Nurturing Children of Another Mother
When I was a
kid, my sisters and I liked to play with dolls in our playhouse next to Mama’s
garden. We shopped for groceries in the
field beside our house: daisies for
eggs, Queen Ann’s Lace for fried potatoes, milkweed for fish, and clover for
strawberries. We took our food to the
playhouse and cooked, cleaned, churned butter, and played hospital or
doctor. We baked pies, cookies, and cakes in the sandbox next to that
playhouse. Our Saint Bernard puppies
were our children when we played church on the front porch steps. Cats
and kittens alike were obligated to wear the doll clothes we put on them and were
forbidden to jump out of the baby buggies in which we pushed them as we walked
in and out the dirt lane.
When young
mothers brought their children to our place to be babysat for a day, we fought
over who got to hold the baby first. In
fact, our mother finally started setting the timer on the kitchen stove so each
one of us got our “turn” and we’d quit fighting over who got to hold the baby
longer. We even had something we called “first baby business” – which was
merely the right to hold a baby when it first arrived at our house. Upon hearing that we’d be babysitting,
the person who called, “First baby business!” got first dibs on the baby. Mama never had to worry about children being
cared for; we’d much rather rock and play with babies than clean bathrooms.
And, when a
child became fussy, there was always another sister who was willing to take a
turn. Babysitting was more fun and games
than work, and I never considered the 24/7 responsibility that came with
having children. In my not-completely-perfect childhood, foster
care was never contemplated. I knew
other foster families but while it was a great idea, never considered that I
should join those ranks.
All I knew was
that, if I ever got married, I wanted a bunch of kids. We settled for six – actually we ran out of
money and I ran out of eggs and veins (and not necessarily in that order).
I was like other
moms. You know, the ones who were going to be the
best mom: ones who never lost patience and spent endless time reading to and
playing with her kids; ones who were creative and full of energy and ideas and
imagination; ones who fixed nutritious snacks and meals. Every mom wants to protect her kids from
injustice and bad influences and corruption.
So it never occurred to me, as a child, young married bride, or even a mother of young children, that I
should open my safe, protected home to children from another mother for
extended periods.
It was safe
here. We knew how to plan and what to
expect in the little garden plot of our world.
Dave and I had tilled the soil and knew its constituency. Even though we
were different, we had experienced similar church and childhood
backgrounds. So it wasn't likely that an
unknown weed would crop up. We
recognized them all and worked at yanking them out: selfishness, dishonesty, disrespect,
laziness, sibling rivalry, and defiance.
Dave and I knew our kids and knew their genetics, personalities, and temperaments because these kids
were products of both of us. We shared
those same traits, although in varying degrees.
Neither of us had to worry about negative influences from other gene
pools or life experiences. We didn't fight bad language or bad habits born from another father and mother. Even though our kids were different, they
still functioned in predictable ways.
And so, even
though parenting was difficult and frustrating and exhausting at times, life
was good because we had our own little world that we had created and built and
prayed about. Our garden was pretty
secure, nestled away from the cross-pollination of others. We had shade, shelter, and plenty of
fertilizer and mulch to keep our garden thriving. We knew what had been planted, and although
there were difficult surprises along the way, we kept tending our garden and
looking forward to reaping the harvest someday.
Then I joined
the ranks of other moms (and their spouses) who felt called to raising seed
that had been germinated elsewhere. There were other plants out there that needed a
place to flourish; we reckoned with the fact that serving Jesus was more than
just caring about our kids, our family, and our little plot in the world. Loving Jesus and giving sacrificially
compelled us to look at ways we could make a difference, bring healing to
others instead of focusing only on keeping our own from hurting, and give to
enrich others rather than claiming what is for “me, myself, and mine.” We wanted to make a difference. We also wanted to give back to God. We decided to become foster parents, so that makes me a foster mom. I've been one since the first day I got the
call.
Foster moms
refer to it as “getting the call.” These
moms never know when the call will come.
Sometimes it comes at an inconvenient time, and the answer has to be
no. But always, when the call comes,
there is that tug at the heart. A foster
mom who has shared her home with 63 children says, “I am waiting for the next call so I can
receive more children into my home.”
A case worker shared about the night she took an infant to a home that was receiving a child for the first time. The parents and all six kids were up, waiting for the arrival: “Every light in the house was on, and it was 11 o’clock at night,” she said.
A case worker shared about the night she took an infant to a home that was receiving a child for the first time. The parents and all six kids were up, waiting for the arrival: “Every light in the house was on, and it was 11 o’clock at night,” she said.
A foster mom
knows that, if the answer to the call is yes, it will turn her world upside
down. Really upside down. Again.
Just when things are settling down to normal, an addition to the family
brings uprooting and moving. Plants that
were finding root someplace else are yanked out and placed in another garden,
with a soil and climate unlike that from which it came. Sure, this soil might seem better, but there
is still uprooting and adjusting to a new climate that takes place. Plus, the already established plants feel the
squeeze from additions to the plot.
When the phone
call comes and the answer is yes, it means “I accept you sight unseen.” Sometimes that includes lice and poor table
manners and behavior that one’s own flesh-and-blood kids never exhibited. Almost
always it includes reciprocated love.
So while playing
with dolls, puppies, kittens, and
real babies as a child is fun and creates interest in mothering, it’s no
comparison to the undertaking of being a mom or adding more troops to your
brood by taking in foster children. It’s
not all fun and games; in fact, it’s a lot of extra work.
Preparing a
heart and a home for another foster child also means preparing a heart for
good-bye. The hardest part, foster moms agree, is knowing that the child/ren
will someday leave (possibly returning to their own home).
Other difficulties include dealing with discipline issues and all the appointments that need to be scheduled. Foster moms spend more time in doctors’ offices than they did with their own kids: medical, dental, counseling, therapy, speech, PT, and family visitation. Meetings with principals and teachers as well as IEP meetings also take extra time.
Sometimes a foster mom goes along to visits where children are checked for sexual abuse. Somebody needs to hold the child’s hand, and she’s going to be there.
Other difficulties include dealing with discipline issues and all the appointments that need to be scheduled. Foster moms spend more time in doctors’ offices than they did with their own kids: medical, dental, counseling, therapy, speech, PT, and family visitation. Meetings with principals and teachers as well as IEP meetings also take extra time.
Sometimes a foster mom goes along to visits where children are checked for sexual abuse. Somebody needs to hold the child’s hand, and she’s going to be there.
In addition, there are adjustments in their own lives and schedules, especially if the child has severe problems. The loss of privacy and control of one’s schedule never ceases to blindside a foster mom when newcomers enter her home. Nevertheless, like a woman in labor who immediately forgets the pain once she holds her newborn, foster moms forget the difficulty of that adjustment period when there are new shoots in the garden patch. When the call comes, they’re ready to take in more kids who need shelter and a place to be nurtured and grow.
Other adjustments are finding new and creative ways to deal out discipline to these children who are not theirs. In addition, each child responds differently to consequences and reprimands and sometimes it takes trial and error to figure out what works best for this previously unknown child.
Another
challenge is visits the children have with family members. Just when things are getting settled and
children are beginning to feel a part of the family, planned visits occur in
order to prepare the children for return to their homes or else to another
family member.
Behavior that is
not acceptable can be weeded out with persistence and planning. Yet just when it seems it’s been cleared
completely out of the patch, something sparks a rebirth of that weed. Visits with parents or family members can
cause those weeds to crop up again. Acting out, disrespect, defiance, loudness,
and tantrums are par for the course after visits with family members.
Seldom
recognized for loving someone else’s children as their own, foster moms diaper
and rock and cuddle and love the children of another mother, and sometimes of
another color. Especially with older children,
it’s a fine line to walk when a foster mom is not the real mom.
A fourteen-year-old boy sobs on his foster mom’s shoulder coming back from his
first visit with his mom. Why the tears?
No one knows. But he finds solace and comfort in the woman
who’s been “mom” to him for a few short months.
His younger sister finally cries herself to sleep after another visit,
all the while being cuddled and rocked by her foster mom for over an hour.
Listening to a Bible story |
“I couldn't leave him alone; I was afraid he’d hurt himself,” she says. She has to go to work the next day, but it doesn't matter, for this little guy has wound his way into her heart, and she’s there for him no matter what it takes.
Foster moms know
to clear their calendar the day of a visit – they’ll be dealing with anxiety,
behavior issues, tears, and
tiredness. Just as in the aftermath of
a storm, they have to be ready to pick up the pieces of debris left in its
wake. Again.
One foster
mother Suzanne told me, "Love isn't enough.
I assumed it would be, but I quickly learned that wasn't true at all.
Love is essential, but so is training, new ways of parenting, and a
professional support system.”
And, just as in
parenting one’s own, Suzanne says foster parenting requires “a willingness to
let go of any expectations you may have of the system or a child.” Again.
Letting go of garden dreams, designs and plans is difficult – but it
must happen for a successful season.
If a foster mom
has kids of her own still at home, they will be caught up in the drama and will
be affected. They’ll need to sacrifice. Again.
Sometimes she’ll be caught between her own plants and these new
seedlings. Sometimes her own kids have
to make sacrifices – like the 15-year-old
son who had to forgo getting his driving permit the day he became old enough because
his eight-month foster sister was awarded to a family member that same day. The call from the social worker changed plans
for his mom to take him to DMV. Instead
of gaining a permit, he, along with his five siblings, said tearful good-byes
to the infant who had been in their home for five months.
Summer play . . . |
Suzanne's children: 2 biological + 2 adopted |
Another difficult aspect involves dealing with truth. We consider ourselves truthful people. I told our kids the truth and expected the same from them. Imagine my surprise to find that a foster child could look me straight in the eye and tell me a lie with such seriousness that I had no doubt he was telling me the truth. His parents had modeled it so well that he thought there was nothing wrong with being untruthful. Telling a lie was more common to him than being honest.
Suzanne, a
foster mom, says, “Doing foster care well requires you to truly enter into a
child’s and family’s pain. Although it looks different with different children,
the descent into sharing a child’s pain always feels the same. It is HARD. Sometimes it means sitting for hours on the
floor beside a little girl’s bed at night because she is too lonely and scared
of me to be comforted or desire to be touched.
Sometimes it’s meant cleaning poop off carpet, windows, and walls
because a little boy didn't have the words to tell us about his fear and
trauma. Other times it’s loving a baby
day after day, while even in infancy he chose to not love me back because I was
not his ‘real’ mama. And there are times
it means holding a child while he rages and screams for literally hours,
knowing that he didn’t know what being loved by a mama day in and out was like,
but still feeling rejected in spite of that fact. In the last year it’s meant
bearing through days and nights of a baby’s grief-stricken screams, just
waiting until she felt loved enough to be calm.
"And sometimes, it means loving
mamas who didn't know how to love their own kids well - taking them groceries,
giving them pictures . . . . And
sometimes it’s sitting through days of court until finally hearing a verdict
that takes away parental rights permanently, a verdict that makes a child a
legal orphan - unimaginable brokenness. Listening to stories of drugs and
abuse, blood and guns, poverty and lack of education, prostitution and drugs –
those are the dark days. Those are days when you wonder what qualifies you to
be in this place, to have this calling.”
"Yes, Jesus loves me . . . " |
The fragrance of love is exquisite, even though it may be prickly, and there is a kaleidoscope of expressions in experiencing new things: a visit to the mall, a ride on the escalator, going out for ice cream cones, family time where everyone is included, meal times around the kitchen table, participation in a Christmas program, learning about the real meaning of Christmas or of Easter, learning to reach out to others by helping a neighbor with yard work, rippling laughter of play, being tucked in at night.
A visitor in our home, after hearing the story of the children we were parenting, said, “We don’t know what we have.” No, we don’t.
Our children can
learn from having foster siblings in the home.
They see the pain, the anger, and the wounds, and they realize how
blessed they are to have parents who will fight for them, who never give up, and
who expect and believe the best in them.
Sometimes our kids have celebrated awards
without us being present because of the foster children in our home. Giving up beds or bedrooms and sharing their
parents with other seedlings is not always easy, but it’s necessary. And it is
worth the energy expended.
“I’ve looked
into the eyes of an abused or unwanted child, and I know it’s worth it,” says
Brandy, a mom of four teens who has three foster children under the age of five
in her home.
In our foster
family journey, we wanted to give back to God for sparing the life of my
husband in an accident ten years ago.
During evenings when playing the same card game over and over brought
complaints from our kids, I reminded them that this was our Thank You to God. During
days when the dishwasher has to be emptied more than three times, I remember
that this is a way to worship God.
During nights of being awake repeatedly, rocking a child who is afraid she’ll be left alone, I have been so weary. When I remember why I am doing this, I can truly say, “Jesus, this is my thank You to You.” When I whisper those words, the tiredness doesn't matter, and I realize that saying thanks to Him isn't really thanks if it doesn't cost me at all. The words “offer the sacrifice of praise” take on new meaning when I am weary and spent. [Jeremiah 33:11 Hebrews 13:15]
During nights of being awake repeatedly, rocking a child who is afraid she’ll be left alone, I have been so weary. When I remember why I am doing this, I can truly say, “Jesus, this is my thank You to You.” When I whisper those words, the tiredness doesn't matter, and I realize that saying thanks to Him isn't really thanks if it doesn't cost me at all. The words “offer the sacrifice of praise” take on new meaning when I am weary and spent. [Jeremiah 33:11 Hebrews 13:15]
blooming where they are planted |
my sister Barbara entertains one of "my" children |
I've spent more hours in grocery stores than any I spent collecting “food” in the pastures next to our house. I've baked more cookies and bread than any we pretended to do in our sandbox. My sisters love our foster children just like they loved the babies who came to our house. And our foster kids love them right back.
Playing church
at my home place was a lot of fun,
and the memories are part of my life. Being the church to lonely, hurting
children is even more enjoyable and rewarding, for we've seen growth as
children have thrived in our home.
Surely they will remember that, even though our garden wasn't perfect,
they were loved. We ourselves have learned so much. We have experienced grace that is more than
sufficient and strength that is made perfect in our weakness. [II Corinthians
12:9]
As Suzanne says,
“I get to help change a child’s life, but really, truly, the best thing about
fostering is how those little children change me. I am transformed by their
strength and resilience, and I am undone by their pain and grief. I am reminded
of everything broken in this world, and I am thankful that I know (and can teach
them to know) the Healer.”
So this Mother’s
Day, I applaud the many women in the world who are moms to children of another
mother – who give and give, love and love, and claim these kids as their
own. I applaud the hearts of each foster
mom, for even though her “children” leave, there is forever and always a part
of them left behind – in her heart.
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