Thursday, February 28, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: New Articles for February 2013

Adoption / Foster Care
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New Articles for February 2013
Feb 28th 2013, 08:00

I hope you enjoy the latest book I have reviewed for this month, the Red Thread Sisters was a great read. It may be recommended for elementary school children, I enjoyed it very much. Perfect gift for a family that has a connection with Chinese adoptions. I also did more work on helping families complete lifebooks as well as continue exploring the different training programs for foster and adoptive parents.

Suggested Reading/New Articles and Features:

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: Cute Gifts Inspired by Easter or Spring

Adoption / Foster Care
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Cute Gifts Inspired by Easter or Spring
Feb 28th 2013, 01:00

So, yes, we are digging out from underneath a ton of snow - I keep wishing for spring.  After all, the Groundhog said it would be here soon and I am a believer in what the little fuzzy guy has to say.  As long as it's what I want to hear and I want to hear that spring is near.

So, what better time than now to create some cute handmade gifts with the kids?

Most moms love the handmade stuff the best when it comes to gifts from kids. Stumped as to what to give or create? Consider the following cute Easter or Spring inspired art projects that you and the kids can easily do in just an hour.

These ideas would be perfect for a birthmom, or any member of a birth family, in a foster or adoptive situation.

Suggested Reading:
Great Foster Parents Work with Birth Family to Aid Reunification

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Adoption / Foster Care: Children's Adoption Book About Open Adoption and a Special Tree

Adoption / Foster Care
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Children's Adoption Book About Open Adoption and a Special Tree
Feb 27th 2013, 08:30

This is one children's book that about makes me cry every time I read it. The illustrations are beautiful and capture a child's many emotions. The story itself is just as beautiful. Megan's Birthday Tree is about a child who is clearly bonded to her adoptive family and goes to them for reassurance and support, yet is grounded by a child's simple understanding of her history. This book demonstrates what an open adoption could do for a child's sense of identity.

If you have opened a closed adoption, especially a foster care adoption, click "comments" below and share your experiences or about your process.

So, what is open adoption to you? Are you part of an open adoption - either as a birth parent, an adoptive parent, or adoptee? Bring your experiences, good and bad to the forum and we'll all get a chance to see open adoption from a different perspective. The forum discussion has been on-going for a couple of years and has numerous posts. Check it out.

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Suggested Reading:

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: Why Lifebooks?

Adoption / Foster Care
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Why Lifebooks?
Feb 20th 2013, 08:00

Lifebooks are an awesome tool for foster and adopted children. Lifebooks are not just simple scrapbooks, they fill in the missing blanks of a child's history and can also offer honest answers to tough questions. Whether a child has been adopted from foster care or India, a lifebook may hold answers for a child as they continue to process their different losses.

This is exactly why I recommend Beth O'Malley's work. She offers clear advice on how to answer these questions without degrading a child's birth family or further traumatizing a child with the blunt truth. Learn how to explain a parent's drug usage or a child's abandonment in an orphanage with Beth O'Malley's wonderful tools. An adoptee and an adoptive parent, O'Malley has a definite passion for her work.

I was faced with a difficult email a few years ago when a grandmother asked how to help prepare a lifebook for her grandchild. This led to an awesome opportunity for me to speak with Beth and ask her advice.  This not only allowed me to help that one grandmother, but to create a few new articles to help all of us who work to prepare lifebooks for children in our care.

Books by Beth O'Malley:
Adoption Book Review: Lifebooks: Creating a Treasure for the Adopted Child
Book Review: My Foster Care Journey - Lifebook for children under age 8
Book Review: For When I'm Famous - Lifebook for Teens

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: Mindy McCready Dead at Age 37

Adoption / Foster Care
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Mindy McCready Dead at Age 37
Feb 18th 2013, 02:03

Country music singer, Mindy McCready has been found dead in what reports are saying appears to be a self-inflicted gun shot wound. McCready had been fighting for custody of her oldest son, Zander. McCready's mother was awarded custody of Zander in 2007, but McCready ran with Zander in November 2011.  The judge over the case awarded custody back to McCready's mother last February and ruled that he be returned to Florida.

McCready has been battling addiction, mental illness, and bad relationships for many years. It's sad that she has given up on herself. She leaves behind two sons, Zander, who will turn 7 on March 6; and Zayne who is ten months old. Zayne's father died of an apparent suicide last month.

SOURCES:
Troubled singer Mindy McCready dead in apparent suicide
Embattled country star Mindy McCready dead at 37

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: Do You Know Dave Pelzer?

Adoption / Foster Care
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Do You Know Dave Pelzer?
Feb 11th 2013, 08:00

One of the most read pages on this site is the book review for Dave Pelzer's A Child Called 'It'. Written from the perspective of a child, A Child Called 'It' offers a chance to see how an abused child may perceive the treatment of an abusive mother. Even though the child abuse that Dave Pelzer endured effected David's self-worth; Dave still had this incredible will to not only survive, but to rise above it all.

This is one book I recommend to those interested in fostering or adopting a child, especially a child who has endured abuse. One main misconception about children in foster care is that they will be grateful to escape the abuse and the abuser. Even after everything Dave Pelzer went through with his abusive mother, he would still, after being placed in a foster home, ride his bicycle by his mother's house in the hopes of getting a glimpse of her. It is amazing, but also understandable to a point. No matter what has occurred, your parents are your parents.

Dave Pelzer entered the foster care system at age 12. He endured 5 different foster homes before aging out of the system at age 18. He went on to become an accomplished author, with his first book, A Child Called 'It', which details the story of the horrible abuse and neglect he suffered at the hand of his mother. But despite his world renowned books, speaking engagements, and documentation from teachers and social workers who worked with him as a youth, there are some who question the validity of his story.

What is your reaction to Dave Pelzer's life story? Share your thoughts by clicking here.

Suggested Reading:
Book Review: A Child Called "It"
Book Review: The Lost Boy The Inspiring Sequel to "A Child Called 'It'"
Dave Pelzer Is a Famous Foster Kid
How Do You Feel About Dave Pelzer's Life Story?

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Adoption / Foster Care: The Other Side of Foster Parenting

Adoption / Foster Care
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The Other Side of Foster Parenting
Feb 4th 2013, 08:00

One of the hardest aspects of being a foster parent is being part of a team of professionals that perhaps doesn't consider us, as foster parents, real members of a professional team. Because of this how often do we get a chance to share our true feelings with the team and actually feel heard?

While we want to be honest and respectful in how we speak to our foster care social workers, sometimes we may feel that it is best to just keep quiet. Maybe we stay quiet because we're afraid that we won't be understood, or that we can't say what we want to say without emotion. It is important to build an effective partnership with your foster care social worker, even when you don't always feel heard. Take this opportunity to tell social workers what you want them to know about foster parenting.  This is just an opportunity to send a mass message to any and all social workers so that they may get a clearer picture of how foster parents really feel.

Whether you are a foster parent, a foster child, a birth parent, or perhaps even another worker - what do you wish you could tell a foster care social worker? How would you finish this sentence,

I was thinking maybe foster care social workers feel the same way, so for the social workers, foster children, and birth family out there, how would you finish this sentence,

Take this opportunity to open up lines of communication and get an idea of how the 'other side' of foster care really thinks and feels.

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Suggested Reading:

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