Anonymous wrote:Gee, if only the google worked
https://ebfsc.org/what-you-can-do/adopt-a-family/
http://www.operationwearehere.com/AdoptMilitaryFamily.html
https://www.stmatthewscathedral.org/outreach/adopt-a-family
https://hruth.org/ways-to-give/adopt-a-family/
Or is there some kind of specific family yiure looking for, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McLean presbyterian sponsors special needs orphans ( or children at-risk of abandonment) in Romania each November. You get a Christmas ornament so you can pray for the child each year. What I love about Romanian Christian Enterprise is that the team takes photos of the children opening the gifts. You get a letter in February or March. I think it’s a great way to teach kids about empathy.
You know what would be more helpful. Adopting these kids or ones hard to place in the US. We have so many US kids with SN lingering in foster care till they are 18 with no family and yet, funny thing, no one wants to do more than a token donation to make themselves feel like they are doing so much. (yes we adopted a SN child). That is not teaching empathy. Empathy is far more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't "adopt" a kid/family by just providing financial resources and/or volunteering. Adoption is a long, legal, complex legal process. What you are describing is charitable giving, not adoption
Do you also get offended when people discuss adopting a pet, or a new routine?
Do you always feel the need to pipe up about matters that are not reflective of your lived experiences because of your fragility kicking in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't "adopt" a kid/family by just providing financial resources and/or volunteering. Adoption is a long, legal, complex legal process. What you are describing is charitable giving, not adoption
Do you also get offended when people discuss adopting a pet, or a new routine?
Do you always feel the need to pipe up about matters that are not reflective of your lived experiences because of your fragility kicking in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't "adopt" a kid/family by just providing financial resources and/or volunteering. Adoption is a long, legal, complex legal process. What you are describing is charitable giving, not adoption
Do you also get offended when people discuss adopting a pet, or a new routine?
Anonymous wrote:You don't "adopt" a kid/family by just providing financial resources and/or volunteering. Adoption is a long, legal, complex legal process. What you are describing is charitable giving, not adoption
Anonymous wrote:I take my small children to volunteer at the DC Diaper Bank. Not Christmas, but it is still a need regardless of what day it is.
Anonymous wrote:You don't "adopt" a kid/family by just providing financial resources and/or volunteering. Adoption is a long, legal, complex legal process. What you are describing is charitable giving, not adoption
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be very expensive - thousands of dollars. I found this out when my friend did it last year and only discovered after getting the lists and requirements from the agency. one of the requirements of the agency was that clothing items on wish lists were expected to be "quality items" and then there were a list of brands and stores and no, Walmart and Target were not on the list. Another one was electronics on wish lists had to come with certain additional accessories even if those accessories did not appear on the wish list.
If budget is a concern to you, make sure to ask questions beforehand on the expectations.
What agency is this? I find it hard to believe this is real. And one can always say no.
Yeah this is definitely fake.
I don’t know if that is fake or not but I remember reading a thread here, maybe last year, where the gift requests were very high and expensive items.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be very expensive - thousands of dollars. I found this out when my friend did it last year and only discovered after getting the lists and requirements from the agency. one of the requirements of the agency was that clothing items on wish lists were expected to be "quality items" and then there were a list of brands and stores and no, Walmart and Target were not on the list. Another one was electronics on wish lists had to come with certain additional accessories even if those accessories did not appear on the wish list.
If budget is a concern to you, make sure to ask questions beforehand on the expectations.
What agency is this? I find it hard to believe this is real. And one can always say no.
Yeah this is definitely fake.