in your care, you treat them as your own. No matter the uncertainty surrounding you. You provide stability, structure, a routine, as much consistency as you can in this swirly mess of unknown, because it never really goes away.

So How do I do it?

Not very well. Some days it breeds fear, and some days I think it will be the death of me.

But I know these two things:

  • I will continue to love fiercely because these children need me to. This kind of stepping up and stepping into their life can change generations and this is what I’m called to do.
  • My Jesus is bigger. He’s bigger than it all. And he’s chosen the families who will intersect with our lives and the children who will be in our home and He has them here.

For a time.

For a reason.

I might not like the outcome, or the length of time they stay, or the reasons they came (believe me – Jesus doesn’t like that either!) but I know Him and I trust Him because He is good, and loving, and faithful.

And when I fail and can’t see past the next unknown – He’s still got it.

He’s got me.

He’s got my kiddos.

And I can face one more day of uncertainty because of that.

Free Attachment Resource

Fostering a secure relationship with your kiddos is oh, so important! Here are 4 elements of a secure attachment and activities to establish it with your children. Put your email address here and “click” so I can send it to you.

You’ll Also Like Reading:

But Love Wins

Why its NOT the Same

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

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Categories // Considering Fostering?, Real Life Tags // Struggle

Dear little one who probably won’t stay long,

09.23.2016 by Sarah //

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Dear little one who probably won’t stay long,

If there’s one thing I want you to leave our home with it’s this – Amazing Grace.

I sing it to you every night before you go to sleep. I pray it for you every afternoon. It is my hope and dream for you – these deepest truths about God wrapped up in a song.

“…Grace…

taught my heart to fear and grace my fear relieved”

Relieved, Gone.

That’s what I pray for you. There’s fear wrapped up in your little body right now. The fight you put up? That’s a result of it. But grace erases that. Grace – God’s perfect-blinding-Holiness wrapped up in a person and given to us. This holiness, this God-presences should have been too much for us, should have vaporized every molecule of our being, but instead He walked with us, He lived for us, died for us, and gave us His perfection.

That grace can sooth every fear – relax every desperate need to fight. And in its place bring something deeper, greater, good. It brings awe.

“…grace, how sweet …

[it] saved a wretch like me. I once was lost, but now am found.”

Relax into that. Be cradled by it. Be held and kept there. Find relief there. Lost, misguided, deceived, trapped, believing the lies, nowhere to go, to escape but here – grace – and it can find you. Can save you. Sweet Grace.

“The Lord has promised good to me. His word my hope secures.”

A promise of good for you is there, plain as day, right in His word- if only you believe. I pray you do one day, because it is this good in the midst of anything life throws at you that is my prayer for you.

“Through many dangers, toils and snares I have already come; Tis

Grace that brought me safe thus far and Grace will lead me home”

I know its God’s grace that’s caused you to survive the many dangers and snares. I know its grace that’s brought you to our family for a little while. And I know that it will be His grace that returns you safely home. Home to your family and hopefully home to God’s final dwelling.

So, one day,

“When we’ve been there ten thousand years Bright shining as the sun. We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise than when we’ve first begun.”

I hope we end up here together. You might be a part of our family for only a little while, but I pray that you repent and believe so that we can be part of God’s permanent family together forever. You, your biological family, us, I want us all there – one house, God’s house – swapping stories of His goodness, dancing, and singing with Him.

So, sweet child, this is what I hope for you,

Grace – sweet grace forever.

You’ll Also Like Reading:

But Love Wins

Why does one Foster Child FEEL LIKE two?

4 Elements of a Secure Attachment

Fostering a secure relationship with your kiddos is oh, so important! Put your email address here and “click” so I can send you 4 Elements of a Secure Attachment and simple activities to develop them.

(Note: I love using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may also contain affiliate links. For more information, read my Disclosure Policy here.)

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Categories // Considering Fostering?, Real Life Tags // Encouragement

How our “babies” came to us

09.16.2016 by Sarah //

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There is a big, long back story on why we became foster parents and how it all happened. I’ve yet to put the full story into words. However, Foster the Family Blog asked us to share this part of our lives and I was extremely honored to do so. So, here is a very small part of a very great story. It’s the punch-line so to speak.

It’s how our “babies” came to us.

Fostering a secure relationship with your kiddos is oh, so important! Here are 4 elements of a secure attachment and activities to establish it with your children. Put your email address here and “click” so I can send it to you.

(Note: I love using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may also contain affiliate links. For more information, read my Disclosure Policy here.)

 

 

 

Categories // Considering Fostering? Tags // Encouragement

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