Posted on 10/03/2005 8:44:57 PM PDT by SandRat
10/3/2005 - U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AFPN) -- They lined Highway 24 in rural Peyton, Colo., about 30 miles east of here, straining to get a better glimpse of this real life Field of Dreams.
A stretched limousine carrying an eager academy family pulled carefully alongside a huge bus so they could not see the miraculous transformation their home had undergone in just seven days while 5,000 Coloradians cheered them on.
The event was part of the ABC network show Extreme Makeover Home Edition, which picks deserving families for a complete dwelling makeover. The show, which aired Oct. 2, unveiled a 4,000-square-foot home and schoolhouse built for the Barrett family. The familys parents, Billy Jack and Anne, were being repaid for the extraordinary confidence they have in children.
The orchestrated setting showed the spontaneous outpouring of emotion directed at this special mom and dad. The Barretts are well known in the area for opening their hearts and home to troubled children by adopting them out of foster care. Of their six children, siblings Dusty and Daphne as well as A.J. and Jennifer are adopted, while Clara and Rebecca are theirs by birth.
It feels strange to receive all this good will, said Mr. Barrett, 10th Services Squadron academy equestrian center manager. Anne and I have to learn how to be receivers. Its not the easiest thing to do.
Neither was tearing down their 101-year-old, 2,000-square-foot, too-small-for-the-family farmhouse.
After the Barretts were sent for a weeklong Hawaiian vacation July 10 by the television show, the nonstop project began with a July 17 completion date.
The shows design team worked with a local home builder and a crew of more than 200 subcontractors and volunteers to build a contemporary farmhouse large enough for the family.
According to a news release from the builder, the new home reflected the heritage and sensibilities of the Colorado prairie -- a solid, practical, timeless home with as much warmth, heart and character as the family who has come together to share it.
But first, the old house had to go. Fitting to Mr. Barretts role at the academy, Radar, reportedly the worlds largest horse at 19 hands tall, was imported from Texas. He provided unique visuals for this episode as he helped pull down walls.
It was also fitting because horses play a special role in the Barretts personal lives. As the founding parents of the Hope and Home Program, specializing in older, unadoptable children, they use the animals to help develop the youngsters.
We were told by experts these children would be institutionalized and on medication their entire lives, said Mr. Barrett, a former horse buyer for the Army at nearby Fort Carson. We brought them into our family and put them in the corral cleaning stalls and brushing horses. They accepted responsibility for the horses and it made all the difference. It does wonders for their self-esteem. Working with the animals, in this environment, is what really helped us pull these kids out of where they were.
They have been in multiple foster homes, but thanks to home schooling by the Barretts, they are excelling academically.
They reach these kids, said Connie Ramos, Extreme Home Makeover design team member and co-host. They use every life experience theyve had to make a difference in their lives. When you meet people who are salt-of-the-earth, hardworking folks who have a belief system that brightens the lives of everyone they come in contact with, thats something you remember forever.
Lonnie Aragon, Mr. Barretts assistant manager at the academy equestrian center, agrees.
I first met Billy Jack in 1997 when I was incarcerated working at the long horse inmate program in Canon City, he said. When I came up for parole, he said hed like to be a support for me, be there for me and help the best way he could. Hes been like a dad to me ever since.
And now Mr. Barrett and his entire family have a new home -- a home that represents more than a place to live.
The house is important, but the heart of the community really made an impression on us, he said. Its unbelievable how all those people came together and did that. It really hit home.
Just in case
Ahh, shucks.
Thanks for posting this...
My kids take horseback riding lessons at the base stable. We went on a family ride with the Barrett kids a little while ago (before anyone knew Extreme Makeover was going to do their thing). Those kids were every bit as impressive as the TV show made them out to be. Mature, grateful and happy. Extreme Makeover picked a good family to help out.
Yet before the Barretts took them in they were considered throw-aways.
SPOTREP
What a fantastic story.
And the boy Dusty said he basically was (a throw-away). He didn't believe anyone would ever take him in. But he added that not only did they take him in, but they gave him a brother when they brought AJ into the home. You could tell he was so excited and so grateful. Unfortunately, those traites aren't exactly common in many kids that age.
PEYTON, Colo. -- "Extreme Home Makeover" host Ty Pennington (left) helps the Barretts celebrate the instant they see their new home for the first time July 17. The ABC show aired nationally Oct. 2. (U.S. Air Force photo by Kelly Peterson)
PEYTON, Colo. -- The Barrett's 101 year-old former home was demolished by the "Extreme Home Makeover" crew to make room for their new 4,000-square-foot home. The ABC show aired nationally Oct. 2. (U.S. Air Force photo by James Lovely)
PEYTON, Colo. -- The new 4,000-square-foot residence of Billy Jack and Anne Barrett, along with their six children sits on the site of their old home. The Barretts' old home was redesigned for them by the ABC television network's "Extreme Home Makeover" July 10 to July 17. The show aired nationally Oct. 2. (U.S. Air Force photo by James Lovely)
As an adoptive, homeschooling parent of two "throwaway" kids who were supposed to be on medication for life, I can tell you that this show will do wonders for the thousands of older children waiting to be adopted.
God Bless You!
BTTT
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