Showing posts with label foster children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foster children. Show all posts

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Never Underestimate What Goes On Behind Closed Doors At Your Neighbor’s Place

The Painting and the Piano: An Improbable Story of Survival and Love

Authors: John Lipscomb and Adrienne Lugo
Publisher:Health Communications Inc., Deerfield Beach, FL., 2017


I’m writing this review on Father’s Day weekend. I suppose that is having an impact on my thoughts. With many wonderful memories of this special day with my own father and now with my children, I can’t help but think that this is not the way so many think of their father, or their mother for that matter. I can’t help but be amazed at just how dysfunctional many families are today. This is a real story of just two of them.  My guess, based on what I read these days, is that there are millions more out there just like them.
This book is gut-wrenching from start to finish. But it opens your eyes wide.
The two authors alternate writing chapters – each telling their own story until the very end, when they’ve joined forces in more ways than one.
First, we meet Adrienne, a happy young lady living with her very loving foster parents. She couldn’t be happier.  Then we meet John growing up in an upper-class home with all its benefits. But it isn’t long before we discover a major problem in each.
In Adrienne’s case, disaster strikes when her birth-parents decide it’s time to reconnect with their daughter. In John’s case, we find out his otherwise beautiful mother has a deep blotch hidden behind her façade – she’s a hopeless alcoholic.
The rest of the story you’ll need to read for yourself, but I assure you that you will not be disappointed. In fact, you may very well be shocked.  But let me share with you some of my observations.
Both Lipscomb and Lugo write very well.  So much so, that reading this book on a flight home from Boston, I was pleased to have my flight delayed because it gave me time to let me finish it.
The book includes some wonderful quotes and truths.  One of my favorites was from a psychiatrist, “If I know the relationship a child has with his or her mother, then I can help that person.” Relationships with our mothers, and fathers, matter.  I’ve also confirmed from the book that it’s the parents that usually (but not always) screw up such relationships, partly because they were screwed up by their parents in their own relationships.
In John’s case, we learn that when a mother is not capable or willing to fill the role she should be filling, that role is often filled by some other, much more loving individual. And thank God for that.
In this book, we observe at close hand, both the failures of our child protection agencies and their limited powers to do what is right. We also watch a lame family court judicial system follow the letter of the law when by doing so, they condemn innocent children to a life of misery.
We see the effects that both alcohol and drug abuse can have on children’s lives – even from within the womb. We learn that what these children deal with constantly in their mind’s images, as a result of their parents’ conditions, is something they seldom wish to talk about even when the events are from decades past. We understand why it is that our children’s friends often wish to spend as much time at our place, avoiding theirs like a plague. The value of wise and loving parents of one’s friends to make a positive impact on a life is brought to the forefront in this book.  I know that from personal experience and I also know it from the wonderful kids that were at our house so often after school spending time with my children and my wife – some of which we are still in contact with.
This is also a book of hope for those that have fallen into the vicious cycle of abuse, now risking the chance of being the abusers themselves. But make no mistake about it, getting off the cycle requires hard work and extreme pain. Another great quote from the book is – “I got the monkey off my back, but the circus is still in town.” (There is some disagreement as to who originated that idea.) Nevertheless, it fits well with the long process of being “clean” (either from alcohol or from drugs), only to have to find yourself in a place full of drinkers or users.
Adrienne and John both end up where their dysfunctional parents were – but with one difference. They both wanted to stop the spinning cycle and get off.  Adrienne committed herself to doing so because of the love she had for her children. John because of the respect he had for people outside his family that really loved him.
Finally, and perhaps a little tongue in cheek – it’s worth buying the book just to find out what the title is all about.
I strongly recommend the book for any parent, any abuser, anyone being abused, any counsellor, pastor, or just anyone who has no idea whatsoever is going at their neighbor’s place.

Ken B. Godevenos, President, Accord Resolutions Services Inc., Toronto, Ontario, June 16, 2018, www.accordconsulting.com

It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Should Christians Give Up?

This article is disturbing -- not so much in what it says or reports, but more in what the implications are.  When victims and their lawyers feel that there is no point in appealing a decision "because the nation's legal system (in the U.K.) is skewed against Christianity."

The recent case under discussion here seems to indicate that Christians only have "qualified" rights as Christians in the U.K.  (And I would venture to say that it is true in most places in the West.)  As a result, true Christians who would accept but not promote homosexuality are now forbidden from being foster children or adopting children.

The case deals with the issue as to whether or not being a Christian is protected by "common law".  The decision seems to indicate that "secular law" trumps Christianity when a judge thinks that a foster or adopted parent's thinking or feeling about a subject may end up being unfair to the child.  In this case, the topic is indeed 'homosexuality'.   But let us stop for a moment and consider another subject:  What if the children were 'prone' to be a compulsive gambler?  Does that mean that a parent who is against gambling and teaches against it should not be allowed to adopt or to be a foster parent to such a child or to any child in particular?  I don't think so.   The U.K. justice system just seems to have it out for Christian beliefs.

So, should these victims have appealed?  What do you think?  Read the article pointed to by the link below and then share your opinion.

Personally, I believe they should have -- if they had the financial support.  But what do you think?

Finally, the article suggests a possible outcome for the future -- that natural parents may one day have to promote homosexuality's acceptance and appropriateness to their own children in order to be allowed to keep them.   That sounds far-fetched.  But it is a rather logical conclusion.  Can you handle it?


Courts have 'special animosity' for Christians



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It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

This Lawyer Asks: When If Ever Will the Church Wake-Up and Speak-Up?

This is an incredible account of a High Court ruling in the U.K. that just came out against our Christian beliefs. The lawyer in the video explains the fallacies.

I've also provided two other links showing how the papers in the U.K. have covered this event. We need to give ourselves a shake friends. This is utter insanity. But I guess the Bible predicts it when it says ... everyone will do (or rule) what is right in their own minds. But the Bible did not predict that Christ's followers would just roll over and play dead. I don't read those instructions anywhere. Yet that's what we're doing.

Please pass this on to others that may be interested.

YouTube - Johns' Judgment

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/feb/28/christian-couple-lose-care-case


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/religion/8353538/Foster-parent-ban-we-have-not-received-justice.html



Thanks for dropping by. Sign up to receive updates. -- Ken B. Godevenos, Church and Mgmt. Consultant, bringing you relevant information from all sorts of sources. Subscribe free to Epistoli or follow us by clicking on the appropriate link in the right side bar. And don’t forget to “share” this blog with your friends by clicking the “Share” link on your Navigation Bar.

It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Follow-up on Major Jackson's Child Custody Case

Recently we reported on the case of an American Christian family that was have the New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services deem them to be unfit to have their children because they were too Christian. They were forbidden to pray with the children about being reunited with them or to even talk to them about the hope of reunification.

Well, now we have a gag order on the case and that was not at the request of the parents. This case is looking more and more interesting.

Judge slams gag order on N.J. custody case



-- Thanks for dropping by. Sign up to receive updates. -- Ken B. Godevenos, Church & Mgmt. Consultant, bringing you relevant information from all sorts of sources. Subscribe free to Epistoli or follow us by clicking on the appropriate link in the right side bar. An don’t forget to “share” this blog with your friends by clicking the “Share” link on your Navigation Bar.

It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Authorities: You can't be praying for reunification with your children!

This is a most complicated case and I am not so sure that we know all the details. BUT -- if we take just some of these facts to be true, it sure appears that the people in charge seem to be totally against prayer and parents being Christian. If true, this is outrageous. At the minimum, we need to be praying that God's will be done for this family.

Father: 'My children are being held hostage'


-- Thanks for dropping by. Sign up to receive updates. -- Ken B. Godevenos, Church & Mgmt. Consultant, bringing you relevant information from all sorts of sources. Subscribe free to Epistoli or follow us by clicking on the appropriate link in the right side bar. An don’t forget to “share” this blog with your friends by clicking the “Share” link on your Navigation Bar.

It would be great if you would share your thoughts or questions on this blog in the comments section below or on social media.