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  #11  
Old 02-22-2008, 09:07 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

Okay, those responses were nice, but I want to know how you've trained them. Did you teach them about God? Did the social workers object to how they were being taught, or that they were going to church with you? Did you dress the girls like you would dress? were the children wearing modest clothes? I appreciate the pat on the back and the atta boys, (I really do) but I was hoping for training advice. We've already went over the pros and cons to foster parenting, but their were some things that we weren't able to answer amongst ourselves because of the experience issue.
BTW, thank you all for the responses that you did share. God bless.
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  #12  
Old 02-22-2008, 09:58 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

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Originally Posted by BrotherEastman View Post
Me and Heather are wanting to start foster parenting. Are there any AFFers with experience to share? Btw, we have thought about this for a few years, so this decision has already been made. I am just seeking experience from an Apostolic point of view from those of you who have knowledge about foster parenting. I look forward to your responses, thanks and God bless.
Get as much information about the child as you can, I have been a paid consultant/counselor to a FFA (Foster Home Agency) if you follow through you will be a miracle worker in the life of a child. Good Foster Parents are worth their weight in Gold.

Also do you have children and how old are they?

Try to get a younger child? Ask about how many placements the child has been in?
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  #13  
Old 02-22-2008, 10:00 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

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Originally Posted by BrotherEastman View Post
Okay, those responses were nice, but I want to know how you've trained them. Did you teach them about God? Did the social workers object to how they were being taught, or that they were going to church with you? Did you dress the girls like you would dress? were the children wearing modest clothes? I appreciate the pat on the back and the atta boys, (I really do) but I was hoping for training advice. We've already went over the pros and cons to foster parenting, but their were some things that we weren't able to answer amongst ourselves because of the experience issue.
BTW, thank you all for the responses that you did share. God bless.
Even in Liberal California most FFA's want the child to experience a normal family life so you usually won't have the object to church, most likely you will have to get permission for baptism or church camps, but Social Workers appreciated structured environment where there is a balance between rules and love.
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  #14  
Old 02-22-2008, 10:07 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

Quote:
Originally Posted by BrotherEastman View Post
Okay, those responses were nice, but I want to know how you've trained them. Did you teach them about God? Did the social workers object to how they were being taught, or that they were going to church with you? Did you dress the girls like you would dress? were the children wearing modest clothes? I appreciate the pat on the back and the atta boys, (I really do) but I was hoping for training advice. We've already went over the pros and cons to foster parenting, but their were some things that we weren't able to answer amongst ourselves because of the experience issue.
BTW, thank you all for the responses that you did share. God bless.
In our foster parenting training we were told that we could take the children to church with us, but we were not allowed to force them to attend. Maybe the rules are different in different states about that? I don't really know. But in our case, that was a moot point because our oldest foster child was 6, so they didn't really even know that they could object

Yes, we definately taught them about God. And we taught them how to pray.

Dressing them Apostolic was not something I worried about since I don't do that myself. But I did see that we had Mennonite foster parents in our system who dressed all of their foster kids like little Mennonite children. I really think that was beneficial for the kids. They need to fit in and feel like they are a part of the community and circle of friends where the foster parents live. If they had dressed the Mennonite kids in short shorts, they would have stuck out like sore thumbs. So it was in the kids' best interest to dress them the way they did.
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  #15  
Old 02-22-2008, 10:36 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

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Originally Posted by Newman View Post
I think the world of people that are foster parents and work with foster children in court.

Having seen alot; I would implore anyone thinking of becoming a foster parent; to only foster children who are younger than your own.

Many have NO IDEA what some of these kids have been through and the kinds of abuse they may have experienced. You want your children influencing them and not the other way around.

This is really the hardest part of foster parenting. One of the children that we had was one of these cases.

I want to share part of the story.....

He was 13. He was mentally and physically disabled, according to the files we were given before we met him. I read the first couple of pages of his file, and knew instantly that I wanted this child. He'd been in and out of foster homes and mental institutions since he was 6 years old. No one wanted this child. the files said that one could handle him, and that he was incapable of showing love or being loved. That presented itself as a challenge to me. Then I continued to read the rest of the file to discover things that just horrified me. I won't get into all the details of that, but I'll just say that apparently his entire family was in need of mental help.

The social worker who was assigned to him asked that we go to Nashville to meet this boy. So we did. The first day we met him, I knew that we would take him. He was crippled, and needed braces on his legs (which no one had ever taken time to get done for him) That was just the beginning of his problems. The first thing he did was to come over to me and hug me. Then he turned to my husband, and punched him in the nose.

This child didn't know how to eat using a fork or spoon, he would eat by grabbing food with his hands and shoving it into his mouth. He could not hold a cup and drink without spilling it all over himself. He wouldn't speak-- he just grunted and made other sounds. He would point to things he wanted, or grab an adults hand and take them to what he wanted. He wore diapers-- because he was never toilet trained. He had grand mal seizures. He was an escape artist, and had gotten away from every home he'd been placed in-- which ended up in him being placed in a mental institution.

In spite of all these things, we took him. The social worker thought I was insane to take on such a "problem child" (their label, not mine) as my first experience as a foster parent. I felt strongly that we could help this child-- and we were willing to try it. So the state of Tennessee put me through COPE training to learn to properly handle any aggressive behavior that might come from this boy-- Trained me in CPR and basic first aid-- The state paid for special modifications to be placed on the windows of his bedroom-- and to install deadbolts on the main doors of the house to make it where he couldn't "escape". Two weeks later, they placed this child in my home.

The first couple of months, they provided home health care for 8 hours a day to allow him to have 24 hour supervision-- and basically to give my husband and I a break from the round the clock care they knew he would need.

Within a few months, we taught this child to eat using silverware. He learned to drink from a cup. He was placed on a toilet training schedule. He was placed into a special needs school public school system. We scheduled him for appointments with orthopedic specialists... and forced the state to help in getting him the braces he needed in order to walk without falling.

We took him to church. He LOVED to go to church. We would have to take him outside for a couple of breaks during the service if he got too restless during the preaching, but he loved the music and worship parts of the service.

One day at church-- he went out for one of the breaks, and he just collapsed. Unconscious. We called an ambulance, and people gathered around him and prayed that whatever was going on, that God would be in control. He was taken to LeBonheur... where they found fluid was built up on his brain. There was no previous catscan or MRI in his medical records, so there was no way of knowing how long the fluid had been building on his brain. They neurosurgeon said that the fluid was built up so much, that it was within a quarter inch of his optic nerve. They said it could have only been hours or days before he would have gone blind- depending on the rate of the fluid building up. I believe God let the blackout happen to prevent that from happening-- so that he could get the medical attention he'd so desperately needed.

Within 24 hours, he was taken into surgery to have a shunt placed to drain away the fluid. When he was being prepped for surgery, and they shaved his head... the surgeon just came to get me to come back into the room-- and he cried. What they found, was just beyond belief. This poor child had so many scars on his head where he had been beaten on the head-- that you could not put your finger in between two places without touching another scar.

As the fluid drained away, things began to change. He was able to say simple words... He began to make small sentences. His walking got better. The seizures stopped happening. He became teachable.

At that point, we knew that he needed more than we could do-- because this child needed a chance to be taught more than we could teach. More than the local facilities in our county had available... so asked the social worker about moving him to another place where he could get those services-- where there were occupational therapists, etc that would work with him daily--- and help him like he really needed to be helped. They did, and the difference in this young man's life is just amazing.

If we hadn't taken this child who no one else wanted-- I hate to think what would have happened to him. He would have likely died in the mental institution.

It's been 15 years since he was moved out of our home. Today he lives in an assisted living center, a group home type setting. He has never forgotten us... every time we get a chance to visit him, he runs to me with his arms outstretched for a hug... and he calls me "mom".
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  #16  
Old 02-22-2008, 11:24 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tina View Post
This is really the hardest part of foster parenting. One of the children that we had was one of these cases.

I want to share part of the story.....

He was 13. He was mentally and physically disabled, according to the files we were given before we met him. I read the first couple of pages of his file, and knew instantly that I wanted this child. He'd been in and out of foster homes and mental institutions since he was 6 years old. No one wanted this child. the files said that one could handle him, and that he was incapable of showing love or being loved. That presented itself as a challenge to me. Then I continued to read the rest of the file to discover things that just horrified me. I won't get into all the details of that, but I'll just say that apparently his entire family was in need of mental help.

The social worker who was assigned to him asked that we go to Nashville to meet this boy. So we did. The first day we met him, I knew that we would take him. He was crippled, and needed braces on his legs (which no one had ever taken time to get done for him) That was just the beginning of his problems. The first thing he did was to come over to me and hug me. Then he turned to my husband, and punched him in the nose.

This child didn't know how to eat using a fork or spoon, he would eat by grabbing food with his hands and shoving it into his mouth. He could not hold a cup and drink without spilling it all over himself. He wouldn't speak-- he just grunted and made other sounds. He would point to things he wanted, or grab an adults hand and take them to what he wanted. He wore diapers-- because he was never toilet trained. He had grand mal seizures. He was an escape artist, and had gotten away from every home he'd been placed in-- which ended up in him being placed in a mental institution.

In spite of all these things, we took him. The social worker thought I was insane to take on such a "problem child" (their label, not mine) as my first experience as a foster parent. I felt strongly that we could help this child-- and we were willing to try it. So the state of Tennessee put me through COPE training to learn to properly handle any aggressive behavior that might come from this boy-- Trained me in CPR and basic first aid-- The state paid for special modifications to be placed on the windows of his bedroom-- and to install deadbolts on the main doors of the house to make it where he couldn't "escape". Two weeks later, they placed this child in my home.

The first couple of months, they provided home health care for 8 hours a day to allow him to have 24 hour supervision-- and basically to give my husband and I a break from the round the clock care they knew he would need.

Within a few months, we taught this child to eat using silverware. He learned to drink from a cup. He was placed on a toilet training schedule. He was placed into a special needs school public school system. We scheduled him for appointments with orthopedic specialists... and forced the state to help in getting him the braces he needed in order to walk without falling.

We took him to church. He LOVED to go to church. We would have to take him outside for a couple of breaks during the service if he got too restless during the preaching, but he loved the music and worship parts of the service.

One day at church-- he went out for one of the breaks, and he just collapsed. Unconscious. We called an ambulance, and people gathered around him and prayed that whatever was going on, that God would be in control. He was taken to LeBonheur... where they found fluid was built up on his brain. There was no previous catscan or MRI in his medical records, so there was no way of knowing how long the fluid had been building on his brain. They neurosurgeon said that the fluid was built up so much, that it was within a quarter inch of his optic nerve. They said it could have only been hours or days before he would have gone blind- depending on the rate of the fluid building up. I believe God let the blackout happen to prevent that from happening-- so that he could get the medical attention he'd so desperately needed.

Within 24 hours, he was taken into surgery to have a shunt placed to drain away the fluid. When he was being prepped for surgery, and they shaved his head... the surgeon just came to get me to come back into the room-- and he cried. What they found, was just beyond belief. This poor child had so many scars on his head where he had been beaten on the head-- that you could not put your finger in between two places without touching another scar.

As the fluid drained away, things began to change. He was able to say simple words... He began to make small sentences. His walking got better. The seizures stopped happening. He became teachable.

At that point, we knew that he needed more than we could do-- because this child needed a chance to be taught more than we could teach. More than the local facilities in our county had available... so asked the social worker about moving him to another place where he could get those services-- where there were occupational therapists, etc that would work with him daily--- and help him like he really needed to be helped. They did, and the difference in this young man's life is just amazing.

If we hadn't taken this child who no one else wanted-- I hate to think what would have happened to him. He would have likely died in the mental institution.

It's been 15 years since he was moved out of our home. Today he lives in an assisted living center, a group home type setting. He has never forgotten us... every time we get a chance to visit him, he runs to me with his arms outstretched for a hug... and he calls me "mom".
Thank you for sharing this, my eyes are watery now, thanks.
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  #17  
Old 02-22-2008, 11:55 AM
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Re: Foster Parenting

My step children were in foster care after having been abused by their adoptive parents. My husband lost custody of the kids when they were very very young and were put up for adoption. He was reunited w/them when they were 15/16 so it was difficult. Foster care parents are wonderful, selfless people. Some are bad only in it for the $$ - I saw both sides of the spectrum.

But if you want to go that route God bless you for it You can do a lot of good for those kids during the time they are in your home. Its hard to foster older kids, because of all the bad they have gone through - but good foster parents are never forgotten. This is what I learned from my step-kids. Pray and hope for the best, plan for the worse. Perhaps you can even adopt the child later.

Sis. Susan
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  #18  
Old 02-22-2008, 12:20 PM
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Re: Foster Parenting

Oh Tina - that was unreal!
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  #19  
Old 02-22-2008, 12:58 PM
Tina Tina is offline
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Re: Foster Parenting

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Oh Tina - that was unreal!
And there are probably thousands of similar cases that get swept under the rug....
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  #20  
Old 02-22-2008, 01:09 PM
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Re: Foster Parenting

Whatever you do, don't accept a SED (Severe Emotional Disturbed) child unless you have special training. You might have to ask some specific questions to get some background information on the child you take. But again as some have shared Foster Parents make such a difference in the life of a child.
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