No, this isn’t a blog
about indiscriminate affection. And no,
this is not a mom you will read about in a sensationalized report on
“underground adoptive/foster families”.
But it happens much more often than most people know.
Coming home from the ATTACh conference days ago, I plopped
my exhausted self in the aisle seat next to a married couple and pulled out one
of the adoption books I had acquired at the conference. The cover had the words “adoptive and foster
parents” on it.
“Are you training to be a foster parent?” the woman
asked.
“Oh, no,” I responded and explained to her what ATN was,
what I do and that I had been to an attachment conference. “Are you a foster parent?”
“I was,” she sighed, “for about 12 years until they gave me
a kid who harmed my family.”
So much for my quiet ride home, as I sensed this mom wanted
to share her story. “What happened?” I plunged
in.
For the next hour or so, in spurts and starts, this stranger
told me about the 12-year-old who was placed in her home when her own bio son
was four. And how one day she had caught
him re-enacting the sexual abuse he had endured, and now her son was
victimized. I could only respond with
“I’m sorry” and “you’re not the only one.”
CPS removed the boy from her home immediately, even though
that wasn’t necessarily what she wanted.
“If they had told me ahead of time, I could have kept my son safe AND
got the boy the counseling and help he needed.
But I just didn’t know.”
She proceeded to tell me that her son has struggled for
years with the impact of abuse, and that despite counseling he was currently,
as a young adult, living on her sofa, not holding a job and not thinking about
college. Then she told me about the
foster son and that he had been homeless, previously a drug addict, but doing
much better this year. How did she know
that about a child who was removed from her home nearly 17 years ago? She saw the question cross my face.
“Oh, he still calls me at least on Christmas and sometimes
on Mother’s Day,” she offered. “And he
calls me ‘Mom’.” I teared up. Then she added, “that’s why, even though we
moved from the Midwest to Texas, I’ve kept the same cell phone number for the
last 20 years—so he can call me when he wants.”
And that’s when I hugged the stranger on the plane.
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