Well, I’m not exactly sure how to start this, so I suppose I
should pick up where I left off from the Facebook posts. The rest of that first weekend alone with the
girls went pretty well. After “The Wiz”
incident, I took the girls to the library for Shay’s weekly appointment with
her reading tutor. After that I took
them to see Hotel Transylvania at the dollar theater in the mall (it was cold
outside, hence all the movies. I promise
they do get outside). The theater filled
up with about forty pre-teens that had been milling around the mall all day,
cussing up a storm as they walked in.
With each new F-bomb, the girls just stared at me wide-eyed with their
mouths open. So I told them to ignore
it, that it’s “just a bunch of smelly pre-pubescent boys with their grimy
Affliction tee shirts and chain wallets that contain nothing but the twenty
bucks my mom gave them trying to show off for equally awkward girls that tower
over them and cackle like frightened hyenas.”
I then warned them not to be like those kids, that kids like that are douche
bags. They just kind of looked at me and
do what they do best: pretend they didn’t
hear me. Then the movie started, and all
was well. They girls laughed at the
movie and ate popcorn. I took a nap.
Amy got home later that day, and they ran to her like they
had just been freed from prison. To tell
you the truth, I did the same. Not
because I didn’t enjoy the weekend, but because I was excited to tell her about
the week. I found out that I can
actually LIKE these kids. I mean, I knew I was
supposed to LOVE them and everything. I
told them so all the time. They had said
it to me, desperate for love from someone who won’t abandon them and treat them
like garbage, love from someone who wouldn’t scream at them or lie to them or
shuffle them from one family member to another.
Love from someone they can count on.
So I said it back. Because I felt
that I had to. I know that’s harsh, but to
be completely honest, it’s different with foster kids. You think that the day they show up you’re going
to have all those paternal instincts just wash over you and you’ll just say, “Ah!
So this is what it is like to be a Dad.”
But it doesn’t happen like that. You
don’t know them, you never had that fun little pregnancy time (I say “fun”
because I’ve never been pregnant…I suppose some of you women out there would
beg to differ) where we pick shit out and paint rooms and wonder what to name
them. You don’t get to see them laugh
the first time or speak the first time or walk for the first time etc etc, all
those things that, from what I understand, build the bonds between parent and
child. No, they show up and you realize,
“Holy shit, there are children in here, strangers
in here, rifling through my stuff, playing with my phone, asking me things,
needing things, wanting things. Always, always wanting. What have we done?” Amy and I had been alone for so long,
wondering if we were ever going to be able to conceive, going through that
painful realization that maybe we weren’t able to. We went through the tests, (guys, you haven’t
lived until you’ve gone into a fertility clinic and are handed a test jar and a
worn out Penthouse magazine by some old lady with a big red wig, calling you
sweetheart just before she leads you into an awkward “spank tank” that has a
couch with scratchy paper on it with Kenny G playing on a little radio beside
it, and then told just before she shuts the door to this gross little house of
horrors to let her know if there is any “spillage”), toyed with the idea of
going through medical procedures, deciding if we were going to dip into savings
for IVF, whatever. But we just looked at
one another one day and thought that perhaps we should try to help kids that
need it, not just add another one to the planet that looks like us. I’m not trying to be self-congratulatory
here. And believe me, I’m not knocking
IVF. Everyone’s path to a family is noble
and brave and their own. Our reasons were just as selfish as any
other. We needed to be parents. So we
decided on fostering and to let go of trying to control everything. Let the chips fall as they may. Anyway, that’s how we became foster
parents. And before that “Mom’s out of
town so it’s just Dad and the kids” week, I think that in the back of my mind I
wondered if it was possible to feel the same way about foster kids as it is
with your “own” kids. Would I be able to
look down at them when they tell me they love me and be able to say it back
with everything I have? Would I be able
see their need for love and realize that I need it from them just as much? And more importantly: Do I LIKE them? Yes.
Yes I do. And I can. It’s possible, even for this clueless fat
guy. Sure our bonding experiences didn’t
happen eight years ago when all the cute stuff is happening. But it’s happening now, and it’s great. They’re
my kids. And as long as they are here
with us, I’ll love them like my own. Maybe
one day we’ll be able to adopt them.
Maybe not. But as long as we’re
foster parents, eventually it’ll happen. And we’re excited about that.
I apologize for getting a little sappy there, but I thought
that an introduction and a little background information were in order. I’ll leave with a funny thing Mo said the
other night as I was putting them down for bed.
Mo: “Dad, will you
turn off all the lights? Even the
nightlight? And shut the door?”
Me: “Sure…but you don’t
want any lights on? Nothing?
I mean, I’m glad you aren’t afraid of the dark and all, but when I was
your age, I at least wanted the hallway light on.”
Mo: “Well…it’s
because my skin is dark. You see, if a
monster or someone comes in to get me, they won’t be able to see me. I’ll just close my eyes and they’ll think I’m
not in here.”
Me: “Oh…uh…I don’t
know how to respond to that.”
Mo: “Dad, it’s called camouflage. Haven’t you ever heard of camouflage?”
Me: “Yes, darlin’, I’m familiar with the concept of
camouflage. Good Lord. Go to sleep.”
Then I giggled the whole way down the stairs to tell Amy
what had just happened.
Great blog so far...
ReplyDeleteLove reading your writing, honey! Proud of you!
ReplyDeletethank you for allowing me to share your journey :) I look forward to your next installment. Bless you and Amy....gloria
ReplyDeleteHow do I subscribe to this thing? I love you Welch.
ReplyDeleteUuuh...I dunno how you subscribe. I'll try to figure it out. By the way, are you gonna be around next week after Wednesday? Gonna be in Denver sucka! Girls have never seen the mountains, so we're heading up there.
DeleteMo sounds awesome...and I'm pretty sure you can at least inherit a sense of humor from anyone which means they are definitely in great hands.
ReplyDeleteWell thanks Kate! And yeah, they're both pretty funny. Probably all kids are pretty funny, but before all this I'd never really listened to any of them long enough to figure it out. Hope things are going well for you!
DeleteI can't wait to follow this blog!!! Matt, I really appreciate your honesty and, as always, you have me laughing outloud. You and Amy made a great choice - your girls lives' will forever be changed for the better because you are a part of them.
ReplyDelete