A Gift for Mom! 🤍

Dear Foster Mom,

Do you know what day of the week it is?

Can you count how many appointments are on your calendar?

Did you sleep last night?

Did your kids sleep last night?

People say they admire you, but I know you feel awful when you sometimes don’t want to get out of bed in the morning.

It’s okay.

Your worth is not connected to your calling as a foster mama. Your worth is far greater than anything you do. The work you do every day; change diapers, apply sticky diaper cream, potty train toddler pee-pees and poos, practice letters and numbers, talk to the school counselor on the phone after a behavioral issue, grocery shop with a baby or two or four kiddos, manage the expectations and paperwork of caseworkers and doctor’s offices, homework before and after dinner, mealtime behaviors and attitudes, the constant clean-up, the walk outside to put the trash in the garbage bin that feels like a mini-vacation from the house, and the collapse into bed after the last tears have been cried.

You are absolutely incredible.

Not because you enjoyed every second or because you never made a mistake, but because you did it. You did today. And you did the day before, and you will do tomorrow.

Why? Why do you keep going? Why do you take another placement?

Because you have been called to this life and you also know it helps you practice depending on God for strength in every hour of each eternally elongated day. You know that is worthwhile, you know that it is an adventurous, full and bursting life.

I see you, foster mama, but not because you are overly visible. Sometimes you are so hidden you feel like no one is catching your tears. Everyone might claim to need a village but you lie in bed wondering where your village is and why didn’t they come to your front door today when you desperately needed an extra set of hands?

Let me remind you, sweet mama, that you are normal, and even if things feel overwhelming, you are going to be okay. Your heart is pure gold. I know this because you cringed when you read that. You don’t believe your heart is pure gold. You know which kid saw a flash of your anger today. You remember pouncing on your husband today when you were frustrated with something else and he just happened to step in your way at an unfortunate time. And that caseworker who delivered bad news to you on the phone halfway through dinner? Heaven help us all.

Let’s acknowledge that the Lord is with these children as they heal from unimaginable trauma. He holds the bucket of tears that is their pain, and he hurts deeply with them. They were made in His image and He is the sovereign God of all things past, present and future. Even though it is hard to fathom how evil can go on without stopping, we do trust that in the end, all evil will be smothered. The abusers will be brought to justice in one way or another.

You are part of each child’s beautiful, hope-filled future. What you do every day matters to their brains, their bodies, their vulnerable spirits. Your choices and deliberate care for them physically and emotionally heals them from the inside out.

If you wonder if you should even be considered a “foster parent,” let me save you the trouble.

Who do the kids in your house rely on for a hot meal, comfy bed, and clean bath or shower today?

We know you rely on God for your every need, but those precious souls under your roof where you pay the bills rely on you and your family for their basic needs. Their bodies are aching and begging to feel safe. Once they feel safe, they can get stronger, and once they get stronger, then they will feel the freedom to dream.

Michael Ketterer, biological and foster-to-adoptive dad, worship leader, and pediatric nurse, said when talking about his five adopted sons, “When you’re surviving you can’t dream.”

Thank you mama, for being willing. I know you are tired, and question almost everything, but your perseverance and strong spirit endure through each passing day.

Press on. Your family gains hope as you serve them today.

Originally published on the author’s website

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Kim Patton

Kim Patton is an adoptive and foster mama living in South Carolina with her husband Kevin and two daughters; Eden and Shiloh. She writes for Waiting in Hope Infertility ministry and Shaunti Feldhahn, and has been the host of the Book Therapy podcast since 2022. Her second book, "Nothing Wasted: Struggling Well through Difficult Seasons" encourages readers to recognize personal growth amidst hard times. In her free time, she is usually reading a memoir in the sunshine, taking her girls to the playground or playing tennis with her husband at the YMCA.

A Foster Family Is a Bridge Made of Love

In: Motherhood
Bridge across icy stream surrounded by snow, colored photo

“I don’t think I could give them back.” Those are words I have heard many times. Through my years of fostering, I have come to understand that we are not “giving them back.” We are helping them cross the bridge.  There’s a lagoon at the heart of the university town where we have raised our children. As a college student, I carried my backpack and my garage sale coffee carafe along the edge of this lagoon on my way to my classes.  When our first babies were small, we saved our crusts of bread to feed the ducks on our...

Keep Reading

“Foster Child” Doesn’t Mean “Unwanted Child”

In: Adoption, Featured, Foster Care, Kids, Motherhood

Our first fostering experience was a baptism by fire into the world of child welfare. It was a NICU infant. It was an ICWA (Indian Child Welfare Act) case. The family had a lengthy history with the court system. There was a case plan and paperwork and visitation and court dates and that was all just in the first few weeks of our life adjusting to a preemie in the house. While we had had a hand in parenting lots of boys through our group home work and the adoption of our first child, we had never had an infant....

Keep Reading

Caring For a Foster Child Means Loving His Little Red Bear, Too

In: Motherhood
Little boy hugging red bear, color photo

At first glance, one might look at this bear and think it’s time to toss it out. It’s tattered. It’s damaged. It’s messy and falling apart at the seams. When I first saw it, I considered replacing it, if and when the time seemed right. After all, my kids have loved many toys, but once they get to a certain point, I quietly place them in the trash.  And this toy didn’t seem any different. It’s not a novel character or a family heirloom. It didn’t seem to have a special story behind it.  RELATED: Now That I’ve Met the...

Keep Reading