One Year

We are writing this post after tucking Trevor and Ariel into bed for the night, 365 days after the first time we ever tucked them in. Today is the 1-year anniversary of them entering our lives and it is bitter sweet. When we opened our home to these kiddos (Possible Placements), we agreed to care for them for the weekend. If we said no, they would have spent the weekend in a hotel with a staff member from DHS.  After one weekend, and with nowhere else for them to go, we decided we would continue to care for them as long as we could, or as long as they needed us.  So, that is how we got from one weekend, to one year.

This anniversary is strange. We have been fostering for about 18-months now (Our First Year in Review), and have cared for 6 very special kiddos, but Trevor and Ariel have been in our lives longer than the other 4 combined.  On one hand, this anniversary is quite an achievement and a milestone representing a lot of love and hard work, as well as growth and progress. It is something we can be proud of. It represents our family and the bond and love we have grown and worked so hard for. However, the anniversary also symbolizes failure, loss, struggle, and uncertainty. So much has happened in the last year, but not much has actually happened.

So here we are, one-year in to fostering these awesome kids, and although we have done so much for them, and experienced so much with them, on paper, we are in the exact same place as we were a year ago. 

This last year has been filled with so many experiences for us as parents, as well as Ariel and Trevor as kids in a family.  The year was filled with a lot of firsts.  We had the first day of school, first trip to the coast, first time visiting the Children’s Museum, Oregon Zoo, and OMSI.  On top of that, the kids also had their first therapy sessions, first oral surgeries for teeth extractions, first medications, inaugural stay at a psychiatric unit, placement in a special needs classroom and placement in a therapeutic school.

For us, as parents, we had our first Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, Easter, Mother’s Day, Halloween, and visit from the Tooth Fairy with children in our home.  These firsts, although exciting, were not always easy.  Holidays bring up a lot of memories, emotions, and questions for kids. Although holidays and new experiences can be exciting, they are often difficult as well.  Beyond the exciting “firsts” as parents, we also had a lot of not so fun “firsts”.  These included purchasing security cameras for our home due to the kids having a stalker from their past, as well as our first time dealing with ringworm and lice, watching the children’s mother get arrested at a court appearance, attending IEP meetings, and visiting our kiddo in a subacute psychiatric facility. The past year has been an emotional roller coaster for all of us.

“Holidays bring up a lot of memories, emotions, and questions for kids”

The kids, especially Trevor, seem to know, at least subconsciously that right about now is an important milestone.  They also seemed to understand, again, that about a month and a half ago, was a a major milestone, as it was one year since they entered foster care. We think they know, because we notice changes in their behavior and mood. Maybe we are projecting, but if there is one thing we have learned over the past year about kids, trauma, and the brain, it is that the brain is extremely complex. Trauma during early childhood has significant impact, and kids will surprise you with what they know, understand, and feel. Not knowing how we ourselves felt about the anniversary, we did not mention it to the kids at all.

We didn’t want the kids to feel like they had to celebrate that they have been with us, and not their bio-family for over a year. It is a difficult situation. We are happy that we get to care for them, love them, and that they are safe, but as we mentioned in a previous post, being in foster care, no matter how positive your experience is, is not a happy event to have in your life. No child should have to experience foster care, and it did not feel right “celebrating” an anniversary having to do with foster care.

We didn’t want the kids to feel like they had to celebrate that they have been with us, and not their bio-family for over a year. It is a difficult situation.

Another reason why we did not feel right celebrating the anniversary of their placement with us, is that it was never supposed to last this long. Foster care is supposed to be a temporary situation. Children need permanency, either with their bio-parents or family, or through adoption into a loving home. Foster care is not permanency, foster care is limbo. Foster care is the unknown. The fact that these kids have spent over a year in foster care, with no clear path forward toward permanency, is a failure of the system.  The only positive takeaway from the last year is that the kids have not been moved. They have had only one other foster home before us, which is rare for any child with high needs in the system, let alone siblings.

Foster care is not permanency, foster care is limbo. Foster care is the unknown.

Foster parents care for the kiddos, it is the job of DHS to create permanency for the children, and the role of the bio-parents to do everything they can to work towards becoming safe and healthy parents capable of caring for their kids and be reunited with their kids. Over the last year, we, as foster parents have cared for Trevor and Ariel, and done a lot of work to ensure that these kids have the supports in place that they need and deserve. We have taken work off and exhausted our vacation and sick leave to attend an unimaginable amount of medical, school, and DHS appointments.  During that same period of time, the kids have not had a single visit with their bio-dad, who has also missed multiple court dates regarding the permanency plan for the kids.  Trevor has not seen his mom in over 6-months, and her sporadic attendance to bi-weekly visits has had a significant negative impact on his mental health.  Neither mom nor dad have sought out the DHS and court ordered addiction support and mental health support, however they have both managed to be arrested. More discouraging than all of the failures of the bio-parents though, is the lack of a plan being presented by DHS and the courts.

Children need a plan, and since coming into care, the plan for Trevor and Ariel is reunification.  Reunification is always the goal, until it is apparent that it is not possible.  Everyone, us, DHS, the judge, the lawyers, the bio-grandparents, and even bio-mom, agree that reunification is not going to be a realistic outcome for these kids.  Yet the plan remains reunification.  This craziness, as far as we can tell, is a product of asinine rules at DHS that create a Catch 22 for the kids. Basically, the plan cannot be changed to adoption, and Termination of Parental Rights (TPR) cannot be pursued until an adoptive resource is located. However, DHS cannot put a lot of resources forward toward locating an adoptive resource until the plan has been changed for adoption. The result, the kids remain in foster care.

Children need a plan, and since coming into care, the plan for Trevor and Ariel is reunification.  Reunification is always the goal, until it is apparent that it is not possible.

So here we are, one-year in to fostering these awesome kids, and although we have done so much for them, and experienced so much with them, on paper, we are in the exact same place as we were a year ago.  No plan in place for when their journey in foster care will end, or our services will no longer be needed. This is why the anniversary is bitter sweet. We are exhausted. We are depleted. It was never supposed to be for this long. We agreed for a weekend, and we agreed to continue caring for Trevor and Ariel as long as we could and as long as they needed us, but we never imagined that in a year, the timeline would be just as vague as when we opened our home to them for the weekend.  The milestone is heartwarming from the outside, but a bit demoralizing from the front lines. Although we are exhausted and overwhelmed ourselves, we continue to focus on the fact that we are the ones who chose to be part of foster care, not Trevor and Ariel. A year into foster care, they deserve better. They deserve a plan. They deserve permanency.

***All names of children have been changed to protect their privacy***

Thanks for reading, if you have questions or comments, feel free to post them in the comment section below, we would love to hear from you.  To receive updates when a new post is published, click the “Follow” button, we appreciate your interest in our journey. You can also “like” our page on Facebook.

8 Replies to “One Year”

  1. Thank you for all you do. I am grateful to have met you Jewel. These kiddos do deserve a forever home. My heart goes out to them and to you both as parents as you guide them through this chapter of their lives.

  2. Jewell–it is SOOO incredible that you and Aaron are being Foster Parents. I understand the frustration you describe in ‘One Year’ but I want to applaud what you’re doing in spite of this. How blessed those kiddos are to have you in their lives!

  3. We’re a little over a month into what is already turning out to be the hardest placement of the 6 we’ve done. First time through DHS instead of a private agency. Many of your words stung as I read them, cause we know what it feels like, and not even to the degree you’re experiencing in some aspects. I wonder what I would want to hear from someone else for comfort or help or guidance, and I just don’t know. Words don’t really soothe an exhausting and agonizing long day. But for whatever reason, reading this post makes me feel a little better. Keeping perspective is probably the best we can do. If nothing else, when these kids are older, they will remember the family who loved and cared for them for over a year. Hopefully, it will make all the difference.

    1. Hi iamnotjared,

      Thanks for reading and commenting. Sorry to hear that your current placement is your most difficult. If it is any encouragement, with a lot of consistency and time, we have seen major improvements with both of our current kiddos… although that isn’t to say that it was easy, or that things are now easy, but when in the thick of it, it is important to take a step back sometimes and see how far things have come and focus on the positives. Like you said, there often isn’t anything anyone can say that can help you with your exhaustion or frustration. Sometimes hearing “you are doing great” can even sting and make it worse, because you don’t always feel like you are doing great, sometimes it feels like you are just getting by. Anyways, I have learned that maybe there isn’t something someone can say to make things feel a little better, but if someone can listen to you talk about your journey, the struggle, the successes, the love, the heartbreak, it can really help. For me, writing this blog has also helped a lot with processing.

      Thanks for your dedication to your kiddos, and thanks for reading and reaching out with this thoughtful comment.
      Aaron

  4. Having our one year anniversary being tomorrow this is what i needed to read… I’m greatful and heartbroken someone else is in the same situation we are ?❤

    1. Glad you found the post at the right time. Thanks for all that you do as foster parents over the last year for the kiddo/s in your home. It is a tough, unique journey with so man emotions. We are now pushing closer to two years with one of our kiddos, it feels like a deja vu.

  5. Like another commenter, we are sitting here on the eve of our one year anniversary. We are unsure how to recognize the day. There’s no way to make this happy when it was supposed to be a short term placement. Just days ago we leaves that a 3rd cousin in another state has come forward and now they’re moving him. NOW. After all this time and no effort into finding a concurrent placement, they choose to rip him out of all he knows and move him to another state. On paper we also sit exactly where we did one year ago, but they’re moving him because that’s what seems easy for them.

    Thank you for sharing your words! You said exactly what we are thinking.

    1. Thanks for reading and commenting with your personal story and experience. We wish we could say, “We can’t imagine what you are going through”, but unfortunately we can. Through 13 placements, we have seen the good, the bad, and the confusing decision making and approach that the agency makes. We feel for you, and understand the frustration and the fear of what has happened and what is coming next. Hopefully the 3rd cousin will live and care for your kiddo as much as you did. It is scary. But know despite the decisions being made that are out of your control, even though they shouldn’t be, what you have done for this child was important and necessary.

      Glad you found this post at the right time.

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