Foster parent Haylee smiling during a testimonial interview about her experience with The Foster Alliance.

Foster Parent Testimonial: Haylee

Post Author:

Matt Lipan

Date Posted:

January 12, 2026

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“The three kids that we shopped for today, we’ve gotten in the last two months.”

Ultimately, that single sentence says everything. In a home that said yes again and again, three children were welcomed in just eight weeks. When placements happen that fast, time often disappears while costs quickly pile up. Consequently, what families need most in these moments isn’t just inspiration; they need practical help right now.

Foster families step up in moments of real need, and community support helps make that possible. When foster parents don’t have to carry the burden alone, they can focus on creating stability, safety, and care for children during life’s most important transitions. Especially during the holidays, that support matters more than ever. 💙 Thank you for standing with foster families and helping them say yes when it matters most.



This video captures one foster family’s experience, but it also reflects a much bigger truth. When a community steps in quickly, foster parents can focus on what matters most: caring for kids. To understand the depth of this impact, it helps to look at how we help families navigate these sudden transitions.

A New State and the Same Commitment

“We fostered for four years in another state, and then we moved to Arizona a year ago. We’ve fostered here for about seven months now.”

Moving states typically resets everything for a family, including agencies, requirements, and systems. For foster families, this also means they must rebuild a support network from scratch. However, what doesn’t change is the calling. Because Haylee’s family didn’t pause when they crossed state lines, they got licensed again and opened their doors immediately. Within months, they welcomed three children into their home. This kind of readiness only works when support is already in place.

Before the First Night, the Basics Matter

“When we started fostering, our agency referred us here to get cribs and all the stuff we needed for our home study.”

That line carries significant weight because cribs mean infants who need safe sleep on night one. Additionally, the phrase “all the stuff” refers to dozens of items that add up fast, such as bedding, monitors, gates, car seats, and clothing. This is exactly where donor support becomes tangible. Specifically, it looks like:

  • A crib already assembled and ready for use
  • A room that is fully prepared for a new arrival
  • A first night that feels calm instead of chaotic

The Barrier Is Real and It Is Fixable

“A big barrier for fostering is the expense and the time that you go into preparing for these kids.”

The cost of fostering is never theoretical. Since placements can happen with very little notice, families often start from zero for each child. They spend hours buying gear, guessing sizes, and juggling safety requirements. That is where giving funds changes everything. As Haylee mentioned, events like this take the load off so foster families can really focus on caring for the kids. Taking that load off doesn’t just save money; it also saves the emotional bandwidth parents need most.

Helpful and Meaningful

After the shopping is done, the takeaway is simple: “Today was so helpful and meaningful.” While “helpful” means their physical needs were met, “meaningful” means they didn’t feel alone. This distinction matters because it proves the experience was more than just a supply run. It was a moment of reassurance that someone else is carrying this burden with them.

Three Kids and Two Months Right Before the Holidays

Welcoming three children in two months brings a lot of change under one roof. New routines and new emotions are already a challenge, but then the holiday season arrives. Haylee noted that it is incredibly helpful to have extra support around the holidays so they can give the kids the Christmas they deserve.

Holidays are often complicated in foster care because joy and grief exist side by side. Support during this season doesn’t just provide gifts; it creates stability and belonging when emotions run high.

What Donor Support Looks Like in Real Life

When a placement happens quickly, here is how the “load” is lifted step by step:

  • The Call: When a home is needed now, basics are already available.
  • The First Hour: Children often arrive without clothes that fit. Support provides immediate access to essentials.
  • The First Night: Safety matters most, so we provide cribs, beds, and comfort items.
  • The First Morning: Life keeps moving with backpacks, lunches, and hygiene kits.
  • The First Holiday: Because parents don’t have to worry about the cost, they can focus on making memories.

What “The Stuff” Really Includes

When foster parents mention “all the stuff,” they are usually referring to items like safe sleep gear, diapers, safety gates, and school supplies. Every item removes friction and helps a child feel truly welcomed. If you are looking to help provide these items, you can donate your time to help us sort and organize these donations for families.

Gratitude That Sounds Like Relief

The tone Haylee uses is calm and grounded. She mentions that the support made a lot of difference and was incredibly meaningful. This is what impact sounds like in a busy home: quiet relief and honest appreciation. It is proof that support arrived exactly when it mattered.

Your Next Step

Take action today by picking one volunteer shift, bringing a friend, or giving financially if you’re able. Both matter. Both change lives.

A child is waiting for something that fits just right, and a parent is hoping for a moment of relief. By lifting the load, foster families can do what they do best: care for kids. That is how real change happens.

Have questions about our testimonial programs or how to support families like Haylee’s? Contact us today to learn more.

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