
Dixie van de Flier Davis,
Founder & President Emerita
Waiting
No one likes to do it.
We’re impatient in line at the super market. We don’t want to wait for delivery of new item. On a diet – chances are we quit before we see results.
It is just hard to wait.
The wheels of permanence grind too slowly in the lives of the children who wait in foster care. Another birthday passes. Other children come in and out of the foster home as if their journeys have somehow taken on a faster pace, while teenagers wait and watch, and eventually are tempted to turn their eyes away.
As of last week the wait is finally over for Mandi. She’d been featured on television three times. Clearly she was growing up before our eyes. As the months dragged on, she watched her siblings be adopted. And now – at last – she has joined two of them in her own family.
As one adolescent said, “It feels like sitting down after standing up for a long, long time.”
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Dixie van de Flier Davis,
Founder & President Emerita
What’s on Their Minds?
Sometimes when we watch Wednesday’s Child we wonder what the children are thinking about. Staff at The Adoption Exchange try to schedule an outing that will be fun. And the young people usually have a good time.
They know the purpose of the interview. And during the taping adolescents often let us all know what is on their minds. Here is a sampling of comments from some teenagers in Utah.
Brad (age 14): “I want parent would we treat me right – treat me like their son.”
Allen (age 12): “The would have to be caring and take it easy on me for a few days…like if you don’t eat all of your dinner, they’d still give you dessert.”
Terry (age 13): When you’re in a permanent home you don’t have to worry about moving.”
William (age 16): I was born into a family that wasn’t that pleasant. The other kids had families that would come to their football games. I didn’t have anyone to come to my football games.”
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Dixie van de Flier Davis,
Founder & President Emerita
A Teenager’s Question
We ask teenagers a lot of questions. What are you planning to do with your life? Where will you live? What kind of work will you do in the future?
Teresa responded to those queries with a question in return. “What is a future without a mom and dad?”
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
Questions
Children ask lots of questions. Sometimes it seems like too many questions. Sometimes we have trouble knowing the answers.
Brothers aged 4, 8 and 9 had lots of questions of their adoption caseworker. She told them she was looking for a family to adopt them. They were very distrustful of adults and quite concerned about the home they will go to. These are some of the questions the two oldest boys asked.
“How do you know the home will be safe?”
“What if they lie to you?”
“What kind of test do you give them to make sure they won’t hurt us?”
“We need a home that will feed us every day. Will they?”
Those are questions no child should ever have to ask.
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
Another Holiday Season Without A Family
Diedre can’t get fifteen year old Troy out off her mind. He is going to be celebrating yet another holiday without a permanent family. She wants his wish to come true for him — his wish for a family to “love and accept me as I am.”
Troy is a lot like other teenagers. He likes video games, reading fiction, listening to music. He has a favorite pair of socks that have come to be known as his “lucky socks.”
Unlike most other teenagers, every Friday Troy calls his Arizona case worker to ask if there is any progress yet on the search for his family.
Since I heard Diedre talk about him I haven’t been able to forget him either.
Please take a look at Troy’s photograph and read a little about him. If you’d like to join the effort to see that he will spend his next birthday in a forever family, share his story with a friend.
It would be the best holiday gift we could give him. Thank you.
http://www.adoptuskids.org/_app/child/viewp.aspx?id=46232
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
Complicated Emotions
The overlay of feelings of loss and longing are complicated. For children in foster care hope blends with despair. Anger is mixed with tenderness. The collision of emotions is complicated and confusing.
The Pew Commission invited a number of youth who had experienced foster care to express their feelings through art and poetry.
Mama, Carry Me Home
I lose my eyes at night and dream; Your face the first I see Just as tomorrow's gleam Still devastated from the day They took my brothers and I away By the look you gave me I knew I'd see you another day Over time, I've grown emotionally stronger Not wanting to feel pity; Only accepting the facts of life God has written for me Yet still I miss those days I felt the safest; from your hugs and kisses Never doubting your love for us Now you're the biggest of my misses In my sleep, I can hear the songs You used to hum and sing to me. The melody making the belief it's once again reality. These past three years haven't been so easy; Although I know things can be worse Like some days, I feel I can't walk on my own... I just need you, mama — To carry me home.
Khadijah, age 16
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
Julius
I am lucky enough to know one of Julius’ sons.
Julius himself is sort of a legend. He was the oldest of a large group of siblings that were raised in a government run orphanage. Somehow he made it through those years determined to keep his brothers and sisters together.
In spite of the fact that institutions separated siblings in order to house the children by age groups — regardless of the fact that they had different bed times and day time routines — despite residing in separate cottages that were far apart on a large and lonely campus, Julius never let this little cluster of children forget that they were a family.
They all grew up. Julius became a well known, all-American type softball umpire – the kind that created stories for the players to tell for years. And there are now children and grandchildren. When Julius died, he was a great grandfather. Even though he is gone, he left a large, sometimes boisterous extended family who go to church, have important careers, raised their own children, and enjoy big reunions with an annual golf tournament.
The son I know became a mental health professional and a child welfare supervisor. He is a father and grandfather through birth and through foster care adoption.
We enjoy a healthier community because a boy in an orphanage … a mere boy … knew the power of family.
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
The Perfect Family For Paul
Barbara loves order. She is always neatly dressed, and you’d swear she just came from the hairdresser. When she worked at The Adoption Exchange, her office was always clean. I still find files with her beautiful handwritten notes.
But Barbara says that families don’t have to be just like each other (and they certainly don’t have to be like her) to be perfect parents for the children.
She remembers the couple who asked to adopt Paul. They lived in a tiny house in a very ordinary neighborhood. They liked to run barefoot in the summer. They weren’t joggers or dieters. Their little house was pretty cluttered, and they didn’t work out in the gym.
When she visited them after Paul came into their family, she was moved. It was impossible to tell which of their children was the adopted child. No one seemed crowded by the size of the house. There was a lot of healthy hugging, and she could see Paul was drinking in their affection.
Paul’s parents are grateful that he is in their lives. And Barbara says he got just what he needed.
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
I Am a Blessed Child
Those are the words she wrote. But it didn’t begin that way. Shanté came into foster care when she was eight years old. But she blossomed with the care and love of her adoptive mom. They met at school, where her mom-to be was a social worker.
“On August 28, 1991 we went down to the courtroom and everything was finalized. I was finally in a home to call my own. That’s where I stand now – in a blessed family and with friends.”
“I enjoy my family. I am a blessed child and it shows in everything I do, If there is anything in life that a child needs, it is a family. I think o child is to be lonely in these days. It only leads to destruction of a child’s life.”
Shanté is grown now, and a mother herself.
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Dixie van de Flier Davis, Executive Director
Martin and DeShawn
The children and youth are often our best teachers. One such teacher materialized at an awards ceremony in Chicago.
Martin looked very handsome and a little nervous. He was dressed in a suit and tie and stood next to his mom at the podium. They had been asked to say a few words about their adoption and to assist in the presentation of a couple of awards.
Adoption professionals in the audience beamed as they spoke. Everyone was proud, and the pride was well deserved.
After the fanfare was over, Martin turned to me and asked, “Can I look at the picture book?” Of course the answer was yes. He was referring to the photo album filled with pictures and profiles of children who were waiting for families.
I guess the time to gloat was over. Enough of that – let’s get to work!
Martin went straight to the “D” section of the alphabetically organized book. He was looking for someone in particular. “I want to know if DeShawn is still in the picture book,” he said.
Martin was a good teacher. He kept my focus where it needed to be.
I asked him to tell me about DeShawn. “He was my foster brother, and he still needs to be adopted.”
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