Friday, February 10, 2012

A Father's view on Foster Care

I know I never post on here anymore, but Jeremy wrote a beautiful essay on foster care for his english class and I wanted to share it.


Jeremy Ensley
ENG 101-W03
Essay Rough Draft

Foster Care
Having children has always been my biggest dream. I always imagined my future family in a very specific way; a beautiful wife, and children who were the spitting image of us. I grew up in a very traditional home and looked forward to passing on my family history to my own children. I never gave a passing thought to sharing my life with children who do not share my DNA. Little did I know life rarely turns out the way you imagine it will.                                                           
My journey through foster care and adoption starts about three years ago when I met my wife Ashley. It took no longer than our first conversation to realize her passion for neglected and abused children. It was not just that she cared and wanted to help, she had a plan to do so. She wanted to be a mom to these children; to give them hope and a future they could never have otherwise. Not many people dream about raising a child for three years and then handing them back over to parents who didn’t care enough to take proper care of them in the first place, but Ashley wanted to make a difference; even if it meant breaking her own heart over and over to give these children a mother who cared.  As beautiful as I thought her dream was, I wasn’t sure that I shared that dream.                                 When I met my wife I still had a lot of growing up to do. My days consisted of training hard during the day and drinking hard at night. I was, admittedly, an alcoholic. There were few nights during the week that I did not drink myself into oblivion. I was consumed with the typical single Infantryman life style. Our motto was “train hard party harder” and I lived it to the fullest, treating every day like my last and not caring if it was. When the prospect of a child was put in front of me, it scared the living hell out of me. Who was I to be a father when I wasn’t sure I wasn’t still a child myself? How could I possibly fix a broken child? How was I, who didn’t look past my next beer, going to plan a future for a little child? The more Ashley pushed the idea of foster care and adoption, the more resentful I became.                                                                       
During my tour in Iraq, I grew a lot as a man. I began to prioritize my life and what was really important to me, and that was starting a family. My wife and I began to discuss family and the possibility of children. Adoption was brought up more frequently, but to be perfectly honest I was not sure that I could ever love an adopted child as much as my own flesh and blood. I was resistant, but she was insistent. I still had one more year left in the Army and I was stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington after my deployment ended. The last thing I wanted to do was move home and be thrust straight into father-hood. As much as I wanted a family, this was not the way I wanted it. 
But of course, my very stubborn wife started the licensing process to become a foster parent in February of 2009. She was only twenty-three years old and I thought she had to be crazy to be doing this. During her time spent in the licensing classes, she learned some staggering statistics and passed her knowledge on to me: At the time of her training, there were over 950 children in state custody in Greene County alone. That is well over twice the number of licensed foster parents in the area, and only about two-thirds of licensed homes are actively accepting placements at any time. That means if they are unable to place a child who comes in state care, that child is sent to a group home or “emergency care”. Ashley visited a group home to see what it was like, and it broke her heart. She said it was utter chaos, children everywhere crying and confused. Beds were lined up wall to wall and every single one of them was occupied. The number of staff and volunteers didn’t come close to meeting the need of the children in their care. Some children spend their entire childhood in places like this.                          
As sobering as these numbers were, I still wasn’t convinced that I was the one to make a difference to these kids. There had to be someone more qualified and financially stable. Quite frankly, I wasn’t ready to take on the responsibility of raising a child that wasn’t mine. I really didn’t think I had it in me to do so and I just didn’t want to. But my wife was firm in her resolve to “save the world, one child at a time” and in May of 2011 she received her licensing qualifications to be a foster parent. Her joy and excitement was palpable and I tried my hardest to share in her elation over accomplishing a lifelong dream. Inside however, I was really struggling. I was months away from finishing my five year commitment to the Army and all I wanted was to come home and start the next chapter of my life with the woman I love. I wasn’t ready to be a dad. 
In June of 2011, she received her first placement, a little three month old angel named Zoey; she weighed seven pounds and was severely malnourished. Ashley was ecstatic to be getting a placement and I was still in Washington swallowing my doubts. She sent me picture after picture of this brown haired miracle and yet my heart was still unmoved. It wasn’t until I came home for a three day trip that my heart began to open to the possibility of fatherhood. 
In July of 2011, I was in town for my brother’s wedding and I got to meet Zoey for the first time. She was a beautiful, tiny baby girl with more hair than I’ve ever seen on any child. At four months old, she only weighed eight and a half pounds. She couldn’t hold her head up or roll over, and she had trouble taking her bottles due to the neglect she endured during her first three months. Her cry was so weak and quiet, but her smile was strong and beautiful. And from the first moment she took my finger and wrapped it tight in her little hands, my heart was gone. 
 As incredible as the three days that I got to spend with Zoey were, I wasn’t convinced that I was cut out for playing “dad” to a baby whom I didn’t even know would be there when I moved home permanently. A month later, when I moved back to Springfield for good everything changed. With every smile, this little girl captured my heart. It felt like she had never belonged to anyone else. It didn’t matter anymore that she did not carry my genes. She carried my heart in her tiny little fingers. 
Over the past five months, my heart and mind have been opened to the plight of the children in our own town who have nobody to love them. I have seen firsthand the damage that a parent can do to their own child. It is mind blowing how one mother’s selfishness can forever change the life of her child. My wife and I have witnessed the trauma of little girls who suffered severe emotional, mental and physical abuse. The results were astounding. When a four year old lives in a constant state of “fight or flight” panic, the psychological effects are too much for most to handle. We have seen parents care more about getting high then getting custody of their kids, who care more about winning the “competition” between them and the foster parents than they do about actually getting better for their young children. It is heartbreaking.
Foster care is definitely not for everyone and the closer we move to adopting our little miracle, the more we are ready to be done with it. It is hard, it is gritty and it is emotional. You have to look these parents in the eye, parents who have abused, abandoned and neglected their children in the worst of ways, and pretend that you don’t think they are the scum of the earth. You have to hand off your child for their weekly visits; the child you have nursed back to health, raised and watched grow into the amazing, special little person that they are. The child that you have helped to get past their developmental issues from the severe neglect, the child that doctors said “had given up on her life and was two days from death” and is now a vibrant, energetic, bubbly source of joy. It is heart wrenching and very hard for any person to do. But on the other hand, it is singularly the most rewarding experience of my life and I would do it over again one thousand times if it meant getting to spend one day with my angel. 
 It’s very easy to have a lot of pre-conceived ideals about what family is, how family should look, or who should be in your family; but what I’ve learned is that family is love, family is acceptance, and family is more than blood and DNA. Sometimes the idea of two loving parents, a brother, sister and a dog behind a perfect little white picket fence is not what you are going to get. Family is a choice. You choose to love and accept your family the way they are. And maybe you can’t fix all their problems or save them from pain or heartache. But you sure as hell try to, because family is a bond that supersedes all else. It took a little girl with brown hair and a smile of gold to teach me what family really means. Her name is Zoey, and she is my daughter.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Little Star

          I haven't posted in forever. It's so hard to find the words to describe my life right now. Z is growing, healthy and learning new things every day. She loves music and tries to clap her hands when she gets excited. She is the light of my life. I wrote a little something that pretty much sums up my feelings for my sweet girl. I've not written anything in 6 months, so enjoy "Little Star".

Little Star

Twinkle twinkle little star
I know exactly where you are
Sparkle sparkle little light
I will keep you safe tonight
I will keep you safe tonight

Shine bright my little girl
You are the light of my whole world
Dream sweetly through the night
I will keep you safe tonight
I will keep you safe tonight

And if there ever comes a night
When I don’t get to be the one to hold you tight
And kiss you goodnight
Don’t cry
It will be alright
I’ll be holding you in my heart
We will never be apart
I love you and you are mine

Little sparrow, spread your wings
How I wonder who you’ll be
Little angel, don’t fly too far
My heart is always where you are
My heart is always where you are

And if there ever come a time
When I don’t get to be the one to hold you tight
And kiss you goodnight
Don’t cry
It will be alright
I’ll be holding you in my heart
We will never be apart
I love you and you are mine

Twinkle Twinkle little star
I know exactly where you are
Sparkle sparkle little light
I will keep you safe tonight
I will keep you safe

Friday, September 16, 2011

Princess Z

          I had one more false alarm before getting a call that stuck. I was on vacation with my family in Branson, and we were on a boat on Table Rock Lake. So there I was, sunning myself and taking in the lovely view, when my phone rings and it’s the home finder. She told me that there was a 3 month old baby girl in the hospital and wanted to know if I’d take her. Let me remind you that I was adamantly against taking in an infant. You know what I said? “Absolutely! Be there in a couple hours!” Apparently, I have no back bone. J

          When I met Princess Z, my whole life changed. Walking into the hospital, (where they make children on a regular basis) I was overwhelmed with emotion. I was scared, not knowing what to expect, but so at peace at the same time. When I saw her, I couldn’t take my eyes off of her. I’ve never seen a more beautiful person. She had a whole head full of dark hair, and red eyebrows. Her long fingers wrapped around mine perfectly. She was sleeping when I got her, but I swear she smiled at me. She has one blue eye and one that’s half blue and half brown. She was only 7 lbs at three months old. Her beautiful eyes sink deeply into her skull and her cheeks are so hallow that it makes me want to cry. But when she smiles at me, I melt.

          As the nurses fill me in on the horrendous neglect that this angel has been through, rage fills every inch of my body. I remember being so torn between wanting to scream and wanting to curl up in a ball and cry. The thing is: when you have a child in your arms, you can’t do either. I got her scripts filled, signed our papers and took her out of the hospital. I felt like, at any point, someone would stop me and say “HEY! That’s not your kid!” Little did I know, she already was.

          Her car seat swallowed her. It was supposed to be for babies weighing 5-45 lbs. My baby curled up in there and looked like a tiny little pea in a pod. Her little body was so uncomfortable because her skin literally laid on her bones with no muscle or fat to pad her. When I gave her a bath for the first time, she was so scared that I could tell that she’d probably never had one before. (BTW, she LOVES baths now.) The 3 month baby clothes that my parents got for her fell off of her tiny body, and her little cry was so weak and pitiful.

          If you could see her now, you wouldn’t even recognize her. At 5 months old, weighing in at 14 lbs, 2 oz, Princess Z is quite the little porker. She loves to eat and nothing makes her happier that to have your undivided attention at all times. She loves to cuddle and sing, and her little personality is growing more and more every day.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

My first call

          I got my first call about a 4 year old little girl who had made allegations of abuse. One of the main things they teach you in class is to know when to say no to a placement. But of course, I was so confident in my parenting skills that I just knew I could fix this poor, broken little girl. And how could I possibly turn her away? When I got to the hospital to meet little M, I was greeted with a smile by an adorable little girl with thick glasses that made her big brown eyes even bigger and long brown hair that fell in her face. She gave me a hug right away and smelled so strong of urine and filth that I almost gagged. I hugged her and held her for a minute. She seemed so sweet.

          As I heard the allegations, I felt so physically ill that it was hard to stay smiling for little M. She was talking away, telling me about her bunny. All of a sudden, everything changed. It was like somebody flipped a switch in her little brain and she lost it. Little M wrapped her little fingers around my neck and started yelling for her mom. The fear and uncertainty in her eyes was heartbreaking, but the inhuman strength in this 4 year old was terrifying. As I pried her hands off of my throat, she started hitting, biting and kicking me. When she took off running down the hall, I sprinted after her, trying not to let her out of the ER. (The nurses, by the way, were no help at all.) When I finally got her back into the room, she screamed bloody murder and ran into the door so many times, she broke it off the hinges.

          I tried everything to calm her down. I sang to her, I tried to hold her, I read to her, colored with her. This poor baby had been in a fight or flight situation one too many times. She couldn’t trust me or anybody else. With every step I thought we’d taken to calm her nerves, we’d take two GIANT steps back. I have never in my life been afraid of a child, but this little girl scared me. The scars and damage that had been done was far too great for me to handle by myself. I’ve never felt so helpless in my life than I did during those 2 hours alone with her.

          In the end, I didn’t get to take little M home. She needed so much more than I could give her. I cried all night long, and any time I think of her, my heart hurts. I had never thought that there would be a child that I couldn’t connect with, and make a difference for them. But sometimes I’m just not enough. As humans, feeling inadequate is one of the worst feelings that we can have. In our jobs, with our spouses, at school, we want to be enough, if not more than enough. Imagine knowing that you aren’t enough for a broken little girl who’s done absolutely nothing wrong, except be born into the wrong family.

For Jenna
Ashley McClain
This isn't how it's supposed to be
Children are killing and dying in the streets
They're trained to hate their mothers by the movies on the screen
They're used as pawns and trinkets for broken moms and daddys

Little girls are women and boys never become men
Daddys say they're sorry then they bring the pain again
Mommy hides the tears in a bottle full of whiskey
She'll lock the closet door until her wrists stop bleeding

She watches through the keyhole while her mama lay there dying
Little Jenna doesn't shed a tear, nothing comes from crying
She stands there on the sidewalk while they wrap mama up in white
But she doesn't see a thing, her eyes shut tight

How do we raise our children when we're still kids ourselves
If we hide our eyes behind our lies, we're damning them to hell
I'd tell you to go home and give your little girl a kiss
But I think that it's too late. We can't fix this.

          I can only pray for little M now. Even if I’m not enough, there is One who is, and He will hold her every day of her life. I hope and pray that someday she knows the pure and unselfish love of a Father who will always protect her, and will never fail her. God’s grace is great, and I pray it over little M every day.

Why foster care?

          When I was about 8 or 9 years old, my family became friends with the M’Bogos. The M’Bogos were a family that had recently moved to the states from Kenya. They spoke very little English and were completely unaware of standard social etiquette, but I was fascinated with them. Their stories of the African culture completely opened my eyes to a world so different than mine. As I learned about the disease, poverty and depravity of their homeland, my heart broke for the people there. My childish mind decided that I would save them all! It was at this time that I began my journey toward adoption.
I’ve had a passion for Africa ever since my childhood experience with the M’Bogo family.

           Later on, in high school, my youth pastor (one of the most influential people in my life at the time) announced that he and his family would be going to the mission field of Ethiopia. I immersed myself in learning every aspect of the Ethiopian culture. Again, I was amazed at the corruption, poverty and despair of the nation. My heart hurt every time I read about the orphans there. 1 in 5 children dies from hunger before they turn 15 years old. By then, they are usually parents themselves and carrying multiple diseases. I became more and more convinced that Ethiopia was where I wanted to adopt from. That is, until earlier this year.


          Anyone who follows adoption news closely knows about the recent movement to cut foreign adoptions in Ethiopia. This year, the Ethiopian government cut international adoption down by 95%, leaving hundreds of American families childless, and thousands of African orphans on the streets. Talk of corruption and misfiled paperwork was the reason behind the sudden change.

          As heartbroken as I was about Ethiopia, this news only sealed in my mind something that I’d already been contemplating. I was meant to start here at home. My church (James River Assembly) focused on foster care and adoption last year and started a non-profit called “Cherish Kids” to benefit local foster children and their families. When I learned of the 9,000 children in local care, and the incredible lack of decent foster homes, I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that God was showing me the need in my own community.

          I started my classes and paperwork and, two years later, I got my state foster care license. The process was so long and very emotional, but so worth it. As much as you learn in class, nothing can prepare you for that first phone call. Mine was pretty intense. You see, I had my idea of the perfect placement for me. A little girl, maybe 3 or 4 years old, (ABSOLUTELY NO INFANTS) healthy and no behavioral problems. I also didn’t really want any severe abuse cases. I was very picky, because I was scared. Did I mention “no infants’?

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Wisdom from a friend


          As I’ve struggle with letting go of the situation with Z and letting God take control, (which I know He has already) I’ve been blessed with good friends to offer their comfort, support and advice. My good friend sent me this devotional that she found online. It was so uplifting to me, and I hope it will be to you as well.
Posted: 30 Aug 2011 05:25 AM PDT
If someone is having a problem, particularly someone I love, I want to fix it.  I want to look at the situation, figure out what's gone wrong and do what needs to be done to make it right.  I hate seeing people I care about in pain.  I want to take it away, take it away from them, take them away from the pain.  I want to be of help, to be of service, to put an end to the hurt feelings, the impossible decisions and the string of bad news.It tears me up and apart.Even though it goes against my grain, I know there that are problems that no person can fix.  Sometimes things seem to have to be the way they are- raw, terrible, unfair and hopeless- and it's all happening for no apparent reason.  I've come to the conclusion that some things happen for a reason and some things happen for no reason, but God will do a good work in spite of the awfulness.  And, sometimes it might not be the good work we have in mind.I know that He works behind the scenes - softening hearts and leading people to those who may offer them hope and comfort, but so often it's not visible enough for me.  I can't see the softening, the affects of the comfort and hope and it leaves me feeling helpless again and it breaks my heart because I know that the helplessness of the people directly involved is infinitely more intense than mine.I need to let go.  I need to lay it at the feet of my Jesus.  I need to give up the (lack of) control and rest in the confidence that my God is SO big and awesome and mysterious and yet He loves and cares and He sees every hurt, hears every word and senses every emotion.In this life we may never see the reconciliation, the good work, the softening that we long to take place, but we must trust anyway and never doubt for one second that our God hasn't been right in the midst of the brokenness from the very beginning.
"Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your hearts to him, for God is our refuge. Selah" Psalm 62:8
Broken

           I have always struggled with an all-consuming need to control my surroundings. I am very guilty of holding on to the past. It is something I try very hard to overcome, but it's an uphill battle. The past can take everything from you if you let it. Regrets and fear will replace peace and faith. Bitterness and distrust will replace honesty and love. The past leaves you numb, unable to feel. Sometimes you have to face your past, and yourself along with it. When you've been stuck in a dream (or a nightmare) for so long, you forget how to feel love, hear truth, see beauty and believe in anything pure.

          I worry that Z will struggle with these same issues, considering her fragile beginning in this world. The chaos in her little life breaks my heart. I pray constantly that she will be stronger because of all of this, and not allow it to control her life. I will never allow her to play the victim, as long as she is in my care, but rather, encourage her to rise above her situation. I hope that her strong will (which I already see displayed on a daily basis) and her strength will be used to build people up and set an example for those around her.

          I wrote this song a while back about overcoming this problem of not being able to let go.

I pinched myself tonight to see if I still feel
Sometimes the dream I’m in can seem so real
I made a fist tonight to see if I still fight
It’s funny how what’s wrong can feel so right
I played some rock and roll tonight to see if I still hear the music
I opened my eyes to see if I still have my sight
Wake up, Wake up
This dream you’re in won’t last
Wake up, Wake up
The morning fades so fast
I cut myself today to see if I still bleed
How does pain and loss fill a need
I took a walk outside today to see if I still taste the rain
When you’re numb you can’t feel the sunshine on your face
I watched the news today to see if my heart still breaks
I prayed a prayer to see if I still have my faith
Wake up, Wake up
This dream you’re in won’t last
Wake up, Wake up
The morning fades so fast
When you’re looking in the mirror
What do you want to see
For so long I was too blind to see me

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Protect Her

          When you have a little sister, going off to school for the first time can be traumatic for both sisters. I remember my first day at CSOS. Nick Price was my only little friend until he told me to say the “F-word” to our teacher. Mrs. Carson sent me to the Principal’s office. Nick Price was not my friend anymore. We graduated together in 2005, and I still hold a grudge after he put that blemish on my sparkling first grade record. Emily would be so excited when I would come home from school. I miss the days that her whole adorable little face would light up when she saw me. We would set off on new adventures that lasted until bedtime, and sometimes well into the night.

          When Emily started 1st grade, I was in Mrs. Roberts 5th grade class. I would walk by her class room any chance I got to check on her. I took every opportunity I could to pound on anybody who messed with her. There was a little brat named Cassie, who used to throw basketballs at Emily’s head, and Mrs. Hale, who wouldn’t let her go to the restroom when her nose was bleeding buckets, and a freak named Christian who would pin her against the wall and threaten her. From yelling at Cassie, to mouthing off to Mrs. Hale, to slamming Christian’s head into a locker, I had my sister’s back. I wanted to protect her at any cost. Even as an adult, I want to protect my sister from all the hurt and pain that comes with growing up. I want to shield her from the lies and deceit. The same way I do for my Princess Z.

          It’s so hard to protect the ones you love when you have absolutely no control over this world. I can’t control the outcome of our foster care situation anymore than I can control a tsunami. The biggest struggle that I have with being a foster parent is the need to control the situation, to do what’s best for Z. I sit and listen to lawyers and social workers decide what’s to be done and inside I’m screaming for justice. All I want to do is protect this child, this perfect gift, who I don’t even know how long I get to keep. My heart bleeds for her.