I've a friend who has a lovely turn of phrase, such as;
"The smallest fish are the sweetest."
For example if she gets a £2 win on a scratchcard (not exactly life-changing)... it's;
"The smallest fish are the sweetest."
I thought of her yesterday when this happened.
We have a parent and child alongside our regular fostering at the moment. A young mum (age 16) and her 4 month old baby. With a Parent and Child (P+C) placement, the foster parents have to stay on track with the main tasks which are a) to ensure the child's safety and b) keep accurate records of the parent's parenting to help a judge decide whether the parent has what it takes to keep the child.
I'm new to it.
Blue Sky prepped me for the job, I spent hours looking up the latest research on child development and baby care on the unbelievably outstanding NHS website, but I was nervous right up to day one.
One of my concerns (and it's an ever-present with me) is whether the young people who arrive will ever feel at home.
We all need to feel comfortable wherever we have to lay our hat.
To begin with the mother showed all the signs of homesickness; phoning her mum for an hour every evening after the baby fell asleep, dragging me round Home Bargains buying up half the shop because her mum's birthday was only two months away, dressing heself up to the nines for weekly Contact with her whole family…
Homesickness can be cruel. In fostering we try to ease it with little touches. For example, the young mum likes 3 spoons of sugar in her tea. Luckily she's been advised by Health Visitors to keep her sugar intake up as she breast-feeds. Now, we don't take sugar any more in our house any more, but I Amazoned a sugar bowl and now keep it filled.
For the first few weeks she was a fish out of water around our house, obviously. But we did everything we could to help her feel at home.
She and I had plenty of friendly chats, she welcomed having half a shelf of our fridge to herself for her own "bits"…I felt things were going in the right direction, but you can never be sure.
Then, yesterday.
My other half was in the kitchen finishing the drying up. The young mum came in and put her empty tea mug in the sink. Then she boiled a kettle and made a cup of instant coffee and took it back into the living room.
After the young mum went to bed I said to my other half "Thanks for my coffee earlier".
He replied: "I didn't make it, she did."
I told him that when she got up to put her cup in the kitchen I asked her to ask him to make me a coffee.
Only she didn't.
She made me a cup of coffee herself, and brought it to me.
Wonderful.
I told my friend, the one who's good with phrases;
"Ah," she said "She crossed the bridge right there then?"
I nodded, and said; "And I know what you're going to say next…"
And the two of us chorused'
"The smallest fish are the sweetest."