Thursday, December 11, 2014

We choose to share our family story both as a testimony to God's faithfulness and a call to others to take a risk to foster and adopt. Many thanks to Joe Congleton and Rebecca Congleton of theSurrenduring for permission to use their original song that so perfectly fits how we felt on our foster and adoption journey. Watch our video story at the link below.
Risk It All (Cooper Family Story)

Friday, November 14, 2014

Winning Parenting Battles

Last night I trained other parents on therapeutic discipline techniques for children from hard places by Dr. Karyn Purvis. This morning I battled my six year old over taking cough medicine, brushing teeth, brushing hair, and putting shoes on. These seem like simple requests, but she panicked about taking medicine which escalated into a full blown power struggle.

After dropping her off at school, I felt the nudge to read some verses in my Bible app on my phone. I read the verses that popped on the screen.

Philippians 2:3-4
"Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of others."

Conviction hit me like a bag of bricks. At the heart of this battle was my selfishness. I wanted my way and I won the battle of wills. But what did I really win? Certainly not my daughter's heart. I didn't help her calmly comply with my requests. I used force. And at the end of the discipline neither of us felt content or connected.

So I confessed out loud in the car to God. I messed up. I need Him to help me look to my daughter's best interest when I discipline her. I want to win the battles for my daughter not against her. Through connection and correction, we can both feel victorious against bad behavior.

#winning #adoption #badmoments #goodmomma

Dr. Karyn Purvis IDEAL Response Video


Monday, October 20, 2014

We Have An Orphan Crisis

This post may not be politically correct, but I don't care. America has an orphan crisis. We call it foster care, but the truth is this: American children are growing up in institutions. And South Carolina, the place I call home, has the most staggering statistics of any state in the union. I will not be silent. Will you?


What is the need?

There is an urgent need for foster families in the USA. We have over 3,000 children in the foster care system in South Carolina alone. Statistically, one in four children does not have access to a foster home, which means they are placed in residential facilities and group homes. In fact, South Carolina has the highest percentage of youth under age 12 in residential care of any state in the USA at 23%. This is a shame and a tragedy.

Why do children come into foster care?

Children come into care through no fault of their own due to abuse or neglect or the inability of the parent to care for the child's needs. All children in foster care have experienced trauma and loss, often resulting in difficulty adjusting to these changes. These children need caring adults to help them work through the traumatic experiences and develop healthy ways of coping. Through therapeutic parenting, the healthy attachment between a child and foster parent can be the primary means by which children heal.

Who can become a foster parent?

The idea of a perfect foster family is a myth. The foster care system needs diverse families because children have diverse needs. Foster parents can be single or married, working, retired, or stay-at-home parents. Foster families can rent an apartment, own their own home, or live in a trailer in the country. What matters most is the safety and stability of the home and family environment and the parent’s willingness to commit to a child for whatever length of time the child needs care.

To become a South Carolina foster parent, you must to be:
•At least 21 years of age
•High School Diploma or GED
•Capable of financially supporting yourself
•Have adequate bedroom space for a child
•Pass criminal and child-abuse background checks
•Willing to submit to a reference check
•Willing to attend training sessions

What will you do with what you know?

Children need mommies and daddies, not paid staff to care for them. As Christians, we have a mandate from God to care for orphans. Often times we sponsor orphan ministry overseas, yet we fail to care for those children in our own neighborhood who are separated from their parents due to foster care.

Pray about how you can be part of the solution. Consider becoming a foster parent or adopting a child from the foster care system. If you are unable to foster or adopt, speak up for those who have no voice and help recruit families. Raise awareness of the need in your state! You can also raise awareness on social media by liking and sharing pages that advocate for children. Christian Alliance for Orphans, Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption, Empowered to Connect, and SAFY of South Carolina are just a few.

Each child deserves to have a safe and loving family. I truly believe that most people agree. But there is work to be done to see this belief become a reality in our nation. We must persist in this work until every child is home.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Paradox of Perspective

There are blessings in the midst of life's difficulties.
There are difficulties in the midst of life's blessings.

In this paradox of perspective, which one is true?

We get to choose. We have a saying in our family that goes like this: "Perhaps you should see things differently." This statement was made by some wise pastor in a message we heard a long time ago, but I can't recall who. There is so much power in this statement, though, so I wish I could give the credit where it is due. The bottom line is clear; though, we choose our attitude.

Proverbs 15:15 in The Message puts it like this:
"A miserable heart means a miserable life;
 A cheerful heart fills the day with song."

There is so much power in perspective. We choose whether to be critical and harsh or forgiving and patient. We choose whether to be anxious and fearful or calm and peaceful. We choose whether to be passive and lazy or proactive and helpful.

We have a choice to make: focus on the blessing or dwell on the difficulty.  When we choose to dwell on the difficulty, we lose sight of the blessing. But when we zoom in on the blessings, God's goodness is magnified in our lives.



Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Who is Amie, Adoptive Mom?


Amie Cooper is passionate about foster care and adoption. As a college student, Amie spent a summer as a missionary doing orphan ministry in Zambia, Africa. After graduating with her Bachelor of Science in Family and Child Development from Liberty University, Amie pursued a full-time career in social work. Before having children, she worked as a case manager for the Department of Child Services in Indiana, investigating child abuse and neglect, placing children in foster homes, and facilitating adoptions when family reunification was not in a child’s best interest.

Overwhelmed by the lack of foster and adoptive families within their community, Amie and her husband Zach made a decision to become foster parents themselves. Nevaeh came to live with them at 2 ½ months old, followed by Christina at age 15 just six months later. Another six months after that, Mackenzee and Braydyn were placed in their home, and a year later they found out they were pregnant! That’s right, the Coopers went from 0 to 5 children in just 2 ½ years! In fact, they finalized four adoptions and welcomed baby Levi all in a year’s span!

After filling up her own home, Amie began recruiting other families to foster and adopt, which has recently led her family to South Carolina with SAFY as the statewide recruiter. Amie’s heart’s desire is to encourage families to pursue foster care and adoption, which spills over from her home life to her full-time career and her writing. You can read more from Amie Cooper on her personal blog, Adoptive Mom Amie, in an upcoming devotional, and a book in the works with her husband on pursuing God’s path as a family.

Monday, September 8, 2014

But, What If?


I am so blessed beyond measure. I really can't complain. I have a hilarious and handsome husband that I absolutely adore. We have five incredible children. I have the career of my dreams with a flexible schedule and even a paid day off for my birthday. I live in the sunny south, just a quick drive from the beach in a house big enough for guests. My parents are both alive and well. My sisters are my best friends. 
But, what if something goes terribly wrong? What if my husband doesn't think I'm attractive any more because my belly looks like a Dunkin Donut? What if my inconsistent parenting causes attachment disorder and my children can't form healthy relationships with others? What if I can't live up to the expectations of my boss, lose my job, and put our family into financial ruin? What if my husband dies at a young age and I become a single mother, forced to move back in with my parents for the rest of my life?
Okay, these fears might sound a bit extreme, but I know I am not the only one struggling with anxious thoughts about the future. I read Facebook posts every day from other women who sound completely stressed out about the future. Sometimes anxiety gets so out of hand, that worries about tomorrow steal the joy away from today. Matthew 6:34 says, "Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself."
Rather than worry, God commands me not to fear. Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God (Philippians 4: 6). Regardless of the circumstances, Christ wants us to trust Him with the outcome. This does not mean that we should never have feelings of anxiety or thoughts of worry. Rather, when these feelings and thoughts come into our hearts and mind, we overcome them through prayer and petition to God. Once we present our requests, we must allow His peace to guard our hearts and minds from anxiety.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Deliverance Among the Survivors

My name is Amie, and I'm a believer in Christ who struggles with love addiction, anxiety, and depression. I completed a 12 step recovery program, where together with my sisters in Christ and my sponsor, I admitted that I was powerless over my tendency to do the wrong thing and that my life was unmanageable. As I waded through the traumas and terrible choices of my past, I started to recognize unhealthy patterns in my life.

I understood that anxiety about the future gripped my mind and paralyzed me. After I memorized the Serenity Prayer, I replayed these words over and over to help me overcome. "...Living one day at a time, enjoying one moment at a time, accepting hardship as a pathway to peace, taking as Jesus did, this sinful world as it is, not as I would have it, trusting that you will make all things right if I surrender to your will..."

During the study, Joel 2:25-28 and verse 30 became my hope and my comfort (emphasis mine).
 I will repay you for the years the locusts have eaten
    the great locust and the young locust,
    the other locusts and the locust swarm—
my great army that I sent among you.
26 You will have plenty to eat, until you are full,
    and you will praise the name of the Lord your God,
    who has worked wonders for you;
never again will my people be shamed.
27 Then you will know that I am in Israel,
    that I am the Lord your God,
    and that there is no other;
never again will my people be shamed.

28 “And afterward,
    I will pour out my Spirit on all people.
Your sons and daughters will prophesy,
    your old men will dream dreams,
    your young men will see visions...
32 And everyone who calls
    on the name of the Lord will be saved;
for on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem
    there will be deliverance,
    as the Lord has said,
even among the survivors
    whom the Lord calls.


The LORD knows the depths of my sin and the sins committed against me. I am confident of my salvation. But I struggle to entrust my children fully to Him. I panic at the thought of them one day leaving home, never to return or acknowledge my love. I worry that the confusion of their past will harden their hearts against me and cause them to turn away. I desperately want to fix them, to change them, to help them see the beauty that can come from brokenness. The LORD knows the depths of depravity that my children's biological families exposed them to and evil deeds done against them in their innocence. The LORD knows I am incapable of healing their wounds, yet He entrusted their lives into my hands as their mother.

I must trust The One who will repay the years the locusts have eaten from our lives, the years of abuse, neglect, abandonment, and shame. I must trust the one who will provide the food to fill the bellies of the once hungry and terrified children so they will always have plenty to eat. I must trust The One who will pour out His Spirit on my sons and daughters, so they will tell of His work in their lives, how He is the one who brings deliverance to survivors.

I am the mother that He chose for my children, not because of my great wisdom, but because of my complete dependence upon His guidance. Because He is faithful, I am able to trust. And when I trust, I am able to enjoy the moments rather than worry the days away, missing the beauty of His hand in all of our lives, bringing all things together for good for those who love Him and are called by Him.