A Foster Mom Heard One Dinner Question And Found A Hidden Pattern-Quieen - Chainityai

A Foster Mom Heard One Dinner Question And Found A Hidden Pattern-Quieen

I’ve fostered children for eleven years, and there are some sounds you never really forget.

The thud of a backpack dropped too hard in a hallway.

The scrape of a chair when a child decides they need to sit with their back to the wall.

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The little breath a kid takes before asking a question they think might make an adult angry.

I thought I knew those sounds.

Then Lily came to our house on a rainy Tuesday afternoon.

She arrived at 4:18 p.m., standing on our front porch under the emergency caseworker’s umbrella, holding a gray backpack so tightly the zipper teeth pressed into her fingers.

The porch light was already on because the sky had gone dark early, and the little American flag by our front door was dripping rain onto the step.

My husband, David, opened the door, and I stood behind him with a dish towel in my hands.

The kitchen already smelled like garlic and tomato sauce because I had started dinner before the placement call even ended.

That is something you learn after enough years as a foster parent.

A warm house matters.

A full plate matters.

A clean towel, a soft voice, and a room where no one is shouting can feel like proof that the world has not completely forgotten a child.

The caseworker looked exhausted in the way emergency caseworkers often do.

Wet coat.

Phone buzzing.

File folder tucked under one arm.

Paper coffee cup gone cold in her hand.

She told us Lily was seven.

She told us Lily had been living with her aunt for two years after her mother died.

She told us the official reason for removal was “caregiver overwhelmed, unable to provide adequate care.”

I had heard that sentence before.

It usually meant there was more underneath it.

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