The Seven Longest Yards

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The Seven Longest Yards Page 21

by Chris Norton


  One day I was on the phone with our caseworker, trying to find out how we could get permission to take the kids on a trip. “Oh, by the way, did you hear about the grandmother?” she mentioned casually.

  “Um, no,” I said, wondering where this was going. Who else would have mentioned anything about these kids’ grandma except their caseworker?

  “Well, it turns out her home study is now approved, so they’re going to move in with her as soon as the judge signs off on it.”

  I sat frozen, completely stunned. I thought we had way more time with these kids, and now they could be gone within days. Not only did I want them to stay, I felt instinctively protective of them. Who was this woman, and how was she getting the kids when her home study had been denied?

  As soon as I hung up, I broke down in tears, completely devastated. Chris was just as upset as I was when I told him. I knew this was what we had signed up for when we agreed to become foster parents, but the reality hit hard.

  Once we had worked through our emotions, we laid out a plan of what we should do next. The kids were going to go to the grandmother. We had no say in that. But we hoped to still have some part in these children’s lives. I set up a meeting with their grandmother so we could start a relationship with her. I had to meet her and help her see how much we loved these kids!

  When the time came to actually meet, I had so many concerns. I was very protective of these kids, and I wanted them to have the best, so I immediately prepared for the worst. To my surprise, the grandmother turned out to be the nicest lady in the world, who obviously cared for and loved these children. Her home study was denied by mistake. There was no reason she shouldn’t have custody. She was also extremely appreciative of the care we’d provided for her grandkids and told us she wanted us to be part of their lives.

  “Here’s my address,” she said, handing me a slip of paper. “You can come visit whenever you want.”

  When the day came for these two precious children to move out, our house felt so empty that I ached with loneliness. I couldn’t sleep. I would wake up in the middle of the night crying. I was sick to my stomach. It felt as though I were grieving the loss of my own flesh and blood. God, I know this is the plan you have for us, I prayed. But it’s so much harder than I imagined. I really need you right now, because I can’t do this on my own. I trust that you’ve got this in your hands.

  Chris held me on his lap as I sobbed. “Emily, these two little ones are going to a place where they are loved,” he whispered, stroking my hair. “There are kids out there right now who will come to our home who don’t have that love and are in much worse situations. They need our love more than those two do.”

  I knew he was right. God was opening our home at just the right time so we could take in more kids who needed us. Not knowing who that would be made me feel jumpy. We were foster parents with no kids, and I desperately wanted kids in my house. What’s next, God? I prayed. I should have known that his answer was already on the way.

  19

  Learning to Walk by Faith

  EMILY

  As it turned out, I really didn’t have to worry about being a foster family without foster children. The need for foster parents is so great that long waits between placements never happen. Ever. The day we said goodbye to Trevor and Ella, we were asked to take on a short-term placement for a two-year-old boy and his newborn baby brother going through drug withdrawals. At the same time, we also committed to taking in a three-year-old boy with behavior problems.

  The two-year-old came to us first—his brother was still in the NICU. I visited the baby in the hospital for snuggles and love as often as I could. The two-year-old had his own struggles. His caseworker warned us that he was extremely small for his age and most likely malnourished. I had a sandwich, cookies, and chocolate PediaSure shakes waiting for him the day he arrived. As soon as he came into our home, we could see the tiny boy’s ribs through his shirt. He barely said a word but looked around wide-eyed, quiet and withdrawn. He clapped and smiled when he saw the food but still could barely even pick at the cookie.

  The three-year-old came the next day. The first few days he was pretty good, but we had a feeling we were in the “honeymoon phase.” This is what they refer to when you first get a foster child. They are on their best behavior because they aren’t yet comfortable enough to reveal their true feelings and behaviors. After the honeymoon period, maybe three days, this boy blew around our house like a tornado. His caseworker wasn’t kidding about behavior problems. Multiple times a day he went into full-blown screaming, panic mode. He hit, scratched, and pulled hair every day. Once, he picked up a Pyrex glass bowl and launched it at the two-year-old’s feet. I was grateful when the two-year-old and his brother were taken to a different home, solely because I feared for what could happen when the three-year-old was in one of his destructive moods. He had to have our full and undivided attention, which meant we could not take on any more placements.

  Within a month the three-year-old’s behavior started to calm down. We saw small changes, along with far less physical aggression. Day by day he started to trust us. He stopped fighting as much. Let me also add that the little guy’s behavior did not shock us, nor did it scare us off. We knew that kids who need the most love ask for it in the most unloving ways. Every child who finds himself or herself in foster care has gone through trauma. They need love and stability in their lives even though they often don’t know how to respond to either. When the three-year-old lashed out at us, we knew it wasn’t about us. He’d been through a lot. No foster parent in their right mind ever expects a child to come into their home and behave like a perfect angel. I knew from experience how God loves me when I am at my worst and how his love can change a life. That’s why he called us to be foster parents, so that he can love hurting children through us.

  Once the three-year-old’s behavior improved, Chris and I felt God leading us to do more. We’d already been contacted about taking on more placements. Before saying yes or no, we always prayed over each call. We said no to a few that didn’t feel right while we were working through our little boy’s behavior. We wanted our next placement to feel as though it was part of God’s plan.

  We went through a few weeks where we received no placement calls. Rather than fret, we waited for God to bring the right children to us. Then a call came about a sibling group—a one-year-old boy, a three-year-old girl, and a four-year-old girl. Chris and I looked at one another and instantly knew we would take them. I was very surprised when Chris was willing to say yes to this placement. He was starting to love foster care as much as I did.

  The thought of caring for three more kids in addition to the three-year-old already living with us was very intimidating. Even though Chris and I felt ready and willing to help other kids, every placement brings a new set of challenges and unknowns. What will the kids be like? How will this affect our three-year-old? How will our lives change? Do we have what it takes? We kept reminding each other of a message we had recently heard at church: “God doesn’t call the qualified; he qualifies the called.” Both of us had peace that if God wanted us to do something, he would equip us with what we needed and would take care of the details.

  The only problem was, we didn’t have a vehicle big enough to carry all our new children. Both Chris’s van and my car only had three seats in the back. But that wasn’t a problem we couldn’t overcome. “We are going to get a bigger vehicle,” I told the caseworker. “We’ll take the two oldest kids, then get the younger brother as soon as we get the car.”

  We drove to a car dealership as soon as we could and bought a giant used SUV that fit eight people. We then went on a shopping spree and practically bought a new wardrobe for each of our new foster kids. Since Christmas was right around the corner, I also hurried to shop and wrap as many presents as I could so the kids would have a nice holiday.

  The kids hadn’t lived with us for a week when we found out an aunt had stepped forward to take them. We had everything ready
to care for four kids, and now they were leaving. Even the Christmas presents I’d bought were left behind.

  Somehow, I wasn’t discouraged. “This was not a waste,” I said to Chris. “I know God had us do this for a reason. I just have a feeling that we’re going to get another placement that will make all this work worth the effort.”

  CHRIS

  By the end of the year, my apprehension toward foster parenting had completely evaporated. I had given up on my idea of only taking in one child under two long ago. Caring for the three-year-old with behavior problems gave me the trial by fire I needed to get comfortable with being uncomfortable. Our lives became like foster parenting boot camp. Emily read child development books and offered me tips and ideas to help us cope with the boy’s destructive behavior. Saying yes to the three-child placement was a huge step for me. Had we received that call even a week or two earlier, I don’t think I could have said yes. God still had work to do in preparing my heart.

  When the three kids went to live with their aunt, Emily and I left our three-year-old in respite care and joined Emily’s family on vacation in Turks and Caicos. We had just arrived at the beach and were in the middle of transferring me out of the car when I noticed Emily checking her phone.

  “Chris, you need to take a look at this,” she said, her voice serious.

  I grabbed her phone and noticed she had a text message from our licensing agency. “Sorry to bother you on vacation,” she said. “We had four girls come into care, ages one, four, six, and eight. Can you help at all?”

  I gulped. “Four is a lot.”

  As much as I had grown comfortable with living outside my comfort zone, the idea of having five kids in our house scared me. Plus, caring for school-age children was not what I had in mind. Besides taking care of Whittley, I had zero experience with kids older than three and before that had zero experience with kids under three.

  “I don’t know, Chris,” Emily sighed. “It sounds like these kids really need help.” Our caseworker gave us more details about their case. The children’s mother had passed away, and now their grandpa who had taken them in was dying. As Emily read these details to me, tears welled up in her eyes. I could tell she was doing her best not to cry, but it wasn’t working.

  “I know they need help,” I said, trying not to seem heartless, but I had some real concerns. “I just don’t know anything about how to raise school-age kids. I don’t know how parenting them from a wheelchair would even work. We’d have to figure all that out while we’re also trying to get the hang of juggling five kids.”

  “Okay,” Emily replied. Emily received a message saying they think they found placement for the oldest child. The look in her eyes told me her mind was racing. “Well, what if we take the three younger kids? We were going to have four kids anyway before the other kids went to live with their aunt.”

  “I can live with that,” I said.

  Emily whipped out her phone to text our caseworker. “Wait a second,” she said a few moments later. “I recognize these names.”

  “What?”

  “The caseworker just told me the three youngest kids’ names, and the name of the six-year-old sounds so familiar.” Emily frowned, deep in thought. “There was a girl with that name when I worked at the group home.” Emily had since quit the group home to devote herself to being a full-time foster mother. “I doubt it could be them, but I’m just going to ask her for the eight-year-old’s name.”

  “There’s no way it could possibly be them,” I said. “That would be nuts.”

  Moments later, Emily burst into tears. “Oh my gosh, Chris, it’s them.”

  I stared at her in disbelief. “But . . . how could this happen?”

  “It’s Cali and Sara,” she sobbed. “You know when I quit that I was sadder about leaving them than anyone else.”

  I held her silently as she cried on my chest right there on the beach. It was hard not to believe that somehow God had arranged all this, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that caring for five kids was more than we could handle.

  “We can’t let them separate these girls,” Emily said, looking up at me. “We’ve got to do something. We’ve got to take these girls.”

  As much as it killed me, I had to put my foot down, or as I like to say, put my tire down. “Absolutely not, Emily,” I said. This was how our relationship worked. Emily followed her heart; I followed my logic. “We cannot take in four kids. Especially not four kids who have been through so much. We would be crazy to do that.”

  I thought Emily would nod in agreement and acknowledge that I was right. But instead, she stood back and stared at me in disbelief. “How can you not want to help them when you know they need us?”

  I had every reason to say no. “It’s not just the extra four kids. I love fostering, but taking care of all of them with my physical limitations … Emily, you would have to take care of all of us, cook seven meals, get seven people up in the morning, grocery shop for seven, drive everyone everywhere they need to go and, oh, on top of that, take care of our dog just for starters. I also feel guilty because when you need a break or get overwhelmed, I can’t take over for you, to say nothing of the stress it will put on our relationship and how little time we could spend together.

  “Our families live in Iowa, and we are in Florida,” I continued. “Think about how it might impact me and my speaking career. That’s what I love and what gives me purpose. We are months away from our wedding. We still have a lot of planning to do. I just don’t see how this can work.” After I finished, I thought to myself, How could anyone disagree with my logic?

  Emily looked at me, completely disgusted. “I can’t even talk to you right now,” she sobbed before she turned and ran down the beach.

  EMILY

  As soon as I heard those girls’ names, I felt in my bones that we were supposed to take them. It all made sense. God had clearly placed me at the group home at exactly the right time so I could meet them and bond with them. And it wasn’t a coincidence that months earlier, I had this feeling that God wanted us to take on more kids. Literally the night before, Chris and I had been outside, looking at stars, when I told him I had this strong feeling God was about to use us in a huge way. I thought we might get a call about twins, a drug addicted baby, or a sibling group of four kids. At that moment, Chris obviously thought I was crazy. But I thought back to the night before and just knew this was God’s plan. Why else would we have bought the eight-passenger SUV or all those Christmas presents with no one to receive them? All our preparation was to get us ready for these girls. But Chris didn’t see it.

  I cried hysterically as I ran down the beach, eventually collapsing to my knees. I was devastated to hear what these girls had gone through since I last saw them. My heart was shattered, thinking about all the pain and loss they had endured in their short lives. God, I know in my heart you want us to take these kids, I prayed. Please give Chris strength to know that we can do this and give him peace that this is all part of your plan.

  I saw my older brother Michael running down to the beach toward me. “Emily, what’s wrong? Let’s talk.”

  I told him about the text I’d received. “Chris doesn’t want to take in the four kids. He thinks it’s too much.”

  “You’ve got to do this the right way, Em,” Michael said. “Don’t fight him. You need to go down there and explain to him more in depth about how much you care about these girls and how connected you are.”

  I knew Michael was right. My mind-set switched from devastation to action. I was going to do everything in my power to help these kids heal and know God. And that began with talking to Chris and trying to change his mind.

  CHRIS

  I felt I’d made a convincing case until Emily took off running down the beach, crying. Then I thought about one of the key verses at our church, Isaiah 54:2 (NIV): “Enlarge the place of your tent, stretch your tent curtains wide, do not hold back; lengthen your cords, strengthen your stakes.” The verse sounded so inspirat
ional before. Now it sounded convicting. It was as if God was asking me to stretch out my tent and trust him to take care of the rest. I realized I wasn’t saying no to Emily. I was saying no to God.

  I thought back through my winning logic. I said I was worried about Emily, but I had already witnessed the incredible transformations in kids’ lives she’d already made. I had no doubt God made her for this. Then why did I say no? Plus, Emily had been so right about Whittley, and every other child we had brought into our care. I needed to step out in faith once more.

  Emily returned a few minutes later, much calmer now. She laid out her case for me. Rather than shoot her down, I took a deep breath and said, “If you think we can do this, then I think we can too. Let’s do it.”

  EMILY

  We returned home from Turks and Caicos just three days before the girls were set to move in. Chris’s parents were in town celebrating Christmas with us, and meanwhile, we had to round up the supplies we’d need for our exploding family while also caring for the three-year-old already in our home.

  One particularly pressing need was bunk beds. We didn’t have enough places for everyone to sleep, and there wasn’t enough time to order beds online, where they were much cheaper than the local furniture stores. I posted in a Facebook group for local foster families, asking if anyone had a bunk bed I could use, not really expecting a response. Within an hour a woman texted me saying she had brand new bunk beds sitting in her garage that we could have for free. I felt chills down my spine. This was confirmation from God once again that we were following his will.

  The girls arrived on December 26—Cali, Sara, Sam, Haley. The only clothes they had were what they were wearing. All four each only brought one Christmas present. They left everything else behind. I found out later that their aunt purposely didn’t send anything for fear that whoever they were placed with would steal their belongings. Luckily, we already had piles of presents waiting for them. We expected them to be emotional messes after leaving their family, their grandpa passing away, and all they had endured. We braced ourselves for the worst, but surprisingly, they were excited to be here. When the two oldest, Cali and Sara, got here, they screamed, “Miss Emily! Miss Emily!” and ran to give me a hug. Cali, the oldest, was used to being the mom. When the caseworker left, the youngest, Haley, screamed and cried, so Cali quickly picked her up. Haley was feisty—she hit, scratched, and would spit at you if she got mad. Sara had a loud and big personality. Sam was sweet, quiet, and much more reserved than her sisters.

 

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