Anonymous wrote:Of all the kids who have stayed with you -- what has been the average length of stay? Are we talking 2 weeks or 6 months? And how long of a break do you take between foster kids or do you always have one?
Sorry but I'm just not getting why someone with your own young kids would do this. You say you work part time, DH works full time, and you have 2 young kids. Aren't you going to look back in 10 or 15 years and feel like you missed out on your own kids' childhoods or skipped the opportunity to take your kids on certain outings or events because little Daquan who you never spoke to again was with your family for that 3 week period and you didn't want to spend the $$$ to take everyone on an outing but couldn't just leave him home with a sitter due to his emotional issues? Except that it won't be just 1 thing you skipped with your kids but dozens if not hundreds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of all the kids who have stayed with you -- what has been the average length of stay? Are we talking 2 weeks or 6 months? And how long of a break do you take between foster kids or do you always have one?
Sorry but I'm just not getting why someone with your own young kids would do this. You say you work part time, DH works full time, and you have 2 young kids. Aren't you going to look back in 10 or 15 years and feel like you missed out on your own kids' childhoods or skipped the opportunity to take your kids on certain outings or events because little Daquan who you never spoke to again was with your family for that 3 week period and you didn't want to spend the $$$ to take everyone on an outing but couldn't just leave him home with a sitter due to his emotional issues? Except that it won't be just 1 thing you skipped with your kids but dozens if not hundreds?
Wow.![]()
Anonymous wrote:We have two wonderful daughters, 6 and 8. We are thinking of becoming Foster parents without the intention of adopting but of helping in a critical moment and being a positive influence towards a child. Sooo many questions!!!! What if when the child can go back, does not want to and rather wants to stay with you??? Has it happened to you? What do you do? We would give her the same tools as we give our daughters, talking and expressing our feelings, could those tools hurt her when she goes back to a rougher place? What about school? I read they ask you to keep her in her in her regular school...my kids go to a private, would that be an issue?
Anonymous wrote:Of all the kids who have stayed with you -- what has been the average length of stay? Are we talking 2 weeks or 6 months? And how long of a break do you take between foster kids or do you always have one?
Sorry but I'm just not getting why someone with your own young kids would do this. You say you work part time, DH works full time, and you have 2 young kids. Aren't you going to look back in 10 or 15 years and feel like you missed out on your own kids' childhoods or skipped the opportunity to take your kids on certain outings or events because little Daquan who you never spoke to again was with your family for that 3 week period and you didn't want to spend the $$$ to take everyone on an outing but couldn't just leave him home with a sitter due to his emotional issues? Except that it won't be just 1 thing you skipped with your kids but dozens if not hundreds?
Anonymous wrote:
Good to know that they are asked. Reason I keep asking this, we've thought about becoming foster parents, and I think this would be one of the hardest things to deal with -- if someone came and took away a child we'd bonded with, a child who did not want to leave, and it wasn't to be reunited with family or be adopted, but into another foster home. I'd be tempted to pack up the kids and skip town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Generally we are told "Larla's aunt has agreed to take her so we'll pick her up after school tomorrow." We aren't given the exact address or anything. Sometimes they're moved because a bed opens in a home where their sibling is, or in a home better equipped to help with their specific problem.
In cases other than when a family member becomes available, and especially when the child has been with you for a while, are the child's desires and your opinions taken into account? For example, there may be a home that is supposed to be better equipped to handle her problem, but she has been thriving with you, thriving at her school, do you get to say you think she should stay, does the child get to say she would rather stay?
The goal is to get the child into the home that will be their home long-term, as soon as possible. So no, they can't stay with us if a suitable permanent placement has been found. Their desires are taken into account in terms of being asked, but they are guided towards what is truly best for them. If they don't want to stay with grandma because she's strict and makes them do homework instead of watching tv and playing Minecraft, then that's not a reason for her to NOT go live with Grandma.
Good to know that they are asked. Reason I keep asking this, we've thought about becoming foster parents, and I think this would be one of the hardest things to deal with -- if someone came and took away a child we'd bonded with, a child who did not want to leave, and it wasn't to be reunited with family or be adopted, but into another foster home. I'd be tempted to pack up the kids and skip town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Generally we are told "Larla's aunt has agreed to take her so we'll pick her up after school tomorrow." We aren't given the exact address or anything. Sometimes they're moved because a bed opens in a home where their sibling is, or in a home better equipped to help with their specific problem.
In cases other than when a family member becomes available, and especially when the child has been with you for a while, are the child's desires and your opinions taken into account? For example, there may be a home that is supposed to be better equipped to handle her problem, but she has been thriving with you, thriving at her school, do you get to say you think she should stay, does the child get to say she would rather stay?
The goal is to get the child into the home that will be their home long-term, as soon as possible. So no, they can't stay with us if a suitable permanent placement has been found. Their desires are taken into account in terms of being asked, but they are guided towards what is truly best for them. If they don't want to stay with grandma because she's strict and makes them do homework instead of watching tv and playing Minecraft, then that's not a reason for her to NOT go live with Grandma.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Generally we are told "Larla's aunt has agreed to take her so we'll pick her up after school tomorrow." We aren't given the exact address or anything. Sometimes they're moved because a bed opens in a home where their sibling is, or in a home better equipped to help with their specific problem.
In cases other than when a family member becomes available, and especially when the child has been with you for a while, are the child's desires and your opinions taken into account? For example, there may be a home that is supposed to be better equipped to handle her problem, but she has been thriving with you, thriving at her school, do you get to say you think she should stay, does the child get to say she would rather stay?
Anonymous wrote:PP here - also, could a couple be foster parents if they both work full time? (My guess is no?)
Anonymous wrote: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?
Generally we are told "Larla's aunt has agreed to take her so we'll pick her up after school tomorrow." We aren't given the exact address or anything. Sometimes they're moved because a bed opens in a home where their sibling is, or in a home better equipped to help with their specific problem.