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PAGE A10, KEIZERTIMES, JULY 20, 2018 FOSTER: ‘It changes the entire dynamic of our home’ (Continued from Page 1) parents need to have a love of children, but they also need more than that—a willingness to stay with a child even when the going gets tough. Shane and Malia Witham have fostered 24 kids over a pe- riod of six and half years. Ma- lia and Shane also have three of their own “forever” chil- dren in the home, in addition to the children they foster. But they don’t usually make this distinction when they have a foster child in the home: “We’re not babysitters, we’re parents,” Shane said. Foster parenting is a task that requires the involvement of one’s entire community—not just those acting as foster par- ents, but also their own kids, their extended families, their circle of friends. “It’s a family affair, it is not just my husband and I, because it changes the entire dynamic of our home,” said Malia. Incorporating foster kids into the dynamic of one’s home requires acceptance of the chil- dren as they are, not as one would like them to be. This re- quires adjusting one’s expecta- tions of behavior. Kids who come into one’s home from somewhere else are often used to different routines, and in the case of kids coming into foster care, these routines often aren’t ideal for the chil- dren’s age group. Ratliff described a one-year- old she fostered who threw his food on the ground when she put him in a high chair for snack time. Usually when a small child throws their food, Ratliff said, it means they’re done eating. But when Ratliff took the child out of the chair, she saw him trying to eat off the fl oor. She realized he was throwing food because he wasn’t used to eating in a high chair. “He wasn’t done, he wanted to eat in a more comfortable environment,” she said. Especially when working with young foster children, who can’t yet articulate their needs, listening to behaviors and adjusting one’s sense of a “normal routine” accordingly is important. As opposed to forcing the child to eat in a high chair im- mediately, she tried to fi nd safe, but less restrictive places in the kitchen to feed him. “Their worlds have been fl ipped upside down,” she said, just by coming into care, so one shouldn’t force change too quickly. “Over time, we gradually work on that to get them to healthy, scheduled routines that are appropriate for their age,” she said. Malia noted that while fos- tering is truly challenging, the impact a foster home can have on a child is immense. Throughout our conversation, the Withams referenced a sib- ling set of three who lived with them for two years before mov- ing on to live with their bio- logical relatives a year ago. They still keep in touch and provide respite care for the kids on oc- casion. The three kids came to the Witham household with high needs and intense behaviors, but over the course of the three years they’ve known those sib- lings, they saw how their sup- portive environment allowed the kids to grow. “The growth that we’ve seen from when they moved in with us to now, you can see in behaviors what uncondi- tional love, what stability, what routine, all of those things that were not a part of their lives before, it changes them,” Malia said. “They are different kids.” One of the most challenging parts of being a foster parent is letting go and saying goodbye to the foster kids, especially when they’ve been in the home for an extended period of time. AL NU 4 T H AN 8k, 5k, 1k SATURDAY State Capitol Start/Finish AUG 11 Let’s Hustle to Prevent Heart Disease! Benefits Salem Health Foundation’s High Street Hustle for Heart Fund COSTUMES ENCOURAGED! REGISTER AT: ActiveSalem.com/high And that’s often a reason people cite for not becoming a foster parent, because it would hurt too much to give up a child they’ve developed a bond with. But foster parents are sup- posed to get too attached. That’s Every sometimes I wonder how many times can we do it. At what point does your heart say I can’t break anymore? I don’t know. We’re not there yet. It is the hardest thing we’ve ever done, but they’re worth it.” SHANE & MALIA WITHAM Shane and Malia Witham have been fos- tering for six and a half years. Shane works as a city planner in Keizer and Malia works as a stay-at- home mom. Their fostering journey began on the fl ight back from a mission trip to Uganda, when Malia felt challenged in her prayers to do good in Keizer. She asked herself and her family, “What is my mission here in Keizer?” Soon after, she and Shane certifi ed as short-term foster respite care, but ultimately began fostering full-time. Over this six-and-a-half year period, Shane said he has adapted his role as a father to consider the needs of the foster kids he and his wife Malia bring into their home. “I think sometimes people look at parenting, just regular old parenting, as I’m the parent and I’m the boss and I’ll have rules and boundaries. I’m there to fi x things, to protect things, and to be the person in charge,” Shane said. But when a child has been traumatized and abandoned, they’re not a problem to be “fi xed”—they’re a complex person that needs to be loved and listened to, even when they’re throwing a tantrum. “They’re going to freak out about cereal or whatever silly thing, because that’s a way they can control something because their life has been cha- os,” Shane said. And dealing with these behaviors takes a different approach to parenting than many have been socialized with. “One of the most effective ways of getting them to be okay, is just to be with them,” Shane said. If one of his foster kids was having a tantrum, “I wouldn’t say a word, but I’d go in [to their room] and just hang out with them, and say, ‘Aw buddy, I’m sorry you’re having a hard time’ but not forc- ing them, ‘Tell me what’s wrong,’ you can’t do that,” Shane said. “I think in a lot of these situations where children lack that trust, we have to earn that trust, by being consistent, by being loving and caring.” BRIGETT & MIKE EISELE Brigett Eisele and her husband Mike have been fostering kids for about two years. She works as a nurse full-time, and her husband works full- time as well. They now have two of their own kids, ages 12 and 14, and usually foster one or two children un- der the age of six. Eisele’s fi rst experience with the foster care system came when she was a fi rst-grade teacher in the Portland area in the early 2000’s. She regularly had students who were in various stages of foster care in her classes, and learned an important lesson about supporting them in her capacity as a teacher. She came to understand that “the academics I had to teach them was not the most important part of their life.” As a teacher without kids of her own GWEN & MIKE SLIPPY Gwen Slippy has worked in the local child welfare offi ce for fi ve years and currently fi lls the District 3 (encompassing the Marion, Polk, and Yamhill counties) role of foster parent recruitment and retention specialist. Her entrance into working with the system did not begin as a DHS worker, however. Her fi rst seven years of engagement with the foster care system were in the role of a foster parent, alongside her husband, Mike. Slippy became a foster parent in response to the methamphetamine crisis of the early 2000s, when a huge infl ux of kids entered foster care. “We drove a 12-passenger van and often traveled with 10-plus people in it. Our family of origin was four at the time, so we often fostered six children at a time,” she said. Her two biological children were always involved in the process, and Slippy and her husband adopted two children out of the foster care system during their time as foster parents. Foster parents will emphasize how AT KEIZER RAPIDS PARK To fi nd out more about be- coming a foster parent, adoptive parent, or short-term respite care provider, visit MarionFos- terOrAdopt.com, where you can contact local foster parent certifi ers. a home By CASEY CHAFFIN KEIZER ROTARY AMPHITHEATER PATRICK LAMB part of their job. “They need us to be heart- broken when they leave, be- cause that means that we loved them with every part of our being and that’s what we do,” Malia said. “It is hard. And important communicating with their “forever” children is in the fostering process, and making sure family cohesion isn’t stressed beyond repair during their time as foster parents. But foster parents, including Slippy, also emphasize how engaged their own at the time, she could spend time “making sure their basic needs were met,” so they could thrive in an educational environment. Now, as a full- time foster par- ent, she can have a fuller role in their lives, “in- cluding them in what our family would normally do,” she said. It’s important, however, to under- stand one’s capacity to bring foster kids into the home. “Not everyone can take every kind of kid,” she said, and differ- ent kids need different environments to thrive. “Recognizing what your family can handle, setting boundaries and sticking to them” is essential to being a suc- cessful foster family, she said. Because when a family doesn’t exceed their ca- pacity to care for the children in their home, those children get the care they need: full and undivided love and at- tention. Eisele said people tell her they could never foster because they’d get too attached to the kids. However, she said, “That’s what they need. You are supposed to get attached and you’re supposed to make them 100 percent part of your family.” children were in supporting the youth they brought into the household—and that whole-family engagement is part of what makes a foster family successful. “Our children were young and it was just a part of who we were as our children were growing up,” she said, adding: “When we didn’t have a full house – our two biological children would always ask in anticipation, ‘When will new kids come?’ and sometimes they would wake up in the morning and there would be several new faces at the kitchen table.” Her perspective on the foster care system has broadened since working within DHS. “The need is great and I had no idea just how great until coming to work for the Agency. … Understanding the whole picture of Child Welfare was a completely different perspective than when I was a foster parent. My focus was very narrow when fostering; it was all about loving and nurturing children, guiding and providing for their needs and doing what we could to help families reunify,” she said. CELEBR ATE · REMEMBER · HONOR FREE 2018 SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Saturday, July 21 GATES SHOW OPEN STARTS 5:00 pm 6:30 pm 503- 910 -3232 Thursday, August 23 at 7pm Salem Riverfront Park Join us for a short program of celebration, refl ection and a veteran honoring ceremony. SPONSOR TITLE SPONSOR Program: 7pm | Luminaria Reflection Walk: 8–9pm MORE SPONSORS City of Keizer • Columbia Bank • Uptown Music • KSLM 104.3 FM Keizer Vision Source • Willamette Valley Bank • Rich Duncan Construction UPS Store • Salem Electric • Walsh & Associates • R Bauer Insurance Advantage Renovations LLC • Highway Fuel • Rasmussen Spray Service Order your personalized luminaria online or call 503.588.3600. twilightontheriver.com