Monday, July 1, 2013

Respite

G and I have had a few opportunities the past few months to take short trips without the kids and let me tell you, it's been a lifesaver.

Respite is an official break from caregiving and we are fortunate enough to have several options when it comes to people we can leave the kids with; in addition, foster families have access to paid
'respite care' that DHS pays for-- basically other foster families or DHS approved folks who take the kids for a certain amount time.

We were actually a weekend respite placement for Miss M and Baby A, when their former foster parents had health issues. Those health issues eventually forced them to give them up and since we'd bonded with the kids, we were able to become their official foster parents. And that weekend placement will be a year, in a little under 2 weeks!

Those same foster parents are still in our lives; we call them the 'foster grandparents'. And they were gracious to keep them last weekend when G and I went to my sister's wedding in Springfield/Branson, MO last weekend. They had a full house-- their adopted kiddo, 5, Miss M (also 5), Baby A (2), and 2 foster babies (12 months and 6 weeks). That's 5 under 6. Woo! Glad it wasn't me.

Contemplating the view at Black Mesa State Park; .can't you just feel the serenity?!
We've also had G's parents watch the kids for the weekend, most recently for Memorial Day weekend when G & I took a road trip to Black Mesa in the Panhandle, which has been great for everyone. They love spoiling the kids, the kids love them and we feel safe (and a little guilty) about leaving them with Nana and Pop Pop. They've been so generous over the years, and have not failed to wholeheartedly embrace our foster kids as their own.

So grateful for the love that surrounds us and the kiddos.




Sunday, May 19, 2013

Dinner with Papi

So, the blog's been quiet, which usually means that there's too much going on behind the scenes for me to share.

The same is true for the kids' custody issues- where I once worried that M wouldn't get to finish her school year, now I have to consider what we're gonna do with the kids this summer. But that's another topic for another post.

Visitations with the kids' dad- Papi- have been fairly consistent over the months we've had them- with the exception if Easter weekend. The day has shifted around a little, but now we're having visits in our home, Thursday evenings.

(I DEARLY miss the Sunday afternoon visits where he would take them out for several hours and leave G and I alone, blessedly alone.)

So, he comes over for dinner about 5:30,  plays with the kids while I cook, and we eat when G gets home 6ish. Then, he helps gives baths and puts them to bed.

The first few weeks few super awkward- he was real wrapped up in the kids, particularly Baby A-- M was practically climbing him in an attempt to get her fill of attention-- and he was so unsure what to do when it came to the nightly routine.
He was definitely in "learning mode"!

Now, he can give baths and monitor bedtime stuff practically on his own! So cool.

This is foster "bridging" as it's supposed to be- we are actively modeling discipline (which he reinforces), routine and care. And he gets to see how much we love his kids & we see how much they love him.

Dinner is still a little awkward (language barriers still pop up sometimes), but we're getting there.  



Friday, April 12, 2013

Back to Square One

As a follow-up to my ranty post the other day about Miss M, we met with her therapist-- who is a friggin saint (and very wise)-- who not only validated our frustration and concerns, but had some good suggestions for managing behaviors.

1.Stay strong! Don't take no crap off of no 5 year old! If she pitches another fit in the car (complete with chair kicking like she did on Tuesday of this week), pulls that sucker over!
2. Teach kindness-- i.e. awareness of how other people are feeling, how her actions affect others. Taking suggestions on this point!
3. Be more affectionate-- she's still dealing with a lot of anxiety over the pending reunification and needs to be reassured that she's going to be ok. Oy. That can be a hard one for me, but if more hugs and high fives and positive affirmations of correct behavior will get us farther along the behavior path than my default setting of 'no!', then I'm all for it.

Thoughts and comments? I welcome them!
~~~~~~

Also, have you checked out my Easter post? We had a nice time! We do manage to have fun with these kiddos, between the tantrums. :)

And stay tuned for  my thinky post about taking family portraits last weekend and how that's really the first step of my grieving process.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The Not-so-secret truth

{note: this post brought to you by Day 4 of Mega Tantrums and Extreme Stubbornness)

The truth is...if DHS wouldn't also take Baby A, I'd call them to come get Miss M today.

They truth is... I have deep deep doubts about whether we're getting through to her-- she's not learning from her mistakes and no amount of love, logic or discipline can break through her anger.

The truth is...I worry, almost constantly, about how her Papi will handle her tantrums when the family is reunited, but I also can't wait for that day to come.

The truth is...I've never been more frustrated or felt so unbelievably helpless in my life.


Monday, April 1, 2013

Easter 2012 vs 2013


2012- first Easter with foster kiddos! I remember being so excited about doing Easter baskets for Da Boys; it was their first or second week with us and they were still on pretty good behavior.

I bought Easter baskets for everyone (including Greg) and my sister and brand-new boyfriend (now her fiancee) came down for a visit and laid out an Easter egg hunt in the backyard.

Their grandmother had sent them little pants & vest combos and they were excited to wear them.

I even wrangled a picture with both of them; it was my phone background for months.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2013- 2nd Easter with foster kids. These kiddos we've had for much longer, they sort of feel like (and could pass for) our own kids.

I went bananas buying co-ordinating outfits (so cute!!) and we even made a special effort to join G's parents at their church so they could show off their "grandkids."
Check out that color coordination!


G's grandparents were there too and Grandpa Ed and Baby A, who are special buds, enjoyed hanging out together.
How cute are they?!

It was a special time. Best holiday we've had to date.



Monday, March 18, 2013

What it feels likes when you say, "oh I could never do that"

The "that" of course being fostering.

Oh, "that'd be soooo hard"

Oh, "ugh I could NEVER do that, I'd get so attached!!"

Like "it'd be so haaaaaaard"

"I'd be so saaaaad to see them go!"

No shit, Sherlock. It IS hard, it does suck, you DO get attached and yes, it rips your heart out when they leave.

But fostering is not about YOU and your emotional COMFORT, it's about being willing to be provide safety & comfort for a child whose whole world is NOT safe or comfortable.

So, please, save it- you whining about how hard it would be for YOU belittles those of us who DO. Encourage, praise, even just a "wow" would be fine, but don't wax eloquent about how you could neeeever do it, lest I be forced to school you about how selfish you sound.

*mic drop*

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Not so much a lightbulb moment...

...As a slow dawning that the truth of the matter that Miss M's hellish tantrums at bedtime are not actually about wanting (or not wanting) to go to bed, they are about deviations from the standard routine.

And for her, routine = stability = love.

And denial of ANY part of this routine means obviously we don't love her.

This frustrated me to no end because we've spent the last 9 months heavily investing in her. It honestly kind of sucks that she doesn't trust that we love her without having to prove it every. single. day. and. night.

And like, no, duh- her "trust bank" is limited (because she HAS only been with us 9 months), but despite us making daily "deposits" she still gets "overdrawn" on a fairly regular basis.

Poor baby. I love her so much, but this is the part that tests us to show Love and BE grace when it's very much not natural to do so.