Joy filled Flight

“Sometimes your joy is the source of your smile, but sometimes your smile can be the source of your joy.” -Thich Nhat Hanh

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“Once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return.”  -Leonardo da Vinci

 

‘fly me with your feet, momma…please’
trying is succeeding
contagious giggles
guttural giggles
everlasting joy
irreplaceable memories
‘fly me with your feet, momma…please’
-kdm

LL Cool Baby

LL Cool Baby was hard to care for and hard NOT to fall head over heals in love with.  He came to us at 2 weeks (after NICU).  By 4 weeks he was re-admitted to the hospital with a major UTI (into his bladder and kidneys).  And by 6 weeks he was starting with upper respiratory and reflux issues.  Yet he was growing and developing (slowly) and just look at those cheeks and the twinkle in his eye.  He had us all wrapped!

Unfortunately, his health didn’t get any better as the girls started into school for the Fall and I started chauffeuring to after school activities.  Development delays were in full bloom.  (He was born at 35 weeks.)  I kept thinking surely it would get better. WE (the Doctors and I ) would figure out what his underlying health issues were and fix him up and we would move on down the road.  But that didn’t happen.  Instead it was a constant stream of Doctors appointments and ER visits.  Medicine prescribed and failed.  Virus they would say.  Breathing treatments.  And through the entire time, he kept getting worse.  He sounded like Darth Vader on a good day.

The baby that could be soothed if distracted or held, couldn’t be soothed anymore.  He would go into fits of rage and be inconsolable.  This would happen several times a day for up to an hour each time.  The baby that we would get smiles from, who was close to rolling over,  was grabbing at toys and swinging with Gregg, was miserable.  And the worst part was that I didn’t know how to help him.  Medical professionals were throwing out theories but nothing was helping.  His oxygen level would look normal when tested so he must be just a ‘fussy baby with a virus’.  ARGH!

Then one day in early December I had a revelation.  LL and I were finally at the Pulmonology Clinic. (2 months wait list) Of course, when we arrived at the Pulmonologist, everyone was concerned about his breathing.  (duh…me too) Medical professionals are swarming around us to get him a breathing treatment and take his puls ox.  And then I made the fatal mistake…I told them he had Rhino Virus.  And then all they could think about was Rhino.  We were in that examination room for 4 hours.  Two things came out of that exam room:  a cool nose sucker and my realization that I had to let LL go.  He had become 100% of my time.  And while I loved him and wanted to advocate for him and help find a diagnosis, I was neglecting myself and my family and I needed to advocate for LL in a different way.

There are different levels of care within the foster care system.  (Basic, Moderate, Specialized, Intense)  We are ‘basic’ level care home.  

LL had exceeded the basic level of care and needed to be moved to a moderate (preferably medical) home.  When we got home from the specialist office, I called the caseworker and yelled ‘calf rope’.  Then I proceeded to write and email to formally request his removal and re-location.

calf-rope:  to give in, surrender

When i was little, my dad would play tickle monster with me.  He would be the ticket monster and the only way I could get him to stop tickling was by saying ‘calf rope’.   Well, I hated to say ‘calf rope’ because it meant giving up.  I wanted to be able to wiggly out and away and ‘beat’ the tickle monster.  I never want to surrender.

That’s when the really hard stuff started.  I requested he be moved within 7 days.  The things I learned about levels of care after requesting removal:

  • The state legally has 30 days to re-locate a child unless said child is inflicting harm to themselves or our family.
  • In order for his level of care to be changed, paperwork has to be submitted with medical backup and then approved by directors.
  • CPS only supports basic level homes.
  • In order for a child to be labeled medical they must have a machine hooked to them 24 hours a day.

I began to unravel.  Did I mention it was Christmas time?  Or that Chase had moved home and then to NYC?  Or that Mitch and Liz had moved home?  Or that LL was crying ALL the time?  Or that G was traveling?

When I submitted the formal request to remove LL, I felt like I was saying ‘calf rope’.  I had spent every last bit of energy and effort and I didn’t have any more to give.  So after a visit with LL’s caseworker telling me that there weren’t any homes and that he might have to come live in her office or be taken to a shelter, and 10 days out from the request, I called our FAD caseworker.   I pleaded with her to find someone.  She called back with her Supervisor and that is when things got ugly.

A lecture about the ‘quality’ of children in the foster care system and my ability to care for them would not be received well at any time.  But a lecture from OUR FAD workers Supervisor on a day when I am more than overwhelmed sent me over the edge….to the ugly cry/rage.  To inconsolable disbelief.  To calling G.  To G and I getting on the phone with the Supervisor so that he could clear things up because to say ‘I lost it’ was an understatement.

Fourteen days into the request, I got the call they had found a placement.  It was a Wednesday and they were moving him on Friday.  Great!  I had just left to take Landen shopping and we would have enough time to pack him up and say goodbyes.  About 10 minutes passed and the caseworker calls back.  They have to move him today by 5pm, should she send a transporter or do I want to bring him to her office?  So much for shopping.  Landen and I headed home to pack.

We had him packed up within a couple of hours and then G and the girls helped us load up and I took him to South Dallas to the caseworkers office.  It was hard but I knew it was for the best.  We got to the office and she was’t ready and needed to finish paperwork.  So I sat and played with him and tried to feed him.  They were going to move him to a family in Henderson, TX.  I didn’t know where that was and I really didn’t question anything about the placement because I expected that CPS would be placing him according to what was best for HIM:  A moderate level home that had a lot of medical experience and had the flexibility to take him to all of his specialist appointments.

There are certain looks that kids can give you that can break your heart.  When their eyes show fear and are looking for you to comfort them is one of the worst.  When I got LL loaded in the caseworkers car to head to his new home, he gave me that look.  The look that he knew he was being separated from the momma he had known for 6 months and he was scared.  It can actually rip a part of your heart I think.
I wailed.

I was so relieved when the caseworker texted later that evening to say that the foster parents were both nurses.  Yea God!

The evening was spent snuggling my girls and gregg, eating pizza and watching a movie.  The next day I was doing pretty good.  I was cleaning out baby stuff to lessen the clutter.  I really felt (still feel) like God had his hand in moving him to an unofficial medical home.  And I was moving on with the girls.  Reece had a friend over and Landen’s friend was headed over.  I was going to take all the girls to ice skate at the Galleria.  Everyone was excited as we headed to Dallas.

And then, LL’s caseworker called. The caseworker had taken LL from his parental visit and was headed to ER.  The new foster family had been up all night with him and were very concerned about his major respiratory distress, but they were headed to a family event.  So the caseworker decided to take him to the ER and ‘not leave until she had answers’.  Of course, she didn’t know anything about his medical history so she called me.

One of the hardest things as a foster parent is letting go.  No matter how long the child has been in your care, it is hard to let go.  It’s even harder when the child is sick and you have been in the trenches with them for 6 months.  So when the caseworker called, I immediately wanted to head to the ER and comfort LL.  He had been with strangers for the past 24 hours and he was still physically feeling lousy.  But I was on track with my kids to go Ice Skating.  I was torn.  While the caseworker had said I could come to the ER, I had talked with Gregg and Julie and they discouraged me from going.  Julie said that the hospital wouldn’t let me in see him because I had no legal rights and Gregg said I needed to let go.  And I’m pretty sure a bit of my heart ripped deeper.  So a 6 month old baby in a strange place with strangers, feeling horrible and wondering where did my momma go?

It still hurts to think about it.

I stayed with the plan to ‘play’ with my girls.  Ice Skating didn’t work out but we managed to salvage the afternoon by making a mess in the kitchen.

The next morning I received a call from the new foster family.  They had not intended for the caseworker to take LL to the ER or for the hospital to keep him.  They thought they were coming to Dallas for a visit and family event.  So they didn’t have my number but called as soon as they could.  Bonnie is a pediatric nurse and her husband is an ER nurse.  They have 5 children and are adoption motivated.  THANK YOU GOD!  When they accepted placement of LL they were told he was healthy with one specialist and up for adoption.  Once he came into their home, they learned the truth.  They are 2.5 hours away from Children’s Medical and realized that this kid has lots of medical needs.  They immediately submitted for him to be relocated.

Why on earth would CPS place a medically needy child so far from the best medical care in North Texas?

So LL was admitted to the hospital on December 22 and didn’t get out until the evening of the 24th.  Doctors said he had the Rhino Virus again.  And CPS changed their mind and wouldn’t let me visit.  And all I could think about for those 48 hours was…a 6 month old baby that is in the hospital AGAIN, but this time with out his ‘momma’… Instead he is being ‘monitored’ by a stranger.  Even without his new foster parents because they are 2.5 hours away.  And I felt like my heart might actually burst.

Bonnie, the new foster mom, was able to pick him up the evening of the 24th and take him home with her.  He remained with her until January 6 when he was moved to another foster home.  During his brief stay with Bonnie, she was able to get him to breath better.  She regulated his breathing treatments and got him into a pediatrician that was actually able to remove and dry up some of his mucus.  She figured out that depending on how he was positioned determined his oxygen quality level and she was able to start him on a new asthma medicine.  She also knows the new foster parents and they have another child that has respiratory issues so they feel very comfortable caring for him.

I don’t doubt that God has been in LL’s life from the beginning.  I don’t doubt that he continues to comfort him and care for him and guide his path.  And I believe He is with our family as well in this fostering journey.  I do wish it wasn’t such a painful process.

We all loved LL Cool Baby and still do.  He is a special little boy.  He is sweet, cute, loving and strong willed.  I will pray for him always.  He has a piece of my heart forever but I am still healing from his departure.

Big Dreams

img_0396A love of food gets passed along.  Gregg has that love of food.  It’s grown over the years from a necessity to a relaxing obsession.  Landen has acquired his taste, observance, technique and desire.

Cooking shows fill the airwaves in our home.  WE watch, critique, admire and dream.  A couple of months ago Landen found THE show that was going to highlight her dad’s impeccable cooking skills.  And so we filled out an application. What happened next has been a ride that none of us expected, especially Gregg.  Had we known the amount of time it would required for Gregg to participate in this show, we may have thought twice. Instead we risked and signed him up for the competition.  Hundreds and maybe thousands apply for this competition so why shouldn’t we sign up the best chef we know?

Phone calls, emails, Skype calls and one sliced off finger tip and HE made it on the show!  I don’t know how Gregg has felt throughout this process, but I do know that there are at least 3 girls in TX that are proud of him.  Win or lose, we are proud.  And we are hopeful and we are excited and we are in awe.  And we brag and we share and we anticipate and plan for the big trip and the big show.  And we are all in NYC.

And after a 10 hour day, it is over.img_0458

The mixture of emotions that was displayed between these girls and their father was beautiful.  Joy and pride, anticipation and excitement, disappointment and yet appreciation.  I witnessed a level playing field of humanity tonight.  No hierarchy.  Just pure human emotion surrounding the events of the last couple of months and it was beautiful.  Risking big without huge reward.  Being brave.  They know.  

A lot of life is reacting to what ‘happens’ to us or accepting the ‘consequences’ of our actions.  This is how we respond to life and this is what we teach our kids.  Today Gregg taught us all how to be brave and to risk.   How to boldly go after something that seems crazy and beyond the expected life path and he did it with humility, hard work, and an open heart.  Most of all he taught our kids how go after your dreams and I am so thankful.

Field Day

Field day in 2016 looks a lot different that Field day in 1979!

2016 = Famous Cowboy at the pep rally, multiple water slides and blow up obstacle courses, snow cones, popcorn, water balloon toss, football, soccer, lacrosse, softball, playgrounds, three legged race and the ultimate tug of war.

1979 = Running and tug of war.

So different, yet just as exciting.  And the highlight for our girls…US.  Gregg and I were there helping out.  To see us every so often throughout the day made their smile a little brighter and their hug a little tighter.

Grieving

‘It feels like he died.’ -Reece

Love Always

Everyone feels like that but Reece said it.

She is right.  But she is wrong.

 It’s the strange life of a foster family.  When they leave it hurts like they have died.  But after a few days the fog clears and the constant prayers ease the pain and God shows His goodness.

And we remember that he was not meant to be with us forever.  We hope and we pray we will get to continue a relationship with him, but that is not up to us.  And so we pray and believe that God’s got him…because He does.

 

Jayden

We were blessed on August 13, 2015 with the arrival of Jayden.  Our newest foster son was 5 days old and adorable.  With a full head of black hair and dark eyes, he grabbed all of our hearts immediately.
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And over the next 9 months, he wrapped us all around his finger with his constant smile, buddha belly and chill personality.
In the beginning, I was determined to get him placed with his forever family ASAP.  I had decided he needed to be moving on by the time he was 3 months.  When that came and went, I decided by Thanksgiving he would have his forever family.  I called, texted and emailed the caseworker, her supervisor and the attorney.  And know-one budged. It seemed they were determined to take a year to place him.
January came and we were informed of a court date.  All parties said they were working towards parental rights being terminated.  I was excited and hopeful.  The court date was a debacle.  (I think I wrote about it in another blog post) and a new court date was set for May 13.  Five more months of a babies life on hold.  5 more months that another family misses out on.  But God lead us to a potential forever family for him and I was excited…And then a great aunt and uncle appear.  A home study begins.  Then a potential dad.  Home study stops.  DNA testing wait begins.  Two month later, it is determined that DNA is NOT a match.  Home study re-starts.  All the while, Jayden is growing, developing and bonding with us.  A constant source of joy.
I don’t like how his last week went down with the fast approval to transfer him to a distant relative without transitioning him and an over-zealous judge that made a rash removal.  But I know this is part of the fostering process.  (well not the judge part)   We are all still a bit shell shocked. I knew it would be hard when he left, but the way in which he was taken was devastating.

Everyone in this case, the judge, attorneys and to a certain extent the case worker, had no interest in what was best for Jayden.  While family is important, there wasn’t any discussion or concern about the fact that he was number 5 in a family which one mother and three fathers.  Or that 3 of his other siblings are back in care after being placed with paternal family.  There is no interest in doing what’s actually best for Jayden but only that they had a year and that they were dead set on finding someone/anyone that would state they were related and willing to take him.

This happy, well adjusted, loving, giggling, chunky baby was not represented properly or advocated for properly by the people in power.  The dysfunctional family that he came from, however, was overly represented to the detriment of this beautiful baby boy.
And so in a selfish act to wield her power, Judge Martin did the unthinkable and removed Jayden from us at the court house.  She treated us like criminals for taking care of and loving our ‘little man’.   I will eventually let the good memories overshadow this moment
of insanity from the judge but for now I am still processing.  I am still aching because he isn’t here.  And I am still angry and baffled by the disrespect we were shown in the court room.
I miss him.  I miss feeding him and snuggling him and kissing him.  I miss his laugh and his dancing to the music.  And I pray for him.  I pray for the relatives.  That they are good people that will love him well.  That they will be patient with him while he adjusts to their home.  I pray for Jayden that he will bond with them quickly and be comforted when he is scared or sad or confused.
I knew this one was going to be hard to let go…

When 7 days of the stomach bug doesn’t make your worst week list…

It’s been 7 long days and night.  Started with 2 then a 12 hour break then me, baby and lastly Gregg.  7 days.  5 people with the stomach bug.  Countless loads of laundry and dishes.  2 cans of lysol and dozens of plastic lined trash cans.   But we survived.  And when we raised our heads up to comment about how bad the last week was, we grinned.  Because while it was bad, it wasn’t one of our worst weeks ever.  It actually didn’t even make the top 10.

Perspective is re-aligned and we recover.

And miraculously we are thankful because it didn’t make the top 10.

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It Matters

IMG_2436What we do matters.  Who your friends are matters.  Every thing we do with and around our kids matters.  How we talk about others matters.  How we love others matters.

I had an AHA moment this weekend.  I had never drawn the parallels in my life to that of my parents.  But this weekend it hit me like a ton of bricks as I attended the funeral of my mom’s best friend.  Too young to die and the most painful type of cancer you can image in the developed world.  62 yo.  They had been friends for almost 40 years.  I am 44.  They only lived in the same town for 11 years.  It didn’t matter. One of those friendships that lasts the test of time and the drama of life.

Joyce was a wild child from a rough and tough family.  The oldest of 4 and only girl, her childhood was full of drugs and violence and void of God.  She grew up in Wichita which doesn’t sound very glamorous or ‘hard core’… but whenever there are drugs involved and it’s YOUR childhood, its ‘hard core’.  She barely stood to 4’11” fully grown but her personality stood 10 feet tall.  And to think this tough girl ended up moving to Pittsburg, KS (smaller than Wichita…much smaller) and married a PREACHER!  She did.  And she was the ‘rebel’ paster’s wife of Pittsburg.  She was hip, opinionated and knew how to unconditionally love.  And while they seemed like opposites on the outside…their hearts connected and so began a 40 year friendship.

What also began was an 11 year run at Open Door Fellowship Church, a non-denomination, charismatic family.  The 11 years were not all great.  But the golden years in the beginning are still a part of my memory and I dare say some of the best moments of my parents lives.  Young couples with their kids or not, attending church Sunday morning and night and Wednesday Nights.  Parents playing softball together.  Pot lucks.  Pepsi, Mississippi Pie, McDonalds, Burger King, late night talking (and falling asleep to them talking)…you could actually feel the love.  Of course, it couldn’t last forever, and it didn’t.  Joyce and Kent moved to Kent’s home town to pastor a church there and that is where they lived for 30 years.  But they visited.  And when they did and if I could ever get close to that smell, sound or feel of excitement, fun, love, laughter and acceptance… I would.  As couples, they made time for each other … the guys enjoying each other as much as the girls.  There was/is a respect and love between these couples that is rare but visible.  Dad and Kent could talk about ANYTHING and always make each other laugh.  Laughter was BIG!

IMG_0952The others in the golden era of ODF were influential and important as well.  At least two families fostered and four families had adopted children.  Many hippies (it was the 70’s) and creative people.  Entrepreneurs (my dad being the king).  All of strong faith and while I didn’t appreciate it at the time and honestly focused on everyone’s faults rather than their faith…it mattered.  Education was important to all around us but loving and taking care of others was equally as important.  If someone needed something and you had it…share it.

Dad and Mom have been the epitome of sharing their knowledge, time and money.  Always looking for others to educate, feed, cloth or pray for…but without reward.  I have no idea how many kids my parents have put through college or families they have fed or clothed.  But I know it’s a lot.  I know that jobs were offered when they probably weren’t deserved.  I know doctor visits were attended with friends when it wasn’t required.  I know dinners were cooked or paid for in restaurants when it wasn’t requested.  And I know acknowledgement was not needed or wanted.  They were merely doing what God had told them to do…love.

There are many hard things about life that I didn’t know growing up.  One I witnessed yesterday.  My mom giving a Eulogy at her best friends funeral.  I can’t imagine.  And she ROCKED it!  She honored her memory and their relationship and God well.  I have never known my mom to be a public speaker.  She can play piano and sing in front of people but to get up and speak…well it has to be for someone special.  And Joyce was special.  I was so proud of her words and her composure.  And after, I learned that she has and does speak publicly in two scenarios:  for the Ronald McDonald House and Tourette Syndrome.  Of course!  When defending and battling for the rights of children and their families.  HA!  IT MATTERS!

This all sounds ideal and perfect right?  NOT!  I have not seen my childhood this way until NOW.  I have been quite critical (ok a lot critical) of my parents and how we were raised.  The craziness of the Charismatic church then jumping to Nazerene then Catholic HS.  The workaholic dad, the emotional mom, the strict parenting, the judgmental nature of it all.  Of course, I was being the most judgmental of all.  They weren’t perfect and still aren’t.  Did dad work a lot?  Yes.  Did he build a fabulous education company for kids K-12 , teachers and families? Yes.  Did he show us a great work ethic, determination and creativity?  Yes.  Did he do the best he could?  Yes.  Is my mom emotional? Yes.  Is she more sensitive and aware of others around her than the normal person?  Yes.  Did she use this for God’s greater good?  Yes.  Does she get paralyzed by over analysis?  Yes.  Is she a great detail person?  Yes.  Did she do the best she could?  Yes.  Where they strict when we were growing up?  Yes.  Did they need to be?  Probably a Yes for me.  😉  Were/Are they opinionated?  Yes and Thank God!  They taught us to question respectfully, not judge.  I so wish I would have understood this earlier.  But I get to see it now and how I view my childhood and how I love and treat my parents matters.  It matters to my kids, my parents, me and to God.

I was blessed.  I am still blessed for this family and that I get to have a veil lifted.  I get to appreciate while they are still alive.  I get to be shown what matters.  I get to be reminded that what we do RIGHT NOW with our ‘second round’ WILL matter when they are grown and on their own. I get to say THANK YOU to a mom and dad that believe in the Trinity and the redemptive love of Christ and lived it out.

 

DisBelief

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They grow up so fast.  Landen turns 10 at the end of the month and Reece is headed towards 7.  Beautiful inside and out.  I love their unique personalities, their sarcasm, their humor and their tender hearts.  Thank you, God, for giving me the privilege of being their mom.