Thursday, October 12, 2017

This is Indeed Us

This IS Indeed Us

There are 4,000 kids in foster care in SC, and 600 kids waiting for forever families.  This Is Us- South Carolina. 

For a long time, I have recoiled in horror as the media always seems to portray foster parents as heartless and abusive people.  Finally, the tide seems to be turning with the movie, The Great Gilly Hopkins, and now This Is UsThese are the foster parents I know in our community.  Our community is full of foster parents who make great sacrifices, take on great risks, and greatly invest in children from hard places as depicted on This Is Us this season.    

Fostering is the first thing perfectionist Randall has waded into without assurances of success.  And, as Randall points out, fostering is indeed “as hard as they said it was going to be.”  I am praying this show gives other “perfect” American families the bravery they need to risk failure by investing in a child who needs the love of that idealistic family they are holding so tightly to. 

Randall is shocked, like many overzealous newbies, that once a family is licensed a social worker will indeed drive to your house and drop off a child/children in less than 10 minutes. They leave sometimes without having a correct last name or birth date, much less knowing about allergies, or having a clue about what that child has experienced the past 12 hours.  They leave you with 14 hours of training, a piece of paper, someone else’s most prized possession, and a little precious, injured soul.  Sometimes you can start your first “day” together at 5pm with dinner and time to talk, but sometimes its 11pm or later.  Sometimes they stare blankly at you with fear, trembling quietly, or screaming through tears, and other times they run around wildly fueled intensely by anxiety. There is no real way to prepare for such strong emotions, except to ensure that you have support in the wings.  This is where Fostering Faithfully comes in.   The relationships built through support group becomes a network of people to call for help, ask questions, or cry with after feeling traumatized yourself by what you now know as more than just another story on the news of abuse/neglect. 

Randall rushes to the door to stop the caseworker questioning, “Are you going to leave? She’s not okay.” The caseworker’s response is spot on.  “Yes, that is correct. She is not okay. She was just taken from her family and brought to a stranger’s house.”  Randall thinks he can win her over with trite advice from blogs, by giving a house tour, and saying their names over and over.  It just isn’t that simple.  No matter how spectacularly you feel “ready” the child and the foster parents have fears to overcome and trust to build, which takes time and work. 

He is sorely disappointed with an aggressive interaction, and heads to bed with a classic foster parent move: the baby monitor hidden in his daughter’s room.  This made me chuckle since the “baby monitor trick” is something that always helps us cope with our own first-night fears.   I am sure when the 12 year old foster child entered the biological kids’ bedroom in the middle of the night every person in America took a long, deep, scared breath.  I was relieved when the writers chose the high-road again.  After all, there is enough negative stereotypes of foster kids in the world.  She really just had questions about figuring out how to best “survive” in her new home.    This is often the main objective of foster children each day, just figuring out how to meet their needs.  Many foster children are normal kids that just need to learn to relax and be a kid again, knowing a loving caregiver will meet their needs physically and emotionally. 

 Foster parents have the great honor and overwhelming task of earning trust they didn’t violate and of meeting basic needs, so foster kids know how to thrive, not just survive.  When the new foster child finds out that they both kids in the family have iPads, she says, “This place is crazy.”  It has been our great joy to share our own wonderfully “crazy” life with foster children who’ve been able to enjoy boating, hiking, swimming, camping, riding 4 wheelers, and playing in the creek and river, which seem like crazy wonderful experiences to kids who’ve been busy worrying about too many adult things or left to figure life out alone while a parent is distracted by drugs. 
I am breathing a sigh of relief that the writers of This Is Us seem really in tune with what foster care is actually like, and while many Americans find the emotional storyline captivating, I hope Americans will actually realize that they can have their own family love story by opening their hearts to the idea of foster/adoption, following through with all the unglamorous paperwork to start the story, and saying that first fearful “yes” to see what story God will write with their family’s gift of love.

There are 4,000 kids in foster care in SC, and 600 kids waiting for forever families.  This Is Us- South Carolina. 






And we're crying as much as a human can cry. #ThisIsUs