Archive for the ‘Family News’ Category
Online Support: The Perfect Answer for Many Adoptive Parents
Support can come in lots of ways for people who have adopted children who have special needs. Talking to someone who “gets it” is one of the best things that we as adoptive parents can do to normalize our experience and feel like we are not alone. However, some types of support just aren’t possibilities for us during our most trying of days.
Here are some reasons why “real life” as opposed to virtual, online support aren’t possible for adoptive parents:
1) Traditional support groups require us to leave our homes. This requires child care. Many adoption support groups do not provide child care.
2) Traditional support groups that meet in person sometimes offer child care. However, sometimes our children simply cannot function in that setting — even if it is geared to special needs children.
3) Sometimes we are simply to exhausted to make ourselves look presentable. Even if we want to get out and go to a group, it would require having time for a shower and ttime to find clothes that match and don’t have holes in them, perhaps makeup or perfume… you get the idea. Sometimes we’re just too tired at the end of the day to get there.
4) If we can’t meet in person, phone calls are the next best thing. However, it is quite embarrassing to be talking to someone with the noise of a kid raging in the background or while being called a variety of interesting and colorful names by an angry teenager. After we’ve said, “wait, hold on a second” five or six times it just gets too frustrating to try any longer.
5) Having visitors would be another natural way to connect with others, but I know you can think of 30 reasons why THAT isn’t going to happen. At least I can.
6) Meeting another adoptive parent for coffee or lunch is a great idea IF all the kids are in school and IF the school isn’t calling to interrupt the lunch or coffee time to say that we have to come to the school to intervene, give advice, or bring them home.
So, naturally, those of us who have interesting children at home often can’t find support by going to a “real life” support group. We can’t have people over, go out to meet someone, or talk on the phone. Fortunately, there is the internet and now even those of us in the midst of the battle in the trenches can participate in an online group.
So obviously, after reading the paragraphs above, you should already be able to articulate these reasons why online support has been my favorite type in my fifteen years as a foster and adoptive parent:
I don’t have to get dressed up. In fact I don’t have to get dressed at all. I don’t have to go anywhere. I can do it any time of day or night, it doesn’t matter if everyone is awake, or nobody is. Nobody can hear the noise and chaos in the background.
I also find that the ability to write down what I am feeling (which often is required for online support) helps me understand myself more.
So if you are finding a need to “talk” to “someone who gets it” during the next weeks, why not check out online support options? List servs, message boards, blogs, and other avenues of online connections can be just what you are looking for.
If you have not heard, Adopt America has an online support group via Facebook. You can check us out by searching for Adopt America Network’s Support Group on facebook and asking to join. We’d love to have you be a part of our group. And remember … we couldn’t care less what you look like right now, or what your kids are doing or saying in the background, or if you have lots of energy or very little. We are definitely a “come as you are” group. “See” you soon!
Adoption – the Hood Family
My wife, Karen, and I have adopted ten children. We have children from Korea, India, Ethiopia, and from the United States. We used WACAP (World Association of Children and Parents) for our foreign adoptions. We went through Child Protective Services (CPS) for most of our in-country adoptions.
I would certainly encourage people interested in having children to consider adoption. There is definitely a need for adoptive parents locally and globally.
Being a parent is a big responsibility, which brings big joy and sometimes big sorrow. However, we now have 16 children, 10 adopted, 5 biologic, and one foster daughter. The satisfaction of seeing then mature into responsible adults is worth any hardship.
Keep smiling,
Dr. James Hood
May is National Foster Care Month!
Source: National Foster Parent Association

Presidential Proclamation
President Barak Obama issued a presidential proclamation designating May 2011 as National Foster Care Month. The proclamation begins,
“For nearly half a million youth in foster care across our country, the best path to success we can give them is the chance to experience a loving home where they can feel secure and thrive. During National Foster Care Month, we renew our commitment to ensuring a brighter future for foster youth, and we celebrate the selfless individuals who make a meaningful difference in their lives.” You can read the full proclamation here.
What can you do? Here are some ideas.
- Go to the FosterCareMonth.org website and get some action ideas! See if there is an event in your area.
- Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper. Tell them why the contribution of foster families should be celebrated.
- Raise money for your local or state foster parent association by creating a Walk Me Home walk.
- Help a foster child by becoming a mentor or a CASA.
- Call, email or write your local social services or family services director – tell them that you are thankful that they do their best to protect our most vulnerable children.
- Once a week this month, bring up the topic of foster care in a conversation with friends or co-workers.
Walk Me Home
Walk Me Home….to the place I belong is the signature fund-raising and awareness event for foster care in America. We know not everyone can be a foster parent, but Walk Me Home is a great way to support the over 424,000 children in foster care. This year thousands and thousands of walkers will participate in Walk Me Home events across the country, raising funds to support the life changing programs and activities of foster care associations throughout the United States.
Get your organization, family, or just yourself involved! Get more information at the Walk Me Home web page, and check out the cool music videos.
NFPA is proud to announce the Dave Thomas Foundation as the newest Walk Me Home sponsor.
April is National Poetry Month!
In 1996, the Academy of American Poets instituted the nation-wide recognition of American poetry. Now, 15 years later, National Poetry Month is the largest literary celebration in the world, bringing poets, librarians, teachers, booksellers, and ordinary citizens together. We in the Hood family enjoy reading poetry very much, and Karen herself is a talented poet with several volumes of poetry in print. We hope that you will join us in celebrating American poetry during the month of April.
According to the National Poetry Month website, the goals of this celebration are to:
- Highlight the extraordinary legacy and ongoing achievement of American poets
- Introduce more Americans to the pleasures of reading poetry
- Bring poets and poetry to the public in immediate and innovative ways
- Make poetry a more important part of the school curriculum
- Increase the attention paid to poetry by national and local media
- Encourage increased publication, distribution, and sales of poetry books
- Increase public and private philanthropic support for poets and poetry
There are literally hundreds of things you can do to participate in National Poetry Month, including attending a poetry reading or organizing one of your own, memorizing a poem, or attend a writing workshop. There are also local events being organized around the country, like the Copper Canyon Press Poetry Reading that will be held on April 5 in Seattle. Check with colleges and bookstores in your area to find out what special events you can attend. If you will be in New York at the end of the month, check out the 9th annual Poetry & the Creative Mind benefit that helps raise funding for the Academy of American Poets. Some of America’s leading artists, scholars, and public figures will participate in this extraordinary evening celebrating the role of contemporary poetry in American culture. Past guest readers at the benefit have included Meryl Streep, Senator Edward Kennedy, Dan Rather, Lauren Bacall, and Alan Alda.
For more ways to participate in NPM, click here! In the meantime, check out this review of Karen Hood’s first volume of poetry, Frost of Spring Green. Whether you are a poetry lover already or someone looking into this art form for the first time, you will be delighted by this book. It’s a great way to kick off the celebration!
Purchase Frost of Spring Green today!

















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