HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 5 | Page 5

E D I T O R ’ S M E S S A G E E d C o m e y - L a w C l e r k t o U. S . B a n k r u p t c y Ju d g e M i c h a e l G. Wi l l i a m s o n they Didn’t have to Be in honor of national foster care month, i’d like to thank all foster parents for being the parents they didn’t have to be. B rad Paisley, arguably one of the best country music songwriters over the last 20 years, said that one of the best pieces of songwriting advice he ever got was to “make sure you have a great opening line.” It has to be something, Paisley says, that makes you want to hear the rest of the song. But the other day on my drive in to work, I caught the tail end of an old Brad Paisley song I hadn’t heard before, and it was the last line of the song that made me want to hear the rest of it: I hope I’m at least half the dad that he didn’t have to be Cause he didn’t have to be The song, Paisley’s first number one hit, tells the story about a stepfather’s relationship with his stepson. The song begins with the stepson recalling how his single mom used to wonder whether she’d ever meet a man who wouldn’t turn and run as soon as he learned she had a kid. But then she meets the man she would eventually marry. When the man first asks her out to a movie, he invites her son to go with. Years later, when the stepson is having a child of his own, he realizes all his stepfather has done for him. Paisley says that what makes a song great to him is when it makes you feel an emotion you hadn’t planned on feeling. Perhaps that’s why the last line of that song (pardon the pun) struck a chord with me. Ten years ago, my brother Mike and his wife, Colleen, decided to become foster parents. Over the years, they fostered nearly 50 children — kids who were taken from their homes and placed with my brother and sister-in-law until their parents could straighten their lives out. During the time those kids were part of my brother’s family, they were blessed to have loving parents; a wonderful big sister (Macey); and grandparents, aunts, and uncles who loved and cared about them. Although it has been years now, I still remember most of the kids Mike and Colleen cared for. Two, in particular, will forever have a piece of my heart. Mike and Colleen adopted my niece Olivia and my nephew Joey from the foster care program. Every day, I’m thankful Mike and Colleen chose to be parents they didn’t have to be. May is National Foster Care Month. And the first Tuesday in May is National Foster Care Day, which is dedicated to all the children in the U.S. foster care system. The statistics tell a heartbreaking story: More than 250,000 children enter foster care each year; only half of foster children graduate high school; foster children suffer PTSD at twice the rate war veterans do; and nearly 20 percent experience homelessness within a year of aging out of the system. National Foster Care Day is intended to highlight the problems plaguing our foster care system, in particular the nationwide shortage of foster parents. The only real hope foster children have is that more selfless parents will volunteer to foster children in need. In honor of National Foster Care Month, I’d like to thank all foster parents for being the parents they didn’t have to be. © Can Stock Photo / zimmytws M AY - J U N E 2 0 1 8 | HCBA LAWYER 3