Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Reflections - November Support Group

I know I say this every time. But it is true. We have awesome support groups. This last Thursday the topic for the evening was 'Biological Children and How They are Affected by Adoption'.  We were given the perspective of the adoptive families birth children. One birth child had just turned 18 when her parents adopted (a sibling group of four), and she has always taken a strong support role. One young man (22year old who now has a baby of his own) was ten or eleven when his parents adopted his brother. He shared of his appreciation of the experience but also of how he became the parentified older brother.
We also had a brother (13) and sister (16) share their experience, loving their very wounded and challenged adopted sibling, who they are grateful to have in their lives despite the difficulties and challenges of his mental illness. That very week he had just come back from a year’s intensive out of placement care.
Now these were not necessarily the stories one shares with the faint of heart. But as anyone who has adopted can tell you, adoption is not for the faint of heart.
Their experience highlighted one important fact that should never be ignored by a prospective adoptive family. Adoption is not an individual experience. It is not mom’s “project” or “just something my parents want to do.” Adoption is a family experience. It affects the lives of everyone in the family and the commitment and involvement of everyone in the family is needed to make it successful.

Kevin

P.S. The Parent's group for December will be a pot-luck, meet and greet. Date is still pending.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

STC at Kidfest

E-mail from Sharon who represented the Sylvia Thomas Center at the Kidfest event at MOSI this past Saturday morning.


Hey Kevin,

The Teen Scene and Forever Friends Kids Club had a great time at the Kidfest on Saturday, October 1st.
Kidfest consisted of a parade of banners with anti-drug and anti-violence messages, and free
admission to MOSI after the parade. The kids work on the banner during their September 22nd Support Group meeting.
We also had two teen volunteers come in to STC last week to complete the banner. Making the banner helped foster
teamwork, grow friendship and cooperation amongst our kids.

I attached 3 pictures from the parade that you can choose from. We had releases for all of the kids.
Sharon Dues




Thursday, September 29, 2011

These Three Things I Know Are True - Part One

Okay, nothing is 100%. There are always exceptions to every rule. In all the years I have worked child welfare I have not seen many exceptions, and those I saw I question. When caring for children who have been traumatized, (every child in the system of care), you can count on these three things:

Children always love their birth parents
If you want a definition of unconditional love, you do not have to look any further than the heart of a child. It does not matter the type of abuse or situation brought the child into care. Trust me on this. When you want to “set your child straight” regarding their bio parent because your child doesn’t appreciate all you are doing; bite your tongue. It is unnecessary and you will lose the heart of your child.
Unnecessary - because they will figure it out on their own. It may take their late teens or early adulthood for the pieces to connect, but it will happen.  
You will lose the heart of your child – Your child will raise sword and shield in defense of their birth parents. You lose the moment you make it an “us versus them” issue. Seriously, just don’t go there.

Children always feel the guilt
I don’t really know why this is, but you also see it children of divorce. Somehow our children take it upon themselves that they are the reason the marriage dissolved or somehow it is their responsibility to bring their parent’s back together. In the case of children who have been removed from their birth family this guilt may be compounded due to a sibling’s accusation that they “caused the problem” or if the abuse or neglect was discovered due to something they said or someone seeing marks on their body.
Our children just don’t get it until much later (with much loving reinforcement), that their only responsibility in life is to be a child and grow. Caring for the child and themselves is the parent’s responsibility. Be aware of this especially when your child seems to always be lying or hiding something. Guilt can be a beast.

Children hold on to the belief their birth family is going to “save” them.
This goes back to that unconditional love. With love comes limitless hope. Our children are fountains of hope.  Regardless all evidence to the contrary, they cling to the hope that birth mom and dad are going to finally get it together and show up at the door one day to take them back home.
Of course it doesn’t happen. There is a reason our child languished in the system and it is not because social services needed more children to care for. This leads to countless heart breaks. I wrote previously of the difficulty our children face as they turn 18 and often try to reconnect with birth family.
This is one reason why many children have difficulty in fully giving themselves to a new family: it feels like a betrayal of their birth family; and again we come back to guilt.


 Kevin

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Guest Speaker Maurice Webb and Adoption Competency Training


The Sylvia Thomas Center has a couple of big events coming up that we hope you will consider taking a part in: Oct. 14th Guest Speaker Maurice Webb and Oct. 31st – Nov.4th  Adoption Competency Certification Training

Sylvia Thomas Center Training Institute Presents:                           
Guest Speaker Maurice Webb

National lecturer and author of Growing Up in the Care of Strangers will present Friday, October 14th, 9:00am to 1:00pm.  He will be speaking on “Youth and Family Engagement: Systematic Approaches for Stakeholders” covering the following topics:
·         Identifying strategies to engage families and youth in the permanency process.
·         How to affectively use therapists, social workers, family, etc. as stakeholders.
·         His experiences as a former youth in the system of care, becoming a parent and his experience as a professional in the child welfare field.
·         Capturing the failures and success of how to engage the whole family.
This one day invitation is open to the public.  Seating is limited. 
Please RSVP by contacting Sylvia Thomas Center (813) 651-3150 or e-mail kroles@sylviathomascenter.org

Cost: $30.00

Location:   The Children’s Board of Hillsborough County   
      1002 E. Palm Avenue
      Tampa, FL 33605
Seating is limited.  Please RSVP by contacting Sylvia Thomas Center (813) 651-3150.
Also coming up:
Adoption Competency Certification Training

Through this intensive program you will learn invaluable tools to support you in providing for the unique needs of our children in Child Welfare and Adoptions and the families who care for them.  No matter your role, if you touch the life of a child in the system of care, who has been adopted or the parents of these children, this training is for you. 

This one-week training covers Attachment, Transition, Abuse & Neglect, Brain Development and so much more.


Added Benefits
With completion of this state-certified training:
·         You have the opportunity to become credentialed to provide specialized Adoption Training services with the Children’s Board ASO (Administrative Services Organization). STC’s Adoption Competency Training is a standard credential requirement for a number of adoption-related ASO services.
·         Listing on the Children’s Board website as an Adoption Competent provider.
·         Listing on the Sylvia Thomas Center’s web-site as an Adoption Competent Provider.
·         DCF Certification recognizing you have completed of Adoption Competency Training.
·         Therapist may be listed on the www.adoptflorida.org website.
·         Have CEU opportunities for some licensed providers.


Details:
Trainings are scheduled quarterly with each session lasting one full week; 36 hours.  Classes are from 9:00am to 5:30pm Monday through Thursday and 9:00am to 3:45 on Friday.  The trainings take place at The Children’s Board of Hillsborough County. 
Location: 1002 E. Palm Ave, Tampa, FL
               33605, in the Ybor City area.

2011-2012 schedule:
  • 10/31/2011 – 11/4/2011
  • 2/27/2012 – 3/2/2012
  • 6/4/2012 – 6/8/2012
  • Fall 2012 – TBD

Class fees are $195 for the complete training.  CEU’s are offered for an additional $50.  Registrants are eligible for CEU’s if they are licensed for one or more of the following: 
·         Florida Board of Clinical Social Work (LCSW)
·         Marriage and Family Therapy (MFT)
·         Mental Health Counseling (MHC)

Registration:
For more information or to register, contact Kitty Roles at the Sylvia Thomas Center kroles@sylviathomascenter.org or (813) 651-3150.  Additional information and registration forms will be forwarded as requested.  Fees are to be paid at time of registration.    Scholarships may be available based on individual need.

Kevin D. Slack, M.A.
Director of Training
Lead trainer, Kevin Slack, M.A. is certified by NACAC as an Adoption Competent Trainer and has provided training for Adoption Competency since October of 2008.  Mr. Slack is Director of the Sylvia Thomas Center Training Institute and has over 23 years experience working in the field of child welfare and adoptions.  He has a wealth of knowledge which he actively shares with students.

Ginger M. Martin, LCSW
Adoption Support Counselor/Trainer
Co-Trainer, Ginger Martin, LCSW is an Adoption Competent provider and trainer.  Ms. Martin has 7 years experience working in the field of child welfare and adoptions.  These years included case management, therapeutic services, as well as, training potential foster and adoptive families.  
She enjoys sharing her experiences
with her students.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Got a minute? You could save a family…

Many of you saw the recent news reports regarding the Sylvia Thomas Center and our funding concerns. I have asked our Executive Director Denise Jamieson to write this next blog to answer some of the most asked questions.

Kevin

Got a minute?  You could save a family…
Most of you have heard about the funding challenges the Sylvia Thomas Center is facing.  Our primary funder for the past eleven years has been the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County and we are extremely grateful for that support.  However, due to cuts in tax revenue and the taxpayer referendum it will face in 2016, the Children’s Board decided to significantly reduce the funding of most of the agencies it supports and limit future funding to organizations focusing on early childhood school readiness.
So, on August 25th, the Children’s Board announced that our total funding for next year would be cut by slightly more than 20%, equating to $73,000.  This was shocking because we had only been anticipating an 8% cut.  The cuts begin on October 1, 2011.  That gave us just 5 weeks’ notice.
The Sylvia Thomas Center needs to raise $73,000 on its own this year, something we have never done before, in order to continue helping adoptive and pre-adoptive families and their precious, precious children. 
Adopted children suffer deeply from feelings of abandonment, in their minds feeling they have been abandoned by their biological moms, often abandoned by a myriad of foster moms, and are now, because of their emotional wounds, in danger of being abandoned by their adoptive moms.  The teens in our Teen Scene support group said to us, “You cannot abandon us too.  We need you.”
We cannot let these children and families down.  The board and staff of the Sylvia Thomas Center are committed to raising the funds not only for this year but for the years to come.
However, we need YOUR help!
Partner with us and you could save a family.  In fact, you will save a family.  In eleven years of operation we have had only one adoption dissolve among families receiving our case management services.  However, many of the families have said that, without our help, they would have dissolved the adoption.  The Sylvia Thomas Center puts the “forever” in forever families but we cannot do it alone.
Through our website or through the mail, please consider making a one-time donation or support us on a monthly basis.  The healing continues only if partners like you stand up and stand beside us.  Any amount makes a difference in these families’ lives.  If you can make a gift of $5,000 or more, please call me directly (813.651.3150) so we can talk about ways to leverage your gift.
It only takes a minute, and you could save a family…

Dee Jamieson, CEO

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Social Security Stipend and Adoptions Tax Refund

(One of our families shared this with me and I am sharing it with you.)

Hey Kevin,

Thought you might like to share this info with other adoptive families.

I found out that if you adopt a child who has been diagnosed with ADHD the child may be eligible for social security benefits in addition to the stipend from HKI. Those parents need to call Social Security and make an appointment to talk to them. They will tell you what you need to do and/or take with you to your app’t.

In addition, I found out that since I am over 65 and get social security, my son is able to get something called Aux Child Benefits, which in our case give him more money each month than SSD (or SSI??) would.

It’s worth checking into. Please pass this info on!!

Thanks for everything you’ve done to help us.

NMM

P.S.   Yes, you can get an adoption refund on income tax because of the change in the law this year. The first tax person I went to at an H & R Block near my house said I couldn’t because my son was not a special needs child. Thankfully a foster mom friend of mine, who has also adopted some of her children, directed me to her H & R Block tax person and sure enough in FL if a child is adopted from the foster system he/she is considered “Special Needs”.

(I know you had a speaker at Sylvia Thomas recently and I was not able to make that session but there may be other parents who have adopted and are still not aware of this law. If they don’t act soon they may miss this small window of opportunity!!)

HOPE THIS INFO HELPS SOMEONE!!


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Laughed, Screamed and Jumped

Our kids from the Adolescent Support Groups, Teen Scene and The Forever Friends Kids Club, had a great time celebrating the end of the summer last Thursday night at BOING! Jump Center in Tampa. They laughed, screamed and jumped until they were drenched with sweat. We then cooled down with water, pizza, snacks and cupcakes. 

We also celebrated the end of our MSW intern, Khalilah's summer internship. (Don't worry Khalilah's not going anywhere

she will still be facilitating Teen Scene).







Don't miss out on the fun. Join us on 9/22/11 @ STC for the next Teen Scene and Kids Club meeting.

Sharon

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

August Support Group


Another incredible group this last Thursday night on “Advocating for Your Child’s Educational Needs” discussing how to prepare our kids for a productive school year and how to navigate the school system special needs programs and advocating for our children. Our guest speaker for this month was Kelli Stocker (you will want to remember this name). She is an amazing resource for our parents with kids struggling through the school system, Kelli is a guidance counselor with the School District of Hillsborough County on special assignment to support students in foster care.   In this role she works with the youth, foster parents and service providers to complete educational plans for students, monitors their progress and serves as the children’s educational advocate. She clearly has a heart for our kids and has openly availed herself to also assist our adoptive families in need of guidance and assistance.
You can reach her at kelli.stocker@hillsboroughkid.org, kelli.stocker@sdhc.k12.us, or (813)210-4108.
Just a reminder, our parent support group is on the second Thursday 6:30 to 8:00pm of every month are open to both Pre and Post adoptive families. So, if you have just finished the MAPP training, have not even been matched yet or if you adopted years ago, you are invited. We usually post our month’s topic on our Facebook page about a week ahead of each group. If you would like to visit, go to http://www.facebook.com/pages/Sylvia-Thomas-Center/255679040265.
Call if you have any questions. (813)651-3150

Kevin

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Back from NACAC 2011


Back from the NACAC Conference and still just processing everything. So many incredible speakers with vast knowledge and experience. As I sat through one amazing presentation after another, I was often struck by the thought, “you just don’t know what you don’t know.”
Of the many of topics covered the most commonly addressed issues were trauma and brain development. Of course our keynote speaker Dr. Bruce Perry is very well known for his knowledge on these topics. But I would not say that these topics were the theme of the conference. Not even of Dr. Perry’s message.
No, if I was to summarize the theme of the conference, it would be this: The potential power of one committed connection to change the writing on a wounded child’s soul. Or “Healing takes place in relationship.”
A healthy committed relationship/attachment has the potential to rewrite the brain.
A good message. One we need to hear again and again. Because when you are deep in the dark forest, at times you need this reminder: there is hope. And that hope is you. You may not see it yet, but you make a difference.

Kevin


Thursday, July 28, 2011

"18"

Do you remember turning 18? I do, and even without a history of trauma and multiple moves I knew I wasn’t ready for the real world. Oh, don’t get me wrong I wanted my freedom, but I wanted my parents to sponsor it.

Whenever I hear our families speak of their child turning 18, I cringe. Why? Because they are almost always referring to their child “ageing out.” This term is a relic of the child welfare system that is as destructive as a leftover landmine hidden in the jungles of Vietnam. In the system of care, when a child turns 18 they are somehow deemed adults who can now take their lives into their own hands. If they elect to stay in school, they can (if the foster parent agrees) stay with their foster family until they are 21. In truth it is rare for our children to take advantage of this opportunity. Somehow this concept has crept into adoptions.

We see the pattern again and again. Our child (yes, they are still children), almost always hangs on to the belief that bio family is going to save them. Despite all the therapy we may have put our child through, they cling desperately to a fantasy that their “real” family was just misunderstood. So our child turns 18, and often that very morning we see them with their bags packed, ready for someone to drop them off at the last known address of the bio-family.
We are offended and angry (especially if we are the adoptive parents), convinced that our love and sacrifice has been wasted on this ungrateful child, often allowing this to forever cripple our relationship.

What happens next is truly heartbreaking. The realities of the bio-families dysfunction, often the very issues that brought our child into care in the first place, hit our child head on. Sometimes after just a couple of days, almost always within a few weeks our child is lost. They are again rejected. More often than not they are again re-traumatized. They make increasingly self-destructive decisions.

These facts were again brought painfully to my attention as a coworker recently shared that an 18 year old adoptee was raped within ten days of leaving home on her 18th birthday.

So how do we address this? We can’t force the child to stay. The concept of “ageing out” will likely forever be a part of child welfare and the system of care. Agreed. But let me give a couple of thoughts of how we may approach this in regards to our adopted children.

1.      We have to have tougher emotional skin. Our child’s love and conceptions (regardless of the history) of bio-family is a constant. Any word we speak against the bio-family or attempts to “set our child straight” about them will almost always horribly backfire. Trust me on this, the realities of life will slap them soon enough. We need to be tough enough not to be offended or jealous of our child’s love for other people. This means we need to reassure them of our love (even as it is being rejected) while they pursue the realities of long held hopes. We need to leave the door open: physically and emotionally.
2.      The very concept of “ageing out” needs to be eliminated from our vocabulary. Having this concept as part of our conversation is like a married couple speaking of divorce every time they have a disagreement. Say it enough and it is going to happen.
3.      We want to prepare our children for the day they leave our home, but that is not “ageing out.” That is simply growing up. And we do this in steps, walking with them to the degree that we can through their decisions.
4.      Our conversations need to reflect the future tense of our relationship looking way beyond the 18th birthday. Speaking of what we hope to see in our future relationship: grand-children, their education or career, marriage, holidays together, our hopes and expectations to be involved in their lives as we both get older. Our language needs to be consistently reinforcing to our child that our relationship with them, where ever they may live, is lifelong.
5.      And finally, we are going to need to expand upon our world to include their world. At the very least making connections.

 Kevin

Thursday, July 21, 2011

July Support Group
The guest speakers and the families attending our STC support groups continue to just wow me with their insight and passion. Our guest speakers this month were Ms. Patricia Jackson and her remarkable adopted twins, Alexis and Alesia.
Ms. Jackson is a previous foster parent and adoptive mother of 5 children. (Her experience goes way back to HRS days). She also has 12 year old biological son and has sponsored an adoptive parent's support group in Hillsborough County.
Alexis and Alesia have overcome struggles that started at birth. Today they are Howard University bound. They shared their story, insights gained on their remarkable journey as well as the questions and issues they still face.
Last month Alexis and Alesia participated in our Teen Scene meeting winning over all of the youth in attendance.



In The News! Correction...

Just got called by 10News.  Story is being held until tomorrow (Friday) in the 6pm hour due to breaking news.  Hopefully tomorrow is a quiet news day.

Denise G. Jamieson
President & CEO


In The News!

Isabel Mascarenas of 10News (CBS) is scheduled to do a story on the Sylvia Thomas Center this evening on the 6 pm news.