Kids like to look cool, I was the same. Foster children are no different, why should they be?
I took our eldest - "Alicia" - to a gathering at Blue Sky for foster parents with older kids. My social worker had told me discreetly that some teenage foster children become a bit introverted and tend to spend a lot of time in their room instead of with friendship groups.
Easy to see why. When a child is taken into care they see themselves as different from the rest, and don't want to be profiled as "a foster child".
Alicia is transitioning and a bit more self-sconscious than the average teen.
The format was that parents would have coffee and cake in one room and the youngsters would use a separate room. They'd have cold drinks, crisps and fancy cakes, board games to play and a speaker system connected to a lap-top with music on it.
The children would leave their phones at home.
Alicia feigned she wasn't interested in the event, wouldn't attend. But the Saturday before she'd come downstairs and asked me to look at a coat she liked, on the internet.
It wasn't my cup of tea, the jacket. Alicia corrected me "It's not a jacket it's an over-shirt". Or did I get that the wrong way round? The thing is, as the parent, you have to behave out-of-touch - which I don't have to work hard on. She insisted it would go with her sort-of combat trousers and sort-of army boots, and I could see that.
It was £29.99.
A deal was being struck, and good for her.
The deal obviously was; she'd allow me to drag her along to the event if I forked out for the jacket.
It was a no-brainer, for me.
As you know if you're already a foster carer, we get an allowance from Blue Sky which more than covers the expenses of having a foster child, and leaves resources over that can be chanelled however the carer chooses.
It's not "pay" as such - or else it would be taxed like normal income. The government gives foster carers tax concessions to make sure we feel appreciated, and to max out the allowance.
So I clicked 'buy', paid for 'next day' delivery, and it arrived.
She ran the parcel up to her room to open it.
Half an hour later she appeared in the kitchen in the full outfit. The new coat/jacket/overshirt looked a tad big, but she'd grow into it.
On the Tuesday before the event she asked for the hairdressing kit we keep at home to tidy anyone's hair if either it's a) in need of a trim or b) they're too embarrassed to go to the barbers/hairdressers. Alicia was in the latter category. It's going to be a long time before she can get up the courage to visit even a unisex salon.
Long(ish) story short(ish);
It turned out the event was her first social thing since she took the decision to be who she believes she really is.
It was a big deal, and she carried it off so well! In the car I told her I was proud of her.
And you can guess, I reckon, what this great young person said to me in reply? Yep;
"I'm proud of you too."
Then.
"The thing I really need is a new hoodie to go under the overshirt. That's why I got a size bigger, so a hoodie would fit, and I've seen one that's sick, I'll show you when we get home…"
Always a good moment when your foster child refers to your house as their 'home'.
Another deal in the offing.
Cool stuff fostering, eh?