Barry Farmer spent time in the foster care system while growing up and was no stranger to hardship. Having been raised by his grandmother since the age of 4, he credits her for the accomplished adult he turned out to be. And now he is a proud single father of three adopted children.
Barry applied to become a foster parent when he was just 21 years old in 2010. And a year later, he was allocated his second placement, Jaxon, then an 8-year-old boy. And at first, he had some trouble wrapping his head around the cultural difference. “I didn’t know he was supposed to be white, no one at the agency did. I was very surprised he was white, I had never worked with white children,” he said.
Within a year, the opportunity presented itself to foster a second boy, then-8-year-old Xavier. And a few years later, in 2013, Barry officially adopted him as well.
The family was completed in 2014 when they took in then-4-year-old Jeremiah for temporary respite care. “They welcomed him with open arms, as did I, so we adopted him as well,” Barry recalled.
Finding himself a single dad of three adopted white children while barely having turned 30 is not something Barry could have predicted. “I look in the mirror all the time, and if you would have told me 10 years ago that this would happen, I wouldn’t believe you,” he said. “I wished to be a father, but it wasn’t going to be this soon.”
“You can look at older children simply as diamonds in the rough. Even a diamond that’s in the dirt is still a diamond. They just need help, polishing them up, and once you hold them up to the light they’re still the same diamond, they’re just a little more refined now,” he poignantly noted.