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There’s a quiet myth that’s kept too many loving people from opening their hearts to children who need them. It doesn’t shout. It whispers — planting doubt where there could be hope.
Myth: Only younger people can foster.
Truth: The only requirement is that you must be over 21. People start fostering at all stages of life.
This idea — that fostering is only for the young — overlooks something deeply important. It overlooks the kind of love that comes with time. The calm steadiness that age brings. The lessons learned, the compassion deepened, the patience grew.
We’ve seen it time and time again: a grandmother who thought her parenting days were long behind her, a single man in his 50s who felt a pull he couldn’t ignore, a couple whose own children were grown and gone, suddenly finding room again — in their homes and in their hearts.
No age defines readiness to foster. There is only love.
NBA legend Alonzo Mourning is one of many who know what that kind of love looks like. When he was just 10 years old, his parents’ divorce left him at a crossroads. He entered the foster care system, and into his life stepped Fannie Threet — not a young woman just starting, but an experienced, warmhearted foster mom who had already cared for 49 children.
Fannie welcomed Alonzo as she had the others, with gentleness, structure, and an open heart. And Alonzo? He didn’t want to leave. He later shared, “Once I walked in, I never wanted to walk out.”
She wasn’t the youngest. But she was exactly what he needed.
Love like that isn’t measured in years. It’s measured in presence. In listening. In showing up. In being the kind of steady that a child can lean on when the world has been anything but.
There are people right now who don’t think they’re the “type” to foster. Maybe they’ve had their own families. Maybe they’ve weathered heartache or are just settling into a quieter chapter. But that’s often when love has grown the deepest roots.
Because fostering doesn’t ask how old you are.
It simply asks, can you care?
Can you offer safety, and kindness, and patience?
Can you sit beside someone when they’re hurting and not turn away?
The truth is: many people begin fostering later in life. And children thrive in homes filled with warmth, wisdom, and unwavering support — no matter how many candles were on the last birthday cake.
Because what children need most isn’t youth.
It’s love. And love has no age limit.
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