Posts Tagged ‘Lifestart’

Perfection Not Required

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

I’m well aware of the pressures parents put on themselves to be perfect – though fortunately my children are too young to roll their eyes at me or tell me that I humiliate them every time I put the trash out in my bathrobe and fuzzy slippers. Yet, as I potty train my toddler or get up to feed the baby at oh-dark-thirty, I am constantly critical of how well I’m playing the role as the adult who shoulders the incredible burden of bringing up the next generation.

I have a laundry list of parenting faults – I’m a little high-strung, I hate to mop the kitchen floor (negating any 30-second-rule for fear my kids will die of whatever has taken up residence there), I don’t find the emptying of an entire roll of toilet paper or tube of toothpaste particularly humorous and sometimes I put the pillow over my head and mutter, “if I ignore you can I sleep just 20 more minutes?”

And yet, my kids are lucky – they have parents who love them and are fiercely devoted to giving them the best life we possibly can. And that is enough perfection for them.

It is also the reasoning behind this month’s National Adoption Month theme: “You don’t have to be perfect to be a perfect parent: There are thousands of teens in foster care who would love to put up with you.”

Last month, President Obama declared November as “National Adoption Month”, to “honor those families who have strengthened America through adoption, and we recommit to reducing the number of children awaiting adoption into loving families,” and to “renew our commitments to children in the foster care system.”

The observance of National Adoption Month is more than just a celebration of adoption, it is a cry for more than 120,000 children who are in foster care awaiting a permanent family and an end to a life of turmoil. These are children who are not in the “system” by their own choosing, but have become without permanent home, family or support through tragic circumstances and the unfortunate choices of others. National Adoption Month aims to focus on the needs of these children, nearly 25,000 of whom age out of the foster care system each year and to remind each of us of our responsibility to the rising generation.

Every year, we are losing alarming numbers of these young adults who have “aged out” to cycles of poverty, crime, incarceration and death at far above the rate of their peers. Without a support system to prepare them for life on their own, many face an uphill battle that is rarely won.

It is this alarming fact that has lead AdoptUsKids, a  cooperative agreement between The Children’s Bureau, Administration for Children & Families and the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, to highlight the message of “anti-perfection” – that even the quirkiest of us have something to offer a teen in foster care. Their PSA campaign reminds us all that each of us - foibles included - can make a difference in the life of a child in foster care by being a mentor, a foster family or by giving a foster child into a permanent, loving home.

We work with many individuals and organizations who champion this same message. This past year we helped Christmas Box International with their Lifestart initiative to help arm teens aging out of foster care with basic necessities. We champion the ideas set forth by Judy Cockerton of The Treehouse Foundation for their ability to make an impact. And we embrace the idea of reminding us all about the “forgotten children” who live among us.

At the very least, we ask that you hug a child in your life today. You’re a far greater parent, example or mentor than you realize. After all, you don’t have to be perfect to be a perfect parent.

-Sara

The Impact of Your Giving: An Update

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Whom do you have to thank for helping ease your transition into the real world?

For most of us, that person is a parent or, at the very least, a relative. When I left for college, my parents outfitted me with mis-matched sheets, fuchsia towels, 1970s Tupperware and more advice than I knew what to do with. I could call home anytime I needed to via a pre-paid calling card and there was never any doubt that I had a support team behind me that would help me should I need it.

At 18, I’m not sure most of us truly appreciated how much our parents or other relatives did for us to help us ease into life as an adult – largely because we expected it. However, I can tell you that my experience, while it felt like the norm, is only a dim dream for the more than 24,000 teens who age out of foster care each year. There are no expectations there – only tenacity and hope.

In October, we began working with New York Times bestselling author, Richard Paul Evans,  on The Christmas Box Lifestart Initiative- helping raise awareness and funding around “Lifestart Kits” – essentials these youth need when they transition from foster care to life on their own.

There are no parents to help them. No mis-matched sheets, no calling cards (or cell phones), no one to be there when they need help. It is them and the state transition-to-adult-living caseworkers, who do their best to make sure these kids succeed.

Over the last three months, I’m excited to say, we’ve raised in excess of $50,000 (not including the Operation Kids matching donation) so far toward this program – through  primarily $25, $50, and $100 donations. Every dollar is going to provide a kit to a youth to help ease the transition to life on his or her own.

One of the youth who received a Lifestart kit this past year tells donors:


“I can’t believe there are so many people out there who don’t even know me, but still want to help me.” (Eddie, 18)

He was stunned by the generosity – that there are so many people out there who want to be that person who eases a teen’s transition into adulthood – much like their own parents did years ago.

Best of all, there is progress. The funds raised to date, while by no means even close to solving the entire problem, are going to allow the program to expand to several new states, and already will help to TRIPLE what the organization was able to do in 2008.

Do you owe your success to someone who gave of their time? money? him or herself? If so, I urge you to pay it forward somehow – through this program or another one. Because for each of us reading this, there is likely another person who helped us as a youth.

And, while I’m at it, thanks mom and dad for giving me a great start.

-Sara