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The Watercooler
So.....out of nowhere
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<blockquote data-quote="susiestar" data-source="post: 382621" data-attributes="member: 1233"><p>Even with this new diagnosis you are still more savvy than many parents I know. Heck, you problem have more on the ball than a lot of the other parents I have met up at school! I am very sure you will talk to your own attorney and advocate about this, which is what you need to do. I am just very suspicious about this because my own interaction with CPS has been less than trustworthy.</p><p> </p><p>Regardless of the reasoning, I think even the idea of this would hurt the kids a whole lot. You are their stability and safety, the one who will be there when the paid caregivers get new jobs or assignments or leave to have their own kids or whatever. While a TPR wouldn't mean you couldn't see them, it would legally sever your familial relationship. </p><p> </p><p>You need to think long and hard about whether this is good for you and for them in the long run. What damage will a TPR do to them, and what benefits would they get from it? Would they think they don't have you as their family anymore? How would you handle that, and how would they?</p><p> </p><p>in my opinion it is a very strange thing to have them bring up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="susiestar, post: 382621, member: 1233"] Even with this new diagnosis you are still more savvy than many parents I know. Heck, you problem have more on the ball than a lot of the other parents I have met up at school! I am very sure you will talk to your own attorney and advocate about this, which is what you need to do. I am just very suspicious about this because my own interaction with CPS has been less than trustworthy. Regardless of the reasoning, I think even the idea of this would hurt the kids a whole lot. You are their stability and safety, the one who will be there when the paid caregivers get new jobs or assignments or leave to have their own kids or whatever. While a TPR wouldn't mean you couldn't see them, it would legally sever your familial relationship. You need to think long and hard about whether this is good for you and for them in the long run. What damage will a TPR do to them, and what benefits would they get from it? Would they think they don't have you as their family anymore? How would you handle that, and how would they? in my opinion it is a very strange thing to have them bring up. [/QUOTE]
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So.....out of nowhere
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