Being a child in foster care is never easy, but when you’re separated from your siblings, the situation becomes increasingly heartbreaking. The sad reality is that most kids are placed in separate foster homes from their siblings, and when they’re adopted, they’re often adopted without their biological brothers and sisters. It takes a special kind of person to take in multiple foster children, and it takes parents with enormous hearts to keep families together by adopting siblings.
Most of us scroll absentmindedly through Facebook, liking and commenting and even responding with the cry-face emoji if the situation is particularly heartbreaking. But Pam Willis is no ordinary Facebook user, and she’s certainly no ordinary parent. In January of 2019, Pam saw a post on Facebook detailing the story of seven siblings who had been in foster care for over a year after the unimaginable happened – the seven kids who ranged from 12-years-old to just 1-year-old lost both of their parents in a horrifying car accident.
“I can’t explain it — I just knew I was supposed to be their mom,” Pam told TODAY Parents.
Heartbroken for the trauma the young kids experienced and determined to help, Pam tagged her husband Gary in the post. The couple is no stranger to parenting, with five kids of their own and several foster kids over the years. Even so, Pam was certain her husband would think she’d lost her mind. The kids were already in foster care, so taking them in wouldn’t be temporary.
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“That evening I asked my husband if he’d seen the post,” Pam wrote on Instagram. “’Yes,’ he said. ‘We should adopt them.’ My heart stopped. ‘We should,’ I said…We knew deep inside that this mission was being placed before us. If not us, then who?”
The couple called the number included in the article and quickly realized they weren’t the only ones touched by the seven siblings’ ordeal. Thousands of calls had come in about the siblings, couples stepping up to give the kids the life they deserved. Sometimes though, things are just meant to be. Their last child had just left their six-bedroom home, leaving the couple with a lot of space and a huge amount of love to give. Two months later, Pam and Gary were matched with the children who so deeply touched their hearts.
“They were ours from the minute we saw their faces on the news story,” Pam wrote in an Instagram post. “If you ask my friends, one moment we were reposting their heart wrenching news story and calling attention to their plight, the next minute we were meeting them, falling in love, and starting the adoption process. They moved in June 7th.”
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June 7th of 2019, Pam and Gary began a new chapter. The road wasn’t easy, and helping the kids cope with trauma was an ongoing process. It took time, care, and consistency to help the seven siblings realize they were safe in their new home. Prior to the car accident that took their lives, the siblings’ parents struggled with addiction and homelessness. The kids often didn’t know if they’d have a place to sleep or food to eat, so Pam and Gary’s home felt almost unbelievable.
“One night, my then-7-year-old came into our room,” Pam recalled. “I asked her, ‘Did you have a bad dream?’ And she replied, ‘No, I just wanted to make sure that you were still here.’”
In August of 2020, Pam and Gary took another important step in showing their kids that they weren’t going anywhere, that their family was forever. In a virtual ceremony attended by all 12 of the couple’s children, they officially adopted their seven sons and daughters.
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