Anonymous wrote:I would make sure they are all younger than your youngest child.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an adoptive mom and I would love to do this.
But now now. We have two young kids adopted from birth and there's no way I could give them what they need plus add a whole new sibling group that has experienced trauma.
I would consider this when my kids are much older and out of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I adopted from foster care and adopted out of birth order. Thing is, you can find people who had good experiences doing this and those who didn’t. There are always risks with adding to your family, even if you have a biological child. You will have to take classes before you are approved. Educate yourself there, not on DCUM where people are so negative and have no actual experience.
Op here. Thank you. I’m not naive to birth order. I just don’t think it is the end all and be all. I also think the posters on here so obsessed with it clearly never raised twins before. I also believe that it is good for people to recognize that hierarchy can and will change. We are signed up for an info session next week and then 30 hours of classes thereafter.
And to the extent it matters dh was a teacher in dcps with homeless foster and adopted children. He would stay home full time. I don’t think six children is so
Difficult but we aren’t such fools as to think it is easy.
Anonymous wrote:Have you been around the population of kids who end up in foster care? I work at a school that is 100% free and reduced lunch eligible. The kids that end up in foster care are the ones that not only have suffered abuse and/or neglect, they don't have stable extended relatives to take them in so they have to grow up quickly. To survive when your mom is so out of it that she doesn't feed you AND there is no concerned grandmother or aunt to check in on you means you need to often lie, steal, fight, etc. because you can't trust anyone. These kids often have to grow up so quickly a 7 year old may have the street vocabulary of a 14 year old. A sibling group of 2 or 3 elementary foster kids don't need to be in a house with 3 other kids, they need what they never have had- attention. You sound really naive, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I adopted from foster care and adopted out of birth order. Thing is, you can find people who had good experiences doing this and those who didn’t. There are always risks with adding to your family, even if you have a biological child. You will have to take classes before you are approved. Educate yourself there, not on DCUM where people are so negative and have no actual experience.
Anonymous wrote:My mom had what I called a “mother Theresa complex.” Please save it for when your kids are out of your house. Your kids need more attn as they get older, not less. These kids will have a lot of trauma and much it will not be known to social workers. There is a lot inappropriate sexual behavior at that age and I would not allow it around my kids. I’m not saying not to do this if it’s a calling but please wait until your kids are out of the house. My family had a bad story and my mom came to her senses and stopped fostering until all kids were out. She’s a foster mom again and truly a wonderful person but I do not recommend this if you have little kids of your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve always heard you should adopt younger kids than you have for safety reasons. Older children could possibly harm your younger kids.
I am familiar with this adage as well but I was thinking that so long as they were roughly the same age it would probably be fine. My kids are 6 and twins that are almost 9. I thought for example a 7 and 10 year old would likely be fine. But I’m ignorant here. I want to be educated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations on your decision to consider adding to your family! As an adoptive parent, I’d strongly urge you to not disrupt the birth order.
Please elaborate on this. Please remember that my eldest are fraternal twins so normal first born hierarchy does not apply.