This mom raised more than 40 kids | members only

Aarp

This mom raised more than 40 kids | members only"


Play all audios:

Loading...

You don’t start out thinking you’re going to raise more than 40 children — including two of your own. But they’re all my own, in a way. When my kids, Tamara and Floyd, were in high school in


Silver Spring, Maryland, they’d sometimes bring home friends who needed a place to stay. For whatever reason, their parents had kicked them out. I’d been a housewife until my husband and I


divorced, but at this point, I was working two jobs. My kids still thought I was the kind of mom who could make the cookies and fix the problem. So when one of their friends had trouble at


home, they’d say, “Let’s go talk to my mom. She’ll know what to do.” We had a big house with extra bedrooms, and their friends who couldn’t go home were always welcome to stay. I really


don’t know what prompted me to formally apply to the foster care system, but after Tamara and Floyd were launched, in the 1990s, I decided to open my door to younger children. Often the


agency would ask, “Will you just help us for a couple of days, until we can arrange for a longer-term placement?” They would bring the kids, and the kids would adjust and wouldn’t want to


leave. And so the county would let them stay. Most of the babies and toddlers I fostered stayed with me until they graduated from high school and eventually college. And most of them still


keep in touch. My last foster daughter just graduated from high school in the spring. You do get a stipend from the county for their upkeep, but it doesn’t cover everything. Whenever a child


needed a dress to wear to the prom, I would sew it for her. If someone needed money for an after-school activity, I took it from my savings. I never wanted them to feel different from the


kids in biological families. I consider every single one of these children to be a member of my family. I pray for my kids every night. I ask God to keep them safe and watch over them,


because they all turned out to be really nice men and women. They all have jobs. Some of them own their own businesses; some of them work in the medical field. Before I moved to a retirement


community recently, I lived in the same house for 52 years, and the neighbors knew there were always children staying with me. Not too long ago, one of them told me they’d never known the


kids were foster children. They’d thought I was just taking care of relatives — family members’ children. There’s no better compliment I could have gotten. Every child deserves that level of


love and care. So when my neighbor said that, I thought to myself, _You know what? I didn’t do too bad._ _Emma Patterson, 88, a retired administrative worker, lives in Upper Marlboro,


Maryland._


Trending News

Salman rushdie's 'feisty and defiant' humour is intact, says son

New York: Salman Rushdie is still in a critical condition, but his usual feisty and defiant sense of humour remains inta...

Washington grown | organic produce preview | season 12 | episode 1207

- On the next episode of "Washington Grown" we're learning about organic produce. Val's visiting Lit...

How is va working to end veteran homelessness? | va greater los angeles health care | veterans affairs

The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is on a mission to end Veteran homelessness. It is making great strides in this ...

Steven gerrard has doubts about duo ahead of rangers’ match against hibernian

Rangers duo Connor Goldson and Juninho Bacuna are both doubts with knocks for the top of the cinch Premiership table cla...

Poll shows print newspaper readership on the decline - aarp bulletin

An era in which Americans read a daily newspaper with their morning coffee, or on the subway on their way to work, is fa...

Latests News

This mom raised more than 40 kids | members only

You don’t start out thinking you’re going to raise more than 40 children — including two of your own. But they’re all my...

The 17 million mystery (opinion)

Why, asks commentary writer Richard Vedder in the Chronicle of Higher Education, are 17 million Americans with four-year...

San antonio livable community: a survey of residents age 45-64

Memorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4  G...

Overlap of chronic pelvic pain disorders and neural cross-talk

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe Pezzone MA _et al_. (2005) A model of neural cross-talk and irritation ...

557 decreased bone mineral content (bmc) in breast-fed infants without supplemental vitamin d (d): “catch up” mineralization at 6 months and one year;

ABSTRACT We previously reported a double blind randomized prospective study of 9 exclusively breast-fed infants without ...

Top