Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Safe Families- Application and Homestudy


As promised, I am going to write a bit about the process of applying to become a Safe Family at SFFC. If you missed it, here is the link to the first post I wrote about our decision to become a host family.

Summary: it is very easy.  In fact, it almost feels too easy.  We are so used to living in culture of litigation and mistrust, that a process that relies on trust and common sense feels strange.  Nice, but strange.

The application process for Safe Families starts with an online application that requests information about your family.  There are questions about your home, number and size of bedrooms, safety of the home (do you have firearms, unprotected pools or ponds, etc), and information about your family.  There are a few "essay" questions that pertain to your family background, and they are especially interested in how you were disciplined growing up, and how you discipline your children, if you have any.  Because the backgrounds of the children in the program are so varied, they feel very strongly that corporal punishment could be very damaging for these kids (duh).

Safe Families is a church-affiliated program, so they ask that you get a recommendation from your pastor, as well as recommendations from two friends who can speak a bit about you.

The next step is to watch the training videos- which are each between 2 and 20 minutes long, and there are about 12 of them.  They cover the who, what, when, where and why of SFFC- including talks on biblical hospitality, working with the SFFC families, home safety, child development, what to expect when a child enters your home, and the logistics of the program.  We really liked the segments by David Anderson, the founder of the program...we felt that he said everything in a way that was smart and respectful to us and to the parents in the program.  He discussed many of the reasons that someone might end up in the program, and some of the issues that might arise.  He let common sense dictate his advice and he didn't patronize.  There were also a few segments from a pastor/psychologist who spoke about some of the faith issues involved in choosing to host a child and working with families in crisis.  We didn't learn much that we didn't already know, but it was a good refresher and did introduce us to some of the specifics of the program.  Not painful at all!

The final step was the homestudy visit.  I promised there was a bit of a story behind this one, so I will set the scene.  On Wednesday night we had a closing for our home refinance.  Murphy's Law held out and hours after writing a check for that, our water heater decided to give up the ghost.  We had to turn the water off to the house in order to stop the flood.  We spent much of the night up dealing with a screaming baby who could not be consoled.  Thankfully Matt had already planned to work from home on Thursday for our homestudy, so he and I tag-teamed in the shower-less morning...he went to obtain a permit for a new water heater and arrange that, and I took the kiddos to the walk-in-sick clinic.  Little Beatrice ended up needing a nebulizer breathing treatment and meds for an ear infection.  I did the preschool-pharmacy-preschool-McDonald's run while Matt did the Village Hall-ATM-Village Hall-Home Depot dance.  Good times.  Fast forward to an hour before J was to arrive to do our homestudy...the door to our utility closet has been removed.  There is a water heater sitting in our hallway.  The plumber is welding pipes...which has filled the house with smoke.  The smoke alarm is screaming...as is Beatrice, who is having another breathing treatment.  The Village inspector arrives to check out our new water heater and tracks mud everywhere.  The McDonald's bags are still on the table, above the sticky floor from where Matias tried to pour himself a glass of apple cider from a heavy gallon jug and dropped it.  Nothing says "quality home for children" like our house in this moment!

Mercifully, J was running a few minutes late and we were able to pull things together by the time she arrived.

The actual homestudy meeting consisted mostly of chatting.  She explained the program, discussed some issues that pertain to our specific county, asked us questions about ourselves, our kids and why we wanted to be a host family.  She took a quick look around the house (there was no deep inspection, measuring or formal assessment...which is good since my house was sporting the "lived in" look).  She answered questions we had.  Our biggest concern was whether or not we could fit another child in our house.  We were not sure what the space and bedroom requirement were for the program.  She assured us that our house would be fine.  If we were being licensed through the state, there would be very specific requirement for where a child could sleep, who could share rooms, etc.  Safe Families, as a voluntary program, is more relaxed about this...again, letting common sense guide policy (can you tell we appreciate this mindset?!).  Where we put a host child will depend on the age and gender.  Right now our girls share a room and our son has his own room.  We are looking to swap their rooms around soon so that the sharers get the more spacious room (again, stay tuned for more on the "making room effort".  We figure we can pull out the Pack n Play or put up bunkbeds or our extra toddler bed as needed.  I suppose that being packed like sardines into a safe and loving home is still a better situation than most of the children are coming from.  But if anyone wants to build an extra room onto our house, give us a call!!

We ended our session by being fingerprinted (which she kindly did right there, rather than us having to go have it done at the police station).  Now we wait 6-8 weeks for the fingerprints and background checks to be processes. Then we should have the green light to host our first child.  When SFFC gets a child, they post it on the message board, including details about the child's age, gender, reason for placement, estimated length of stay and any special needs or issues.  When we see a child that we feel we could host, we let them know.  We get to choose our placements, and are never forced to take a child that we do not wish to host.  It is a bit heartbreaking reading the posts (we are on the mailing list, but still awaiting our final okay to host).  I predict some hard conversations about which children we can realistically host, and some difficulty in having to say no.  But we will cross that bridge when we come to it.

As of now...a bit more waiting and a bit of space-making!
We just need a bit of this...

And a bit of this.


Tuesday, January 22, 2013

T-Ball in the Snow



When you wake up on a 10 degree day, what do you do?  You decide to play T-ball of course!  Nevermind that you didn't play all that much T-ball during the summer...

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Our New Adventure: Safe Families For Children

Things at the Handley home have leveled off lately.  We no longer have a *baby* in the house...she is toddling her way into being a walking, talking, sleeping through the nighter.  We are getting the hang of this homeschooling gig.  We are well settled in our house.  Life is pretty sweet right now (knock on wood!).  So it is time to shake things up a bit, don't you think?

Our new adventure: becoming a host family for Safe Families for Children.  In a nutshell, it is much like being a foster family, but rather than being licensed through the state to care for children that have been removed from their parents, we voluntarily take children that parents voluntarily place with us during a time of crisis.  Kids come into the program for any numer of reasons; homelessness, loss of job, addiction, domestic violence, hospitalization of parent, referral by DCFS...the list is very long.  The kids range in age from newborn to parenting teen, though we will be taking children under age 6.  The length of their stay can range from 2 days to a year or more, with the average being a couple of months.  Safe Families works to find a safe home for every child they are asked to take, whatever the reason.

What we think is particularly neat about this program is that Safe Families, and we as a host family, get to work with the parents as they work through their situation.  This means that we can help the children talk to, visit and stay in contact with their parents.  We can offer some mentorship, help them find resources, and just provide a listening ear and sense of community.  These are families who have no one else to turn to.  We were touched by this question in our training: "if you were to lose everything you had, how long would it take you to secure a meal?  housing for the night?  housing for a month?"  For us, the answer would be the length of one phone call, one facebook status, or walk to the house next door.  We are so blessed.  But the reality is that for some people, they have nobody to turn to.  What a privilege to get to be that person for someone.

Now, we are not totally naive (delusional).  We know this will be hard.  We know that we cannot change the whole world.  We expect that this will open our eyes to needs that we had never even considered, and we expect to be humbled by our limitations in helping meet those needs.  But if we can change the trajectory of one family by just a few degrees, or provide some early love and bonding for a little one, we would be honored.

I want to write about bits and pieces of our experience here because I have not been able to find much writing on the experience of host families, even though there are 90 host families in our county alone.  Obviously I will be sensitive in what I share, but I hope that maybe a few of you out there might like to take this journey with us and learn about things that we never knew we never knew.  And if you see us out and about with an extra child, or see a plea to borrow clothes or kid gear, you'll know why.  So here we go!

When I get a chance, my next Safe Families related post will be... applying to SFFC and the homestudy process. It is kind of a funny story.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Light Table



I am a bit late to the light table craze that has attacked Pinterest. To be honest, I was feeling a bit counter-cultural when it came to light tables...everyone was doing it, so I WASN'T going to. But last week was a long, dark, inside, winter week, and I realized that we had a big tupperware bin and a string of LED lights leftover from Christmas, so I taped some black paper around the inside of the bin, stuck the lights in there and voila.

Turns out, the thing is pretty fun...who knew?! (oh yeah, everyone on Pinterest)

We started by playing with some colored plastic, overlapping them to mix colors, which happened to go nicely with the book Little Blue and Little Yellow by Leo Lionni that we had just read.  Then we pulled out some pieces from our Blokus game, and a few lenses and prisms from our science set.  Matias discovered that logic puzzles and sudoku are more fun on top of the light table. All three kids seem to enjoy it- especially Beatrice.

I have some other plans in the works for the light table...we will be putting salt on it to do some light table handwriting practice this week.  I also want to get out the clear marble run pieces and try those out.  Maybe play with water beads on there (if I can set aside my type A personality and deal with those bouncing menaces indoors...talk about a Pinterest craze I should have avoided!) I pinned a few more ideas to a light table board on Pinterest (because it is the done thing, you know).

Anyhoo...it turns out that the masses are right...light tables are a lot of fun!


Tuesday, January 15, 2013

First Haircut for Violet

Before
After (it was a more of a trim than a cut!)
 






For Christmas, one of Violet's presents was the promise of her very first haircut.  Some people have hairy babies.  I am not one of them.  It took her a good 3 years to get it to the point of (almost) needing a haircut.  Being a curly girl like her mother (grandmother, great grandmother and great great grandmother), even when her hair got to be a decent length, it just curled itself up nice and short.  It really did need a bit of evening up across the back though, and she was oh-so-anxious to finally have a turn, so we went for it.

We invited her grandmas, and she kindly decided to bring her little sister along as well for a girl's outing.  After the haircut we celebrated at her choice of restaurant, "Square". This little girl of ours is feeling quite grown-up these days!

Monday, January 14, 2013

La La Laundry


If you've read my post about The Laundry Game, you may have inferred that laundry is not my favorite chore.  At all.  Not even close.  I have been patiently waiting for my children to get old enough to start helping out with this task...and I think we're finally there!

Here is how we do laundry at the Handley house.

1) Drag out all the dirty laundry and dump it in a pile in the family room.  Matias, Violet and I sort it into lights, darks, whites and reds. Totally educational, no?

2) I spend the entire day shuffling loads between the washer and dryer, praying nobody wets the bed at naptime or vomits (because obviously, these things trump the usual loads and throw off the whole laundry equation). Besides- who doesn't pray that nobody wets the bed or vomits every day?!

3) The clean laundry is once again dumped on the [hopefully] cleanish family room floor, and a laundry basket is set out for each family member, plus one for towels, bibs and dishcloths.

4) Matias and Violet sort the laundry into each person's basket while listening to awesome, rocking music, dancing around, and stepping all over the [formerly] clean laundry. And I'm not talking Raffi music...this requires full on dance music (so call me, maybe?!)

5) I get to fold one basket at a time and put away each person's laundry.  This makes is WAY harder for Beatrice to undo my work...if I were to have piles of laundry for each person out at the same time she would have a field day! Full disclosure- my super awesome husband usually takes pity and helps fold and put away the clothes.  He must love me...because I am pretty sure he doesn't love laundry either!

6) Bedtime comes, we all change out of our clothes and voila...more laundry.  Always more laundry.  But hey, at least I don't have to pay with quarters anymore!  And we have clothes...so for that I am thankful.

Friday, January 11, 2013

A Visit to Daddy's Office

What does Daddy do at work all day?  We decided to visit the office to find out.
Leaving Daddy some love on the whiteboard wall in the game room

Not sure sure about this walking thing...but those bloxes and the piano are pretty cool!

More whiteboard love

Maybe walking is easier pushing a ball?!

Rock band!

Mario Kart

Foosball

Video Games

And a free, delicious lunch.

Yes, we know they have difficult, high-stress, demanding jobs.  But they hide it well!
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