Marie

Our fostering journey has come to an end, now that we have 6 permanent children in our home, but I have been asked many times what influenced me to become a foster parent. There are actually several stories from my life that pushed me toward becoming a foster parent. I thought I’d share one of the many…

16 year old Marie showed up on our family’s doorstep a week before Christmas in 1994. She had on a faded blue backpack with a wooden color guard rifle sticking out of it. There were two young men with her. She told my parents she needed a place to stay. I was 8 years old.

My dad asked Marie if her mother knew she had come to our home and she said she did. It was evening, and so they said she could stay for the night. The two guys who had driven her left. She settled in on the family room couch that night. I remember being in my bed, too excited about the new guest to sleep. I had no clue how our lives would change over the next 2 years.

This Christmas sticks out to me for a few reasons. One being that it was the last Christmas with my parental grandmother, Grace. She was dying from breast cancer. Her last Christmas, she gifted my mother with a poinsettia afghan. I “borrowed” it from my mother 2 weeks later, wanting comfort at night. I have slept with it every night to this day, and it’s attended every hospital stay, been across the country, and to 2 other countries with me. This was also to be the last normal Christmas of my childhood, made special by family traditions that all vanished when my Grandma Grace died. But, normal it did not turn out to be.

We knew Marie. She had dated a boy from our church the previous year and had come to youth group on and off before moving an hour and a half away. She was a few months younger than my oldest sister Sarah, and so Sarah probably knew her best. She came from a troubled home, fraught with instability and substance abuse. She was a standout from her loud laugh and what I now assume was a smoker’s cough. Marie was often like a big kid. She acted younger and more impetuously than her peers. She was also somewhat of a chameleon, and had a strong desire to fit in with those around her.

At some point in that first week, my parents followed up with Marie’s mom to make sure she wasn’t a runaway. When my parents asked if Marie could stay, she seemed ambivalent and didn’t care, so Marie stayed. Having random people in our home didn’t surprise me. My parents always seemed to be opening our home to people.

Being a pastor’s family, my parents felt strongly about practicing what they preached. There was the pregnant and single woman sent to us from a crisis pregnancy center when I was a preschooler, the strange lady who picked almonds from the chicken salad off my plate with her bare hands and pulled my sister Beky’s hair, and there was family who burned their house down for insurance money, but needed a place to stay. There were also countless missionaries who slept in our home, exposing me to cultures from around the globe from a young age. My parents’ home is 1300 sqft on a small lot, but this never kept them from extending hospitality to people who needed a safe place to stay. My sisters and I recently asked my parents if they were concerned about our safety when strangers were staying in our home. My mom said she prayed faithfully each night for God to protect us, and He did.

Of course, Marie wasn’t a total stranger to my parents, but they didn’t know her well. I don’t even know how she knew where we lived. But when things turned for the worse with her family, she remembered my parents and that’s where she fled to.

A few days after she showed up at our home, I was moved out of my bedroom and into my middle sister Beky’s room. Marie took over my pink and flower bordered little girl’s room with her few belongings. People from church sent toiletries, and gifted clothing and treats. I recall my parents making a mad dash to buy her presents so she would feel included with us 3 girls as we opened gifts on Christmas morning. My parents lived below the poverty line on a very meager salary from our church, and in hindsight, I can’t help but wonder if they were wondering how to pull it all off— but they did.

Looking back at the home videos of that Christmas, you can hear Marie talking loudly in a silly falsetto voice, joking about the underwear she unwrapped. Something I didn’t find strange then, but did later— she was already referring to my parents as “Mom and Dad”. She was like a magnet to metal looking for stability, and she forced herself onto it with gusto.

At the beginning of the new year my parents started gathering paperwork to become Marie’s legal guardians. She had a host of dental issues and some medical needs, so my parents asked her mother if she would sign over parental rights so my folks too could tend to Marie’s needs. Her mother signed her over without a fight.

Marie had been in and out of various public schools with all of her family’s moving around. But we 3 girls were homeschooled, and so my mother set out to homeschool Marie, too. She was at a 5th grade level, and I remember my mother explaining over and over the definition of an adjective to her around our kitchen table. Between trying to get her caught up academically, carting her to countless dental appointments from her extensive dental needs, doctors visits, and whatever hushed about things were happening with her family, all while my grandmother was starting hospice and not long for this world, I got lost in the mix.

I remember learning to be self taught in my homeschool studies as much as I could, also leaning on my sister Beky for help. I went back and forth a couple of times sharing a room with Beky while Marie had my room and then at times Beky and Marie sharing a room when Beky and I were fighting too much. (Once was for reading Beky’s journal where she confessed her crush on a boy in our church, and me telling my friends and teasing her endlessly for it— yes I was the stereotypical annoying little sister!) My mother was stressed, handling the brunt of Marie’s needs. My father was tender hearted toward Marie and didn’t seem to share most of my mother’s frustrations and concerns, because he was at work much of the time that Marie was being carted off from appointment to appointment. My oldest sister Sarah was already off to cosmetology school and working most days, so Beky and I probably felt the pinch of the day to day change more noticeably, though I do remember all 3 of us murmuring at times feeling the stretch of our parents’ attention.

Looking back, I know that the extra mouth to feed, the extra needs, the behaviors, and the uncertainties mixed with their usual flood of responsibilities with the church and mourning the death of my maternal grandmother followed one year later by the death of my maternal Grandfather must have been horribly overwhelming. But despite all of that, they did their best. I know they weren’t perfect, but they tried. They threw Marie a big 17th birthday pool party at a friend’s house since she hadn’t had a Sweet 16. Her teeth did get fixed and replaced. She eventually was able to enroll in the local adult school. She got her GED. She got her license and bought her first car. She got a job. And after 2 years of high highs and low lows, my parents helped Marie find a room to rent 5 minutes away.

The day we moved her out was a big one. She had accumulated so many things since she had shown up with only a backpack of possessions to her name. She now had clothes, jewelry, books, furniture, so many toiletries, keepsakes, stuffed animals, linens, and more. This was the part where my parents hoped she would make it on her own, and live a life as responsibly out of our home as she had in our home.

Within a week or so, we got a call from the woman whose room Marie was renting saying she hadn’t seen Marie. Not long after we got a call from her job asking why she hadn’t been to work. Marie had met a guy who pulled her back into the things from her old life. She hadn’t lasted a month in the real world before she lost everything. She never came to get her things. I remember us taking everything downstairs from her rented room into the van. I remember us sorting through it, my parents trying to get ahold of her to come get her things. I remember taking them all to a donation drop-off when she wouldn’t return calls.

My parents struggled for years after. It had all been for nothing, they thought. The wild girl that they had tamed and tried to make in the image of their own daughters had failed. Years later, we reconnected with Marie brieflyw, even visited her, her husband, and her baby in their apartment. She would have other ups and downs in life, but the last I saw, she was clean and sober, living in the other half of the state near her parents, who also had found sobriety. Still, my mother had regrets about how Marie’s stay in our lives had affected our lives. She had voiced it so many times as I grew up and even into adulthood, remembering how she wasn’t able to be as attentive as she wanted to be toward our needs and education, wishing the time hadn’t been wasted.

In 2019, I got a call from our FFA social worker saying “I know you don’t take teens, but this one has a baby, and if you don’t take this one, she’ll be separated from her baby.” The first thing I told her was “I’m not inclined to say no, but let me talk to my husband.” And when I called Noah, I said “I know we said we wouldn’t take teens til our children were grown, but…” and he replied “I’m not inclined to say no”, repeating my exact words to the social worker. We called the social worker back in half an hour and said yes.

That teenager would change Noah and I forever. We had over a year of ups and downs, ins and outs, but we love her and her babies with our whole hearts. I could have said no. I could have looked at my young years with a strange teenager living in our home, who took my parents’ time and attention from me and said, “I just don’t want that for my own kids.” But the thing is, I didn’t have a childhood of wealth and ease, and it came with its share of heartaches during that season of instability in my own little life, and I see how it shaped and molded me, and knew my kids would be okay.

And so, since meeting my daughter at 17, and since loving her with a ferocious and protective love, and through loving her babies the last 4.5 years and seeing her spread her wings and make it in the world, I have salved my mother’s wounded conscience. I have thanked her for taking in Marie. I have assured her, that time was not wasted. For leading by example. For showing me the importance of living out your faith and ideals, not just talking about it. If my parents hadn’t taken Marie, I might not have said yes to a teenager when we got the call. And life without our oldest girl and our grandbabies from her is a life that Noah I couldn’t fathom.

(Marie’s name has been changed to protect her privacy.)

Note: we never refer to our foster children as our own because they have their own parents. However, by her request, we call our oldest our daughter, and she calls us her parents. It is an honor we do not take lightly.

Celeste

Our fostering journey has come to an end, now that we have 6 permanent children in our home, but I have been asked many times what convinced me to become a foster parent. There are actually several stories from my life that pushed me toward becoming a foster parent. I thought I’d share one of the many…

In 2005, I was 19, and found myself in a relationship with a guy about 10 years older than me. Bobby and I worked together at a hardware store. I was a manager and we worked in the same department one night and hit it off. I was very much into the Rockabilly scene at the time, and you could find me at car shows with my hair piled high, and wearing leopard pencil skirts. I listened to The Reverend Horton Heat and bought new issues of Rat Rod magazine every time it hit the rack. Bobby was very much my type. He also loved old cars and played guitar. His hair was a perfectly coiffed, high, black pompadour, built up with layers of Murray’s pomade. He wore 501s cuffed over his Chuck Taylor converse, and his deep brown skin glinted in the sunshine when he hung his arm out of the car window while smoking a Camel.

One night, I accidentally became his girlfriend. I say accidentally, because he, being much older than I, likely assumed it was a kiss and nothing more. But, having been raised in purity culture and also being quite naive, I thought that one kiss meant we had to be together. When he found out how much younger I was than he, I remember him becoming a little leery, but I was impetuous, and I have always been quite convincing, so he found himself in a relationship with me.

I was (and am) a Christian who had fiercely disagreed with people being in relationships when they came from different religions. However, young love makes you question all the things you’ve ever held to be true, and I decided instead to just hide my relationship from my family. Looking back, I realize that what transpired next was supposed to be Bobby’s way of nicely getting rid of me. He told me that we should come clean to my pastor father about our relationship. He assumed this would cause me to break it off. I didn’t want to tell my dad, but he pushed, and so we did tell my father, and I was given an ultimatum. Cease to date this much older guy, who did not share my faith, who was not a good fit for me, or go find somewhere else to live. I was given 3 days to make the decision. In hindsight, I am absolutely sure that during those 3 days, Bobby was thinking he was about to be rid of this very demanding, yet very young, naive girl. I know this because later I found out he had slept with my best friend for the first time during this deliberation period while I was at home, pining for him in my childhood bedroom.

When it was time to answer my father on leaving Bobby and abiding by the house rules or finding another place to live, I was frozen. I really didn’t think, when push came to shove, that my dad would make me answer. I had been on my way to work and tried to slip out without my dad knowing, but he stood in the door waiting for my answer. The first thing out of my mouth was, “I guess I’ll leave.”

I threw everything I could fit in my 1996 Chrysler Concorde and drove away from my childhood home, with no where to live.

Throughout the next several weeks I lived out of my car, crashing at my best friend’s house (yes, the same one he had spent the night with, unbeknownst to me at the time), crappy motels, and wherever I could lay my head. A couple of weeks after my 20th birthday, Bobby took pity on his young, homeless girlfriend, and I moved into his parents’ home with him.

Now at this point, I’m sure you are wondering a lot of things, like “what does this have to do with fostering?” Or “why was an almost 30 year old man still living with his parents?” Or “why am I still reading this?” I’ll answer the first question and let you ponder the second, but only you can answer the third.

One evening, while I was living with Bobby and his parents, there was a knock at the door, and it was Bobby’s older sister, her boyfriend, a giant dog, and a most adorable, round faced 4 year old girl. The little girl turned out to be Bobby’s niece, Celeste. To this day, I do not know the ins and outs of what the situation was, but soon, Bobby’s mom and I were cleaning out the spare bedroom and making it ready for Celeste. I remember that we were preparing the house for a social worker to approve the living situation. I remember scrubbing the bathroom, cleaning the carpet in the living room, and dusting little trinkets. I also remember hushed talks about Celeste’s mother and boyfriend needing to find another place to live in order for Celeste to stay with her grandmother.

And then Celeste was there living with us. All I had ever wanted in life was to be a wife and mother, and I suddenly had this chance to test it out. Bobby and I took Celeste to the park, and the beach. I picked her up from preschool, and cooked her breakfast. I read books to her before bed, and memorized the words to Fox in Socks from reading it so many times over. I cleaned up her vomit in the middle of the night, styled her hair, and gave her snuggles. There came a point when I was becoming disillusioned with Bobby, but I loved Celeste so much, that I couldn’t fathom a life apart from her.

But of course I was not a wife, nor a mother. I was just a rudderless 20 year old in love with a dream. I could pretend I was a mother, but I never would be her mother. Her grandmother was her legal caretaker, and she had a mother, even if we didn’t see much of her. I was playing house and there would be no happily ever after for me. Bobby cheated on me with my best friend while I was nannying in Scotland for a couple of my preschool students, and this time, I found out shortly after. I tried to stick around, and force him to love me, but we were cursed from the start. The dramatic story of my homecoming after leaving him is one for another day.

One of the hardest parts of breaking up for me was leaving Celeste. I knew leaving Bobby meant losing Celeste. I kept in contact for a while, even attending her 5th birthday, but sitting across from my ex and former best friend at Chuck E. Cheese was awkward for everyone. Bobby’s mom was incredibly sweet and arranged for me to see Celeste a few more times after that throughout the following year, but understandably, that didn’t last.

I think about Celeste often. I still have her Kindergarten school picture stowed in my jewelry box. She’s now a young adult woman, living where and with whom and doing what, I may never know. I think about how when I left Bobby, it broke my heart to leave her, and yet I was just one more unstable adult in her life to vanish. Just one more person to come and go with no explanation. There were people and situations that came before Celeste, and after her that also led me to become a foster parent, but learning that I could love a child as much as my own flesh and blood, who started out as a stranger to me was eye opening. Knowing that there were children in the world living in unstable situations and needed a safe place to land stuck with me.

Our first foster placements would come into our life 10 years after I left Celeste. One of whom was a 4 year old girl with the same smile, eye shape, and round face as Celeste. Her mom was also having a tough time and she and her little sister needed a safe place to land.

20 year old Rachel was lost and confused about why God would let her make so many stupid choices that led to some serious heartbreak. 30 year old Rachel saw that all things worked together for good, and that a foolish, young relationship may have just been a catalyst used to prepare her 10 years later to love and care for children from hard places— not for pretend with a boyfriend who was bad for her, but for real with a husband who shared her vision.

(Bobby and Celeste’s names have been changed to respect “Celeste’s” privacy.)