Our first foster baby came with about 18 hours notice; it was respite care, which means we had him for a few days while his regular foster family had a break/dealt with a family emergency. He stayed 3 nights, long enough to come to church and have a dozen people cooing over his little sleeping cheeks. With each new visitor to our quiet corner, I explained again that he would be going back to his foster family the next day. Barely a week later, we got a 9am phone call with a fostering request and by the same afternoon, we were snuggling her. This time, we had her for 4 days before church came around. Again, our community was keen to see the little one we had in tow. Again, the question, "How long will she stay?" And this time, "Are you going to adopt her?" Trying out the carrier... -- Here in Toronto, when a child is placed in foster care, it is always for an indefinite length of time. It depends on the parents' situation, and whether they are able to ...
Agreed.
ReplyDeleteMy current list of "things that are difficult" would look really similar: 1) Being. (Yeah. Just "being"...) 2) Conversations with new friends. 3) Knowing. (too much, and too little...) 4) Being Patient. 5) Being Patient some more. 6) Waiting. 7) Going to bed on time :)
Love you, friend.
I agree, good list.
ReplyDeleteto add on...
8. watching others go through pain and not being able to help
9. keeping chocolate in the house and not eating it.
loni,
ReplyDeletehow did i not know that you blog AND that you read my blog!?!?! this has made me extraordinarily happy. i also could add your first item onto my list. as for the chocolate one, i'm surprisingly disciplined on that front.
aimee,
hearts. hearts, hearts, hearts.
Is there any possibility these overgrown children are of the male persuasion?
ReplyDeleteAnd, yes, waiting sucks...especially when it involves overgrown children.