adoption, foster care, Children's Wisconsin, social worker
At Every Turn > Foster Care > The life of a social worker: Understanding, sacrifice and love
Patient Stories May 29, 2018

The life of a social worker: Understanding, sacrifice and love

Haley Hanson, Family case manager May 29, 2018

When I began my career as a social worker, fresh out of graduate school, and someone had asked me why I chose my career, I would have answered like this: “I chose social work because my passion is to help others, volunteer, and work with children. I want to be the voice for those who do not have one. I want to help give children a happy and healthy environment. I want to make a difference in the lives of others.”

Though I still feel these things, I realize now that I wanted to be a person who could fix all the problems. After two years in the field, I have learned that social work is full of triumphs, tribulations and many things you can’t foresee. Social work is not black and white, but several shades of gray. Here are a few things I have learned being a family case manager.

Understanding

As a caseworker, when a case first comes into court at the temporary hearing, you get a blip of information on the family (child’s name, age, mother’s name, and allegation of abuse and/or neglect). It can be difficult not to pass judgement on the parent or adult responsible for the allegation, but you start to gather information. Once you begin working with the family, you gain insight into trauma the parents have experienced, such as domestic violence in their childhood or current relationship, being in out of home care as children, generational drug and alcohol abuse, family stressors and barriers to resources and/or support.

You also gain insight into what the children have experienced. As a case manager you must stay neutral while a child tells you what they have seen or been through, either tearfully or as if it is a part of their everyday normal. Sometimes children will tell you they are hurting through their behaviors, such as fighting at school, throwing tantrums and not listening. As case managers we do not problem solve, but rather heal — heal the wounds of the family through services and resources, to help them become whole again.

Sacrifice

The foster care system is full of sacrifices from all sides. The biological family sacrifices a family member into the child welfare system, and desperately tries to pull them back out. Biological family members will step forward to care for their own, even if they have multiple children of their own, so the child can be comfortable and with people they know. A grandmother will tearfully agree to a transfer of guardianship because she knows her daughter will not be able to become sober. A biological father feels helpless in prison because he cannot change the fate of his child on the outside.

A foster family opens their home to a child they have never met. They sacrifice the normalcy and routine of their home to care for a child who has seen and experienced life way beyond their years. Foster parents sacrifice their hearts — loving a child for months and having them return to their biological parent. And foster parents sacrifice their time by working through the tantrums, emotions, and healing process of that child.

A family case manager sacrifices a full night’s sleep due to nightmares and stress, and lies awake wondering if their child client is also lying awake in the new, unfamiliar home they dropped them at that evening. They sacrifice the rapport and relationship built up over months of time with their adult clients when they testify as to why parental rights should be terminated, and why it is in the best interest of their children to become available for adoption. They sacrifice time away from their family as they rock a 6-month-old baby to sleep in the office because they were just removed from a parent who killed the other parent. The foster care system is full of sacrifices, big and small.

Love

The most important thing I have learned is how love can be found in all forms; a foster family throwing a birthday party for their foster child, an opportunity they never had before; a family case manager attending a graduation of a child on their case load after months of truancy and suspensions; a biological parent working hard being engaged so their children can come home for Thanksgiving.

Social work is not black and white, but several shades of gray. Being a family case manager is not an easy role. You feel pride in the work you do because it is your purpose and your calling. The triumphs outweigh tribulations. You learn to celebrate the small things because small goals met is progress being made. You have great days, like when you tell a biological parent their child is coming home to them. You have bad days, like telling a parent you have filed for termination of parental rights. As a family case manager you laugh, you cry and you celebrate. You lean on your team of co-workers and look to your supervisor for guidance and reassurance that you did the right thing.

I’m grateful for what I’ve learned, and I would not change a minute of this hectic passion of mine.

At any given time, as many as 7,000 children are in foster care in Wisconsin. As the largest provider of foster care programming in the state, Children’s Wisconsin offers high levels of support to foster and adoptive families.  View more articles from Haley Hanson

Related Stories

Owen and Ean Transnasal Endoscopy TNE Children's Wisconsin Gastroenterology, Liver and Nutrition Program
Patient Stories Nov 13, 2024

A better way: How a new technique is improving care for kids with chronic GI issues

Erin Kohlmann Writer

For kids with chronic stomach and GI issues, Children's Wisconsin is dedicated to bringing them comfort.

Lottie NICU Children’s Wisconsin HOPE (Healthy Outcomes Post-ICU Engagement) Clinic
Patient Stories Oct 23, 2024

Little darlings: A new Children's Wisconsin clinic is giving the smallest babies hope

When Lottie was discharged after nine weeks in the Children's Wisconsin NICU, her journey was just starting.

Collins Enteral Feeding Program Children's Wisconsin
Patient Stories Sep 23, 2024

Home sweet home: How a unique Children’s Wisconsin program is getting babies home faster than ever

Evan Solochek Writer

The Enteral Feeding Program at Children's Wisconsin is the only fully integrated, multidisciplinary newborn nutrition programs in the country.

Camden spinal muscular atrophy SMA Children's Wisconsin Neurosciences Center
Patient Stories Aug 28, 2024

A new hope: How specialized gene therapy is helping kids with a rare genetic disorder

Evan Solochek Writer

Cutting-edge treatments are giving kids with spinal muscular atrophy hope.

Shanika family single parent foster care
Patient Stories Aug 20, 2024

What matters most: Married or single, love is all you need in foster care

Shanika Wilder Foster Mother

Shanika Wilder used to think you had to be married or have a partner to foster — she now knows how mistaken she was.

Maya Northeast Wisconsin Children's Wisconsin Connected for Kids
Patient Stories Jul 19, 2024

Peace of mind: How a Children’s Wisconsin partnership is helping families in Northeast Wisconsin

Evan Solochek Writer

When Maya needed answers, a new partnership in Northeast Wisconsin helped get them for her faster than ever.

Caroline Advocacy Day Children's Wisconsin Government Relations
Patient Stories Jul 09, 2024

Miss Caroline goes to Washington: How Children’s Wisconsin advocates for kids

The Children’s Wisconsin Government Relations team supports policies and legislation that help kids get the care they need on the local, state and federal level.