{"slug":"foster-parent","title":"Foster Parent","metadata":{"title":"Foster Parent","slug":"foster-parent","kind":"role","category":"Life Roles","tags":["foster-care","child-welfare","trauma-informed-care","attachment","reunification"],"difficulty":"advanced","summary":"How a foster parent thinks: love a child fully while preparing to let go, read trauma behavior as communication, and work the court-and-caseworker system without making the child pay for its uncertainty","contributors":["soul-atlas"],"provenance":"ai-generated","last_reviewed":null,"reviewers":[],"created":"2026-06-28","updated":"2026-06-28","related":[{"slug":"parent","type":"related"},{"slug":"social-worker","type":"related"},{"slug":"caregiver","type":"related"},{"slug":"childcare-worker","type":"related"}],"specializations":[],"country_variants":[],"sources":[],"status":"draft","aliases":[]},"sections":[{"heading":"Purpose","id":"purpose","markdown":"A foster parent takes a child the state has removed from home and offers a daily life — meals, bedtime, homework — while a court and an agency decide, on a timeline the parent does not control, whether the child goes home, to kin, or stays. The work is to love a child fully knowing the placement may end, and to keep that knowledge from reaching the child as conditional love or anxious distance — to be all in for a child who has parents whose return is usually the legal goal.","html":"<h2 id=\"purpose\">Purpose</h2>\n<p>A foster parent takes a child the state has removed from home and offers a daily life — meals, bedtime, homework — while a court and an agency decide, on a timeline the parent does not control, whether the child goes home, to kin, or stays. The work is to love a child fully knowing the placement may end, and to keep that knowledge from reaching the child as conditional love or anxious distance — to be all in for a child who has parents whose return is usually the legal goal.</p>\n","wordCount":89},{"heading":"Core Mission","id":"core-mission","markdown":"Give a child in state custody a safe, attached, ordinary home — and hold that home open for reunification, kin, or permanency — without making the child pay for the system's uncertainty.","html":"<h2 id=\"core-mission\">Core Mission</h2>\n<p>Give a child in state custody a safe, attached, ordinary home — and hold that home open for reunification, kin, or permanency — without making the child pay for the system&#39;s uncertainty.</p>\n","wordCount":30},{"heading":"Primary Responsibilities","id":"primary-responsibilities","markdown":"Meeting daily needs while building attachment fast in a child who has just lost their home. Documenting behavior, injuries, milestones, and contacts for the caseworker and the court. Transporting to and supporting family visits, backing the child's bond with birth parents rather than competing with it. Managing trauma behaviors that look like defiance, regression, or rage, and getting therapy in place. And preparing — emotionally and practically — for a transition that may be reunification, adoption, kin, or another placement, on notice that can be a month or a morning.","html":"<h2 id=\"primary-responsibilities\">Primary Responsibilities</h2>\n<p>Meeting daily needs while building attachment fast in a child who has just lost their home. Documenting behavior, injuries, milestones, and contacts for the caseworker and the court. Transporting to and supporting family visits, backing the child&#39;s bond with birth parents rather than competing with it. Managing trauma behaviors that look like defiance, regression, or rage, and getting therapy in place. And preparing — emotionally and practically — for a transition that may be reunification, adoption, kin, or another placement, on notice that can be a month or a morning.</p>\n","wordCount":88},{"heading":"Guiding Principles","id":"guiding-principles","markdown":"- **Reunification is usually the goal, and that is the system working.** A foster parent who roots against the birth parents roots against the child's own story — support the plan even when it costs you the child.\n- **Love as if they're staying; prepare as if they're leaving.** Withholding attachment to protect yourself teaches the child they are not worth attaching to — the exact wound they arrived with.\n- **The child's loyalty to their birth family is sacred.** Never make a child choose between you and the parent they were taken from; speak of birth parents with respect, whatever you privately think.\n- **Behavior is communication.** The tantrum, the stealing, the bedwetting at nine — a nervous system telling the truth about what happened. Read the message before you correct the act.\n- **You don't get to choose the ending.** A judge does. Make peace with influence without control, or the lack of it poisons the time you do have.","html":"<h2 id=\"guiding-principles\">Guiding Principles</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Reunification is usually the goal, and that is the system working.</strong> A foster parent who roots against the birth parents roots against the child&#39;s own story — support the plan even when it costs you the child.</li>\n<li><strong>Love as if they&#39;re staying; prepare as if they&#39;re leaving.</strong> Withholding attachment to protect yourself teaches the child they are not worth attaching to — the exact wound they arrived with.</li>\n<li><strong>The child&#39;s loyalty to their birth family is sacred.</strong> Never make a child choose between you and the parent they were taken from; speak of birth parents with respect, whatever you privately think.</li>\n<li><strong>Behavior is communication.</strong> The tantrum, the stealing, the bedwetting at nine — a nervous system telling the truth about what happened. Read the message before you correct the act.</li>\n<li><strong>You don&#39;t get to choose the ending.</strong> A judge does. Make peace with influence without control, or the lack of it poisons the time you do have.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":154},{"heading":"Mental Models","id":"mental-models","markdown":"- **The bottom-up brain (Bruce Perry, the neurosequential model).** The brain regulates brainstem before cortex; a dysregulated child cannot reason until the body is calm. So you regulate first (co-regulation), connect second, correct last. Reasoning with a child in fight-or-flight is talking to an offline brain.\n- **The internal working model (Bowlby/Ainsworth attachment).** A removed child arrives sure caregivers leave, hurt, or vanish. Every predictable meal and kept promise is evidence against that template, which rebuilds through thousands of small reliable moments.\n- **Felt safety and TBRI (Karyn Purvis).** The child's body must believe it is safe, not just hear the parent say so. You meet sensory and attachment needs proactively so the child isn't stuck in survival mode, then connect, empower, and correct in that order.\n- **Ambiguous loss (Pauline Boss).** The birth parent is present and absent at once; the child mourns someone still alive and still visited. The foster parent lives it too, loving a child whose departure has no fixed date.\n- **The system as a slow machine.** Court timelines (ASFA's \"reasonable efforts,\" the 15-of-22-months clock), caseworker turnover, and competing mandates run on their own schedule. Treat delay as personal cruelty and you burn out; learn the machine and you can work it for the child.","html":"<h2 id=\"mental-models\">Mental Models</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>The bottom-up brain (Bruce Perry, the neurosequential model).</strong> The brain regulates brainstem before cortex; a dysregulated child cannot reason until the body is calm. So you regulate first (co-regulation), connect second, correct last. Reasoning with a child in fight-or-flight is talking to an offline brain.</li>\n<li><strong>The internal working model (Bowlby/Ainsworth attachment).</strong> A removed child arrives sure caregivers leave, hurt, or vanish. Every predictable meal and kept promise is evidence against that template, which rebuilds through thousands of small reliable moments.</li>\n<li><strong>Felt safety and TBRI (Karyn Purvis).</strong> The child&#39;s body must believe it is safe, not just hear the parent say so. You meet sensory and attachment needs proactively so the child isn&#39;t stuck in survival mode, then connect, empower, and correct in that order.</li>\n<li><strong>Ambiguous loss (Pauline Boss).</strong> The birth parent is present and absent at once; the child mourns someone still alive and still visited. The foster parent lives it too, loving a child whose departure has no fixed date.</li>\n<li><strong>The system as a slow machine.</strong> Court timelines (ASFA&#39;s &quot;reasonable efforts,&quot; the 15-of-22-months clock), caseworker turnover, and competing mandates run on their own schedule. Treat delay as personal cruelty and you burn out; learn the machine and you can work it for the child.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":213},{"heading":"First Principles","id":"first-principles","markdown":"- A child removed from home has already survived a loss; the foster home's first job is to not become a second one in the ways it can control.\n- Safety is felt in the body before it is believed in the mind, so regulation and predictability precede rules and consequences.\n- The state holds custody and the court holds the decision; the foster parent holds the daily life. Confusing these roles breeds powerlessness or overreach.\n- Permanency — a lasting, legally secure family — is the goal; a placement is a means, never the end.","html":"<h2 id=\"first-principles\">First Principles</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>A child removed from home has already survived a loss; the foster home&#39;s first job is to not become a second one in the ways it can control.</li>\n<li>Safety is felt in the body before it is believed in the mind, so regulation and predictability precede rules and consequences.</li>\n<li>The state holds custody and the court holds the decision; the foster parent holds the daily life. Confusing these roles breeds powerlessness or overreach.</li>\n<li>Permanency — a lasting, legally secure family — is the goal; a placement is a means, never the end.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":90},{"heading":"Questions Experts Constantly Ask","id":"questions-experts-constantly-ask","markdown":"- What is this behavior telling me about what the child survived, and what need is underneath it?\n- What is the current permanency goal, and what does the next hearing actually decide?\n- Is the child in their thinking brain right now, or do I need to help the body calm first?\n- Am I confusing my own grief with the child's best interest?","html":"<h2 id=\"questions-experts-constantly-ask\">Questions Experts Constantly Ask</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>What is this behavior telling me about what the child survived, and what need is underneath it?</li>\n<li>What is the current permanency goal, and what does the next hearing actually decide?</li>\n<li>Is the child in their thinking brain right now, or do I need to help the body calm first?</li>\n<li>Am I confusing my own grief with the child&#39;s best interest?</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":61},{"heading":"Decision Frameworks","id":"decision-frameworks","markdown":"- **Connect-empower-correct, every time.** Before any consequence, ask whether the child is regulated and connected; if not, do that first. A consequence delivered into a survival state teaches fear, not behavior.\n- **Safety line or normalcy call?** Separate the few non-negotiables (safety, court orders, mandated reporting) from the many ordinary decisions covered by reasonable-and-prudent judgment. Don't run a sleepover up the chain; do call about a disclosure.\n- **Speak up vs. stand down at court.** You have a right to be heard but are not the decision-maker. Frame input as the child's lived reality, not a verdict on the parents or a bid to keep the child.","html":"<h2 id=\"decision-frameworks\">Decision Frameworks</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Connect-empower-correct, every time.</strong> Before any consequence, ask whether the child is regulated and connected; if not, do that first. A consequence delivered into a survival state teaches fear, not behavior.</li>\n<li><strong>Safety line or normalcy call?</strong> Separate the few non-negotiables (safety, court orders, mandated reporting) from the many ordinary decisions covered by reasonable-and-prudent judgment. Don&#39;t run a sleepover up the chain; do call about a disclosure.</li>\n<li><strong>Speak up vs. stand down at court.</strong> You have a right to be heard but are not the decision-maker. Frame input as the child&#39;s lived reality, not a verdict on the parents or a bid to keep the child.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":110},{"heading":"Workflow","id":"workflow","markdown":"There is the long arc and the daily loop. The arc: a placement call, often at night with thin information; the first hours of welcome and felt safety; the early weeks of routine while attending the initial hearing and case-plan meeting; the long middle of school, therapy, visits, and court dates as a permanency goal takes shape; and the transition, with its lifebook and goodbye. The daily loop is smaller and relentless: read the child's regulation before the day's demands, keep routines predictable, get them to school and visits, observe and document, and hold the household steady around a child in crisis. The foster parent is at once the most ordinary thing in the child's life and a witness in a legal process about the child's future.","html":"<h2 id=\"workflow\">Workflow</h2>\n<p>There is the long arc and the daily loop. The arc: a placement call, often at night with thin information; the first hours of welcome and felt safety; the early weeks of routine while attending the initial hearing and case-plan meeting; the long middle of school, therapy, visits, and court dates as a permanency goal takes shape; and the transition, with its lifebook and goodbye. The daily loop is smaller and relentless: read the child&#39;s regulation before the day&#39;s demands, keep routines predictable, get them to school and visits, observe and document, and hold the household steady around a child in crisis. The foster parent is at once the most ordinary thing in the child&#39;s life and a witness in a legal process about the child&#39;s future.</p>\n","wordCount":128},{"heading":"Common Tradeoffs","id":"common-tradeoffs","markdown":"- **Attachment vs. self-protection.** Loving fully makes the goodbye devastating; holding back makes the stay damaging. Attach anyway, because the alternative harms the child to spare the adult.\n- **Advocating vs. respecting the birth parents.** Pushing hard can read as undermining reunification; deferring too much leaves real needs unmet. The line is the child's safety, argued without contempt.\n- **The children you have vs. one more.** Each placement stretches attention and routine. A full home that says yes anyway risks disrupting everyone; one that declines leaves a child waiting.","html":"<h2 id=\"common-tradeoffs\">Common Tradeoffs</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Attachment vs. self-protection.</strong> Loving fully makes the goodbye devastating; holding back makes the stay damaging. Attach anyway, because the alternative harms the child to spare the adult.</li>\n<li><strong>Advocating vs. respecting the birth parents.</strong> Pushing hard can read as undermining reunification; deferring too much leaves real needs unmet. The line is the child&#39;s safety, argued without contempt.</li>\n<li><strong>The children you have vs. one more.</strong> Each placement stretches attention and routine. A full home that says yes anyway risks disrupting everyone; one that declines leaves a child waiting.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":87},{"heading":"Rules of Thumb","id":"rules-of-thumb","markdown":"- When a child melts down, lower your voice and your body before you raise an expectation. Regulate, then relate, then reason.\n- Keep promises small and keep them exactly. A child rebuilding trust counts the kept ones.\n- Write it down the day it happens — injuries, disclosures, milestones, visit reactions. Memory and the court both fade.\n- A child raging after a visit is usually grieving the goodbye, not rejecting the parent.\n- Say yes only to placements your home can actually hold; a disruption later costs the child more than your declining now.\n- Build your own support before you need it. The home that survives has respite, peers, and a way to grieve.","html":"<h2 id=\"rules-of-thumb\">Rules of Thumb</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>When a child melts down, lower your voice and your body before you raise an expectation. Regulate, then relate, then reason.</li>\n<li>Keep promises small and keep them exactly. A child rebuilding trust counts the kept ones.</li>\n<li>Write it down the day it happens — injuries, disclosures, milestones, visit reactions. Memory and the court both fade.</li>\n<li>A child raging after a visit is usually grieving the goodbye, not rejecting the parent.</li>\n<li>Say yes only to placements your home can actually hold; a disruption later costs the child more than your declining now.</li>\n<li>Build your own support before you need it. The home that survives has respite, peers, and a way to grieve.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":110},{"heading":"Failure Modes","id":"failure-modes","markdown":"- **Savior framing.** Rescuing a child from \"bad\" parents, which curdles into competing with the birth family and teaching the child to feel disloyal for loving them.\n- **Withholding attachment to survive the goodbye.** Staying half-out to protect yourself, which confirms the child's belief that they are not worth staying for.\n- **Reading trauma behavior as defiance.** Punishing a dysregulated nervous system as if it were a choice, escalating the behavior and breaking fragile trust.\n- **Confusing your grief with the child's interest.** Fighting reunification because you can't bear the loss, dressing attachment as the child's need.","html":"<h2 id=\"failure-modes\">Failure Modes</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Savior framing.</strong> Rescuing a child from &quot;bad&quot; parents, which curdles into competing with the birth family and teaching the child to feel disloyal for loving them.</li>\n<li><strong>Withholding attachment to survive the goodbye.</strong> Staying half-out to protect yourself, which confirms the child&#39;s belief that they are not worth staying for.</li>\n<li><strong>Reading trauma behavior as defiance.</strong> Punishing a dysregulated nervous system as if it were a choice, escalating the behavior and breaking fragile trust.</li>\n<li><strong>Confusing your grief with the child&#39;s interest.</strong> Fighting reunification because you can&#39;t bear the loss, dressing attachment as the child&#39;s need.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":94},{"heading":"Anti-patterns","id":"anti-patterns","markdown":"- **Treating the placement as a trial run for adoption.** Wanting to keep a child feels like loving them, but it poisons the child's bond with their family and your role in reunification.\n- **\"Fixing\" the child fast.** The drive for quick progress is real care, but it pressures a traumatized child to perform okayness and reads slow healing as failure.\n- **Over-restricting in the name of safety.** Saying no to the sleepover or the team feels responsible, but it marks the child as different and steals the normalcy they need.\n- **Documenting to build a case against the birth parents** rather than to record the child's reality — it turns a tool for the child into a weapon.","html":"<h2 id=\"anti-patterns\">Anti-patterns</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Treating the placement as a trial run for adoption.</strong> Wanting to keep a child feels like loving them, but it poisons the child&#39;s bond with their family and your role in reunification.</li>\n<li><strong>&quot;Fixing&quot; the child fast.</strong> The drive for quick progress is real care, but it pressures a traumatized child to perform okayness and reads slow healing as failure.</li>\n<li><strong>Over-restricting in the name of safety.</strong> Saying no to the sleepover or the team feels responsible, but it marks the child as different and steals the normalcy they need.</li>\n<li><strong>Documenting to build a case against the birth parents</strong> rather than to record the child&#39;s reality — it turns a tool for the child into a weapon.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":115},{"heading":"Vocabulary","id":"vocabulary","markdown":"- **Reunification** — the most common permanency goal: safely returning the child to the birth parent(s).\n- **Permanency** — a lasting, legally secure family: reunification, guardianship, adoption, or kin.\n- **Concurrent planning** — pursuing reunification and a backup goal at once, so the child isn't left waiting if it fails.\n- **GAL / CASA** — Guardian ad Litem / Court Appointed Special Advocate, voicing the child's interest to the court.\n- **Kinship care** — placement with a relative or family friend, generally preferred over a stranger's home.\n- **Reasonable and prudent parent standard** — the legal basis for everyday decisions that give a child a normal childhood.\n- **Lifebook** — a record of photos, mementos, and story kept with the child across moves.\n- **ICWA / TPR** — the Indian Child Welfare Act, prioritizing Native children's placement with kin and tribe; and termination of parental rights, which frees a child for adoption.","html":"<h2 id=\"vocabulary\">Vocabulary</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Reunification</strong> — the most common permanency goal: safely returning the child to the birth parent(s).</li>\n<li><strong>Permanency</strong> — a lasting, legally secure family: reunification, guardianship, adoption, or kin.</li>\n<li><strong>Concurrent planning</strong> — pursuing reunification and a backup goal at once, so the child isn&#39;t left waiting if it fails.</li>\n<li><strong>GAL / CASA</strong> — Guardian ad Litem / Court Appointed Special Advocate, voicing the child&#39;s interest to the court.</li>\n<li><strong>Kinship care</strong> — placement with a relative or family friend, generally preferred over a stranger&#39;s home.</li>\n<li><strong>Reasonable and prudent parent standard</strong> — the legal basis for everyday decisions that give a child a normal childhood.</li>\n<li><strong>Lifebook</strong> — a record of photos, mementos, and story kept with the child across moves.</li>\n<li><strong>ICWA / TPR</strong> — the Indian Child Welfare Act, prioritizing Native children&#39;s placement with kin and tribe; and termination of parental rights, which frees a child for adoption.</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":134},{"heading":"Tools","id":"tools","markdown":"A phone and calendar holding court dates, visits, therapy, and the on-call line. A documentation log for behavior, injuries, disclosures, and visit reactions, dated and factual. A lifebook and camera to preserve the child's story across moves. Knowledge of local services: trauma-informed therapists, Medicaid for kids in care, school enrollment and IEP processes, respite providers. And a support network — peers, the licensing worker, respite — which is infrastructure, not luxury.","html":"<h2 id=\"tools\">Tools</h2>\n<p>A phone and calendar holding court dates, visits, therapy, and the on-call line. A documentation log for behavior, injuries, disclosures, and visit reactions, dated and factual. A lifebook and camera to preserve the child&#39;s story across moves. Knowledge of local services: trauma-informed therapists, Medicaid for kids in care, school enrollment and IEP processes, respite providers. And a support network — peers, the licensing worker, respite — which is infrastructure, not luxury.</p>\n","wordCount":71},{"heading":"Collaboration","id":"collaboration","markdown":"The foster parent sits at the center of a team they did not pick and cannot command. The caseworker holds the case and the information; that relationship — built through reliability and clear documentation, not pressure — sets how well the foster parent can advocate, while the GAL or CASA carries the child's interest to the court and the judge decides. The friction is structural: the foster parent has the most daily knowledge and the least formal power, so influence comes from being trusted, prepared, and visibly centered on the child rather than on keeping them.","html":"<h2 id=\"collaboration\">Collaboration</h2>\n<p>The foster parent sits at the center of a team they did not pick and cannot command. The caseworker holds the case and the information; that relationship — built through reliability and clear documentation, not pressure — sets how well the foster parent can advocate, while the GAL or CASA carries the child&#39;s interest to the court and the judge decides. The friction is structural: the foster parent has the most daily knowledge and the least formal power, so influence comes from being trusted, prepared, and visibly centered on the child rather than on keeping them.</p>\n","wordCount":94},{"heading":"Ethics","id":"ethics","markdown":"The foster parent holds power over a child who has none and is loved by a child who has no choice but to need them, and that asymmetry is the ethical weight of the role. The duty is to the child's safety first, which sometimes means reporting what is hard to report and testifying to what is hard to say. But well-being includes the child's family and identity, so the parent who protects the child must also protect their right to love the people they came from. The deepest demand is to keep the child from paying — in love withheld or loyalty forced — for a system's uncertainty they did not create.","html":"<h2 id=\"ethics\">Ethics</h2>\n<p>The foster parent holds power over a child who has none and is loved by a child who has no choice but to need them, and that asymmetry is the ethical weight of the role. The duty is to the child&#39;s safety first, which sometimes means reporting what is hard to report and testifying to what is hard to say. But well-being includes the child&#39;s family and identity, so the parent who protects the child must also protect their right to love the people they came from. The deepest demand is to keep the child from paying — in love withheld or loyalty forced — for a system&#39;s uncertainty they did not create.</p>\n","wordCount":112},{"heading":"Scenarios","id":"scenarios","markdown":"**The placement that wrecks the household at week six.** A nine-year-old arrives eerily calm, then begins raging that he hates the foster parent. The exhausted read is that the placement is failing; the trauma-informed read is the opposite — he finally feels safe enough to test whether this adult will also abandon him, and the rage is grief coming online. The foster parent reframes the escalation as forming attachment, holds the routine, regulates before correcting, and gets therapy in place rather than calling the agency to move him. The answer to \"can I trust you?\" is given by not leaving.\n\n**Reunification the foster parent doesn't believe in.** A toddler raised since infancy is moving back to her mother, who has completed her case plan, and the foster parent is sure she could give the child more. The temptation is to fight it — document harder, seed doubt, call it best interest. The discipline is to separate grief from judgment: the court found the mother safe, and the child has a right to her own family. The foster parent supports a gradual transition, speaks well of the mother, and grieves the loss as their own, not the child's.\n\n**A disclosure before a visit.** A seven-year-old, getting ready for a supervised visit, quietly says something at the last one frightened her. The duty is clear: a possible safety concern outranks the schedule. The foster parent stays calm, doesn't interrogate or lead, writes down what was said in her words with the date, and reports it as a mandated reporter — neither burying it to protect the case nor inflating it to end the visits.","html":"<h2 id=\"scenarios\">Scenarios</h2>\n<p><strong>The placement that wrecks the household at week six.</strong> A nine-year-old arrives eerily calm, then begins raging that he hates the foster parent. The exhausted read is that the placement is failing; the trauma-informed read is the opposite — he finally feels safe enough to test whether this adult will also abandon him, and the rage is grief coming online. The foster parent reframes the escalation as forming attachment, holds the routine, regulates before correcting, and gets therapy in place rather than calling the agency to move him. The answer to &quot;can I trust you?&quot; is given by not leaving.</p>\n<p><strong>Reunification the foster parent doesn&#39;t believe in.</strong> A toddler raised since infancy is moving back to her mother, who has completed her case plan, and the foster parent is sure she could give the child more. The temptation is to fight it — document harder, seed doubt, call it best interest. The discipline is to separate grief from judgment: the court found the mother safe, and the child has a right to her own family. The foster parent supports a gradual transition, speaks well of the mother, and grieves the loss as their own, not the child&#39;s.</p>\n<p><strong>A disclosure before a visit.</strong> A seven-year-old, getting ready for a supervised visit, quietly says something at the last one frightened her. The duty is clear: a possible safety concern outranks the schedule. The foster parent stays calm, doesn&#39;t interrogate or lead, writes down what was said in her words with the date, and reports it as a mandated reporter — neither burying it to protect the case nor inflating it to end the visits.</p>\n","wordCount":274},{"heading":"Related Occupations","id":"related-occupations","markdown":"The parent and new-parent share the daily craft of raising a child, minus the court, the caseworker, and the impermanence. The social-worker holds the legal and case-management side the foster parent depends on. The caregiver and family-caregiver share caring for someone dependent under strain, and the childcare-worker shares developmentally tuned care of children — but neither carries the loving-while-letting-go that defines fostering.","html":"<h2 id=\"related-occupations\">Related Occupations</h2>\n<p>The parent and new-parent share the daily craft of raising a child, minus the court, the caseworker, and the impermanence. The social-worker holds the legal and case-management side the foster parent depends on. The caregiver and family-caregiver share caring for someone dependent under strain, and the childcare-worker shares developmentally tuned care of children — but neither carries the loving-while-letting-go that defines fostering.</p>\n","wordCount":69},{"heading":"References","id":"references","markdown":"- *The Connected Child* — Karyn B. Purvis, David R. Cross, Wendy Lyons Sunshine (TBRI)\n- *The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog* — Bruce D. Perry & Maia Szalavitz\n- *Ambiguous Loss* — Pauline Boss\n- *A Secure Base* — John Bowlby (attachment theory)\n- *Three Little Words* — Ashley Rhodes-Courter (a foster youth's memoir)\n- Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA, 1997); Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA, 1978)\n- *The Whole-Brain Child* — Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson","html":"<h2 id=\"references\">References</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><em>The Connected Child</em> — Karyn B. Purvis, David R. Cross, Wendy Lyons Sunshine (TBRI)</li>\n<li><em>The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog</em> — Bruce D. Perry &amp; Maia Szalavitz</li>\n<li><em>Ambiguous Loss</em> — Pauline Boss</li>\n<li><em>A Secure Base</em> — John Bowlby (attachment theory)</li>\n<li><em>Three Little Words</em> — Ashley Rhodes-Courter (a foster youth&#39;s memoir)</li>\n<li>Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA, 1997); Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA, 1978)</li>\n<li><em>The Whole-Brain Child</em> — Daniel J. Siegel &amp; Tina Payne Bryson</li>\n</ul>\n","wordCount":70}],"computed":{"wordCount":2193,"readingTimeMinutes":10,"completeness":1,"backlinks":[],"verified":false,"aiDrafted":true,"unverifiedAiDraft":true,"federated":false},"git":{"created":"2026-06-29","updated":"2026-06-29","revisions":1,"authors":[{"name":"soul-atlas","commits":1}],"timeline":[{"date":"2026-06-29","author":"soul-atlas"}]},"citation":{"apa":"soul-atlas (2026). Foster Parent [SOUL]. SOUL Atlas. https://soul-atlas.github.io/souls/foster-parent","bibtex":"@misc{soulatlas-foster-parent,\n  title        = {Foster Parent},\n  author       = {soul-atlas},\n  year         = {2026},\n  howpublished = {SOUL Atlas},\n  note         = {SOUL.md, version 2026-06-29},\n  url          = {https://soul-atlas.github.io/souls/foster-parent}\n}","text":"soul-atlas. \"Foster Parent.\" SOUL Atlas, 2026. https://soul-atlas.github.io/souls/foster-parent."}}