Foster families: ‘They have no idea how much they saved me’

National Fostering Week is an initiative to increase the pool of foster parents

‘I dug myself out of the depths of despair and self-pity to now have an amazing friendship with my foster parents.’ Photograph: iStock
‘I dug myself out of the depths of despair and self-pity to now have an amazing friendship with my foster parents.’ Photograph: iStock

Shauna Armstrong, a final-year law student in NUI Maynooth, said that although being in foster care was a challenge at times, she believes the system saved her life.

However, the current number of foster care families is resulting in delays in children being placed in homes and foster families being requested to take in additional children, the Irish Foster Care Association (IFCA) said.

Ms Armstrong said that as a child she blamed herself for the abuse she endured before she was taken into care.

“I was an eight-year-old who was sexually abused, brutally beaten, starved, emotionally and physically scarred. I still believed that it was somehow my fault. I hated myself. I didn’t want to be here so I started to self-harm and became suicidal,” Ms Armstrong said.

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“With the help of the brilliant people around me, I dug myself out of the depths of despair and self-pity to now have an amazing friendship with my foster parents, Mary and Gary; my social worker, Cleatus; and after-care worker, Eithne.”

She added: “With the help of these amazing people, and the entire team behind the scenes, I’m now able to support myself and give myself the life that was cruelly taken from me as a child. They have no idea how much they saved me.”

Ms Armstrong was speaking at the launch of Tusla’s National Fostering Week, which aims to dispel misconceptions about who can be a foster carer and encourage people from all walks of life to consider providing a stable home to a child in the system.

‘Immense success’

Speaking at the event, Catherine Bond, chief executive of the IFCA, said she was "acutely aware" of the need for foster carers.

“We do know that, unfortunately, despite all attempts to keep children with their families, there are some children who will need to be placed outside of their families,” Ms Bond said.

“This is where the role of a foster family comes in, and without new foster carers coming forward to care for these children, sadly some children’s move into foster care can be delayed and in some instances the existing foster carers may be requested to take additional children into their family home.”

Bernard Gloster, chief executive of Tusla, said the increasing proportion of children in foster care is a " very significant change" compared with previous standards.

"There are 6,000 children in care in Ireland today. We have, by international standards, achieved an immense success, by virtue of the fact that 92 per cent of those children are with foster carers," Mr Gloster said.

“Thankfully, in our almost 4,000 foster care settings, we have 1,100 people who are relative carers – people who step in, their extended family, to provide that support. Thankfully, we have such wonderful diversity, such a redefined view of what family is.”

Lord mayor of Dublin Paul McAuliffe, who opened the meeting in the Mansion House, said fostering made an “amazing impact” on society.

“We all know what a child needs,” he said. “Without foster carers there would be many children desperately in need. They are the unseen heroes in our city.”

Shauna Bowers

Shauna Bowers

Shauna Bowers is Health Correspondent of The Irish Times