Tuesday, March 17, 2015

fear

I'm walking on the street, Missy on my hip and Mac walking with us. I turn and Missy has disappeared. Suddenly I'm in a room full of people, water comes in through a drain and I cling to Mac as water rises and rises. A wave comes in and pulls him from my grip. I wake up.
These are what my dreams have been like the past week. I'm not sleeping. I'm drained. I'm scared.
I'm afraid of losing Missy. Im afraid of what it could do to Malachi. What it could do to me, to Doug, again.
We ran into a biological family member at a place we are at often a few weeks ago. They recognized Missy. I froze. I stood there silent as Doug held Missy and my mother in law held Malachi. They don't know Malachi and they won't. I cried on the way home. And for days afterward. I'm scared to go out in public with out Doug. It's an irrational fear. I know this. But it takes a lot for me to go out with the kids alone. Malachi will never leave our home. He's ours. Running into biological family will never change that. They wouldn't even recognize him. But Missy. She may leave. She may never be ours forever. She could be gone tomorrow and I would have no control over it. All I can do is to pour in to her and love her as if she stays forever, something I am honestly struggling with. And to pray. Pour myself into Jesus. Guys, we could not do this with out Him. Foster care is hard. Parenting is hard. With out God I would be a puddle on the floor and never leave home.
We have decided it's best for me to not go to that certain place with Missy for awhile till we see if anything comes of it and my mind eases. I'm praying it does soon.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Missy

It's been 3 weeks since Missy came back to our home. It is still crazy to me to say those words. When I saw Bair pop up on my phone I was not expecting it would be about her. I was just starting to come to terms with her being gone and probably not coming home to us. It had been over 5 months. If she was going to come back it would have happened already. Everyone thought so. I had imagined over and over in my head what it would be like to hear that she was coming home. Those sceneries were not even close to the real thing.

It was 2:45 pm, Malachi was napping, Doug was in the living room playing videos games and I was laying in bed, still recovering from the flu. Bair Foundation popped up on my phone. My first thought.. "Here we go, this is it" (for a new child) I answered. It was our Bair worker for Mac and Missy's case. I didn't think anything of it since she had been helping out with intakes and we have talked off and on for awhile.

BW: "I have good news for you. Missy (insert real name) has come back into care."
Me: sobbing immediately and uncontrollably.

We talked for another minute as I asked if she was okay and a couple details. She said she would tell the investigator to move forward with placement and would call me back with a time for drop off. I immediately jumped out of bed and ran to tell Doug. I was crying so hard that he didn't get what I said at first. Then we cried together. I was shaking and weeping. I called my mom and then Bair called back again. They will be dropping her off at 4 pm. It was 3 at that point. Missy will be here in an hour. In. An. Hour!!! We jumped into action. Got dressed, Doug showered, I cleaned as much as possible. We had all been sick all week. Piles of stuff everywhere. Meds out. Food out. We were a mess. With all the adrenaline I felt like super woman, I wasn't sick anymore (until later that night) I even cracked a joke and said "acabelieve it!"
4pm rolled around. Cps and Bair showed up. Missy was in a car seat with a blanket draped over it. I took in a breath as I lifted the blanket. There she was. staring right at us. Guys she smiled the moment she saw us. I cried, again. It's a thing with me. Get used to it. :)
We filled out paper work, discussed details and cps and Bair left. In 2 short hours, we were a family of 4 again.

 When Missy left our home I broke. In every way possible. It was beyond devastating. I would constantly pray that she would be safe and healthy and ultimately come home. Every time , and I mean EVERY time, I prayed a thought would pop in my head, "6 months, just wait, 6 months"  I honestly didn't think anything of it, just wishful thinking I thought.

Missy returned to us the day before she turned 6 months.

That was so the Lord. He knew exactly when she would come home.
Our Bair worker said that calling us was the best phone call she has ever made in her years working there. The case worker that we had to drop Missy off to when she left our home called us crying when she heard Missy was back with us. She felt horrible the day we lost her and it was something she never forgot. She was thrilled to know that she was safe with us. I could go on with stories like these.

We still have a long road ahead of us. Nothing is certain. Missy requires a lot of attention, she's been through so much. We have done a bazillion doctor appts and check ups and more to come. She starts ECI therapy next week. We have finally started to get into a rhythm with feedings and sleeping. She's getting healthier and stronger every day. She's bonded more to us. Mac ADORES her. I am finally starting to get back  to where I was with her in the beginning. It's a strange thing having to rebond with a child who you weren't expecting to come back, who doesn't know you as "momma"  We are relearning each other all over again. We will get there. God is good and faithful.
Continue to pray as we continue to adjust and go through the whole process again as we hope to make her forever ours.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Sisters

Sisters. They bring out the best in you and they bring out the worst in you. Anyone who has a sister knows what I'm talking about. If not, let me just give you a glimpse of what I mean.
I have been blessed with 3 sisters. Ashleigh, my twin sister. Sarah, my younger sister and Monica, the youngest of us all. Anyone who has spent anytime with my sisters and I know that it's loud, crazy and  drama filled. Poor Doug handles it with ease. :) Most of our time together involves a lot of laughing. Usually at one of the ridiculous things our family has done. Like the time Sarah fell down stairs on her first day of college, books flying every where. Sorry Sarah, I still crack up about it. Or the time my mom fell outside and came crawling back in on her hands and knees, or the time Ashleigh slid right under the car on some ice. We fall a lot. It gives us great stories to laugh about later. But then there are times when that laughter stops and one of us gets, uh let's say.. Feisty.
Ashleigh and I were sitting in the dinning room talking, completely normal and friendly, then a comment was said, and the next thing I know is my hand is flying at her face. Yeah...I have no idea what came over me, but this rage came up in me and I couldn't help myself. I immediately felt bad (and sorta good) Sisters know exactly what buttons to press and it doesn't need to be a big button, the smallest thing can trigger ugliness, even for just a minute. It's a laughed about thing now, and we all know Ashleigh could take me in a second. ;)
Even when there are times of ugliness between sisters, there is also pure beauty. My sisters stopped everything they were doing and drove through the night, the day we lost Missy. We are all about 6-8 hrs from each other. They stayed the whole weekend and even one of them came back a couple weeks later to stay for several days and help with Mac. Sisters are good like that. Sisters are your best friends, they will laugh with you and at you, they will cry with you and they will occasionally take you down in a heart beat.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

God is good

Oh man, God is so good. I cannot say that enough.
As we have been getting back in to the fostering world I have been reading a lot about other people's stories in foster care. I recently just read about a mom who has taken in 10 children over 4 years, who were "medically fragile" all ranging from abuse, to neglect and drug exposure. The stories are heart breaking and astounding. The trauma these babies have endured is devastating and the healing and restoration they received are amazing. It makes me think about Malachi and his story. That sweet beautiful 2 day old baby boy suffering so much in his short life. And yet defied all odds and thrived. I read his whole case history, all 500 pages of it. The amount of trauma he endured in the womb were astounding to say the least. He shouldn't be the boy he is today. I remember holding and praying over him as he had withdrawals, ranging from tremors to not sleeping because of tremoring to stomach issues. But you know what, he overcame it all and fast. He is a super energetic, spunky, thriving, normal toddler. Ah it brings me to tears. It makes me want to walk right into Malachi's room, wake him up and hold him.
Often people tell us how blessed Malachi is to have us, but really we are blessed to have him. we are better because of him. He is one amazing kid and there is just something special about him.
God is so so good.