My House

My House An alternative approach to provide housing & supportive services for homeless youth & youth aging out

‼️Great way to support and amazing organization!
05/09/2024

‼️Great way to support and amazing organization!

The HOFFA Pro Shop is now open!

Even if you can't make it to The 4th Annual HOFFA Classic, you can still purchase from the Pro Shop!

Order by Monday May 13th and receive one entry into the Helicopter Ball Drop!

https://www.hoffaclassic.com/collections/hoffa-pro-shop

We still have a few sponsorship opportunities left if you would like to join us. Please reach out Andrew Boone ([email protected]) if interested!

Don't forget we also have our helicopter ball drop balls for sale to have a chance to win $2,000!

https://www.hoffaclassic.com/products/2024-golf-ball-drop

02/12/2024

Every single person that steps up to help can make a life long impact for kids in care.

10/26/2023

WOW!!!!! Beyond blessed to be able to share so many great people through The Faces of Westminster MD! Yesterday we hit 30,0000 views!! See for yourself at https://thefacesofwestminstermd.com
I look forward to sharing my Ignite Carroll 11 presentation - the story behind this impactful community project!

10/19/2023

The nervous 11-year-old showed up at Peter Mutabazi’s doorstep around 3 a.m., wearing blue pajamas and a gray Batman blanket. Thus began a journey that would lead Mutabazi, a foster dad, to adopt the boy and two other children.

08/23/2023
08/07/2023

A TENNESSEE business is selling ready-to-go tiny homes for just $15,000. These scaled-down houses are built here in the US and have many customizable extras. Incredible Tiny Homes is a construction…

08/03/2023

💕

This says it all..💕
08/03/2023

This says it all..💕

"Tonight, after 2.5 years of living here, my oldest son sat down at the table with this.
He was about to chow down when I stopped him and asked what in the world he was doing.
He said, ‘I made myself dinner.’
‘But it isn’t cooked. I can cook that, you know.’
‘Well, I wanted to eat something I used to eat a lot with my old family.’
So, we sat down and I asked him to tell me about it.
He said that they wouldn’t feed him due to being passed out (you can guess why) and he would have to make dinner for himself and his brothers (ages 2 and 4 months when they came to us).
He said that all the money they had would be spent on ci******es and other ‘fun things’ and so he would find change in their van and buy Ramen packets at the store down the street, at 6 years old!
He said he didn’t know how to boil water, so he would eat it like this. And, he actually grew to like it.
So, he would break it up for his siblings, and would try to make bottles for the baby (at 6!!!!!!).
I asked him to make me some.
I sat there beside him and crunched it down with lots of water because it’s not great…and he just started talking about how the first time I made them Ramen, he wouldn’t eat it and I told him I remembered.
He said it’s because it reminded him of his Ramen packets and he didn’t trust me (big thoughts for 9!).
He said he isn’t sad he’s not with his ‘old family’ (his words) anymore, but that sometimes HE LIKES TO REMEMBER HOW STRONG HE HAD TO BE.
I write this so everyone knows trauma isn’t healed quickly (sometimes never), and adoption doesn’t erase the past or the memories.
Kids can change, and they will change with love, but please never give up on a kid because ‘they are hard.’
I walked away in shock, in sadness, and so so so proud of how strong my baby is. He’s so wonderful. And, we love him so much.
Friends, THIS is the life experience of kids who come from hard places.
THIS is living a trauma-informed life.
We can’t imagine what kids from hard places have lived through. It is not just about one act of abuse or neglect, it is about living in survival mode and doing it day in and day out.
It is about making sure younger siblings are also surviving, even at the expense of childhood.
Trauma infuses itself into every pore. Kids just don’t forget it. Their brains and bodies won’t let them.
Those of us privileged enough (yes, I said privileged) to enter into the lives of children with hard life experiences must be willing to sit down, eat uncooked Ramen noodles, and listen. We must not give up.
Our kids didn’t.”
Credit: Aubren D. & Barren to Blessed

Address

Westminster, MD

Telephone

+14438214827

Website

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