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Once more, my heart broke upon hearing the story; the horrible story that most turn away from.

This time, the news came from Idaho.Β  A baby had a fractured skull and brain bleed.Β  The infant was a victim ofΒ shaken baby syndrome and was severely malnourished, getting only enough calories to keep his heart beating.

It is a story that you likely did not read or hear about.Β  It is a story that most will turn away from, and instead focus on the latest Hollywood gossip, read about the latest reality tv star, concern themselves more with their favorite sports team.Β  The truth is that it is horrible story that most simply refuse to acknowledge because it is too simply that; too horrible.

Child abuse.

As a foster parent of over 50 children from foster care the past 15 years, I have witnessed up close what you have refused to look at.Β  I have lived with it, as you chose not to help these children.

Four year old Michael and his four month old sister Melinda came to live with us several years ago. stayed with us for four months, as well.Β  The two had been placed in our home due to the ever increasingΒ opioid drug abuse of their mother, and the father was nowhere to be found.

Michael had been horrifically abused by his mother, so much so that it continues to haunt both my wife and I to this very day.Β  When Michael first came to our home, my wife discovered small, black, circular marks on his scalp.Β  These marks were in fact burns, cigarette burns, from his mother.Β  Frighteningly enough, the burns were not only on his scalp, covered by his blond hair, but on his tongue, the roof of his mouth, and even on his genitals.Β  His mother, the one person who was to love him the most, to protect him, and to guide him through life; the person who had given birth to him, had hurt him so terribly, had scarred him so appalling, physically, emotionally, and mentally.Β  Indeed, the young boy did not show any emotion while in our home, not joy, pain, sadness, curiosity, fear, or any other emotion.Β  His young sister, a tiny baby, suffered from Meth addiction, and was our first excursion into that sad world.Β  Their time with us was one of sadness, fatigue, as baby Melinda screamed day and night from her suffering from Meth.

β€œAre you willing to look straight at this ugly truth, and help save a child from abuse?”

Children in the very city you live in are victims of this horrific crime. Today. As you read this. Furthermore, the abusers and perpetrators may be your colleagues at work, members of your church, your neighbors, and even those who come to your annual family reunion. Again, as you read this!

Michael and Melinda are just one of the stories of the children who have come to live in my home.Β  Studies show that up to five million children in the United States experience and/or witness domestic violence each year. Whether it’s watching an act of physical or sexual abuse, listening to threats or sounds of violence, or viewing the evidence of such abuse in a victim in the signs of bleeding, bruises, torn clothing, or broken items, the effects are damaging to a child, in a variety of ways. Children in our nation are suffering from an epidemic of child abuse from those who proclaim to love them the most. Indeed, simply witnessing domestic abuse can also be traumatic for a child.

Children around you are falling victim to domestic violence and abuse. It is up to you toΒ help bring an end to it.

Will you turn away from your sports team, reality tv show, and Hollywood gossip long enough to do it? Are you willing to look straight at this ugly truth, and help save a child from abuse?

Somewhere, a child near you hopes so.

Originally posted onΒ www.huffingtonpost.com


John DeGarmo, Ed.D.

Born in 1969, Dr. John DeGarmo has worn many hats throughout his life. Singing and dancing while touring around the world in the international super group, Up With People, serving as a D.J. at four different radio stations on two different continents, working in the professional wrestling industry, teaching English and Drama at the high school level, and working as a media specialist at two different schools, Dr. DeGarmo has had a variety of experiences.

Dr. DeGarmo has a B.A. in History, a Masters in Media Technology, a Masters in Educational Leadership, and a Doctorate in Educational Leadership from Walden University. Dr. DeGarmo wrote his dissertation on Responding to the Needs of Foster Children Face While in Rural Schools. He is the author of several foster care books, including the training book The Foster Parenting Manual: A Practical Guide to Creating a Loving, Safe, and Stable Home, as well as the foster care children’s book A Different Home: A New Foster Child’s Story. Dr. DeGarmo is a dynamic speaker and informative trainer on the foster care system, and travels extensively, meeting with foster parents, child welfare workers, churches, schools, and organizations. He writes regularly for many magazines, and is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post, several publications, and newsletters, both in the United States and in Europe.

Dr. DeGarmo is married to Dr. Kelly DeGarmo, who hails from Australia, and the two of them have six children, both biological and adoptive. Dr. DeGarmo and his wife are also currently foster parents to three siblings, bringing their household to nine children. Dr. DeGarmo has been a foster parent for dozens of children for over a decade now. He has a passion for foster children, and is driven to bring education and insight into general society about all things foster care.

Dr. DeGarmo and his wife are the recipients of the Up With People Every Day Hero Award for 2015. The two also were honored in 2016 with their city’s Citizens of the Year Award.

Learn more about Dr. DeGarmo at DrJohnDeGarmoFostercare.weebly.com

You can connect withΒ him on:
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube

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