A Family
I read a great article in the Des Moines Register yesterday about a girl named Sam who was just adopted at age 19. It is such a cool story (that of course made me cry)!
I actually know Sam. The foster family she lived with in Ames is friends of ours and go to Cornerstone. They are the family she mentioned in the story that taught her a love for God.
This story just reinforces my last blog post about BELONGING. Every child - even a young adult - longs to belong to a family.
Enjoy reading the article .
The Lee Three
Showing posts with label Foster Parenting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foster Parenting. Show all posts
Monday, November 22, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Tools, Resources & Goals for Foster & Adoptive Families
Below is the fourth post in the series I mentioned in my last post about being a foster parent. I thought his insights and resources are just as relevant to adoptive families (adopting children from hard places) as foster families.By the way, here is a tip if you are a family wanting to gather resources to prepare to adopt a child(ren) from hard places. I know how overwhelming it can be to see a resource mentioned but not know what to do with it because you are not ready to read it right now. Anytime I come across something I think will be helpful I put it in my "Read for C-country" email folder. Even if I come across something that is not in an email, I copy and paste it into an email (like the title of a book) and still file it in the same place. That way when I get ready to start reading, I can go to the one place and choose what to read next. Just a little tip from the organizer part of my brain!
Tools, Resources, & Goals for Foster Families - Part IV
As a follow up to the first 3 blogs about fostering today’s abused, neglected, and abandoned kids, I want to share a few tools and goals that have made this one of the best decisions we have made. As I previously stated, it isn’t easy, but if you understand the greater mission and purpose this opportunity gives us, the rewards are tremendous.
Our greatest support comes from our licensing agency. Choose wisely, ask lots of questions (for instance, do their standards of care exceed the state’s requirements?). We use Christian Family Care.
It's important to understand what these kids have missed and what they need. We take for granted a few simple things about childhood. Imagine the countless hours of face-time healthy babies are given, the innumerable times a baby drops something on the floor only to have it re-appear in his her mother’s hand, the myriad of sounds and expressions exchanged by a baby and a parent. Kids that are abused, neglected, and abandoned miss out on all of that.
It came home for us when our son joined our family at 3 ½ years old (literally). Immediately noticeable was his undeveloped speech. A lot of kids that come from hard places suffer the same delayed-speech. There are many scientific reasons behind this but one of the main reasons is that he simply missed out on the noise making that naturally happens from birth to early childhood. As he settled in his first night, I sat him down on my lap to read him stories and after the second page he got up and walked away. It eventually became evident that he had never had a book read to him before. The book was about farm animals and we were joined by our youngest son who was 15 months old at the time. At 15 months, he could make the sounds of most everyday animals. Our new foster son didn’t know any of them. Other struggles for him were the inability to look people in the eyes and being too clingy and affectionate with everyone (friends and strangers). Most of these issues are diagnosed or explained as Attachment Disorder. Click on the hyperlink to read the in-depth Wikipedia entry. The short explanation is that it happens in the first 3 years of life when a child has a need and that need is not met or inconsistently met. Attachment Disorder effects psyche and brain chemistry.
One of the greatest resources to learn about what every child needs is Tim Kimmel’s Grace Based Parenting. Tim explains that every child needs a secure love, a significant purpose, and a strong hope. These kids have been deprived of all 3 and our goal as foster parents is to purposefully build these needs into each child’s heart. Purposeful means that you can’t trust that taking over the parenting of a child at 3 ½ and treating them like nothing happened in the past will work. My son loves to be held. No, he actually craves to be held. He’s a healthy 8 years old and he still asks for “uppy.” I carry him around, in front, on my back, on my shoulders. It doesn’t matter how much he weighs, he needs to connect with me, attach to me, and have distinct face-to-face time with me. We are building into him a secure love that he will take with him for the rest of his life. That is, he will always know that he is lovable and that someone loved him.
Another great tool is the Kids Flag Page. Based roughly off of the DISC profile, this resource gives you the “heads up” on how your new foster child is hardwired, what makes him special, and why he may be unique in your family dynamic. It will help you learn the best ways to connect and correct your child. For instance, let’s say that you and your spouse are paced a little slower and lean more towards the methodical. You are getting ready to leave for church so you excuse your foster daughter from the breakfast table and tell her to go upstairs, brush her teeth, comb her hair, put on her shoes, get her bible, and get to the car. You get busy getting yourself ready and are soon in the car waiting. Exasperated, you go back inside, head upstairs, and find her sprawled out in the hallway in front of her bible coloring the unfinished handout from last week’s Sunday school. Based upon your profile, this is disobedience and needs to be punished. After all, your own kids were all able to get ready for church. The problem is, your foster daughter is not hard-wired like you or them. She is from “Fun Country”, easily distracted and has a hard time remembering the laundry list of tasks assigned to her. The Kids Flag Page will help you interact with different kids that have different styles.
Finally, Dr. Karyn Purvis and Dr. David Cross are the world’s leading authorities on attachment issues. Their book, The Connected Child, is must read for all foster and adoptive families. You can find out more about Drs. Purvis and Cross at their website: http://www.child.tcu.edu/.
My wife and I have a simple goal as foster parents: that each child in our home, no matter how long they are there, will experience a loving relationship that will stay with them forever. My vision is that when I end up in eternity and am strolling along the streets of gold, a stranger will approach me with a strong embrace and say, “You were my foster dad! You are the reason I’m here!”
___________________________________________________________________
Peter Bartolini is a member of Family Matters’ board of directors and is part of our Speaker Team. He and his wife Julie have been foster parents since 2004. They have 3 children, Natalie- age 9, Morgan- age 8 and Sammy- age 6. They currently have the blessing of an 11 month old foster care placement living in their home and bringing them joy daily. Since they became foster parents, they have had 19 foster kids in their home and look forward to many more! Peter blogs at http://peterbarto.wordpress.com/.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Being a Foster Parent
A friend told me about an awesome series of posts on being a foster parent at the Family Matters Blog. I am posting Part I on my blog because it is fantastic! I especially love that he addresses the biggest fear people have with the idea of foster parenting.
Why I am a Foster Dad - Part I
James 1:27 tells us that “Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction….” It really is that simple. In the context of James’ letter, he was encouraging those who follow Jesus to be followers of action, Jesus’ actions: “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror. For he looks at himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like. But the one who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, he will be blessed in his doing” (verses 22-25). So I had to ask myself, what does it mean for me to “visit the orphan in their affliction.” To obey this, not everyone is supposed to become a foster parent, but everyone is supposed to have a part to play in taking care of our community’s orphans. For my wife and me, we already had the tools, we saw the need, and we already weren’t sleeping through the night, so it has been an easy transition to bring these special kids into our home, our family, and our hearts.
Moreover, when I read Matthew 25, and Jesus explains what the final judgment will be like, he summarizes our earthly actions by saying that what we did to “the least of these” – those we saw in need – we did to Him. I have to ask myself who, in my life, was the least of these. The answer was the 10,000 children in Arizona who are abused, abandoned, and neglected.
There are a lot of responses and excuses people tell me about why they can’t be a foster parent. The number one excuse I hear is that it will be too painful to let them go. I understand that. It’s true. But if you run that through the filter of Jesus’ Gospel, run that excuse parallel to Jesus’ own words: “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me” (Matt 16:24). Jesus picked up His cross for us, he bore the pain of death and the punishment caused by our sins. Can I bear the pain of falling in love with a child and letting him or her go? One thing I glean from the gospels is that Jesus didn’t live a life for Himself – it wasn’t about Him. In the same way, we aren’t bringing these kids into our home for us, we do it for them. Simply put, it isn’t about you or the pain you will feel, it’s about these kids.
The reality is that someone needs to become a mom and dad to our community’s orphans. I wonder why there aren’t more Christ followers operating within the foster care system. Why not us? Why not you? There is pain, it’s trying at times, but there are many blessings that we receive. We have been fostering kids for the past 6 years and have had 19 kids in our homes. Some of them stay a few days, some a few months, and one of them has become a permanent part of our family. There are more great times than there are tough times, although the tough times have been hard. Those are the times when you really have to dig deep and see the face of Jesus in these kids, seeing that you are doing this unto Him and not the crying, screaming child that is carrying around more pain than a child should carry. Following Christ isn’t easy, but He’s good. God smiles on me at the right moments.
_________________________________________________________________
Peter Bartolini is a member of Family Matters’ board of directors and is part of our Speaker Team. He and his wife Julie have been foster parents since 2004. They have 3 children, Natalie- age 9, Morgan- age 8 and Sammy- age 6. They currently have the blessing of an 11 month old foster care placement living in their home and bringing them joy daily. Since they became foster parents, they have had 19 foster kids in their home and look forward to many more! Peter blogs at http://peterbarto.wordpress.com/.
Why I am a Foster Dad - Part I
James 1:27 tells us that “Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction….” It really is that simple. In the context of James’ letter, he was encouraging those who follow Jesus to be followers of action, Jesus’ actions: “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror. For he looks at himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like. But the one who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, he will be blessed in his doing” (verses 22-25). So I had to ask myself, what does it mean for me to “visit the orphan in their affliction.” To obey this, not everyone is supposed to become a foster parent, but everyone is supposed to have a part to play in taking care of our community’s orphans. For my wife and me, we already had the tools, we saw the need, and we already weren’t sleeping through the night, so it has been an easy transition to bring these special kids into our home, our family, and our hearts.
Moreover, when I read Matthew 25, and Jesus explains what the final judgment will be like, he summarizes our earthly actions by saying that what we did to “the least of these” – those we saw in need – we did to Him. I have to ask myself who, in my life, was the least of these. The answer was the 10,000 children in Arizona who are abused, abandoned, and neglected.
There are a lot of responses and excuses people tell me about why they can’t be a foster parent. The number one excuse I hear is that it will be too painful to let them go. I understand that. It’s true. But if you run that through the filter of Jesus’ Gospel, run that excuse parallel to Jesus’ own words: “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me” (Matt 16:24). Jesus picked up His cross for us, he bore the pain of death and the punishment caused by our sins. Can I bear the pain of falling in love with a child and letting him or her go? One thing I glean from the gospels is that Jesus didn’t live a life for Himself – it wasn’t about Him. In the same way, we aren’t bringing these kids into our home for us, we do it for them. Simply put, it isn’t about you or the pain you will feel, it’s about these kids.
The reality is that someone needs to become a mom and dad to our community’s orphans. I wonder why there aren’t more Christ followers operating within the foster care system. Why not us? Why not you? There is pain, it’s trying at times, but there are many blessings that we receive. We have been fostering kids for the past 6 years and have had 19 kids in our homes. Some of them stay a few days, some a few months, and one of them has become a permanent part of our family. There are more great times than there are tough times, although the tough times have been hard. Those are the times when you really have to dig deep and see the face of Jesus in these kids, seeing that you are doing this unto Him and not the crying, screaming child that is carrying around more pain than a child should carry. Following Christ isn’t easy, but He’s good. God smiles on me at the right moments.
_________________________________________________________________
Peter Bartolini is a member of Family Matters’ board of directors and is part of our Speaker Team. He and his wife Julie have been foster parents since 2004. They have 3 children, Natalie- age 9, Morgan- age 8 and Sammy- age 6. They currently have the blessing of an 11 month old foster care placement living in their home and bringing them joy daily. Since they became foster parents, they have had 19 foster kids in their home and look forward to many more! Peter blogs at http://peterbarto.wordpress.com/.
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