September 22, 2022

Foster Care Support Group: Stepping Back to See In

Oh, yeah.  We see him all the time.  We take him out, we call.  He just can’t live with a family, he can’t be that close to people right now, but he loves it like this,...
Close-up of a teenager with wavy hair looking directly at the camera.

“Oh, nothing going in my house, just the usual.  I don’t need to take up everyone’s time,” she said.  Her voice was upbeat.

As a Homefinder, it often surprises the families when I know about the goings on in their households.

“I think you’ve got something pretty big coming up…Aren’t you taking guardianship of Big C?”

“Oh, that…Yep, that is coming up.  But it’s no big thing,” she deflects.  Foster parents so often shy away from the spotlight.

“How is he doing?  He’s got to be thinking about what he’ll do after graduation.  He’s a junior, right?”

“Oh, we’ve been visiting schools.  We always make the rounds.  Nothing crazy.  We went to MIT, UMass Amherst, Bridgewater State…” She rattles off at least half-a-dozen more schools, all over the state, some hours away from her town.

“He doesn’t know what he’s doing after he graduates, but he’ll get there.  H did,” she notes, referring to a former foster youth.

“You keep in touch with H?”  H left her home after some really challenging behavior despite significant efforts to get through it.

“Oh, yeah.  We see him all the time.  We take him out, we call.  He just can’t live with a family, he can’t be that close to people right now, but he loves it like this.  He is all into that coding, he’s in a group for that and he hopes to make it into MIT.  He might get it, too,” she beams.  Her camera is turned off for the support group video conference, but you can hear the pride and love in her voice.

“M, that’s incredible.”

“Well, then I have L…He’s a daddy now, has a little boy of his own.  He comes over almost every week.  He tells me he wants the baby to know me just like he does, that I’m the grandma.  I didn’t ask, I don’t push, that’s just what he wants.”

My eyes prickle with tears.  L left her home almost ten years ago.  He was a tough kid, one who pushed the envelope, but M and her family stuck by him through it all.  M used to buy groceries for L’s parents, just to make sure his little sisters had plenty to eat.

“He says I’m the only one he trusts to take the baby to the park.  The baby’s three, but I’m the only one aside from him and his girlfriend who is allowed to watch the baby.  He gives me a run for my money, just like L!”

“I’m so glad he has you, M.”

“Oh, it’s nothing special.  It’s just being there for them, you know?  That’s all.  I try to get them through high school and then it’s all up to them.  I just keep picking up the phone,” she jokes.

The support group goes on and parents share the joys, the defeats, the fears, the in-betweens.  Living in the thick of it, they so often don’t see the resilience they’ve allowed to grow, the bonds they’ve created.  They are too close to it.  Sometimes, support group is about being an outsider who gets to see in and stare in awe.

These are the moments that remind me of why I love my job.  To M and all the others, thank you for sharing your hearts.

If you hope to be like M, reach out today and begin your foster care journey.

Topics:
Share this
Courtney Edge-Mattos

Read our latest blogs

SEE MORE
December 5, 2025

Supporting Siblings In Care

As we discussed in our last blog, there are many reasons siblings might be separated in foster care.  The significance of separation, however, cannot be overlooked. As adults involved in the foster care world, what can we do to lessen the impact of sibling separation? Avoid It First and foremost, every effort to allow siblings […]
December 5, 2025

Siblings In Care

The majority of children in the foster care system have at least one sibling.  Whether full or half, step-siblings, or raised as siblings, those bonds are incredibly important. Yet, despite the importance of siblinghood and the existence of the Sibling Bill of Rights, all too often siblings are separated while in foster care. Why does […]
1 2 3 62

Comments

Leave a Reply

Sign up for updates!

Get news from JRI delivered directly to your inbox.
CARF accreditation badge
Joint Commission International Quality Approval gold seal.
JRI's intensive residential treatment programs, clinics, and community-based services are accredited by the Joint Commission. JRI's residential schools, group homes, day habilitation and Huntington at Symphony are accredited by CARF.
Instagramfacebooklinkedintiktok

Copyright Ⓒ 2025 JRI. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy. Language Accessibility Notice. Machine Readable File Links.

magnifier