
Michelle and Marie, ages 6 and 8, live with their father and his soon to be ex-wife. Chris (the kids father) works a part time job because of the bad economy, so he hustles on the side. Michelle and Marie's mother is addicted to the hustle. She is physically, mentally, financially and emotionally unstable. She can't look after the girls. Chris can't afford to take care of the girls, especially after his divorce. Chris is a good guy, but he has a junior high education, and he's addicted to the game, "for the love of Money," his family is also unstable.
One day Chris and his ex-wife, have an argument and she refuses to pick Michelle and Marie up from school. The girls are stuck at the school for nearly three hours, until Chris shows up.
When Chris arrives, DCF is accompanying his children out of the building. Chris is distraught, he rages out and is arrested.
At the county jail, they run Chris's fingerprints and find that he has a prior warrant out for his arrest. Chris gets thrown the book; 5 years in prison, out in 2 with good behavior.
Meanwhile, Michelle and Marie are stuck in DCF's custody while they try to find a suitable guardian. They later find that the girls' mother has a drug addiction problem so she is unable to care for them, and Chris's soon to be ex-wife refuses to take the girls for personal reasons.
What then do you do with the girls?
I decided to address this topic, because a lot of times in the African American community DCF has to get involved, and it's like the plague. People think that it's a bad thing for DCF to get involved, and a lot of time AA think that people are sell outs when they call DCF. Some AA, especially those from low poverty areas would rather the child not go into the system. I agree only under the stipulations that DCF aren't doing their job. In lots of cases AA and other minorities have to deal with ignorant, prejudice DCF workers that don't know what's going on. But since they have a certain perception of the inner city community they prejudge before they get to know the individual involved.
On the other hand, if DCF is on point, and the children are in unstable environments. For an example, if the mother and father come from a long line of criminals, liars, child abusers, drug dealers and drug addicts, then I believe that the children should be placed in foster care. At least, in foster care they have an opportunity to see life from another perspective. If children, are kept in those dysfunctional environments chances are they will become dysfunctional, and continue the vicious cycle of mental, physical, and verbal destruction.
Even in the chance that these individuals grow to be adults and they make it out of the "hood" they still tend to carry the mental and physical scars with them. This is why a lot of people become child abusers, because they were abused and they never knew how to deal with it. A change of economic status doesn't change your mental status.

"Child abuse cast a shadow the length of a lifetime" Herbert Ward
I know we've all met that person not living in the hood, middle/upper class, with a chip on their shoulders, so much rage in their heart, a ticking time bomb waiting to happen. For some of us it's our boss... Bottom line is, murderers, sociopaths, psychotics, child molesters, and abusers all have a past. More than likely they didn't just wake up and say "I think I will murder 15 people today (they probably did)". Seriously though, If the cycles aren't broken they will continue through the generations.
Be the one to break the cycle...
So I ask "is blood thicker than water?" If you have a niece, nephew or
cousin, being mentally, physically, verbally, or sexually abused "what will
you do?" What if they are living in a house with no electricity or food,
heat or hot water, and their parents are running the streets? Will you turn the other cheek, or will you break the cycle?"80% of young adults who had been abused met the diagnostic criteria for at least 1 psychiatric disorder by age 21
1/3 of abused and neglected children will eventually victimize their own children




