Fostering gives you a gift of seeing potential long before it has bloomed.
Helping parents understand what feelings and moods are normal and what might need a little extra attention.
Look in any dictionary and the word “mother” will be defined as a noun. However, we as foster parents define it as a verb. Because for us, being a mother is not just who we are, it’s what we do.
When you were a child, which definition of mother, noun or verb, was your cheerleader, your soft place to fall, your safety, your protector, or your love? I venture to say it was the one with the action attached to it. The verb.
For those of you who think you could never mother a child who is not yours, I ask you to think again.
We as foster parents don’t seek to replace those who share the same DNA of those that have been placed in our charge; we are simply running the race that could not be continued, for whatever reason, until their family can start again.
I am asking each of you reading this blog post to respond and post a comment. Let us know in what ways, big or small, you have “mothered” someone you did not give birth to. Guys, it’s okay to admit you mother people too.
Fostering gives you a gift of seeing potential long before it has bloomed.
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