Personal Stories

of Hope, Healing & Empowerment

Please read below and enter into the past stories of LYDIA Home. We hope these stories move you and show you just a glimpse of the care LYDIA provides. We are honored to share with you and serve these children and families.

 

Foster Care Youth in the Chicagoland Area: First-Person Narratives of Hope, Healing + Empowerment — Agents of Change

 

“I spent 17 years in foster care. If my memory serves me correctly, I lived in about 12 different homes and in one shelter. And I attended about 10 different schools, across two different counties. All my life, my mother suffered from severe mental illness; my father was absent. I say all of this to emphasize that many youth pay attention to their placements, their schools, and their lives.”

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“Their input and their engagement in both court hearings and the full permanency planning process can and does lead to improved stabilization, as well as expedited reunification and permanency because it enables them as stakeholders in their own lives.”

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“Foster care and non-traditional family structures often make people impacted by foster care feel disempowered and detached from their own lives. But, when we intentionally trust youth to provide us information about their wants and their needs, we give them back the agency they so desperately seek.”

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*Names have been changed to protect children in the above stories.

** The following stories are from the foster care system and are the actual names. It’s stories like these that show how the “Rising Tide” initiative, led by LYDIA, will positively impact thousands throughout Chicagoland when children and adults are provided hope, healing, and empowerment with a voice. Below are some of the people featured in these amazing stories:

“I remember being a small child, no more than five or six, and I was given the chance to speak at a court hearing that was held in a gloomy, dungeon-like courthouse. Although I was (and still very much am) a shy introvert, I clearly spoke up and out to the judge that I would like to be back with my mother. I felt seen, I was heard, and I felt empowered to be a working part of my own permanency plan.”

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“It would be incredibly negligent of me to not mention the importance of strong connections during my 17 years in foster care. There were key people throughout my entire childhood and adolescents, including lawyers, social workers, advocates, independent living workers, and even judges who grew to know me and who were in support of me being empowered to advocate for myself, my wants, and my needs. I am still in contact with many of these individuals today.”

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“Social media has been a powerful medium for connecting and maintaining those relationships that shaped me into the person I am today. Their connectedness to me and their investment into my growth and success will be with me forever. I look forward to empowering other youth in foster care to be agents of great, powerful, and positive change within their own lives and the lives of those around them!”