Children coming into care have often had to teach themselves self-preservation.
I'll tell you about a dear, sad child we looked after, in a moment.
They often have had to learn to get by without enough love, support and care. Sometimes without even adequate food and drink.
We once took in a child who, aged five, had been left alone in the house all day with only a dog for company. The child had been told to put down a bowl of dog food around midday. The child was so hungy she routinely ate some of the dog food. True.
Now, when I say "self-preservation" I'm mainly thinking about the skills a neglected child develops when it's a case of "needs must".
I've learned of a golden trait in many kids whose parents have let them down, it's this;
They bear no resentment, point no finger of guilt, in fact, they don't merely forgive, they continue to love the adults in question. And it goes further than that; they believe that their treatment was somehow justified and that their family home spiralled downwards because of them; the children.
So get this; they want to make up to their parents for the trouble they think they've caused them.
Painfully, they want to demonstrate to their parents that they are worthy and that they can be loved.
Talk about turning the other cheek, these poor kids are in many ways not only truly holier than thou, but as holy as anyone who's ever declared themselves holy.
Molly arrived in our home aged 7. It's an age where the looked-after child has a growing emotional strength yet still nurtures a massive vulnerablity.
She was shy at first, very respectful. As is almost always the case, once she learned to trust us she began to come out of her shell.
By "Out of her shell" I mean she began to push her luck. Gently at first, then came the inevitable bedtime moment when she tried her luck at saying "No".
We worked it out, the dialogue was reasoned and intially unsuccessful, but we stuck to our guns; the telly was turned off, and I think I remember agreeing to a half-hour extra screen time provided she went up pronto.
We have all the parental controls, and if we have to, I turn the router off.
I win!
So does she.
Molly went for it, as the deal included crisps and a can of Fanta.
The following morning was a Sunday, Molly came down empowered by how she percieved the previous evening's negotiations.
I asked how she was, she shrugged and said "Alright."
Then she asked me how I was!
I told her the truth;
"I've got a bit of a headache, I'm hoping it doesn't turn into a migraine."
Molly was momentarily nonplussed to be having a one-on-one with her foster mum.
I said something like;
"It can happen for no reason with women about my age."
Molly was gobsmacked. I watched her process the intimacy, the engagement that was mushrooming.
She drerw on her experience, and her need to support her parent figures. She said something like;
"Do you want a paracetamol?"
I can't remember Molly's exact words, but I am certain I remember that she suggested some medication but most of all being kind and supportive, to her substitute mum.
Good moment.
ps even if I'd said yes she couldn't have fetch me a paracetamol, medicines are all locked away. It was the thought.