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I am a child welfare professional involved in a case about court-mandated post-termination visitation (PTV), and I am looking for info from people who have experience with this. I am particularly interseted in hearing from prospective-adoptive parents regarding how the possibility of having to produce a child for post-termination visitation impacts their willingness to adopt or their feelings about adoption. Does it interject some trepidation? If you had a choice to adopt either in a state that sometimes ordered PTVs or could adopt in a state where termination was final and complete w/o PTVs, which state would you choose? Are there any porospective-adopters who would prefer to adopt in a state where PTVs may be sought by bioPs and ordered by the court? I would appreciate hearing from anyone who has an opinion on this, especially if you have actual experience with it as a parent, child or service provider. Much obliged.
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The Laws we have were written and passed. Children have a legal right to be raised by a family. There is no way that 2 sets of families can successfully raise an emotionally healthy child with these circumstances.
We have a totally different opposite lifestyle than our dds bio family. Plus everytime they see us they don't like what they see. They are constantly questioning her. When she started her musical instrument they questioned her if she really wanted to play it? They thought we were forcing it because our family is very musical. It's that kinda constant crap that we have to deal with. They are always watching us and questioning her on everything we do. Looking for any kind of open door to get her away from us. They still want control. They certainly don't want her to like us or listen to us. The bottom line is they want her back and they don't look at us as if we are her parents. We are just court ordered babysitters to them and they have made it clear that she is to come back home as soon as she reaches 18. One of them cornered me in the restaurant bathroom and told me that just because she lives with you doesn't make you her mother. I ask you Eomaia, " Can you really have a healthy relationship with your kids now that the sister in law is there legal mother? Can you except that this is their family and support their parental authority? Even when they have a whole different life than you?
This kind of dissagreement (and we have been through much more than musical instuments) make a child emotionally sick. We realized the only way we are going to give her a real chance is to keep her away for a while at least until she feels really secure with us.
We know that someday she may want to see them and that is ok when she is mature and able to deal with it.
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joyfulmother
The Laws we have were written and passed. Children have a legal right to be raised by a family. There is no way that 2 sets of families can successfully raise an emotionally healthy child with these circumstances.
We have a totally different opposite lifestyle than our dds bio family. Plus everytime they see us they don't like what they see. They are constantly questioning her. When she started her musical instrument they questioned her if she really wanted to play it? They thought we were forcing it because our family is very musical. It's that kinda constant crap that we have to deal with. They are always watching us and questioning her on everything we do. Looking for any kind of open door to get her away from us. They still want control. They certainly don't want her to like us or listen to us. The bottom line is they want her back and they don't look at us as if we are her parents. We are just court ordered babysitters to them and they have made it clear that she is to come back home as soon as she reaches 18. One of them cornered me in the restaurant bathroom and told me that just because she lives with you doesn't make you her mother. I ask you Eomaia, " Can you really have a healthy relationship with your kids now that the sister in law is there legal mother? Can you except that this is their family and support their parental authority? Even when they have a whole different life than you?
This kind of dissagreement (and we have been through much more than musical instuments) make a child emotionally sick. We realized the only way we are going to give her a real chance is to keep her away for a while at least until she feels really secure with us.
We know that someday she may want to see them and that is ok when she is mature and able to deal with it.
want to know how a parent could not deserve to ever see their own child again
They still want control. They certainly don't want her to like us or listen to us. The bottom line is they want her back and they don't look at us as if we are her parents. We are just court ordered babysitters to them and they have made it clear that she is to come back home as soon as she reaches 18. One of them cornered me in the restaurant bathroom and told me that just because she lives with you doesn't make you her mother. I ask you Eomaia, " Can you really have a healthy relationship with your kids now that the sister in law is there legal mother? Can you except that this is their family and support their parental authority? Even when they have a whole different life than you?
This kind of dissagreement (and we have been through much more than musical instuments) make a child emotionally sick. We realized the only way we are going to give her a real chance is to keep her away for a while at least until she feels really secure with us.
I'm kept locked out of my kids' lives, they'll find me- probably online the minute they can use a computer unsupervised, otherwise when V turns 18. I try to be forgiving, compassionate and understanding, I know their aunt really wanted to have children and went through years of fertility treatments, and that in her mind, she's doing this out of love. I know that if she keeps telling them that I couldn't take care of them, and they come looking for me, and I've got a really stable life with a nice home, especially if I'm remarried and have more children- that whole "unable to take care of them" line will seem like a lie. If they are angry with her, I will encourage them to keep communication open and resolve things with her.
Eomaia,
I do agree with you that TPR should be a jury trial. It is a huge decision to terminate parental rights with only one person making that decision. It can be appealed but it is rare. However, TPR with adoption is TOTALLY different than divorce/stepfamily situation. When you get divorced you do not have your rights to your children taken from you. When you choose to marry someone it is your decision to have kids together. You know that your husband will have rights to them. It is your choice to do that. When you divorce you work it out with the law if need be when you will see your kids. The kids have a huge change and it is hard on them but they still have both of their parents.
TPR is a whole different ball game. You have certain responsibilities by law to provide a safe, somewhat clean healthy enviornment, adequate clothing, food and education for your children. If you cannot do that your kids are taken from you and given to someone else to adopt. Thats the law. In order for those parents to be able to parent legally they must have full rights to parent. Thankfully the law recognizes this. The kids get a new family and are cared for and loved the rest of their lives.
If you could provide those things for your kids they wouldn't have taken them away. They could not by law take them from you. If you live with a violent abuser and they tell you you must leave then that is what you need to do. If you are on drugs or neglecting your kids you need to change that. Most parents are given more time than the law allows to get it together. Judges don't like to TPR. It is a horrible day to endure. Can I ask you how much time you had? Our dds bps had 31 months. In our state they are only allowed 12 months with up to two 3 month extentions. (That is if they are working their plan.) The judge did everything he could to keep them together.
Eomaia, I hope you do heal and I am praying for you. The first step to healing is admitting. I am so glad to hear you are getting involved in your community. It sounds like you are on your way to a better life. You will probably never fully recover from this. I know I wouldn't. The answer is finding faith in God and seeking the real reason this has happened to you, and finding a new normal. The answer is not in showing your kids someday that you didn't deserve this and somehow secretly hope that your kids will be upset with their Mom and Dad or the sws and the judge. They shouldn't have to make peace with anyone. They will need answers someday from you. They will also get answers from the legal paperwork from your case. We have a stack of papers over a foot high for our dd to read someday when we feel she can handle it. I hope that you won't try to make them take sides. They are innocent and did not ask for all this. I really hope the best for you and that you find peace and a good life. Also I hope that you could come to appreciate your BIL and SIL. They have a huge job taking care of the kids with all of their emotional issues. They deserve your silent support for keeping the kids in the family. Raising kids that have been through the system and taken away from people they know and love have a mountain of issues.
joyfulmother
If you could provide those things for your kids they wouldn't have taken them away. They could not by law take them from you. If you live with a violent abuser and they tell you you must leave then that is what you need to do. If you are on drugs or neglecting your kids you need to change that. Most parents are given more time than the law allows to get it together. Judges don't like to TPR. It is a horrible day to endure. Can I ask you how much time you had?
joyfulmother
The answer is finding faith in God and seeking the real reason this has happened to you, and finding a new normal. The answer is not in showing your kids someday that you didn't deserve this and somehow secretly hope that your kids will be upset with their Mom and Dad or the sws and the judge. They shouldn't have to make peace with anyone. They will need answers someday from you. They will also get answers from the legal paperwork from your case. We have a stack of papers over a foot high for our dd to read someday when we feel she can handle it. I hope that you won't try to make them take sides. They are innocent and did not ask for all this. I really hope the best for you and that you find peace and a good life. Also I hope that you could come to appreciate your BIL and SIL. They have a huge job taking care of the kids with all of their emotional issues. They deserve your silent support for keeping the kids in the family. Raising kids that have been through the system and taken away from people they know and love have a mountain of issues.
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Bad things happen to alot of people. My dh and I have been through 3 huge trials these past few years. We have closed our home because we can't take anymore stress right now. Two of them are bizarre and if I told you about them on -line some folks on here may know who I am and I do not want to give up my anonomous status and confidentiality. We have alot of foster-adopt families in our area. Our Christian agency is shocked at what we have been through and have been very supportive and understanding. We have faith in God and we go to church. One of them could have been prevented the other two were just being in the wrong place at the wrong time. We being believers know that while we are on earth trials will come. We believe God allows them for our spiritual growth and refinement, and God is there helping us, giving us new wisdom, and caring for us as we go through them. I personally believe that true Christians go through alot and some even die for their faith. Going to church or not going to church makes no difference. We still don't know what the future holds for us. I am now partially crippled, and I may never fully recover. I am still improving so there is hope. There are many things that I cannot do now that I could before. I never thought in a million years this would happen to me. These are things that you hear about that always happen to someone else. I have always been so healthy and active. Hopefully this will all go away in the next several months.
Eomaia, I find it hard to believe that you lost your parental rights because they wanted to keep the kids and you safe. Your husband may be a sociopath, but if you have a safe healthy home for the kids you could keep them. Time does run out at a certain point though and then it is too late. The state does not want kids lingering in foster care. Studies show that this is not good for them, and the older they get the harder it is for them to be adopted. I don't mean to be harsh to you, and I don't look at you as sub-human or an animal. Really I feel for you and I am so sad that this has happened to you. Many things that happen to women start by the choices they make when they are very young and inexperienced. Who you marry and or have children with can ruin your life, or give you the best life has to offer. I hope that you continue to do well. I hope the kids can find you well and successful someday.
I had a safe home when the case went to TPR. A 2 bedroom townhouse with a lot of bad memories, and I only got to see the kids for a 2-hour fully supervised visitation each week. Meanwhile, I was spending more time at my friends' house, a few blocks away, they were facing foreclosure, had 4 kids, were struggling financially, and there was always laundry & dishes that needed to be done. So, I moved in with them, it made sense, just until I got some spark of hope. After a couple months, CPS said that was a problem, so I got a studio apartment on month-to-month lease, and explained to CPS that as soon as I started getting more visits, I would get a bigger apartment, but I didn't see the point in committing to a 6 or 12 month lease on a 2 or 3 bedroom apartment that I was only going to use for 2 hours a week. They had said it wasn't good enough that I had the apartment, I needed to live there too. So, I tried to spend more time there, sitting on my butt watching dvds while a few blocks away, my friends' 15 year old with ADHD was trying to watch her 5 year old brother & make dinner & do homework & text boys all at the same time. CPS didn't notice, they just left a voicemail saying not to bother coming to court, my rights had been terminated. Nothing I did was good enough for them. Maybe it would have made a difference if I'd gotten a big apartment and sat alone in it while my friends' family fell apart and their kids ended up in foster care- or maybe CPS would have just kept nitpicking, and when I got TPR'd, I would have been alone without anyone to tell me to eat or go to work or not kill myself. If CPS really was concerned about my kids, they would have helped me make plans with smooth slow transitions since my son has Asperger's. Instead, they wanted me to just keep jumping through hoops without getting any promise of reward, they wanted me to just trust them after they'd proven themselves completely untrustworthy. The guy I'm sort of seeing now has worked for a CPS-related agency, supervising teens with substance abuse & behavioral problems, and he's told me my mistake was in not trusting them, in not telling them what was going on with my friends, but I didn't want for ALL our kids to end up in foster care in an attempt to get mine out.
I guess we could go on and on about this for a long time. I am sure CPS did not want you to move in with someone elses family with a teen ADHD and 3 other kids. Also they can't give you back the kids if you only have a studio apt. You need to have a bedroom for them and things ready for them to come home. You only have so much time. CPS doesn't have the man-power to help you with everything. They have some 30 cases or so per sw that they are working on. They can only give you names and phone #s of charities that can help you. You have to do the rest.
Taking care of your own family needs to come first. Your friend needs to worry about her own life. How could you be so concerned about someone elses family when you were so close to losing the kids? Well anyway this is all "water over the bridge" what is done is done. Now all you can do is pick up the pieces and move on.
I 'm posting all of this to try to help you not to judge you or to put you down. I hope that if you settle down with your new boyfriend that history doesn't repeat itself. I also have too much time on my hands while I am healing.
We're friends. They're the ones who were there for me when things were bad with my ex, they gave me a key so I could go stay in their house anytime I needed to, even if it was the middle of the night or they were out of town. If it had been a real choice between helping them or helping my own kids, of course my kids were top priority. If CPS had been willing to work out a plan- say, if I got my own apartment that was big enough for the kids, then I could get an increase in visits and decrease in supervision, and gradually work towards RU, then I would have. But I wasn't going to sign a 6 or 12 month lease when I might just be TPR'd the following week, and I wasn't going to sit on my butt watching Supernatural on dvd when my friends needed help. A lawyer friend has said since that she thinks they'd made up their minds to TPR me before he even left, so they were going to find fault with anything I did. Also, my ex was making a lot of false accusations to CPS, all my close friends got investigated, so I felt an obligation to help the friends I was staying with be prepared for a visit from CPS. By the point he left, I saw CPS as a bunch of evil control-freaks on a power trip, and I needed some proof that I was going to get something I wanted if I did what they wanted. I didn't need their help, I didn't need charity handouts, I just needed some evidence that my effort was going to be rewarded, it's hard to stay motivated when nothing you do is ever good enough. As for the new guy- he's not my boyfriend, we have not labeled it anything more than friendship, we've been getting to know each other for the past year, and it really bothers me to have people assume that having made one bad choice in a partner, I am going to just keep repeating the same mistake over and over- I suspect that assumption might be the real reason I was TPR'd. Anyhow, my not-boyfriend is really awesome, pillar of the community, does volunteer work helping kids make healthy choices, organized a major charity fundraiser, is on the Board at our church, all while working 60-80 hours a week. He's done a lot to help me get past the anger and stop being so judgmental and start forgiving. He encouraged me to start going to Al-Anon to deal with my issues, and when I've gotten upset, he's calmly listened to me rant then replied "Is there a way to re-phrase that as an 'I' statement?". Knowing him & knowing that he's worked in the system has helped me be more understanding of workers- because of course they all have their own personal issues too. When I first met him, I thought he was really cute, but figured once he found out I was a bioparent, not a real person, that he wouldn't want anything to do with me. It took me a long time and a lot of work to get to the point of feeling like I'm good enough for him, that not only do I deserve someone as awesome as him, but he deserves someone as awesome as me. It's best to focus on the future. My friends still have their kids, I went to visit them tonight and the 5 year old says he misses me all the time and wanted me to stay over. If I'd done what CPS wanted, I would have been TPR'd and gone home to an empty apartment, and been so alone, I don't think I would have gotten through it. Sometimes I wonder if CPS sets things up to encourage bio-parents to commit suicide- I'd really like to see follow-up stats on bioparents post-TPR, but there aren't any. Anyhow, my focus now is on helping other parents, and maybe eventually CPS will start treating bioparents like humans. My not-boyfriend's done work with helping people make healthy choices, maybe he'll have insights on how CPS can empower parents to make healthy choices, not micro-manage every detail of their lives as if they're total worthless idiots. I know how I was treated, and no human being should ever be treated like that.
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eomaia, you sound a lot like my FC's mother and I don't mean that in a degrading or negative way. For the first year the kids were in care, she fought social services with everything she had because she didn't agree with their reasons for removing the kids from her care. And she sure and heck didn't think she needed any of their services or that those services would actually help her get her children back. She was so close to the agency filing TPR after 12 months, but she rallied and changed because she saw she was getting nowhere by fighting them tooth and nail on every little thing. She eventually worked up to unsupervised visits with the kids and even had them overnights for 4 nights. But that was also what showed social services that she was unable to handle parenting her children on her own, full-time.
I think her stubborness is actually one of her best qualities. She will stand up for what she believes in, its just unfortunate that she does it to an extreme and to the detriment of her relationship with her kids and her future (or lack of) with them.
I disagree that CPS sets things up in such a way that bio parents are encouraged to commit suicide. It's a ridiculous accusation considering in my case, the kids' mother has been given all the mental health services they can offer in addition to all the parenting services she was offered.
I agree that you need a supportive network to help you through the ups and downs of life, but at the same time, you are the only one who can be held accountable at the end of the day. Your unwillingness to comply with CPS that I've perceived in your posts, is/was a big issue. And your obvious anger regarding the entire process is holding you back, and I think you may finally realize that.
Without knowing your full story, it's difficult to know exactly where things went wrong and if TPR was the right path, but from what you have shared, it appears as though the decision was made in the best interest of your children.
racingwife20
it appears as though the decision was made in the best interest of your children.
racingwife20
For the first year the kids were in care, she fought social services with everything she had because she didn't agree with their reasons for removing the kids from her care. And she sure and heck didn't think she needed any of their services or that those services would actually help her get her children back. She was so close to the agency filing TPR after 12 months, but she rallied and changed because she saw she was getting nowhere by fighting them tooth and nail on every little thing. She eventually worked up to unsupervised visits with the kids and even had them overnights for 4 nights. But that was also what showed social services that she was unable to handle parenting her children on her own, full-time.
We have a court ordered post adoption visitation with an aunt. I feel the contact has been ok. She is not over stepping her boundaries, but the other family members keep asking her if they can have visits also. I have had several bio relatives try to contact me over the years and it has been very stressful and annoying. I have to keep saying no contact until the child is older. I get mad somedays that the court ordered us to do the visits, I feel like they are interferring with our family.:(
I have not read all the replies so excuse me if I repeat.We have adopted 6 children. 2 sibs of 3. They are bio cousins to one another. Their mother's are sisters. There is a ton of mental health issues in this family and it was deemed unsafe for us to have visits. We felt that in this situation it was better for us to not volunteer visitation. We are again in the process of adopting. Because my first 6 have attachment issues we feel that they wouldn't comphrehend why our new children get to see their bio family and they don't. We have decided that our only option is to adopt children through foster that do not require any personal contact. Had we had open adoptions with our other six I would be open to adopting that way again. I will say that I think, especially when dealing with foster system, that there has to be some leeway in the open adoption.
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o2b30again
I will say that I think, especially when dealing with foster system, that there has to be some leeway in the open adoption.
We are signing papers to adopt in the next week and the great grandparents, who have had court ordered pre and post adoption monthly visits since TPR, have filed a petition to keep the monthly visits in the adoption contract. DHR says they can do this but it will be up to a judge to decide whether or not it will be beneficial for the children. But you better believe I will not be signing any papers that have these terms.