One thing I find myself talking to other foster parents about is how fostering can change your home life for the better. Some of the changes are challenging. A great many of them are wonderful.
Example;
Before fostering, our home was - I now realise - organised to the point of mundane. Everyone knew their role, we were conventional to a tee. Nothing wrong with that; people need stability as well as fun and laughter.
Obviously, one's household is altered when foster children join your happy valley. Children who've been taken into care know all about chaos. It's our job to show them the value of order.
And they introduce us to the many joys of uncertainty.
So...
Last Sunday our eldest foster child was due to bring his new and first-ever romantic partner to our house to watch the football on Sky. The two of them had been a tentative item for about two weeks. I doubt anyone'e kissed anyone yet. We monitor, discreetly.
Watching a TV football match for a first date is hardly the same as strolling hand-in-hand in the park. I suspected maybe one or both of them were reflecting parental role modelling. Meanwhile middle foster child had an 18 year-old relative coming for Sunday lunch. I say 'relative', the fact is no-one knows how to describe their relationship. In most families, the blood lines are clear; brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, cousins and so forth. But things like that can get complicated with foster children. Our middle foster child and the young relative don't know what their blood links are. But they need each other in order to experience that need of belonging to a family.
Youngest foster child was cool about being the 'youngest child'. Youngest children can be very artful at playing the 'little one' role.
Sunday lunch was timed for half-time in the football. I'd sweated over roast spuds, green beans, brocolli and carrots, plus boned enough chicken thighs (skinned them too, trying to pre-empt any "I don't like").
Before we fostered, the technicalities of cooking a Sunday lunch was clockwork; uneventful.
Here's how Sunday afternoon went.
First; a text from eldest; "Running late", the romance had hit its first snag; unspecified.
Middle child's relative arrived, turned out he'd rather watch the cricket than the football, he's never had a dad to infect him with the football virus. So they're glued to the limited-over cricket (limited' being the key word).
We only have one full-size telly. What if it boils over into a cricket v footy stand-off?
Meanwhile.. the roast spuds and chicken are coming on.
Middle son's relative starts to bond with my other half who will watch any sport any day. They're discussing the merits of a swinger versus a yorker. Or somesuch.
Middle son is loving the bond that's growing between his older relative and his foster dad. A taste of family normality for him. The cricket is strangely raucus. A family-style argument breaks out over whether the Essex Car Thieves are going to beat the Kent Tax Frauds (I may have got the team names wrong, forgive).
My partner goes to the fridge. Snaffles two Peroni and a Sprite. "Going well in there", he said over his shoulder.
Eldest suddenly bangs in through the front door. Had a first-ever lovers tiff. The football thing is off. Meanwhile youngest is on a first Calippo and a second bag of crisps for being "Such a good child". Two minutes later eldest comes in and announced they've sorted it out and the partner is on their way to ours.
Long story short; the green veg was soggy, the chicken came out 7/10. The potatoes were overdone. And…I forgot the Yorkshires.
A bucket of instant gravy got me out of jail.
My partner and middle foster child's relative had become joint tribal elders with middle child their keen apprentice. Middle had been poured a glass of weak shandy (lawful and within Blue Sky guidelines, I know the rules inside out).
They were mates. No...more than mates…family.
Eldest wouldn't join us at the table pleading need for privacy in the front room with partner. No problem, that's why God gave us trays.
Then, this happened. I swear this is simply the truth, the whole truth and nothing but...
There I was laying out the table. I had my music on Alexa when our own two grown-up kids showed up on the dot for family Sunday roast. Our house had; a foster child with partner nurturing a start-up relationship, a foster child and their indeterminate relative bonding with their make-believe dad in the TV room and a littlest foster child already hassling for ice cream to top up (if they "couldn't finish the brocolli"), plus my own two who simply got stuck in.
Then, for me, from nowhere...a wave of well being.
I wanted to tell someone how wonderful life can be when you get stuck in, but there was no-one to tell.
Except me.
And so I did...
Then I called out; "Come and get it!"
And so they did...
What a wonderful story! I bet you felt a huge swell of pride and satisfaction as you battled through the clean up!
ReplyDeleteWe have relatives of our younger sibling pair who visit us at home a few times a year (they also do "family time" at entertainment centers etc but we're trying to make it feel a bit more normal than always going to mini-golf or bowling). The oldest are top end teenagers now, so its always awkward, all are naturally a bit shy, and the once-strong family bond between then all has been stretched thin by the age gap, attending different schools, living apart, and all the complicated circumstances that brought them here in the back of their minds. Still, we do our best to make them jolly days, and hope that in time, we’ll all settle into a more comfortable routine together.
Thank you anonymous. Yes, these Contact days are challenging to make both normal and yet interesting. If you go to the park you notice how many splintered families are represented, most often by dad enjoying his access time. Then sometimes it's nothing more than dad letting an exhausted mum have a lie-in, so mustn't judge.
ReplyDeleteI feel sure you get it right, well done.