Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine did this for her nephew when he was that age and it was best thing that could have happened. I second the idea of working with a family therapist. I would tell nephew that you want both of you to go to the family therapist so that you can be a good team together. That will keep him from internalizing that something is "wrong" with him---kids in his situation often blame themselves for the problems in their parents' lives. If you can afford it---get him a tutor to help get him back on track academically. Lots of teachers will supplement their income this way. They can clue you in quickly regarding whether he has any special learning challenges besides those associated with the attendance lag.
Read "The Connected Child" and "Attaching to your older adopted child' and similar type readings to get ideas on how to build a strong relationship with him (they apply to your situation as well as adoption). Figure out things to do together--board games, card games, cooking together, hiking, bike riding---do activities together to build rapport. And go tell him good night each night---kids are often at their most communicative just before dropping off to sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's going to be hard, but you should do it anyway. If you post what state you are in, I might be able to post resources. One thing to consider is whether he will be in foster care and placed with you, or if he will be placed with you in lieu of going into foster care. The difference matters for how much oversight cps has over you and him, but also what benefits you and he might qualify for (Medicaid, monthly funds, discounts on college tuition, etc.). It will be hard but if it were my niece or nephew I would definitely try it.
I am in Kentucky, He was in a foster home for 2 days before i was contacted and then he was moved to my home yesterday on a temporary bases awaiting a permanent decision.
How's it going?
My advice is have the social worker help you find therapy for both of you, connect with the school immediately, take FMLA, and if at all possible work with your job to adjust your schedule to work form home or be home before and after school (unsupervised kids at this age are dicey...maybe not in 5th grade but once they hit middle school). Ask your principal to set you up with a family or two who can show you around. Be blunt and ask for someone from similar financial resources who is kind, maybe with the same interests as your nephew if you know what those are (doesn't help if you are middle class and they are doing fencing and suzuki).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's going to be hard, but you should do it anyway. If you post what state you are in, I might be able to post resources. One thing to consider is whether he will be in foster care and placed with you, or if he will be placed with you in lieu of going into foster care. The difference matters for how much oversight cps has over you and him, but also what benefits you and he might qualify for (Medicaid, monthly funds, discounts on college tuition, etc.). It will be hard but if it were my niece or nephew I would definitely try it.
I am in Kentucky, He was in a foster home for 2 days before i was contacted and then he was moved to my home yesterday on a temporary bases awaiting a permanent decision.
Anonymous wrote:It's going to be hard, but you should do it anyway. If you post what state you are in, I might be able to post resources. One thing to consider is whether he will be in foster care and placed with you, or if he will be placed with you in lieu of going into foster care. The difference matters for how much oversight cps has over you and him, but also what benefits you and he might qualify for (Medicaid, monthly funds, discounts on college tuition, etc.). It will be hard but if it were my niece or nephew I would definitely try it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you know your nephew? Meaning, have you had regular contact with him? Any special needs? Health issues? Do you have a spouse? Does the child have behavior problems? Is the father in the picture at all?
I've only seen a few times and he seemed like a good normal kid with no major health issues, No i don't have a spouse, Neither of his parents can pass a drug test so they won't have any involvement.