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∎ Libro Free One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker

One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker



Download As PDF : One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker

Download PDF  One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker

This true, heartwarming story reveals that miracles occur in everyday life. Enjoyable and uplifting, One Kid at a Time will empower—and encourage—everyone who reads it.

Danny had no chance. His mother abandoned him. His father in prison didn’t know him. His grandmother beat him so badly that the doctors couldn’t count the bruises. He lived nonstop days of unending anxiety, loneliness and terror. Ordered into foster care, the system isolated, drugged and betrayed him.

Jake lived the good life. Warm friendships, plenty of money and freedom to do what he enjoyed. From the outside he had the perfect existence. But inside he longed for a child.

One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker

I just finished reading Dekker's great work. His openness and honesty throughout the book were refreshing. He provided the reader with real life experiences which fully captured the roller coaster nature of the process of adopting and parenting a hurt child.While Dekker is a parent, he accurately portrays and describes the dynamics that any adoption/attachment professional would see. Danny's desire to be a part of Jake's family was striking as was Jake's determination to become a father.Dekker captures the pains and joys of parenthood and,particularly adopting an older child with profoundly serious issues. The hope that fills this book should give so many other adoptive parents hope for their children and their futures.

Gregory C. Keck.Ph.D.,Founder /Director of the Attachment and Bonding Center of Ohio, co-author of Adopting the Hurt Child, Parenting the Hurt Child, and author of Parenting Adopted Adolescents.

Product details

  • File Size 503 KB
  • Print Length 273 pages
  • Publisher NiceTiger (March 28, 2012)
  • Publication Date March 28, 2012
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B007PU10FW

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Tags : Buy One Kid at a Time: Read 82 Kindle Store Reviews - Amazon.com,ebook,Jake Dekker,One Kid at a Time,NiceTiger,FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS Adoption & Fostering,FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS Children with Special Needs
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One Kid at a Time eBook Jake Dekker Reviews


GREAT BOOK. Perfect for understanding what this single caring loving gay father went through to adopt an abused and neglected boy available to be adopted. FAST shipping!! If you want to help kids in foster care, be a CASA! Court Appointed Special Advocate!!!
I really enjoyed this book, it gives me strength and courage with my own parenting! I am so pleased that Danny was saved from the system. Jake never gave up, never questioned his initial desire to be a parent, and remained focused throughout.
It broke my heart to think about all the other kids that are literally "stuck" in an ever revolving door of bureaucracy. It is shameful to think how much money is literally wasted, and how agencies that are supposed to "help" actually cause more harm.
Thank you for sharing your story.
Child welfare systems are staffed by caring and compassionate people who intend to serve and help children who, through no fault of their own, have been removed from their homes for their own safety. At best these systems are poor substitutes for loving families who provide homes where these children can thrive. The child welfare and juvenile legal systems are overburdened and underfunded and often these children become victims of the very systems that purport to make their lives better.

One Child At a Time is an astonishingly accurate example of how a child gets lost in those systems. Worse, many of the problems Jake Dekker's son, Danny, experienced were created by the welfare system itself.

For example, all too many times today foster children are prescribed psychotropic medications for behavioral issues originally created by abuse, neglect and unfit parenting. To be abandoned and physically abused would make any child angry, yet small children lack the language to ask for help with that anger. The child's undesirable behavior should be no surprise. Yet the system often attempts to control him or her with medications that often produce more unwanted behaviors such as the aggression demonstrated by Danny. Thus a horrible cycle begins - a cycle from which many children never emerge.

Jake Dekker presents a compelling and accurate description of such cycles. He also realistically describes the obstacles and challenges created by the bureaucracies of our current child welfare systems - obstacles and challenges to those courageous individuals willing to fight for the rights of a foster child to a safe, permanent home where he or she will be loved and given the opportunity to grow into a successful adult.
I am a CASA volunteer and my husband and I are prospective adoptive parents who are currently in the "information gathering" stage. This book was recommended by my county's CASA organization and I read it to gain insight into my current and future CASA cases, as well as our hopeful adoption of a child or children from the foster care system.

I found this an extremely moving account of one man's journey to become a father to a young boy who had, by all accounts, been failed by both his biological family and the system. It is a wonderful story of two people, both of whom had been damaged and hurt in different ways, becoming a family. The personal narrative is uplifting and moving (often to tears), however Dekker also does a great job detailing facts and figures about the foster care system and adoption, in particular relating to his own state of Washington.

I would highly recommend this to anybody considering older child adoption, as well as CASAs and DHS caseworkers.
I am considering being a foster-to-adopt parent and this book was recommended to me. I applaud the author's honesty about the system, his inner turmoil through the process, and his honest description of adjusting to life with a troubled ten year old. I finished the book in one day. It was impossible to put down.
Confession I cried more than once while reading this book. This true story about a single man's experience with the foster care and adoption system is packed with frustrating setbacks and victories both small and large. The author, writing under a pseudonym, catalogs his doubts about his fitness for parenthood as well as the mistakes he makes while learning to support a terrified, overmedicated 10 year-old boy. His account offers powerful evidence of our innate capacity for survival, interdependence, and (finally) love.

While it's discouraging to read about the ineffective and occasionally dangerous policies which have been put into place 'for the good of the children,' prospective adopters (and foster parents) will find reason for hope within these pages. Dekker volunteers some of the amazingly effective tactics he used to advocate for his new son. And the information he provides about the legal rights of adoptive parents is worth many times the price of this book.
I just finished reading Dekker's great work. His openness and honesty throughout the book were refreshing. He provided the reader with real life experiences which fully captured the roller coaster nature of the process of adopting and parenting a hurt child.While Dekker is a parent, he accurately portrays and describes the dynamics that any adoption/attachment professional would see. Danny's desire to be a part of Jake's family was striking as was Jake's determination to become a father.Dekker captures the pains and joys of parenthood and,particularly adopting an older child with profoundly serious issues. The hope that fills this book should give so many other adoptive parents hope for their children and their futures.

Gregory C. Keck.Ph.D.,Founder /Director of the Attachment and Bonding Center of Ohio, co-author of Adopting the Hurt Child, Parenting the Hurt Child, and author of Parenting Adopted Adolescents.
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