The Moderate Catholic
Christina Gebel: [00:00:00] Welcome to the Moderate Catholic, where we discuss topics that deepen faith and inspire action. I am your host, Christina Gebel, and this is episode 10, “A faith-filled lens of fostering and adoption.” Welcome back, everyone. I am really excited to be here with you today, still in our second season called Radical Family, where families are making bold choices to live out their faith, and I am so pleased today to have two dear friends, local to where I am in North Carolina, who have made the faith filled decision to grow their family, and I think you will really love to hear their story, hear them reflect on that time in their life. So with that, I will hand it over to Heather and Patrick Curran. Would y’all like to introduce yourselves? Heather Curran: I’m Heather and I [00:01:00] am a nurse and a lifelong Catholic. I was raised in Southern California. I had the pleasure of meeting Patrick in college when we were both at the Jesuit University of Loyola University Chicago. Woo. And then we married and moved to North Carolina where we have been for a long while now. And we have been married creeping up on 20 years, but about 17 time really flies. I’ll pass it on to Patrick. Patrick Curran: Thank you, Dear. Christina, yeah, it’s great to be doing this with you. I’m Patrick Curran. By way of introduction I’m Heather’s husband and in the foster care journey. I have to say she’s definitely been the leader, but I’m certainly an avid and willing participant so glad to be doing that. As she mentioned, we’ve been married for almost 20 years. And I think for this context, it’s relevant to say that our faith is maybe part of what brought us [00:02:00] together. And our faith is what led us to our faith community here in North Carolina when we moved here in 2020 and our Heather Curran: In 2010. Patrick Curran: Thank you. In 2010, too many zeros. Our decision to become foster parents and the journey through all of that has been supported by that faith community in incredible ways and continues to be so I’m grateful for all of that. And I’m sure we’ll obviously unpack that more and a little bit about our background and how we came to that. Christina Gebel: Yes. And absolutely we will unpack it ‘cause I know personally, just by the pleasure and honor of knowing both of you, that there’s a real discernment journey there and a great story. And I would say a very happy, not ending, but a very happy present that we will get to, certainly Patrick Curran: Ongoing. Christina Gebel: Yes. A very happy ongoing presence. But perhaps you could take us [00:03:00] back to the beginning. I knew you all when you were. In one of the 17 years, and you were think thinking about growing your family and you were attempting to do that. Can you tell us about those years and share as much or as little as you’d like to about your journey to starting a family? Heather Curran: I think from the beginning, both Patrick and I were very interested in having family. That was always a part of our conversations when we were dating. Our way of dating, I think, was always thinking about the future and I don’t think either of us were good at being casual daters. From the time that we were growing in our relationship, what would a family look like if we were to marry, was always a part of the conversation. I knew beginning in college that there was potential that it would be a challenge for me to get pregnant. [00:04:00] So that actually was a conversation that we started having before we were even married. And if that were to be a reality, what would that be like for you, Patrick. And would that be something we could maneuver together? In our marriage at the time, both of us very easily said yes, adoption would be a very reasonable choice for us. And something that even if we were able to have our own kids, we would be open to talking about. And I think that really helped when later on down the line, that became a reality. At least for me, it was very comforting to know that this is something that we had been in alignment on, from the get-go. Fast forward, we’re married, we were open to having kids from the beginning. It was just something both of us had always wanted and imagined for our lives. And it was not happening. And not happening. So the first year, nothing, but that’s okay ‘cause we’re trying to figure [00:05:00] out how to be married, and that’s its own challenge with its own ups and downs. And fast forward probably five years we had settled in North Carolina and we were really in a place where we felt stable as adults. We had a home and well before we had hoped for a family, it was fine that we weren’t, ‘cause maybe we weren’t totally prepared, but now we felt we were in a place where we really were ready to be moving forward with that and it wasn’t happening and we were ready to investigate the next steps are there things that we can be doing to make it happen. So, we went to a fertility specialist and did some workup. And for women out there that have been through this, that piece has its own emotional journey. I think for me, I went through HSG ultrasound. It’s a very vulnerable experience, and I feel [00:06:00] comfortable sharing that here because I know for other women, this is also a point at which a reality you’re afraid of can become very real. And for me, while I was in the ultrasound, I just, I knew based on what was happening with the people around us and the healthcare professionals, that there definitely was a challenge. It didn’t even feel right for me while it was happening. And I was like, okay, this is this is a reality. And I think I had that nagging feeling for a long time, but it was in that moment on the table, and I started to sob during that experience and Patrick was right there, and I could see it in his eyes that he could see the pain. For me, I’ll say it was grief. There was a lot of grief in that moment. And then it completed. We didn’t talk about results. And Patrick and I just went to lunch together in Chapel Hill, and he just created space for me to be grieving and listened and received that. And I will always [00:07:00] be grateful to him that through this whole process, he has had his own things to process, but has always let me have my space and listened and been patient and asked first what it was and I needed what I needed in those moments and what was it that I felt comfortable with or was hoping to do next. In a relationship, that has given me lots of peace and made it, I think, a much easier, hard journey than it could have been. When we got the results, we had a great physician who is an expert in his field. But he started talking about IVF and for me, it has just been a gut feeling for me that was not a route that I wanted to take. And in that conversation I had said that, and he immediately said, is this a [00:08:00] religious thing? Because it doesn’t need to be. And I really bristled at that. Because for me it was a faith piece. It wasn’t [that] my religion has this rule. It wasn’t about I can’t do this as a Catholic. For me it was, I spiritually, feel, my gifts need to be used in a different way and our resources and how I want to move forward, I want to put in a different direction. So it was a negative experience for me in that moment. And again, Patrick, let me lead in how we moved forward from that, which was a wonderful gift. And maybe I should give him some space now that he offered all of that to me in those moments. But that was the point at which the conversation about moving forward with adoption [00:09:00] or foster care became very real, and we had to start making decisions about what that journey forward would look like. Christina Gebel: Yeah, Patrick, before you jump in on your reaction to that, I just wanna first thank you, Heather, for your vulnerability and sharing that, and for folks who know me personally, I can relate to a lot of what you’ve said. Just being on the fertility journey myself with my spouse, and also opting to not do IVF, not simply because it’s a rule, but just because it wasn’t for me, and having a supportive partner in that is just everything on that journey. Patrick, I’d love to hear what all that was like for you from your perspective. Not only accompanying, but witnessing everything that was happening and for me at least, in a very bodily way, [00:10:00] it’s happening to one spouse. But in your case, what was going on in your mind and in your faith conversation? Patrick Curran: Yeah. Thank you for that, Christina. There’s a number of things there that I’ve want to maybe touch on, and I appreciate you recognizing as a spouse, as a partner as someone who tries to live as a faithful person, I believe that God calls us to honor other people, right? And particularly in a Christian marriage, there’s a way of doing that. I think it’s very easy for the husband, for the male partner to be lost in that conversation. And to say I’m doing all this for my wife, or I’m like Christ calls us to sacrifice yourself for your bride. And I think it’s important that we not overlook the fact that men come to their marriages with dreams and ideas and [00:11:00] what all that is. So, maybe I can share a little bit of that. Going all the way back, as Heather mentioned, we had talked about this when we were dating and just the one little piece of color I would add there is that we both had at least in conversation, talked about wanting to have a big family. And, Christina, you know me well, you know that I love things that are big and chaotic. Yes, I can take things that are small and make them large very quickly. And I have 19 first cousins, and I love each of them in strange and unique ways, and always had dreamed that we would have a large family. And, in my own discernment process of my life and my career, that was a big component. I love the idea of big family and so as Heather mentioned, as our marriage progressed and we were trying to get pregnant and being unsuccessful with that, and then eventually going through the fertility workup, I’m not a medical professional, [and] I was in an adjacent space while they were doing the HSG procedure and I [00:12:00] also knew that something wasn’t right. I was like watching this grainy image on a monitor, and I just had this feeling that like this part of the conversation was not going to be smooth or easy or go the way that we wanted it to. I think Heather, when we were dating, had invited me to offer up those ideas that I had about family. We had a joke at one point we would have 37 kids. Obviously no reasonable person expects their wife to naturally have 37 kids. We were always talking about adoption. But I think we had carried the idea that we would have some natural children and then have some kids through adoption. And we were always curious what would our genetic mashup look like? That part of the dream, I think, we had to surrender. I don’t want to say that it died because it didn’t die, we chose to offer that up. We had always had this idea that we would have a big family and as we were getting [00:13:00] those test results, it became obvious to me that the ways that we had talked about doing that was not gonna happen. I could tell in the way like the physician was talking about what was gonna happen surgically and medically. I was like, we’re not on the same page here. The way that she thinks about her body and the way that I wanted our decisions to be respected in that process. We were just misaligned with how that was all gonna happen. But the assumption that we weren’t going to move forward with IVF we’re following what our religion tells us to do because that’s what the religion says, right? It’s like a non-thinking action. I would say [that] is very distasteful and off-putting to me in any conversation and for any person of any faith. And I think part of why you’ve started this whole effort is to help bring together that space that we’re faithful people with our entire selves. And so then the decision to look into [00:14:00] adoption and kind of what route would that be it was a natural continuation of where we had been, but it also required the opportunity to lay down at the foot of the Cross what’s, yeah, this is coming back raw… [getting emotional] What were the things that we were gonna let go of? What were the dreams that we had dreamed? What were the prayers that we had prayed as young people as independent people before we ever knew each other as a young couple who was dating as a young married couple? Who do we feel called to be? And to allow space for that grief to be there and to believe that there’s purpose and intention. And all of the things that come on Easter Sunday. And on Easter Monday. What you mentioned before it’s not just about accompanying maybe that’s not even the right word, because I think for as much as I was holding space for Heather, she was also holding space for me. And so really [00:15:00] that’s marriage; that’s journeying together. Christina Gebel: Oh, my nose and my eyes keep running over here. [getting emotional] I think one, because I can feel it, right? I can feel it in your words. And I know you as beloved friends, and it hits so close to home for me, too. I really appreciate, Patrick, that you said out loud that sometimes partners don’t always get the full, I don’t even know what the right word is, in this journey because on the one hand we focus so much on the bodily things that are going on or not happening. And if you really love your spouse, which you do in the way that Christ loved the Church, how can you not have your own grief and reaction and journey, simultaneously? I don’t know that there’s many spaces out there that name that so gracefully. So I appreciate you sharing that vulnerably ‘cause I can imagine that there’s [00:16:00] people out there that are like, yeah, I can totally relate. Patrick Curran: And I think it was present to me also that the way that we, as Catholics talk about family, we talk about the woman’s role talk about the spouse’s role and this idea that we’re going through these medical conversations. And as much as I very much have longing to have my own biological children, it’s her body. Like, I’m in no position to tell her what to do with her body. Yeah, I don’t know where that lands for other people who might be listening or how they would integrate that with their faith perspectives. But if there was any space to hold for Heather, I think I wanted to make sure that she knew that whatever choice she felt she wanted to make or needed to make or felt called to make she wasn’t doing that alone. And she wasn’t doing that either in spite of me or that she was gonna have to fight with me [00:17:00] that I was in this with her. She was making decisions for both of us. And I think she was aware of that and I wanted her to know that she was fully supported in doing that. Heather Curran: And I don’t know how you feel about this, Christina, but I think one of the things that was challenging at this point is you don’t realize the expectations that you’ve created in your mind until they’re not met, or you realize that they’re not gonna come to be. And that’s anything in our lives that we become disappointed by. You grow up thinking, I’m going to finish high school and then I’m gonna do this piece, and then I will meet the person that I want to spend my life with. And then we move on to having a family. You do this piece and then you check this box and then you do this box. And the reality for many is that it doesn’t happen quite like that. And suddenly we’re at this point where we have to make intentional choices about [00:18:00] how to pursue this or that, or realize that some pieces are just not going to be. And in the Catholic setting, there were a whole lot of people that had a lot of suggestions, how we might make this happen, and the miracle that is coming to be and hold out faith and with all kinds of well-intentioned loving thoughts and prayers. And they were very hard for me to receive and very hard for me to intellectually and spiritually grapple with. Then I also feel terribly ungrateful because sometimes I’m mad about what someone has offered or I just am sad about it. But where is my spiritual joy? There’s just so many layers. And I remember a conversation with my mom where I was [00:19:00] really just bothered by the idea that I should just be waiting for a miracle. And I’m like, miracles don’t happen for everyone, or they’re not what we expect them to be. I just really had a hard time with that idea and was like, I’m not gonna sit here and just say, my miracle is coming. And the reality is now I look back and I have two miracles in my house. They did not come in the way that I envisioned them. And it was a decade of grappling with lots of different things before that was our reality. And I am so grateful for them with all of that in mind. And for anyone going through this, that 10 years is long, and it feels like forever, and you don’t know when it’s gonna end or what the other side is gonna look like. And now that we are where we are, I [00:20:00] can’t imagine our now being any different than it is. But all of that time before was very hard. And there were many tears and moments where Patrick found me curled up in a ball in our room. Just sad. So there is a miracle in that. And I also am very careful with how I talk to other people that are in that place about it because they have to have room for pain. Like I had room for pain ‘cause it is hard and it hurts. And we hear so many messages about all of it every person’s journey is different. And it’s a lot to hold. So Patrick Curran: I think maybe just three pieces of color about this that are coming to mind for me. I’m thinking about your question what was your journey like prior to starting this? First and foremost, I wanna say that both Heather and I come from very loving and [00:21:00] supportive families. So our desire to have a family. This entire journey from our fertility journey into adoption and then deciding to foster and then adopting from foster care. All of that has been very well supported by our immediate families and our extended families. I actually hope we can unpack some of that a little bit later and we’ll talk more about the influence of that. And… Heather Curran: a lot of pins on things, honey. [laugh] Patrick Curran: I know. It’s a short podcast [laugh] yeah. So I think that it matters a lot, right? And we experienced God’s love in family throughout our entire lives and with the challenges that come with families as well. So that helps support us. And then, as we said before, our faith community within our parish was a big part of that. And it was 10 years of knowing people in that community from the time that we moved to North Carolina before we moved forward with becoming foster parents of people saying, [00:22:00] oh, my gosh, you would be great parents. Yes. Thank you. And then as Heather mentioned, sometimes people make comments that they’re intended to be helpful, but they end up being very hard and difficult to hold. But all of that time, we were being supported by our community in that space. And so then when we did finally have children placed with us in foster care and then adopt them, like that community was ready to receive them and they were excited for us, and they were joyful for that. Christina Gebel: This has been such an emotional journey for me just sitting here listening to you and knowing a lot of these things. I didn’t know about the 37 kids. [laugh] I will say that is the first time I’m hearing this [part], but, just all the emotions and grief, I think for me hits really hard. And also this navigating of people trying to help in the best way they can and trying to rationalize the situation [00:23:00] and their faith angle. And eventually you all started the process of fostering, adopting, I heard you say, that the grief never really fully just disappears. But what were those early days like of starting that process? Because I know for other people I’ve talked to, it’s a very daunting process in the beginning, and one doesn’t necessarily just turn on a dime and start the next path. So what were those early days like when you were just starting to get acquainted with fostering? Patrick Curran: The kind of initial posture from us was like, do we want to move forward? And what are the paths, right? Like we had talked about adoption as a concept. This was now suddenly a thing and we wanted to understand it better. What could this look like? We knew through hearsay that adoption could be very expensive. That was part of the choice not to do IVF was like, we could spend a lot of money [00:24:00] doing IVF or we could spend a lot of money adopting a kid that needs a family then of course you have decisions like international or domestic. There’s an entire forest of decision trees to be navigated. And Heather really took that on for me at that point. And then fast forwarding, we actually ended up starting the process twice. Heather Curran: For me, I have always, for better or worse, made decisions based on my gut I have realized through relationships and conversations with other people, that I sometimes make big decisions in a way that’s different from others. I don’t make long lists and do lots of big planning, and there was just something that kept bringing me back to the idea of foster care. I was very overwhelmed by the [00:25:00] number of different pathways for adoption, the international versus domestic question, the how do you maneuver, what organization manages this in an ethical way? There was just so much to me, and I just kept coming back to, if there is a need in my community and my desire and want is to fill our home with love of a child, why don’t I use that to meet this need? Some of that comes from the Jesuit way of talking about my greatest desire meets the world’s need. And that just clicked for me in this idea and this thought I couldn’t really look away from that once it seeded itself for me. And I knew that was a big ask because [00:26:00] foster care doesn’t automatically come with permanency. And for us, we knew that we wanted the ultimate piece of adoption. And that is not what foster care is per se. And I think we knew that intellectually, but then as we were doing the training, they really made sure that hit home for us. And we had to talk about that a lot. And I think we felt open to that. But it also had to be something that we continually revisited and talked to each other about and thought about. And it’s the piece that people really have a hard time understanding when we talk about foster care to other people because there is that desire for permanency and people want permanency for us, and they want permanency for the child. And the idea of why a child is in foster care sometimes is the extreme [00:27:00] reason for why kids are in foster care. And there’s an automatic assumption. I think sometimes parents of children in foster care become villainized and there are a lot of different ways that people come into care or hit rock bottom, so when we were going through training, they talk about the number one goal of foster care is reunification. And when that cannot be, that is when we move forward with other options for permanency, including adoption. And again, I think we could intellectualize that both of us felt like we could commit to that and spiritually that would be challenging, but that we understood that was the reality. And that also. Comes with its own many challenges and the reality of that is harder sometimes than you think [00:28:00] it’s going to be. Or not harder than you think it’s going to be ‘cause it is hard. But like Patrick was saying, we decided to go through our local county foster care system and we started the training and we were getting to the part where they were getting ready to license us. And we had some shifts happening in our home professionally and realized that we weren’t stable enough for us to bring in that instability that would come with foster care. And so we had put it on hold until we were in a better place. And so we got to go through the training twice and we got to think about all of these pieces twice and really get them rooted in our minds. What do you have to add to that, Patrick? Patrick Curran: So many things. Yeah, I was just reflecting, maybe going back. All of the Ignatian methods of discernment Heather’s is follow the spirit faithfully off the edge of a [00:29:00] cliff and Christina Gebel: what a great cliff it is and Patrick Curran: or the great cliff. Christina Gebel: Great cliff. Patrick Curran: It’s so true. There’s a couple of threads there about like, where is Catholicism living in all of this? And again, it goes back to the roots that we have in our families. I could tell you very explicit moments when my dad, who is not outspoken, and as a young person growing up, he was not like, oh, Catholicism first. That’s not my dad. He was a father and a husband, and somebody just tried to do right by his family. But there were a couple of key moments where he was like, we need to live the Beatitudes right now. And I’m like, I don’t, okay. I’m seven. What does that mean? I think about like all of our experiences at Loyola and the environment that we were in. Specifically the quote that Heather just mentioned, this idea of vocation being, where our deepest desires meet the world’s deepest need. That theme as an expression of our [00:30:00] faith was something that was not by accident in our training, in our formation, and, resonated with both of us and has resonated in our professional lives. And so here we are at this kind of key crossroads of who do we feel called to be as adults, as individuals, and as a married couple, and the decision to lean into foster care because it is a need in our world. Now that said, we’ve interacted with many people who have thought about and discerned becoming foster parents because there’s a great need. It’s clearly not the thing that they’re called to. I think there’s an important part of discernment and I don’t wanna claim or make it sound like we went through some very intentional structured discernment process. There is a process there, and we did approach it [00:31:00] faithfully, meaning that in the way that we live our everyday faith, we continue to ask God, where are you in this and where are you calling us? And I think Heather is very free about following God through any door that God opens in front of her. Which I guess I’m a very resistant sheep lost on the mountainside like that. But that ended up taking us into our local community, foster care. And that’s a beautiful thing and has been a tremendous gift. So, there is a structured discernment process. And I wanna say that to give credit to our trainers and the people who run our county led foster care program, I think do a really good job with the parental training and a part of that, and they tell you straight up is A, we’re trying to scare you out of this. B, the purpose of foster care is reunification. So we are asking you to give your entire heart to these children, and we are promising you that we are going to break it because their goal is to keep those kids [00:32:00] with their birth family, and that’s what’s best for the kid. So again, if we’re approaching this as Christians and we’re saying, God, you’re inviting me to die to myself for someone else’s sake, then without trying to be a martyr, the invitation is to lay down your own desires and do what is best for the child. And I genuinely believe that every true parent does that. I don’t think you have to be a foster parent. I don’t think you have to wear a red cape or be some kind of superhero or magic Christian. I think if you have children in your home and you love them as a true parent, you put their needs in front of yours every single day. And the call of a foster parent is to do that and to recognize that means potentially giving up the gift of the child. And again, I think as Christians there’s a part of our spirituality and our theology that says the children in our home, whether they’re biological or not, are a [00:33:00] gift from God and whatever they’re called to in their lives, God calls us to give them up and to trust God’s will for them. Let God make the miracle out of them that they are. So I think we have simply tried to do that. And so, then there have been real moments where we have had to grapple with the desire for adoption and that desire for permanency. And as Heather mentioned in 2014, we had gone through the training the first time, and part of that discernment process the trainers actually said to us, there’s some resistance here. It doesn’t feel like you are ready. And that was their part of the discernment, right? And we had to sit with that and figure out what that was. And it was four years before we came back and did that again. And I remember at that point we were coming up on our 10th anniversary for our marriage. And I had said to Heather I feel like I’m getting old and crotchety and a little stuck in my ways. And if we’re going to do this, then let’s really do it. And if not, [00:34:00] then I think we need to mutually discern if we’re going to be a couple that doesn’t have children, we have a lot of gifts and a lot of bandwidth, and how are we gonna be using that? And so we determined at that point that we were still very interested in pursuing this journey. We went again, back through the training, completed the licensure, and it was not an easy process for getting placements in our home, which was strange. But then after about seven months from the time that we finally got our license to when we had our first placement [who] was a young five week, baby boy who was blonde-haired, blue-eyed, and if you know anything about foster care, that is the exact opposite of what they tell you to expect, right? It’s the whole thing is if you’re, you should expect to have school children usually of either mixed race or minority race in your home and the idea that you would have an infant, baby boy, blonde hair, blue eyed is just a random thing. What I think was most [00:35:00] striking and potentially difficult at the time was he looked like he could have been our natural child. It’s the Advent season, by the way, when the boy gets placed with us. So our church is filled with all the stories of Mary and the coming of children and this whole like elevation of the family in our Christian narrative and what does that look like? And all of a sudden, we show up at church with a baby carrier. And people are like, oh, my gosh, we didn’t even know you were pregnant. And so our whole community who had been on this journey with us and were wanting so much to see, the love that we had for each other in our marriage, pour out into the gifts of family, just felt, oh, this is incredible. And we were surrounded and uplifted in so many ways by that. And then fortunately for that baby boy one of his biological family members, was able to eventually adopt him. So he was placed with us for only six weeks. We had initially been told upfront that we should expect to adopt him because the case was a little complicated and they weren’t sure what was gonna happen. But they [00:36:00] started out by asking us, are you prepared to care for this child for the long term? And not just in the term of a long-term foster placement, which might be one to two years, but actually adopting him. By all means, yes. And I specifically remember holding him in the hospital, like looking at his face and saying I’m committing myself to you. And having these spiritual reflections and praying prayers of thanksgiving to God that somehow our first foster placement is someone that they’re asking us, will you adopt? And then in a very quick turn of events, a good thing for him, but a hard Cross for us to bear was that he was placed with his aunt. And that, as far as we know, has been a very successful placement, and he is thriving and doing well. But it caused a lot of pain for us. It clarified for us how much our hearts were desiring for adoption. And we [00:37:00] didn’t realize how much us having a child would bring out other aspects of our community. And they were so excited for us. Our family members were like, we’re finally grandparents. The aunts and uncles are getting all excited, there’s all this stuff going on. And then all of a sudden, he was gone. And so it wasn’t just our pain, it was pain for the community, and we didn’t feel like that was fair and we both still had this desire to be parents. So, fast forward, what ends up happening? Through a process of healing and conversation in a quick short few weeks, we had decided let’s move forward with adoption. For anyone who doesn’t know, adopt us kids.gov.org.com, dot something. Go look it up, go find it. Christina will put it in the show notes. [yes, I did and it’s https://adoptuskids.org] There are thousands of kids available for adoption in the United States that need a loving home. They’re broken just like you and me. They need great parents, so [00:38:00] go adopt them. But we were looking on this website and we found a few different sibling sets and other children who were available for adoption that we had been talking with our social worker. The next first step for us that seems to make sense is to move down this path of adoption; we still wanted to do foster care, but it wasn’t fair to a child in foster placement who was going to be reunified with their family, hopefully, that they would have all these expectations from us or from our community and whatnot. And literally, I kid you not, this is three weeks after that baby boy was placed with his aunt. We’ve gone through, made these decisions. We’re supposed to meet with our social worker to review this list of children that we’ve identified as ‘we’d like to learn more’ and possibly see if we would be a good fit for an as an adoptive family for them So, we’re scheduled to meet in the afternoon with our social worker. That morning we got a call from the placement worker about another five week old baby boy. She called me, [00:39:00] Heather was at work and I was available, and so I was like. I’m feeling like I’m gonna say yes to this, and that’s ridiculous. We are grieving so much right now, and my wife is going to be like, what is wrong with you? Why would you even say yes to this? And so I told the placement worker, I was like we’ll have to call you back, but I’ll let you know. So I called Heather and she said, are you gonna say I’m nuts if I wanna say yes to this that’s how I do discernment. God, you are present when I’m surprised and when everything kind of lines up the way that we think it should. And it felt like God was saying to me, you’re missing everything I have prepared you for a young child. Even when our first placement came the way that our friends filled in the gaps with here’s the crib here’s all the baby supplies that you need. ‘Cause we were ready for school age kids ‘cause that’s what they told us to be ready for. And so we had all these things for a baby and then we were looking [00:40:00] at older kids who needed a family. And then here comes this call for another five-week-old boy who today is our 6-year-old adopted son. And he’s awesome, like, just lots of surprises. But, the journey’s not straight. And I think the interaction of faith and the everyday parenting decisions and adult human decisions they go together. They go together in ways that require the tension of hope and sacrifice all in the same moment. Christina Gebel: Wow. I have so many faith parallels coming up, and I keep going back to your words, Patrick, about laying everything at the foot of the Cross. How many times you guys did that? Like having gone through everything you had with fertility biologically the uncertainty of [00:41:00] that and the non permanency of that process. You could have easily said, okay, we’re gonna go with a slam dunk path this next time around. But you kept laying yourselves at the foot of the cross. Patrick Curran: Oh, let’s be clear. I wanted the slam dunk. You wanted the slam dunk. Heather Curran: Like normal adoption paths… Patrick Curran: …Are not a slam, Heather Curran: ….Are not a slam dunk. True. And there’s, there isn’t a promise of permanence. And you can get so close and have these same experiences of so near to something… Patrick Curran: Yeah. Heather Curran: And then it’s not, and there is grief there. That path is not straight or easy either. And I see that in our friends that have taken that journey or reading different experiences. I think things come back to expectations and you create this expectations of what it’s gonna look like in your head or for me, like what will look like as parents and how people tell you’re to make a great [00:42:00] parent, then you have a child and your house and you are exhausted. So yeah, I think especially with that first placement Patrick shared, just there was such an emotional release of this has finally happened. After all of this time and talk and desire, we have this infant that we didn’t expect. What a beautiful gift. It’s Advent. People are excited and we’re trying to hold in our heads, this is foster care. This is not a straight path. We are holding this tightly but loosely. And at the same time, your mind still travels 30 years down the road. Yeah. And when that all shifted, it happened in a week. When family was identified, people were telling us they’re gonna have to do background checks and yeah, it’ll take four months, it’s gonna take months. And they identified this family on a [00:43:00] Thursday. I met them on the Friday. We were meeting to talk about relocation on Monday. It happened so fast, and I had whiplash. And when we initially met them, Patrick was out of town. And I knew in that meeting again, it was like when we were in the the ultrasound I knew as soon as they were in the room, this was not gonna go the way that my heart had anticipated. And I knew that wasn’t the wrong thing for the child. It just wasn’t what I had hoped for or wanted. And those feelings. Again, hard to manage ‘cause you want to be grateful for the gift and the reality of what that meant for him. And then thinking about having to share this with all of the people that have been so excited for us. And those people have all still [00:44:00] been present through everything and wonderful. When we decided to do foster care, I realize now that we made that decision not only for us, but for all the people around us and for our parents, for our siblings and their kids. They are a part of this journey and they are riding these waves with us also. And I have been buoyed by their resilience in these times and their ability to support us in their own grief. And even the preschool teachers where our kids go are like, you are setting an example of love and spiritual journeying that is good for our community. And in that coming and going and saying goodbye, that is our spiritual faith. There’s many times where I think it’s not fair to do this to the people around [00:45:00] us, but the reality is that this is life and we are allowing people to journey it with us and they are supporting us. It’s mutual. And that’s not a bad thing. And to be grateful for taking those steps together and to have those people with us present and witnessing and caring for us in those times, Patrick Curran: We believe in the God of the Ordinary. I think what’s coming up for me right now, Christina, I’m looking at the questions that you had sent us earlier and this idea of radical and radical family. Again, I don’t know that I would consider what we do radical, but in the world of Ignatian discernment, I think part of, what Ignatius’s gift to the Church was challenging us and inviting us to reflect on where do our own attachments keep us from God? And I think in this journey we are continuously challenged to [00:46:00] recognize what are the things that we are holding onto. What are the things that God is inviting us to and when are those things not the same thing? And so like Heather said, how do we hold on tightly but loosely and then have the freedom, have the faith to let go? I was talking with a friend of ours earlier, I don’t know if this is true or not, so somebody can fact check it, but he was thinking that the word radical shares a root with the word “rooted.” And when I think about how we were able to make those decisions, it comes back to being rooted in our faith tradition in our families who nurtured that faith tradition in our community. Where we live, breathe, and express that faith. And ultimately in our individual relationships Yes, I have a [00:47:00] relationship with Jesus Christ, and I love him, and I’m very mad at him frequently, and I don’t know what He thinks of me all the time because I don’t hear enough when He says, I love you, right? And as a father, that’s the message I want my son to hear. As a foster parent, you have to be rooted in that kind of radical love, to have a kid in your home who is gonna need you in ways that you can’t imagine. Again, I’m not sure it’s different from the way any other true parent parents their child, but if there’s anything radical about it today, it’s that our American culture, the society that we live in, even the broken, polarized Church that we live in, I don’t think invites us to let go of our attachments. But instead, has this message of how you can have more of what you want, more of how things should be easy. More, more bigger [00:48:00] family. 37 kids started out as 36 and then it got to 37. And I think in our rootedness, ultimately, we’re hoping to find freedom. And it is a gift to be able to share that with the two children that have been entrusted to us. And we love them both radically, Christina Gebel: Whoever you spoke to, I wanna go back to that. Whoever you spoke to was correct in their interpretation of radical and rooted, and I talk a lot about this in the teaser for the season. That radical came to me in a homily by one of my favorite priests in Boston. He was talking about we need to be radical. And, for me, I’m like, yeah, radical, progressive chain ourselves to the building or something, and he was talking about how there’s this interesting play on the word here and that’s how we usually use [the word] radical colloquially, but radical, which also I think of [00:49:00] radish, which grows in the soil, is really actually to get to the root of something. And he talked about when you actually get to the root of Christianity, Jesus, our Lord and Savior, Christianity is actually quite radical. So there’s almost this circular logic there in that, really, if we really sat down and really spelled out what it means to be a Christian in our modern world, and you put flesh on those bones, Patrick, when you said to not have everything fall into place, like we expect so much of our lives to do in the modern sense is quite radical. That’s what’s also coming up for me as y’all are talking. You mentioned earlier in the conversation, a lot of people come to foster care, through the sense of need. And I think on a cognitive level, especially for people who are committed to social justice, like that’s very [00:50:00] clear, and that might be the doorway that people enter through, right? That might be what the whisper is, but whether or not it’s a call. And a call takes you through all the ups and downs and joys and challenges that you’ve shown us so beautifully in this conversation. That sense of call I’m getting from you the roots were very deep. They were like intergenerational roots. You spoke so beautifully about your families. It’s like the roots were there back then… Patrick Curran: And I didn’t even mention, I have adopted cousins that I didn’t even know were adopted. And not because it was a secret, but simply because the way that our family has loved them over years and yeah, roots. Lots of roots. Christina Gebel: So, I know we’re winding down our conversation, which means we’re saving all the best wisdom for last. This last question is, if you [00:51:00] were to encounter someone who’s just starting to think about this path, obviously there’s a lot of, a lot of information out there, a lot of good people, good trainers out there and people in your parish and there’s a lot of that. But what I’m hoping you can answer is what are some things that you would suggest praying about spiritually as you approach this path? What are some of the spiritual questions or even just a framework? Or a mosaic of discernment for somebody who’s about to seriously consider this, and people discern in so many different ways. Just you both, the sheep, the cliff, I’m somewhere in, I’m somewhere in between those, and I’m not sure which when I am, there’s gonna be some cliff people out there listening and there’s gonna be some sheep people out there listening, so I’d love to hear from each of you in your own unique flavor of discernment, [00:52:00] what spiritual things would you point them to? Heather Curran: I don’t know about spiritual things, and maybe I’m just discounting the spirituality of my thoughts right now. But there are some very practical things that I have encountered in conversations with people. And their understanding of foster care that you have to think about before you jump into the process or discern. And one is your own biases. What are the things that you believe about foster care, children in foster care, parents of children in foster care, and the reality about reunification? I think people tend to…They hear that, but even for us, I think in the beginning we are hearing it. We were committed to it. But we had a need for permanence. And that time between the first [00:53:00] time we took the class and the second time we went in and actually got our license, I think it took all of that time for us to get into a place where we had processed our grief, about our ability to have biological children, and we’re actually in a place where we could receive a child that may or may not stay with us. And then the reality of that actually happening is a whole nother level. And if you are coming into this because you have a desire for children that hasn’t been met because of infertility or whatever, you do have to process that before you come into it because it is not fair for the child you receive to receive all of that emotional desire. The other piece is for me, what has become very apparent and important and I struggle with is biological families are important and we [00:54:00] do have to engage them. And it is because that’s the best thing for the child. There is also making sure that there are boundaries in place to keep your child safe and being open and aware of the realities that are happening. It’s multilayered, there’s lots of things going on, but I very often encounter people who say, I would love to do foster care, but I hear that you have to interact with their families. And I just can’t do that. Or the idea of them going back I just can’t do that. And this is where, for me, the realities of our Gospel and our faith and the ideas of forgiveness and openness and caring for others where the rubber really hits the road. If I believe in those things, this is where I need to put that into action for my child. And it’s hard. [00:55:00] It’s really hard. When I went into this, I think I had all these visions of worst case scenarios and how hard it was gonna be to deal with families and how difficult visitations would be and how they were gonna treat me and just being worried and concerned about that. And we’ve had some really great scenarios, and I’ve been very surprised. And we also need to stay aware and wise and create boundaries, but it has been beneficial to our children to know their families, to understand where they come from. I am in contact with my daughter’s grandmother on a weekly basis, and she is loving and wonderful and sends gifts to both of our children. That is where our family is growing and it has been a gift. And I see people very resistant and [00:56:00] afraid of that. And if this is a direction you’re going to go, you really need to grapple with how are you going to be open to those connections, and what is it that you are going to bring to those relationships? It’s not just the child. The child is coming with a whole set of people. I do not do that perfectly. I have a lot of opportunity for growth, and I want people coming into foster care to be really open to the potential of those relationships and their benefit to their child, but also their benefit to them. And God is good and relationships can be healing if we allow them to be. It’s another place where you have to hold all the tensions. Christina Gebel: Those are great ideas. I think that [00:57:00] piece is really important I haven’t heard that highlighted as often as probably it should be. Yeah. Patrick, what are you thinking in terms of practical or spiritual things you might offer someone at the beginning stages of this path? Patrick Curran: Sure. First I want to underscore. Plus one and give credit where credit is due to what Heather just said. You made the statement that you struggle with this. The reality is that we have relationships with our children’s birth families because Heather has taken that up. And our path through foster care to adoption for them has been made smooth because you leaned into those relationships. I think I’ve also taken for granted how much people don’t talk about that. And what I would add on the spiritual side, and if you’re discerning that is we are people who place a very high value on community. And so it has [00:58:00] actually been a struggle for us to try to balance our own family needs with their family needs and holding in a place of importance, what we believe will be good for them in the long run, which is having those ties back to their birth families and the days that they have questions about their identity and what is that gonna mean. And then everything that Heather said about this gets to the heart of the Gospel. What do we believe about redemption and God’s action for humans, and foster care is a world filled with broken people. So, I think my own set of what would I be discerning about at the beginning of this, first and foremost, as much as you can get your own house in order. And I think what I mean by that is try to get clear on why do I feel motivated or called to do this. What are the [00:59:00] things that are moving in me or around me? And many people come to foster care because they are a kinship placement for someone in need in their biological family. So, it’s not something that they’re desiring or looking out for, but they courageously said yes. And that’s its own kind of faith. And so I think at the beginning, if it is something that you’re thinking about, get clear on why and bring that to prayer and ask God to help you know yourself. Heather Curran: Yeah. Patrick Curran: And to know where is the Spirit moving in you? I would also say for the folks who are planners and like to be very prepared they’re now deciding I will get my house in order to be a good foster parent. There’s no such thing in foster care, right? And so I think one of the very practical things to discern and begin to plan for is how will you navigate the unplanned? How can you be more flexible in your life? Where is God [01:00:00] inviting you to do something that’s outside of your comfort zone that you otherwise might never do? And do you have time to reflect on that and find the grace in those things? And I, for some reason as Heather was talking, the Scripture coming into my head is the, the story of Ruth, right? “Your people will be my people and your God will be my God.” (Ruth 1:16) When you bring a foster child into your home, they need from you and you need from them, and you have to be able to elevate their needs. And so you can’t plan for that. You can’t predict it. Things come out of nowhere all the time. I think there’s a lot of very practical things that any good foster training program will help you think about. I think maybe another thing was just what is your experience with trauma and what kind of training do you have or would you be willing to get around supporting people that have traumatic experience? And there’s a lot to that. Christina Gebel: Great things there to [01:01:00] look into and every time we come to a close in this conversation, and the other ones I’ve had I’m envisioning people out there listening to this and just thinking like, there’s gonna be a spark in someone somewhere, or maybe it’s gonna fan the flame of something the Spirit is putting on someone’s heart. And even if somebody wasn’t, completely, ready to discern this issue, there were so many gems here just about faith and discernment that I think there’s gonna be a plethora of sparks that are lit by this conversation. And I just wanna thank you both so much. I have endless gratitude for this conversation for you as friends, for you as parents, for you as fellow Catholics. I just wanna say thank you because this [01:02:00] conversation…the Spirit’s gonna take it to places that I feel in my heart we can’t even imagine. So thank you. Heather Curran: Thank you, Christina, for doing this podcast and opening the door for these conversations for other people to hear them and add them to their discernment and their contemplation. And you have a lot of depth to you, your questions and your seeking and your spiritual life, and it’s a gift to the people around you. Christina Gebel: All right. With that, the Curran family, Patrick Curran: Yeah, thank you, Christina. Yeah, what a joy to talk with you today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christinagebel.substack.com [https://christinagebel.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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