Anonymous wrote:Well, tell usAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money are you paid?
First, I just want to make sure you know it's offensive to phrase it like that.
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Well, tell usAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money are you paid?
First, I just want to make sure you know it's offensive to phrase it like that.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God bless you for taking care of these children!
Even though you do not want to adopt, I am guessing it must be very difficult to say goodbye to the children, particularly those with whom you really bond. How do you deal with that? Do you keep in touch?
Well generally we are happy for them to go because it's (hopefullly) to a permanent place. To a relative who has stepped up, to a parent who has jumped through hoops to get their child back, etc. We want the kids to have a stable life. But it's still a big adjustment when a child leaves, and we all mope around for a day or two, sometimes longer. We don't really keep in touch because that doesn't encourage them to bond with whatever family they've moved on to.
Kids who have been in foster care always talk about being moved around a lot, sometimes seemingly for no reason. Do the social workers tell you where the kids are going? Have you ever had one moved for reason other than family unification or your request and do you know what that reason was?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:God bless you for taking care of these children!
Even though you do not want to adopt, I am guessing it must be very difficult to say goodbye to the children, particularly those with whom you really bond. How do you deal with that? Do you keep in touch?
Well generally we are happy for them to go because it's (hopefullly) to a permanent place. To a relative who has stepped up, to a parent who has jumped through hoops to get their child back, etc. We want the kids to have a stable life. But it's still a big adjustment when a child leaves, and we all mope around for a day or two, sometimes longer. We don't really keep in touch because that doesn't encourage them to bond with whatever family they've moved on to.
Anonymous wrote:God bless you for taking care of these children!
Even though you do not want to adopt, I am guessing it must be very difficult to say goodbye to the children, particularly those with whom you really bond. How do you deal with that? Do you keep in touch?
Anonymous wrote:OP, do you mind telling us a couple stories of kids that particularly impressed you? They don't have to be "horror" stories, just te ones that made a lasting impression on you. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Have you adopted any of your foster children? If not, is that because none have become available, or because it's not something you decided to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you ever felt threatened by any of your foster children? I've thought about fostering, but we have small children and I worry that some children coming from a very disturbed environment could act out in a violent way.
We only take kids younger than our own, and only began after our kids could talk. I have definitely slept with one eye open with some kids. There are three times when I get very nervous with foster children - one is right when they're about to arrive, one is when whoever has brought them has left and one is right before I open the bedroom door in the morning. DH and I are pretty good at hustling the kids along throughout the day, asking closed-choice questions, and keeping control. We don't have 17 year old 6 foot angry man-boys raging here.
Anonymous wrote:How long does it take you to feel "used to" and comfortable with a new child? How long until you no longer feel like they are a guest?