Anonymous wrote:OP here.
This kind of blew up since last night!
I'll try to answer everyone.
He didn't start our 2nd date by saying he needed to tell me something, and I didn't push him for information.
I asked a very casual question and that led to talking about families and such and he mentioned growing up in foster care.
Beyond knowing he went in at 6 and was never adopted I don't know any details.
I also don't think the details are my business at this point.
On the surface, from what you can know of someone you met online and after 2 dates, he's a very sweet guy and seems to have his life together. To me he seems more mature than 26 , not that maturity is a bad thing in a guy.
I guess is my worry I have a habit of picking guys with baggage that ends in nothing but relationship drama.
So, when he told me that my mind went immediately to "oh no not again!"
I want to give it a chance, but I don't want to get caught up with someone who is not healthy again.
Anonymous wrote:You people are awful and are one of the reasons former foster youth are so stigmatized. I grew up in foster care and aged out at 18. I lived in dozens of homes from infancy until I aged out. I experienced severe abuse and trauma. I aged out into homelessness my senior year of high school, but I graduated with a 4.2 GPA and went on to college. I graduated at the top of my class. Today I have a career and run a program to better the lives of former foster youth. Do I have problems? Sure, but so do you! And if you don't, you're lying to yourself.
I could start listing off all kinds of people struggling in life and try to lump them as a class of people to stamp warning labels on. You know who are the most dangerous people statically? Straight, White, Heterosexual, MIDDLE CLASS men.
And I don't believe that telling someone you grew up in foster care is taboo or something you should be ashamed to bring up on a second date. It's like saying you can't tell someone you have a mom and a dad on a second date. Or telling gay people not to mention their partners because it's just too much information that they love someone. Foster care was my life experience and I'm not going to hide it to make YOU feel more comfortable. It might make you uncomfortable because it's not the same story you're used to hearing, but that's your problem, not mine. It took me a LONG time, but I finally stopped being ashamed of it. When people ask me about my family (because everyone asks about your family) I tell them I grew up in foster care. Screw you people with your severe judgement and/or pity.
Anonymous wrote:You people are awful and are one of the reasons former foster youth are so stigmatized. I grew up in foster care and aged out at 18. I lived in dozens of homes from infancy until I aged out. I experienced severe abuse and trauma. I aged out into homelessness my senior year of high school, but I graduated with a 4.2 GPA and went on to college. I graduated at the top of my class. Today I have a career and run a program to better the lives of former foster youth. Do I have problems? Sure, but so do you! And if you don't, you're lying to yourself.
I could start listing off all kinds of people struggling in life and try to lump them as a class of people to stamp warning labels on. You know who are the most dangerous people statically? Straight, White, Heterosexual, MIDDLE CLASS men.
And I don't believe that telling someone you grew up in foster care is taboo or something you should be ashamed to bring up on a second date. It's like saying you can't tell someone you have a mom and a dad on a second date. Or telling gay people not to mention their partners because it's just too much information that they love someone. Foster care was my life experience and I'm not going to hide it to make YOU feel more comfortable. It might make you uncomfortable because it's not the same story you're used to hearing, but that's your problem, not mine. It took me a LONG time, but I finally stopped being ashamed of it. When people ask me about my family (because everyone asks about your family) I tell them I grew up in foster care. Screw you people with your severe judgement and/or pity.
Anonymous wrote:You people are awful and are one of the reasons former foster youth are so stigmatized. I grew up in foster care and aged out at 18. I lived in dozens of homes from infancy until I aged out. I experienced severe abuse and trauma. I aged out into homelessness my senior year of high school, but I graduated with a 4.2 GPA and went on to college. I graduated at the top of my class. Today I have a career and run a program to better the lives of former foster youth. Do I have problems? Sure, but so do you! And if you don't, you're lying to yourself.
I could start listing off all kinds of people struggling in life and try to lump them as a class of people to stamp warning labels on. You know who are the most dangerous people statically? Straight, White, Heterosexual, MIDDLE CLASS men.
And I don't believe that telling someone you grew up in foster care is taboo or something you should be ashamed to bring up on a second date. It's like saying you can't tell someone you have a mom and a dad on a second date. Or telling gay people not to mention their partners because it's just too much information that they love someone. Foster care was my life experience and I'm not going to hide it to make YOU feel more comfortable. It might make you uncomfortable because it's not the same story you're used to hearing, but that's your problem, not mine. It took me a LONG time, but I finally stopped being ashamed of it. When people ask me about my family (because everyone asks about your family) I tell them I grew up in foster care. Screw you people with your severe judgement and/or pity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No I wouldn't if I could do better than that.
You are a disgusting excuse for a human being.

Anonymous wrote:You people are awful and are one of the reasons former foster youth are so stigmatized. I grew up in foster care and aged out at 18. I lived in dozens of homes from infancy until I aged out. I experienced severe abuse and trauma. I aged out into homelessness my senior year of high school, but I graduated with a 4.2 GPA and went on to college. I graduated at the top of my class. Today I have a career and run a program to better the lives of former foster youth. Do I have problems? Sure, but so do you! And if you don't, you're lying to yourself.
I could start listing off all kinds of people struggling in life and try to lump them as a class of people to stamp warning labels on. You know who are the most dangerous people statically? Straight, White, Heterosexual, MIDDLE CLASS men.
And I don't believe that telling someone you grew up in foster care is taboo or something you should be ashamed to bring up on a second date. It's like saying you can't tell someone you have a mom and a dad on a second date. Or telling gay people not to mention their partners because it's just too much information that they love someone. Foster care was my life experience and I'm not going to hide it to make YOU feel more comfortable. It might make you uncomfortable because it's not the same story you're used to hearing, but that's your problem, not mine. It took me a LONG time, but I finally stopped being ashamed of it. When people ask me about my family (because everyone asks about your family) I tell them I grew up in foster care. Screw you people with your severe judgement and/or pity.
Anonymous wrote:No I wouldn't if I could do better than that.