One of the things you often have to do with a foster child is to help them get used to other people.
Shyness is one thing - it's normal. But foster children sometimes have something different; almost a phobia about people.
Often they've been deprived of normal company.
Katie came to us aged 8. Katie was nigh on incapable of interacting with anybody. She was bright and articulate, mainly because she watched telly a lot. Telly was her window on the world. But telly is one-way traffic; the viewer is sedentary, not interactive.
Katie had no idea how to interact with people. She struggled to connect with her social workers and would try to hide or pretend she was 'busy' when they called.
She was ok with me and our other family members, because she'd learned things about connecting with people she shared a house with.
But she'd hardly ever attended school, and her home life was isolated. Her significant others had no extended family or friendship groups because for one thing they had none of the skills, for another they were fearful there'd be trouble if anyone found out what a strange household they'd created.
So they shut up shop.
Katie was overawed in the supermarket, she'd never been in such a teeming environment. She resisted school, and got angsty during the car journey every morning. If I had a friend over for coffee Katie would shut herself in her room.
What to do?
I managed to make some progress with Katie using that regular standby; food.
As far as schoool went, I took to making an elaborate lunch boxful of her favourites which I'd give her in the car on the school run. She'd open the tupperware to check out;
a) the sandwich filling, which was usually a cheese slice and ham, on buttered white, crusts off. Not a mere peanut butter/marmite jobby which her classmates were stuck with.
b) a bag of smoky bacon ridgecut crisps. Not Walkers. McCoys. Top of the pile.
c) a tube of fruit yoghurt.
d) 8-10 seedless grapes.
e) 3 biscuits. Oreos, hobnobs or milk chocolate digestive, nothing less.
f) optional mini banana.
Plus; plastic bottle of water.
And…no messing… every day… a paper napkin folded into a triangle.
This operation got her to school, and, I suspected, helped her status with her fellow pupils because most of the rest of them had barely such a dandy lunchbox. Her food gave her status and hopefully some confidence to interact.
I'll never know though; because what goes on the the playground stays in the playground.
The supermarket was a challenge.
Foster parents have no choice but to take foster children shopping because you can't leave them home alone.
They don't want to be out and about with a fosrer parent and are generally ultra self-conscious that other shoppers are staring at them and somehow aware that they are in care and that they come from 'broken' homes.
I do this trick; I gave Katie a wire basket and said gently; "Go do a wee shop for yourself."
After a couple of nervous goes she came to love the supermarket run.
Katie got cute at sneaking her luxury goods underneath healthy staples, for example;
a tray of grapes and a bag of organic lentil crisps would sit on top of a doughnut.
a bunch of mini-bananas would camouflage a bag of chocolate raisins.
I didn't say a word, the point of the exercise was that Katie was out and about and mingling.
My mount Everest with Katie was helping her get comfy with strangers visiting our house.
I had to remember that often, in chaotic homes, no-one visits for a chat and coffee. And the strangers who do show up are often trouble one way or another.
I have a good friend called Shirley.
At first Katie would flee to the hills and not come down for the rest of the day.
So I said to Shirley "Next time you come I'm gong to give you a sachet of Revels. Pop them into your bag and I'll tell Katie that you've brought her a present.
Worked a treat. As the weeks went by Katie began asking;
"When's Shirley coming again?"
What we did was this; Katie knew that Shirley had a 'present' for her, so she'd come downstairs and lurk.
Shirley would ask Katie politenesses such as;
"How are you Katie?"
"Did you have a nice weekend?"
"How's school?"
And Katie would respond, because there was a bag of Revels in it for her to do so.
Katie and Shirley became buddies. They'd natter and laugh, it was a joy to see.
By the tiime Katie's family were ready to offer her a good enough home Katie was…
…ok at school …consumate with being a member of the public out shopping, and a hospitality superstar whenever Shirley showed up.