Posted tagged ‘foster care’

Luke 18:27

May 31, 2021

As the month of May comes to a close — which happens to be National Foster Care Month — I want to share a small part of our family’s adoption story.

Like any testimony, may King Jesus be magnified!

LONG before I even had an inkling of becoming a foster mom, God made me aware of seeds He had planted in my heart.

1) Providing a refuge for orphans (I was 7 years old), and

2) Homeschooling my children (I was 18 years old).

I didn’t see them as overlapping, BUT GOD DID!!

Fast forward more than 30 years later and I still shake my head in awestruck wonder of how miraculously He orchestrated every step between those years long ago and today. (Often, my head is banging against the pillow in frustration too, just to be totally transparent!)

One of my kiddos has an alphabet soup bowl of struggles: SPD, APD, PTSD (I think it’s called something else now, but whatever), Dyslexia, two AI diseases, cognitive delay, and to keep us all on our toes, a sprinkling of ODD.

Seems like the junk of her first 2 years of life should have been enough to deal with and this left me wondering, did the years ahead of her need to also be full of struggles?

The simple answer is YES!

My daughter’s Creator God knew how others would sin against her **and** HE providentially leads us on the exact path she needs to walk in order to be set free from what our enemy intended for evil against her.

Because of all that she has going on, she and I are together A LOT! That togetherness is so important for her!

Again, to be candid, it can be suffocating for me when I take my eyes off Jesus and look across the fence to more typical families, but then I repent and get my eyes where they need to be.

Hospital waiting rooms, blood labs with all the associated drama of those draws, doctor appointments, homeschooling, special reading and writing exercises, and plenty of heart-to-heart conversations — these all are a part of God’s love for her on display. One must have eyes to see, though.

That means we can’t look through a filter with our personal expectations.

LOOK and SEE!

With eyes that can see, the Intentional Observer can recognize how hard she has to work to memorize Bible verses.

First, we write the verse in small-phrase segments.

Then, we cut them into smaller segments.

Lastly, she cuts them into single words.

All along the way, she mixes them up and struggles (truly labors) to put them in order, struggling to sound out even familiar words.

Today, without any review, without looking at the bits of cardstock, she quoted the entire verse without any prompts.

Her smile — beautiful teeth and dimples on full display — had me fighting the tears of joy.

SHE DID IT!!

In a day (or even in an hour) she will be frustrated again. She’ll forget the accomplishment of this morning. That’s where I come in, reminding her that she CAN do it, even while inside my head, I feel the urge to scream, “Are you kidding me? Have you so quickly forgotten??

Her grumbling will communicate that she doesn’t care, but God is teaching me to disregard her protests and keep showing her that she can.

But even the victory is a little hollow for her. She wants immediate healing!

What she doesn’t yet grasp is that hard-fought victories are beyond compare!

GOD is giving her a tenacious spirit and a tenderness of heart that didn’t exist even 2 years ago.

Eight years ago, I would have said this day was NEVER, NOT-EVER going to come. Impossible!!

God’s Word says, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.”

Luke 18:27

LOOK and SEE!

My daughter and I are servants of the Lord.

Such a place of rest as the mama to my children.

We get to TRUST, WAIT, and FOLLOW Him as He lights the path He places in front of us — even when we accidentally look away from Jesus and see more traditional families exceling, we get to re-focus and keep our eyes on Jesus!!

God tells us that, the actions that were meant as evil against my children, God means to reveal the good He is transforming it to be.

Genesis 50:20

His Word also tells us that it is no longer my kids and me who live separate from God, but Christ who lives in us. And the life we now live in the flesh (disorders, diseases, and emotional struggles) we now live by faith in the Son of God, who loves us and gave Himself for us.

Galatians 2:20

THIS is glimpse of the path after adoption.

YOU don’t have to have walked the foster and/or adoption path to know that sometimes (often?) small victories are hard and the day-to-day victories fade as new struggles crop up.

It can be a maddening cycle, but the outcome is securely in God’s hands. Draw from the well of His grace and mercy. Make no mistake, the story is still unfolding!! Redemption is possible with God!!

Giving thanks for the Not-So-Amazing Events

November 21, 2014

After all, it is Thanksgiving Season here in the United States.  Many people take this time to declare gratitude for the goodness in their own lives.

Wealth. Comfort. Health. Family. Friends. Freedom.

As one who is rarely content to follow the crowd, I haven’t been posting daily gratitude posts on social media.  Not everyone is given the blessing of wealth, or comfort, or health, or family, or friends.

And yet, I do enjoy reflecting and digging deeper.

Hmmm… there are so many amazing events in my life for which to be thankful, how could I possibly name just one?

As a momma of six ever-so-amazing children through the blessing of foster care and adoption, this is probably what most of my friends might expect me to choose as my answer. Truly each adoption was (and is) an incredible special event.

Or even better, as a follower of Jesus, some might expect me to select as a special event the day on which I “came to Christ” – using a common phrase in evangelical circles. But there isn’t one specific date for me to cite as I reflect on the journey that ultimately brought me to surrender all. Was it when I was 6 or 7 or 8 or 13 (or every other day in between when I dutifully prayed the prayer from fear)? Was it when I was 21 and felt a surge of regret and shame?  Was it when, bit-by-bit, I realized my depravity and my separation from God?  Yep, that’s probably it, but I don’t have a date on the calendar circled.

And then just like that, I realized that The Most Special Event of my life was preceded by a series of special events more commonly regarded as Not-So-Amazing Events that spared me from Horrible Events!

Today, it is for the Not-So-Amazing Events that I give thanks. 

I’m thankful for the reputation-destroying and near-death experiences when I was hanging out with a risky crowd of people because now I am able to more compassionately come alongside of others making similar choices and because I actually survived (!!!) and lived to love on 25 babies and adopted 6 precious and ever-so-amazing children.

I’m thankful for the fear-filled naysayers who attempted to negatively influence my decision to foster, adopt, and homeschool my children as a single momma. Painful as it was to endure their criticisms, the grains of truth were (and still are) that I am weak, it is a hard road, and I’m not able to do it all. BUT when God calls us to follow Him, He equips us to do it. (Romans 8:30) So, in my weakness and inability to do any of it alone, God’s grace and mercy are put on display every day as I and my ever-changing family enjoy every step of the journey… even the hard times are sweeter when we face them together.

I’m thankful that my youthful, ignorant attraction for bad boys did not result in a marriage that would certainly have been doomed; and that, in my still-singleness, my children and I daily experience the loving care of our Great God who promises He will never leave us or forsake us and demonstrates over and over that He really is a Father to the fatherless. (Psalm 68:5)

(See more of my thoughts on being thankful for being still single in one of my earlier blog posts at: https://peapodfam.wordpress.com/2010/11/20/an-uncommon-reason-to-be-thankful/)

I’m thankful for the seemingly good guys I dated who hurt my heart by leading me on and then rejecting me for my past.  Yes, in my eagerness (read: desperation) to be married, I put much stock in their opinions of me and drew my significance from them instead of drawing from the wellspring of God’s grace.  Yet, through those pain-filled experiences God has formed within me a strength of character seasoned with His wisdom and has been used to hone His gift of discernment that is useful in guarding my family, as well as in the way He uses me to minister to others.

I’m thankful for a broken leg when I was tobogganing at 17 years old that yielded an eventual escape from a traumatic path.  The life-long limp I have is a constant reminder that God rescued me from the hands of an abuser.

Although there is nothing wrong with being thankful for wealth, comfort, health, family, and friends, the truth is that not everyone has all, or even one, of those blessings right now. 

Many during this season are filled with despair as they compare their own lives with those proclaiming their blessings.  So today, I am proclaiming my gratitude for the Not-So-Amazing Events that spared me from Horrible Events. 

It is my prayer that those who are feeling desperate right now will remember that even the most desperate times, in the hands of our Loving Savior, are ultimately transformed into Amazing Events… God is able to bring beauty from ashes. (Isaiah 61:3)

And so most of all, I am thankful that while I was still an enemy of God (living through some awful stuff), He chose me, called me, brought me to repentance, and paid for my sins with the sacrificial blood of His only Son, Jesus, and is keeping His promises to transform me (sanctify me) day by day.

Seeds of Faith
“For while we were still helpless, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly. For one will hardly die for a righteous man; though perhaps for the good man someone would dare even to die. But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him.” Romans 5:6-9

“A father of the fatherless and a judge for the widows, Is God in His holy habitation.” Psalm 68:5

“To grant those who mourn in Zion, Giving them a garland instead of ashes, The oil of gladness instead of mourning, The mantle of praise instead of a spirit of fainting. So they will be called oaks of righteousness, The planting of the LORD, that He may be glorified.” Isaiah 61:3

“And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren; and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified. What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us?” Romans 8:29-31

Copyright © 2014 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

God NEVER ‘shows up’ . . .

November 5, 2014

Growing up, I had five strong desires: to be a wife and a mom, to have twins (after all, they run in my family), to homeschool my children, and to have an orphanage.

My plan:  College. Married by age 27. Babies shortly thereafter (total of 12 children, including twins). Homeschooling. Orphanage.

Back in the 1960s, young girls’ aspirations to be a wife and mom were common.  Unfortunately for my generation, it was a decade when our society started to contend with an emerging movement that sought to stamp out traditional girlhood plans.

My dream to have an orphanage was planted within me in that same decade at the age of 7. I awoke from a Sunday-afternoon nap remembering a literal dream so vivid and detailed that it is forever etched in my memory.  There was a forest clearing with multiple teepees scattered about and children of various colors running around playing hide-and-seek among the teepees.  From that day forward, it was settled in my mind. I shared the dream with my mom.  I had no idea the significance of each detail.

One day, as a pre-teen girl, I told my big sister (older by 8 years) that I wanted to be a wife and a mom and have supper on the table when my husband came home.  We were standing in the hallway of our home and she shook me by the shoulders as she declared, “You don’t have to be a wife and mom. You can be more than that.” Shortly thereafter, she moved out to follow her own long-held dream to become a nurse.

Bam. The first seeds of doubt were sown.

In my early teen years, I  bought a record entitled I Am Woman by Helen Reddy and played that dumb thing over and over. My dreams took more hits.

In my late teens, I spent 4 months in Costa Rica on a study-service trimester through my college.  I secured a volunteer role at an orphanage and the dream of caring for the orphan was revived, in spite of all the doubts that assailed it.

Just before leaving Costa Rica, I wrote in my journal, “I now know what God wants me to do with the rest of my life.” I closed the book, packed it in my suitcase, and headed back to the States.

More time passed. I doubted who I was, what I wanted, and my value to anyone. I allowed myself to walk further away from God, my faith, my family, and my dreams.

The decade of my 20s is a blur of rebellion against God and His plan of salvation through Jesus’ sinless life, death, and resurrection. I doubted His sovereignty and rejected any choice that resembled stability and a good-girl image. I was on a detailed mission to torpedo my life and to prove to God that I knew I was destined for hell.

By the grace and mercy of the same God at whom I’d shaken my fist repeatedly for 10 years, I lived through my 20s. Even so, surviving came with a high price… leaving significant emotional scars and well-guarded secrets.

During the decade of my 30s, I completed my undergraduate and graduate degrees and constructed a professional career that yielded a lucrative, corporate fast-track lifestyle that was 100% dissatisfying.

I timidly entered a time of soul searching. I reached out to the God of my youth. In some ways, this decade was filled with a new kind of fast-track masquerading as a slow boat to China. Fast because I felt as if I could barely keep up with God as He led me down paths of confession, repentance, and surrender, and slow because I didn’t know where we were going!

While packing for a move from one part of the state to another, I discovered the box containing my Costa Rica journal. Thumbing through it brought a wave of fond memories, but I was unprepared to read my closing remark about my time volunteering at the orphanage.

Really?  “I now know what God wants me to do with the rest of my life.”

My feelings were a jumble of contradictions. I couldn’t believe I had written those words and I couldn’t believe I’d forgotten them.

I sat on the garage floor and cried as I reflected on how far I’d run away from that dream and away from the One who had sown it within me.

Whether or not the decade was a fast track or a slow boat, I am certain God was ushering me on a path designed for purposes that seemed to be a mixed bag of clarity for me.

I grew steadily in confidence that my Almighty God and Savior Jesus was and is my Shelter and Strength from before the day I was born.

One afternoon while in my early 30s, I purchased a greeting card that read, “On the day you were adopted, all the stars of the universe danced.”  I knew one day I would adopt. Purchasing the card and writing the date on the back of the card would be proof to my future children that adoption was always Plan A rather than a fall-back plan for any other reason. (Almost 10 years later to the month, I adopted my first son!)

As my 30s drew to a close, I finished up my MBA and was in training to become a foster parent.  This decision seemed to be a natural progression toward my long-held dream to have an orphanage.

When I told my mom about my plan to become a foster parent, she easily recalled the dream that I’d shared with her many years ago.  Mom was always concerned for my well being, so knowing this was a long-held dream and not just a passing fancy comforted her.  What an amazing thought that not only was my dream a gift from God to me, but also to my mom.

During my foster parent journey, I fostered 25 babies and toddlers. 

Some wee ones came and left.

Some came, left, came back, and left again.

Some babies came and stayed as God began to assemble my family.

The life of a foster parent is a treacherously amazing journey.  Doing so as a single woman means unique struggles that I mercifully couldn’t have imagined when I began the journey.  Doing so without family nearby to offer emotional and physical support means having to ask and receive help and frequently meant being turned away upon asking.  (Who knew that being a single foster parent was often akin to being a leper?)

In my 40s, I adopted two babies.  I loved being their mom and hated dropping them off at daycare.  I loved nurturing them and hated being torn between a career and the children of my heart.  I agonized over the juxtaposed roles. Year after year, I begged God to allow me to be home with my children.

Miraculously, by the time my oldest son was ready for kindergarten, I saw God open wide the door for me – a single momma – to be a stay-at-home, homeschooling momma.

God leads. I follow. Simple. –ish.

In my 50s, I adopted four more babies.  If you do the math, that means 6  babies stayed and 19 came and left. I was stunned, amazed, and filled with joy that God would grant to me one child, let alone six children!

Life as a single momma keeps teaching me that God has a plan. People often say to me that I chose to be a single mom.  Hmm… insofar as I choose to follow wherever God leads, I suppose so, but not because I choose to be single.  There’s a difference.

My last two foster placements came to us on Christmas night of 2012.  They were teeny, tiny 2 day-olds with thick black hair.

Christmas!!  What an amazing day on which to receive newborns!  The calm that descended upon our home that evening and into the coming months was nothing short of God’s divine grace being poured out over our home.  We enjoyed those sweeties with every fiber of our family, but we also held them loosely, knowing that the case plan was reunification and they would leave us someday soon.

When people asked whether I would adopt them if given the opportunity, I quickly answered with a firm ‘no’ because… well… I am single and I have adopted four children already.

As time when by and the babies’ case plan was still family reunification, the Lord reminded me that He is more than capable of saying ‘no’ – after all, He had already said ‘no’ to 19 other babies and toddlers placed with me.  What He required of me was to walk with Him step-by-step without knowing, or trying to control, the future and certainly I must stop answering people with the answer I thought they expected of me.

Heeding this correction from the Lord, whenever asked if I hoped to adopt these new babies, I answered, “We love them and I want what God wants. If He opens the door to adopt them, I will walk through that door.”  Shortly thereafter, the babies’ case plan began to unravel and it was clear that reunification with either biological parent was impossible.

Bit-by-bit, some very difficult doors opened easily and miraculously for me to adopt the babies.  I never doubted God’s ability to sustain me even though many around me audibly expressed their own doubts.

Adoption finalization  June, 2014

Adoption finalization
June, 2014

The babies’ adoption finalization hearing was held just before they turned 18 months old.  Over 65 friends crowded into the courtroom that day, followed by a blow-out party to celebrate what God had done.

Adoption Finalization June, 2104

Adoption Finalization
June, 2104

After the adoption one evening, when all my precious children were in bed and I had time to prop up my feet and reflect on the past 18 months, I was caught off guard by a flash of memory.

How could it be that in the past 18 months, I never once thought about a very specific prayer request from my youth?

That long-ago plea of my heart never entered my mind – not even once.  But on this quiet night, with my home and heart full, the Lord reminded me of a request that I had stopped praying for following my hysterectomy at 40 years old.

What?!  What had He done here?? How had I missed it until that moment?  From as far back as I could remember until my hysterectomy, I had asked God for twins – after all, they run in my family, remember?  The thing is, following my hysterectomy it was painfully obvious to me that this long-held dream would not come to pass.

(Are you laughing yet?  Maybe crying?  I know I did both that night.)

God had a plan.  A plan different than mine.  A plan better than mine. A plan to demonstrate that He is able to do more than we can ask or imagine. 

God granted to me my life-long request exactly 15 years after I stopped asking.

The babies I adopted in June, 2014 are twin girls who began their life with us when they were 2 days old on a quiet Christmas night.

God said yes to my childhood plea for twins!

Amazing story, right?  Well, all of my children’s stories and the specific way in which God affirmed each adoption, are amazingly miraculous.

Indeed, over the decades of my life, God has graciously demonstrated that His plan was always to forgive and redeem my sin and lead me on an amazing, treacherous, joy-filled, purposeful,  miraculous journey.

And on this journey, I’ve learned that it is impossible to live a dull, uneventful life if one walks by faith in Jesus. 

I have also learned that God never (EVER) needs a Plan B.

What others might see as impossible, God declares possible. This is one of the many ways that His majesty is put on display and amazingly it is for our ultimate good.

God’s Plan A for my life carries the mark of His grace, mercy, and sovereignty over all things.

By God’s grace, mercy, sovereign rule, and loving hand the ethnic heritages represented in my family include Irish, Latino, African, and three different Native American tribes.  My colorful family is one more piece of evidence that the dream I had when I was 7 years old was a gift from God.

I often hear people say, “God showed up.”  I shake my head in disagreement.

God never shows up. He is always here. Omnipresent. Always.

Every detail is in His hands and there is no place safer or sweeter for me and my children to be.

Seeds of Faith

“…for truly I say to you, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move; and nothing will be impossible to you.”  Matthew 17:20

“Be strong and courageous, do not be afraid or tremble at them, for the LORD your God is the one who goes with you. He will not fail you or forsake you.” Deuteronomy 31:6

Copyright © 2014 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

Twice-gifted boots and more to the story.

October 18, 2014

When God calls us to serve Him by serving others, we sometimes, erroneously, imagine a beautiful outcome of our sacrificial acts. Maybe we imagine these outcomes because we are too heavily influenced by Disney’s storybook endings or Marvel’s comic book heroism. Whatever the reason, by designing our own notion of what the outcome should be from our service we set ourselves up for disappointment and even disillusionment.

Let’s be clear, serving others doesn’t come with a neat-and-tidy storybook ending.

Serving others in need isn’t pretty or glamorous. Serving others can leave you scarred. (See what a friend wrote about this over at My Sister’s Jar.)

Answering God’s call to serve others can be downright dangerous and can send heart-wrenching ripple effects through an entire family or community. (Read Pastor Saeed’s letter to his daughter.)

Serving God by investing our time, energy, and money (which all belong to our God anyway) requires that we relinquish the right to know the rest of the story. This fact can be a good thing because even if we do know the outcome, we might not approve.

My post last week entitled Compassionate Wisdom: Training my children to serve others details the account of how my 14-year-old son served someone by giving away his socks and waterproof hiking boots right off his feet to a young, homeless man who was in dire need.

Ones just like these with the heel notch for better grip

Ones just like these with the heel notch for better grip

My son listened to God’s call to serve another and responded promptly.

Later that same day, Josiah and I processed what God had done. I cautioned him against assuming his gift to this stranger would result in good as the world defines it. For example, I explained, it was entirely possible that this young man might sell the boots for cash to buy drugs. I wanted my son to grasp the truth that our role is to obey God’s call and relinquish any rights to the outcome of our service.

Ah, but sometimes… sometimes… we get to see a glimpse of the good that comes and how sweet it is.

God did something special this week and graciously allowed His servant Josiah to know what happened after he sacrificed his own socks and boots.

This week, as we made our way to care for our chickens, we stopped to deliver six homemade meals to the homeless we had gotten to know on our route. We found Hector and (providentially) 5 other homeless folks with him under a shade tree.

Josiah and I got out of the van to walk over to the group, but I could barely keep up with him. His strides were unusually bigger and I knew he was eager to see if Nicholas still had on the hiking boots that once were his.

When we arrived at the group, the look on Josiah’s face displayed disappointment. Nicholas was not one of the 6 homeless under that tree, but his disappointment didn’t last long.

Earl, one of the men who was present last week when Josiah gave away his socks and boots, enthusiastically greeted Josiah and told my son that Nicholas wasn’t with them because he got a job at the car wash. Earl shared that Nicholas commented that he knew it was because he had good, solid, waterproof boots!

Exhale joy!

On this particular day, by God’s providence, a young teen who is new in his journey of walking by faith not by sight, was granted a glimpse into the way God used his obedience. The twice-gifted boots have a new piece to their story and my precious first-born has a stone of remembrance as to God’s hand of grace and mercy toward him and toward those he is called to serve.

Yes, serving others can be messy, frightening, time consuming, and even scarring.

Thankfully, answering God’s call and sacrificially serving others can also be faith bolstering.

All good in the hands of our Sovereign God.

Seeds of Faith
“…for we walk by faith, not by sight.” 2 Corinthians 5:7

Copyright © 2014 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

Confession renders my failures powerless

August 28, 2014

The time has come to confess. Actually, I figured everyone knew and that my failures weren’t being pointed out because everyone was extending grace to me. However, recently I had an encounter with someone who relentlessly pointed out many of my failures.

So let’s not keep any secrets here, I am a failure at SO MUCH!

My bathrooms are stinky and much dirtier than I would have ever imagined I’d be willing to endure. Nearly every window screen is sun-damaged and torn. The corners of every wall have chipped paint and divots. The garage is full of clutter. The tile grout throughout this house is black (it shouldn’t be). There is clutter in every single room AND closet of this house. The more I try to sort and purge, the more behind I get in equivalent or greater areas. The refrigerator water-ice dispenser is broken, as are some of the door shelves. The doo-dad display shelves high up in these lofted ceilings have never been vacuumed in the 5 years we have lived here. A door on my sideboard broke off 3 years ago. It is still broken. The toilet seat in my master bath had some coating peel off when I used bleach on it so it has been yellowed ever since and my budget is too tight to buy a new one. (TMI?) Up until last month when a friend invested his own time, energy, and money, there were gaping holes in the laundry room wall where the doorknob busted through when a kiddo used too much force carrying in the oversized boxes from Costco. There are broken bathroom drawers where a little one decided to use the open one as a ladder.

My kids’ clothes don’t match and are rarely ironed. There’s a stationary bike in the corner daily condemning me for not making the time to ride it as my mid-section gets steadily chunkier. The windshield wiper on the back of my van was chopped off by the automatic garage door. I’m sure it can be fixed, but I don’t know how or where to go — and even if I did, the thought of doing this with 4 little girls in tow makes me cringe. The van is due for an oil change and some costly maintenance. I have over $18,000 in medical bills that cropped up in less than 3 months (and that’s WITH provider forgiveness, discounts, and negotiating).

Foster care and adoption is complicated, messy, draining, and difficult. It is also life-affirming, a blessing time and time again, and an ever-present reminder of God’s redeeming power over all our brokenness. With that said, I have a couple of daughters who still suffer from the effects of trauma at the hands of their bio mom and some days all that gets done is addressing their high needs. On those frequent days (though praise God, growing less frequent), I am in no shape to execute a meal plan so we all pile into the van and hit a drive-thru restaurant in spite of a tight budget because it is better than falling on the floor in a puddle of tears at being a failure again. Toy bags and boxes piled in front of the fireplace look like clutter, but really are used daily by my little ones and I have no clue how to contain them any better than this. The laundry that is in various stages of dirty and clean.

The front yard is a disaster. When we moved in, it was beautiful. The HOA is NOT happy. I am a failure at maintaining (financially and physically) the landscape in this home.

This harsh encounter that I had doesn’t define me. I know that. But in the moments when so many of my failures are being laid bare and there isn’t a husband to stand beside me to physically comfort me or anyone to cheer me on in the moments that follow, my knees buckle.

With all of that said, this isn’t about being single or married, or about being perfect or imperfect. This isn’t a subtle way to plead for affirmations either. Furthermore, as much as I’d like this to be a pre-emptive measure in order to avoid harsh criticism in the future (and yes, secretly I wish it would), I know there will always be critical people and within their criticisms there will often be grains of truth.

What this is, as I said earlier, is a confession that I do not have it all together — and I never will. I had less failures when I was without a family. I had so much more time to clean ovens, bathrooms, and closets!

Even so, I would choose family all over again. Knowing what I know now and the harsh criticisms I’ve received, I would still choose each and every one of my children and their neediness all over again. Yes, I could put them in school so I have more time to clean, get my hair done, and go for coffee with friends. And by the way, my children do have chores and cleaning the bathrooms and floors and their rooms and doing yard work are all part of their duties. It is just that there is a gap between training and perfection. . . a very long gap. And in some of these areas, I fail to effectively train them. (I obviously have NO idea how to maintain a complicated, needy landscape.) I’ve learned to accept that.

Additionally, I know that many of my friends have the same ‘secrets’ — dirty bathrooms, moldy showers, laundry piles, and so forth. So what this is, or can be, is a vehicle to help some of you feeling the press of guilt and shame about being a failure to look to Jesus for your comfort. Without a husband to shelter me, all I have is Christ. AND THAT, my friends, is all I need.

I am a sinner. I am a failure. But because I have accepted the free gift of eternal life through the sacrificial blood of Jesus and His resurrection, I am seen by God as His daughter. BAM! End of story. So even when a brother or sister in Christ withholds grace from me, God does not. This truth doesn’t always keep my knees from buckling (especially when blindsided), but it does lift me up from there once I remember it!

Psalm 40:2 says this about our Good and Great God, “He brought me up out of the pit of destruction, out of the miry clay, And He set my feet upon a rock making my footsteps firm.”

Yah, baby!

Copyright © 2014 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

No excuses, just keep it together, momma.

July 29, 2014

REALITY: Two errands this morning before lunch (with wee tribe in tow) . . . it shoulda been simple. I’ve gotten them pretty well trained, right? Well, ‘in-training’ necessarily means NOT COMPLETE . . . especially when Weak Mommy makes an appearance.

The BAD NEWS: As I got ready to pay, I could NOT find my wallet. Standing at the cashier, emptying my overly cluttered purse into another bag, a few of my kiddos noticed their somewhat frantic and distracted Weak Mommy (still a dysregulating experience for two of my sweet lambs) and they went for my ‘mental jugular’ by whining, asking for every impulse item on display, picking on each other, demanding food, and basically performing the one-act play: HOW TO FAST-TRACK MOMMY TO THE LOONEY BIN.

The stranger behind me had a look. What was it? I couldn’t quite put my finger on it, but it was something close to disgust, or judgment, or maybe impatience.

I am sure I’ve worn that face before, too.

Even so, I chose not to make excuses. I just stayed on task. It’s no one else’s business anyway. I won’t dishonor my children that way or inadvertently teach them to make excuses for poor behavior.

Besides, I knew GOD knew my kiddos were still in training. I knew GOD knew where my wallet was. I knew GOD wasn’t going to abandon me right there as I teetered on the edge of sobbing. I knew right then that our plans for the day had to change. I wrote a check (totally forgot about that option because it’s been so long since I’ve written one). Then, we got outta there!

THE GOOD NEWS: Although I was, as I said, “teetering” on the edge of sobbing and um, eh-hem, maybe even screaming, I didn’t because God’s truth from my quiet time earlier that morning was still strobing through my brain like a Lighthouse Beacon. I finally found my wallet (after looking in seven wrong places and turning those places upside down), the kids got to have Chick-fil-A for lunch instead of my less-expensive, original home-cooked plan, the errands were completed a mere 3 hours later than I’d hoped that they would be done, and the babies actually napped.

THE BEST NEWS: God’s grace and strength were abundant and on display for me and my wee tribe. He really is sufficient.

“And He has said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.’ Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.”
2 Corinthians 12:9

the family the fountain_2

Copyright © 2014 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

Groundhog Day 2012

February 2, 2012

Science class at the PeaPodFamily Homeschool

I love homeschooling for so (SO) many reasons. Today it was cold so we cuddled in front of the fire with big bowls of popcorn while we studied science. Here’s a picture of all my precious arrows warming their feet in front of what is probably our last fire of the season while Baby Boy and I (and puppy Cocoa) kept a safe distance from the heat. Thankful for these low-key days!

Copyright © 2012 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

The journey called Beauty – OR – fostering is a lifelong commitment

November 15, 2010

After 4 months with this precious newborn, Beauty left our home today. I received a call last evening from her new mom who hopes to adopt her. She told me that she was meeting the case manager here on Monday afternoon to pick up Beauty and all her belongings. I was happy to tell her what a sweetheart this dear child is. But when I got off the phone, I cried hard. And then I thought, how many losses can one person sustain? This little baby is my 17th child I’ve “momma’d”, and the 20th to leave my home.

New Mommy and her 2 sisters and her grandfather arrived at 2 p.m. and while they were here, I learned that she never had any children. She is living with her boyfriend of 15 years and she cannot conceive. She cried tears of joy as I handed her a sweet smelling, beautifully dressed baby girl. We talked and took pictures. They left an hour later.

I have always taught my children that when a baby we have loved leaves our home, we can run to Jesus for our comfort. By God’s design, we have many opportunities to seek God’s comfort. I am truly thankful to train and shepherd them through each loss, but it is always difficult.

Last night as our pastor taught us from a hope-filled passage in 2nd Corinthians 1:4-7 that promises we who love Him can receive comfort from the God of all comfort. I sensed that God had me listening with great intensity. Little did I know that a few hours later I would receive the call I’d been expecting – Beauty would leave our home the next day.

Each time a child leaves our home there are always well-meaning people who try to comfort me with “Well, she (or he) was just a foster child. It isn’t like she (or he) was really yours.”

That is no comfort at all.

Although this is long, please allow me to explain how I view my role as foster mom.

In order to follow this calling – to share Jesus’ heart for disenfranchised children – I embrace each baby to be a part of our family. NOT as if they were mine because that implies a distinction between mine and someone else’s (like babysitting). Each child needs to sense they are fully loved. That’s how I have always seen God’s heart for these precious souls who are thrust into foster care.

Most of society regards the child in foster care (if they regard them at all) as mistakes or inconvenient beings; and thus, even their births are uncelebrated. Yet, they were, before God flung the stars into orbit, planned by our Mighty Creator – and at the appointed time, miraculously knit together in the womb of a woman who is also disenfranchised.

Is this baby a mistake? Hardly! That’s like saying a lone flower growing by the side of a busy freeway is a mistake. In reality, that flower brightens the weary traveler and is uniquely qualified to draw the traveler’s thoughts to the Creator of all things.

Inconvenient beings? Not at all! Children in foster care share much in common with Jesus. Largely uncelebrated by the world, they are treasured by our Mighty God and created for His great pleasure.

Yet, there were some who knew and celebrated Jesus’ birth. His foster father and his mother celebrated His birth and so did the shepherds and later the wise men.

That’s what I am. A shepherd. A foster mom. Called by God to love them and whisper truths about Jesus in their ears each day they are mine. (I have little shepherds in training too. Their names are Josiah and Peter. They are amazing shepherds. They might need more than one reminder in Sunday School to settle down, but oh my, they are amazing bottle givers, baby bouncers, and truth singers!)

There are other shepherds, too. Others who come alongside of me and my children and love them the way only family chooses to love. And when one of the children leaves my home, those surrendered shepherds also suffer loss. God’s comfort is evident when we weep with those who weep.

So, Beauty left our home today and she leaves family behind. But for the rest of her life, she has family praying for her – bringing her name and her eternal life before the Throne of the Most High God.

Little does sweet Beauty know, but in times of great affliction for her, God will move His people to send up a concert of prayers on her behalf . . . simply because early in her life she was fostered by a family who loved her and whispered truth to her.

Copyright © 2010 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

What’s free?

September 18, 2010

A conversation between me and the boys while driving in the car this week . . .

Mom, is it true there’s no such thing as really “free”?

Yep, I suppose so.

How about grass? It’s free?

Not really, I have to pay to water the lawn and I have to pay to keep it trimmed.

Oh. Well, how about those rocks over there? They would be free.

No, someone paid to have those rocks put into their landscape. If we take it, we would be stealing.

I know! Our SALVATION is free from Jesus!

Praise the LORD for times when I hear them come up with statements that show me that they are really getting it!

May GOD preserve and grow their understanding!

Isaiah 54:13 “The LORD will instruct your sons and great will be their peace.”

Copyright © 2010 Deborah Rice, PeaPodFamilyPress

A donut with a bite out of it . . .

September 1, 2010

The other night my sons and I had one of those conversations. You know, the kind where I know what they are getting at, and I want to shepherd them so I try to find a word picture to help them understand, and then we get derailed on the word picture and miss the point of the story??

THAT kind of conversation!

The topic of dating came up because of an episode we heard on Adventures in Odyssey (a radio drama we can listen to on the internet . . . listen to many great episodes here http://www.whitsend.org/radio/). Since the topic was fresh on our minds from the audio drama, I took the opportunity to tell them that, in our family, traditional dating was not an approved activity.

This led me to attempt to explain the difference between dating and courtship. That’s when I learned that even at ages 10 and 7, they apparently have an idea of who they want to marry. This was news to me! After thanking them for sharing with me their thoughts, I told them that I was already praying for each girl who would one day be the wife of God’s choosing for each of them. In the meantime, I explained, until God made this clear to them there isn’t any purpose to dating. (Here comes the word picture.)

I said it is a little like seeing a donut in the bakery, asking for it, taking a bite out of it, and then asking the baker to put it back on the rack. Who wants to buy a donut with a bite out of it?

Can you anticipate how we got derailed?

“Which donut, Mom?”

“I don’t know. It doesn’t matter.”

“Yes it does. I wouldn’t take a bite out of a donut that I don’t like and if I don’t know whether I like it, better to take one bite than eat it all, right?”

“No. You’re missing the point here.”

“What point, MOM?”

“Let’s back up. Forget the donut.”

“Hey! I like donuts. Can we get donuts next time we’re at the store?”

(Silently I scream in my head . . . how DO I get into these tangles?)

So, I talked with them about how sometimes guys and girls “date” to see if they like each other. They do this without really any understanding of the rules (and sometimes the rules aren’t even clearly defined) and worst of all, rarely is there any accountability to the parents. Dating, I explained, then becomes a big guessing game where one or both people can get their feelings hurt. This can even prompt a lack of trust the next time they are asked out on a date.

I explained, “When you feel you are ready to marry (and I defined some of what that readiness will look like), you must go to the girl’s father first and tell him of your desire to get to know his daughter better. And if she doesn’t have a father, you must go to her mother and the pastor of her church. Then, if you receive their permission (and mine), you can court this girl.” (I also loosely defined the rules of courtship)

“In the meantime,” I instructed my sons, “when you feel your mind wander to one particular girl, pray for her. Ask the LORD to protect her and to call her to a close relationship with Him. Then ask the Lord to help you honor Him in how you think about her.”

I don’t know if this was a good way to handle the conversation. It seems these topics come up and I feel woefully unprepared to respond. All I know is that I want to foster open communication with them as they grow.

Seriously. Changing diapers and middle-of-the-night feedings are WAY easier than these talks! May GOD’s wisdom be mine along the way!

Isaiah 54: 13 “And your sons will be taught of the LORD and great will be their peace.”

AMEN!