Category Archives: why foster kids

Why? To See the Leaps

Scoot on little K.   The video is priceless, but I will not share here for privacy concerns.
Scoot on little K. The video is priceless, but I will not share here for privacy concerns.

Some times, it is easy to forget how far we have come and to expect less from our children than they are capable of doing. In the past week, K has surprised us twice, showing her abilities for cognition and motor skills far outstrip our expectations.

When you have a blind developmentally delayed child, it is easy to see her as the energetic ball of destructive energy who cannot sit still long enough to have a swallow study. Yes, she has just recently started playing with dolls, a developmentally appropriate toy. Still, we did not think she would be upset over our quietest dog leaving to go with another family. K has learned to stop tripping on the dogs, and she likes to feed them from her high chair, much to our annoyance. However, K never seemed emotionally attached to them or Fiz in particular. As Fiz’s new owner came over and talked about him and his new life, K did not seem to pay particular attention. However, as they took him outside to take to their car, K burst out in tears. We rushed her out to give her a chance to say goodbye. Her emotions are appropriate for any age, and we obviously need to do a better job giving her a chance to express them. It must be frustrating for her to be so unable to express herself, as learning to talk is currently a huge struggle.

Then on Sunday, K surprised me again. When we go outside to play with the neighborhood kids in the cul-de-sac, K can usually be seen chasing behind a random kid on a bike or scooter. We bring her tri cycle out, but she usually looses interest in it quickly as peddling is a bit beyond her thus far. Still, we always give it a go. Then on Sunday, one of the little girls got off her scooter to try to help K ride her scooter. K was in heaven. Suddenly all that time she spent chasing the big kids paid off. For us, trusting her to have playtime with all the other kids paid off too. Just watching her scoot was price less.

It made me think about our family routinely exceeding what I think are reasonable expectations. When I think about A’s heart surgeries, stroke, and gastro intestinal issues, I am amazed to watch her ride her bike for hours with the other kids and then go home to read and calm down. I look at O, born at 24 weeks and later surviving brain bleeds, and I realize he is lucky to avoid being delayed. He is smart and physically gifted, even in his habitual careless destruction and bursts of anger. How did he beat those odds? Finally, I look at K, and I realize we have gone three for three.

Having these thoughts gives context for the answers to the “why” questions. It is funny because I never think raising them is so much harder than any other kids until we try to prepare for A going to camp and fill up all 15 lines on the form for medications she takes. We just do it. Then I look at a day taking care of K written up for social services, and it takes more than a page too. It looks so much more impressive written out than it feels when in the midst of task A to task Z. We just do them, as we hope for more moments like Sunday.

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The Case for Altruism

My wife passed me this topic knowing my fascination with how the brain works as she relayed a conversation she had with A’s neurologist.  It seems scientists and medical researchers don’t know from which part of the brain altruism originates.  They have some idea the frontal lobes control impulse control, but altruism?  What makes people help others when they seem to have nothing to gain from their efforts?

The first step to understanding altruism is to note acts of altruism occur in nature all the time.  When parents die, the young are often adopted by other families or packs.  As humans, we think it’s cute when animals nurture the young of other species, even species who would normally be right above or below them on the food chain.  Why do we assume the family gains nothing for taking in another?

I have shared many times how much strength I get from my kids.  My MS is nothing compared to what they have been through, and it was my daughter covering my eye to show me how to get through double vision which gave me the confidence I could deal with whatever MS had in store for me.  Taking in another “sick” person gave me another vantage to see myself, and every day they give me a reason to get out of bed no matter how I feel. 

Even if the monetary reward for time spent is paltry, I would argue there is also another way society rewards those who forgo money to do something thought to be good and needed.  I can’t tell you the number of people who have helped us through the years whether it’s friends visiting our kids in the hospital to give us a break or Hopkins delivering Christmas presents.  The help is and has been incredibly important, and I’m not sure all parents get it.  Still, this is just altruism in the form of foster care.  It goes beyond this.

It goes for feeding the homeless and countless other acts.  I have come to realize the biggest reason for altruism is a sense of worthwhile self, and society reinforces this view constantly.  We all want to be able to like the person we see in the mirror.  For me altruism is the only way I can justify all I have been given when I look in the mirror.  As I read about people with various chronic conditions, those who find a way to help others are the ones who seem to live happiest.  So many chronic diseases are cruel shots at our ego, like when I pissed myself in my driveway walking the kids back from the lake.  There is nothing like being told by a 4 year old trying to be potty trained, “It’s OK.  We all do that sometimes.”  I’ve thought it a cruel irony how many discover this value of helping the sick by being sick and needing some help themselves.  It’s similar to youth being wasted on the young.

 A while ago, I wrote about Michael, and his simplistic view of the world, and his is one I have thought about many times.  He reminds me all for which I have to be thankful.  At first I thought his story was sad as he seemed to have no idea what to hope would be in his future.  Michael

Still, as time has passed, I have come to recognize a certain comforting vision from him.  His world was good because he believed it so.

Altruism allows the world I live in to seem good to me because I know I offer it something of value.  In a way, altruism gives me back a sense of me as I want to be.  Since I benefit, perhaps there is some logic behind the argument there is no truly pure altruism.  There is always personal gain/loss from all we chose to do. 

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