Fostering to Adopt: What It’s Really Like

By: Jean Meriam (View Profile)

Maybe I am luckier than most parents waiting to adopt. My little girl, a beautiful and adventurous two-year-old, lives in my home already and has been since she came to us as a foster child at three months old. For the past twenty-three months, I have been able to love and mother her as if she is my own. I did not begin fostering with the intention to adopt. I fell in love. After only a few months with this precious little girl, I knew I wanted to adopt her. I hoped of course for the best for her family, that bio-mom would deal with her addictions and the family could be reunited, but always feeling that letting go would be next to impossible.

As the months passed, it became obvious to everyone involved that bio-mom was making little to no effort to deal with her problems. Each temporary court order was replaced with another longer protection order, and the original three months we had been asked to foster (C) turned into a year and then two. My husband and I began to discuss the reality of committing another eighteen years to child raising and decided that, although this was not something we had planned, we just could not let her go. We wanted this little girl to be ours. And we were the only family she knew.

The wait has been agonizing and laced with fear of loss. In our area, biological parents are usually given two years to make improvement and show they are able to provide a safe home for their children. At the end of the two years, social workers apply to the court for permanent wardship. Before permanent wardship can be granted, the social worker must show they have tried all other available options, including all relatives and in the case of aboriginal children, which (C) is on her biological mother’s side, the family reservation. Biological family is always given priority over the foster family whether they have a relationship with the child or not, as is the child’s band.

In the midst of this waiting, we have suffered moments of terror. Bio-mom has come forward with the names of distant relatives on numerous occasions and each time we feared this would be the day we would lose our little girl to strangers. As fate would have it, though, these relatives have either not been willing to commit to raising a child not their own, nor have been unable to pass the home study. For two years we lived with the hope that everything would turn out for the best, while at the same time knowing we could lose (C) at anytime.

7 readers liked this story.
share
bookmarks
Comments
posted: 10.12.2008
JD Smith
Bless you Jean, and your family. Thank you for writing this and please continue to write, it is healing for you and for others. To me, you are the very definition of a hero: a person brave enough to fight the battles and win the war through the personal pain and sacrifice of doing so. I wish the world was filed with more people like you. I know your story will inspire others and I encourage you to publish it in as many places as you can. I have been a volunteer for foster adoption since 1988. I hope that part of my life's legacy will be to rectify and vastly improve the state of foster care. At least now, people can adopt outside their ethnicity. When I first began my work, they could not. Change is ever present, although it may take time. You are in my prayers. Please take comfort in knowing you have already made a tremendous difference in the lives of many through your valliant efforts in the life of one.
posted: 09.08.2008
Erin Coates
I loved this story. My husband and I have gone through the same thing with our neice and nephew. We have officially adopted one of them after the terrifying wait - always expecting her to be taken away. Now we have had my nephew for almost two years and are still waiting for the adoption process to begin. Like your daughter (and yes, she IS your daughter), his case is not a priority because he is in a safe environment. He is our son, but legally, it isn't recognized. So frustrating! Hang in there.
posted: 08.04.2008
Veronica Kavanagh
I love your story, and hope you have the happiness of being able to adopt (C) legally into your family who already loves her. How awful that because her life is stable and you want to adopt her that you, in effect, are being punished for the love and care you've given her. Please give us updates, I am hoping you and (C) have your "forever".
It feels good to write.

Your stories, musings, and advice are welcome here. We know you've got something to share, so jump in—maybe get a little famous. And don't worry—you can save a draft!

most liked
Loader_buff
Other topics you might appreciate
Travel Body & Soul Play Career & Money Neighborhood & World