ANGELS
AND DEMONS
It
was a few days after our phone call with Denise that an envelope containing the
locally produced list of children who were still waiting for adoption plopped
onto the doormat. We opened it with a surprising amount of trepidation,
possibly based on Denise's reluctance to give it to us. The colour photocopied
booklet turned out, as we expected, to be a mini version of Be My Parent or
Children Who Wait. On each page a couple of profiles of children or sibling
groups were laid out with (mostly) a cherub-like photo and a short blurb
describing the child or children. Sure, most of the profiles mentioned some
level of developmental delay in their subject - the severity varying from child
to child - but we were repeatedly told that was pretty much a given when
considering kids for adoption.
Keisha is a happy 6 year old. She loves playing with her
my little pony and trips to the park...
Daniel and Kimmi are the youngest of 6 siblings and are
looking for a permanent home together in an adoption placement...
Jayden is a charming little boy with a bright smile who
loves being outdoors. Although he does display some difficulties in responding
to physical expressions of affection he has been improving greatly throughout
his current foster placement...
However,
one thing that the booklet did prove was that Denise had been telling the truth
when she told us geography was getting in the way of us being matched...
Profile after profile finished with the words "Cannot be placed in
Ourtown." or "Cannot be placed in the Inlawsville area." Fair
enough, between us and parents we did live in striking distance of two of our
county's main population centres. That would have to have an effect on which
children could never be placed with us.
A few days after we had received the booklet we were due to meet up with one of our closest friends, Juliet, who also happens to be a foster carer. Of course, the topic of matching and how we were getting on in the adoption process came up. We mentioned the booklet we had just received and Denise's reluctance to send it. As she flicked through looking at the pages she made some comments which echoed Denise's. She looked up at us and added. "You do know that these write ups are just like estate agents' blurb, don't you?" Clearly our puzzled expressions suggested that we didn't so she ploughed on. "Yeah, they are full of innocuous little code words and phrases that you need to know what they mean." Juliet is possessed of a wicked sense of humour. In fact it borders on the gallows humour which several of the foster carers we have met display - we've always ascribed this to being a coping mechanism for the glimpse into the darker sides of life which foster caring can open up. Apologies to any foster carers out there... Maybe that's just the folks we hang around with.
"Let's
see... 'Jasmine is beginning to learn how to show affection more
appropriately, particularly with strangers...' Hmmm, rampant, raging attachment
disorder. She'd probably wander up to any random adult in the supermarket and
say, 'Can I come home with you?' What about this one? 'Jayden is a very
lively little boy who, his foster carer says, is always full of energy.'
Hmm... ADHD!"
Juliet
continued flipping through the brochure and suddenly exclaimed, "Ah ha!
I'd heard he had been approved for adoption. Can't believe it myself. Listen, 'Aiden
would best be placed in a home without other children or pets.' Yeah, I
know that particular little boy. Frankly, he just likes tormenting and
torturing animals. Jack and Maggie had to get rid of their cat. Properly
aggressive too. He'd probably try exactly the same on any other kids in the
household. He's three and a half now. God knows what he'll be like when he's
bigger and stronger." We sat there slack jawed staring at Juliet.
"What?" She said innocently as she handed the brochure back.
"Hey, as far as I can see there are only a couple of those kids in there I
would even consider looking at."
Sitting
back in her chair she repeated Denise's sentiment to us that the children who
are placed easily first are those who carry with them the fewest problems or
issues. I flipped through the pages again, a little shell shocked. Sure some
issues were obvious from the write-ups. Some were just a matter of a mis-match between two sets of demographics. We were aware that sibling groups were
always considered more difficult to place as the pool of adopters willing to
take on two or more children was more limited than those looking for just one.
Similarly, older children were also considered more difficult to place, particularly when
over 5 or 6 years old. The preference in the majority of prospective adopters was younger rather than older children. In our prep course there had been some discussion about
the apparently higher statistics on placement breakdown where children are
placed at older than this age.
Then
there was the thorny problem of ethnic matching. Our Preparation Group had
almost come to blows with the trainers over this issue, with allegations of
"political correctness gone mad" being flung at them. However, it was
a fact that the statistical make up of the pool of prospective adopters (in our
county anyway) was heavily skewed towards white, middle class, heterosexual
couples. In a system which placed a particular premium on maximising the ethnic
match between children and adoptive parents (and where this could potentially over-ride other considerations), this made placing mixed race children or children from non-white
cultures more difficult. All of this had
been covered comprehensively in our Preparation days but it did still seem
something of a self imposed restriction on the system.
Then
there were the children who already displayed particular medical or behavioural
challenges. There were several profiles where these were made explicit in the
text. All of those would be more difficult to place. Still, these were all
children who needed and had the right to grow up in a loving, caring home with
parents who would love them and work with them to bring them the healing (of
what ever form) they might need. And we had watched this process in the last
two children Juliet had moved on. One had a medical condition which, while
needing ongoing management, had not stopped her from eventually being successfully placed after appearing in
our county's "available children list". And now she was thriving with
her new "forever family" both medically and emotionally (although in both cases there was, of course, still a way to go). Juliet's next ward had been somewhat
different. Badly brain damaged after being shaken as a very young baby he had, at around two years
old, only reached the physical capabilities of a barely one year old (in itself
testament to the therapeutic care he had received from Juliet and a level of
progress which had astounded his doctors). His long term prognosis was not promising,
though, and after nearly two years "temporary" foster placement with
Juliet he had moved on to a long term, specialist foster caring placement.
The
booklet fell open at Aiden's entry. Of all the photos in the magazine his was, perhaps, the
most cherubic. His wide, blue eyes stared out of the page with an
appealing smile. Heart strings could not help but be tugged. Gosh, this was
hard. For a second I was just thankful that we had decided, for now, to side
step this part of the process. If we had to look through the brochures at a later
date to consider possible matches we wondered how on earth we would come to an
informed decision not just driven by emotion. Looking back now, I am only glad that circumstances spared us the need to do so...
4 comments:
Gosh the way you describe Juliet reminds me very much of our son's foster carer...same sense of humour!
Thanks as always, for linking up to #WASO :-)
Yeah, she's totally lovely but she does call a spade a spade and rarely pulls a punch (although in a lovely way).
We have been so blessed with the foster carers we have come into contact with. Our little boy's foster carer was lovely too and couldn't have given our little one a better start or preparation for coming to us.
These descriptions are like school reports - there's a euphemistic way of saying just about everything, but you do need to know the code!
You certainly do need to know the code. We didn't look at anything like this thanks to being given our prospective link to Sqk before the approval panel.
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