Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Cleaning the Place Up


Hello everyone! It has been quite a while since my last blog entry, so I figured I would update you all on some of the activities I have performed while at Sunflower Kids over the past several months. One of my latest volunteering activities was cleaning up around the main building of the organization. This included washing windows, putting away toys in the rooms in which parents visit with their children, and reorganizing a bookshelf. While this experience in and of itself was obviously not an overly taxing or moving one—the tasks I was responsible for completing included moving Barbie dolls from the “Action Figures” toy bin to the “Dolls” toy bin—just being in the offices of Sunflower Kids and seeing their operation run was a learning experience all on its own.
One of the visitation rooms that I cleaned

It is an odd experience to see a parent playing with his or her child and to know in the back of your mind that the parent you are watching was found guilty of doing something so harmful or disturbing that the only circumstances under which he or she is allowed to visit his or her own children is in a closely monitored and highly regulated environment. Interestingly enough, these parents did not look like the “abusive or substance abusing parent” stereotype would suggest. These people are human beings just like the rest of us, and they look like regular people. These people look like they could be someone’s next door neighbor or co-worker. I would wager that many of the acquaintances of these people are not even aware of the things these people do. This provides not only a lesson in not judging a book by its cover, but also a somber reminder that in many cases, you do not know as much about someone as you think you do, and you do not know what happens behind closed doors in a household of which you are not a member.


2 comments:

  1. Do you believe that more programs like Sunflower Kids should be funded to ensure that all people can see their kids, or no? What are the inherit benefits or disadvantages from programs like these?

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    1. I think that, given the laws in place in Kentucky regarding child custody, I would like to see places like SFK get more state funding, but ultimately I believe that if a parent does something so vile and disturbing that he/she cannot be in a room with his/her child unattended for fear of what may happen to the child, he/she has forfeited his/her right to see his/her child. I believe that the laws currently in place force these children to either actively protest seeing their own parent-- which I cannot image being an easy decision for a young child to make-- or see a parent that has abused them or their other parent. I guess to give a more direct answer to your question, I would say they should be funded more and the errors in this system are not committed by programs like SFK.

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