Alternate Reality

Trudging through social media, I am reminded time and again of the old adage about opinions and how everyone has one.  For the shy and the outspoken, Facebook and the like give all who wish to climb upon it a platform- a level opportunity to express one’s opinion – and I find that opinions are as widely varied as the subject matter.

I also find that sometimes conversations are needed. It was evident as I scrolled through my Facebook news feed last Wednesday morning.

A&E premiered Born This Way, a reality show featuring young adults with Down syndrome. I anticipated its showing; I consider myself as a special-needs advocate, so I support anything that promotes awareness.

As I watch shows or movies, or read novels featuring those with special-needs, I feel this on-edge anxiousness, waiting for some derogatory comment or inaccurate statement. In conversations over the years, I have learned to wait for something hurtful to be said.

I believed Born this Way would portray Down syndrome in a positive light, so I went in with no trepidation.  I knew my friends within the DS community would be talking about it but I was not prepared for the discussions that would follow nor did I think my own questions would become a catalyst for such conversations.

Fellow parents of children with Down syndrome asked if the show was truly representative. Opinions varied, naturally. Posts and comments from moms whose children are more like my Josh were not being able to watch because they said their children will never to be like these young people.

Others with younger children were encouraged. They felt their children could grow to be like these young people and nothing could stop them from reaching their full potential.

Small white boxes held very different words. Hopeful parents lovingly compared their children’s progress and accomplishments, thinking optimistically about their future.  Others anguished over multiple diagnoses, things their children still haven’t done and might not ever.

My own Facebook post initiated a discussion between moms that have been on my journey with me since Josh was a baby. We met at our local Down syndrome association and have remained friends. And the opinions of the show were as varied as our children’s abilities, but not necessarily because of them.

I remember back to Josh’s diagnosis. I craved encouragement. I sought out support. I wanted others to know that Down syndrome was not the end of the world.  I even worked on a pamphlet of information for new parents that presented Down syndrome in a more positive light.

I too thought nothing would limit him. With intervention and therapy, nothing would be out of our realm of possibility for him to reach his full potential.

When I read about the show, someone commented that it should be shown an OB offices when a Down syndrome diagnosis is given.

Maybe.

Or- maybe not?

Many times the lines become blurred between expectation and reality. Sometimes those lines are so distinct and bold that reality is a slap in the face. Our own reality can be far from the reality on TV and certainly from “reality TV”. Even in the Down syndrome community.

Last year I wrote a blog post called “A Different Kind of Wonderful” and it was shared on another blog, title rewritten as “A Different Kind of Beautiful”.

However, my original idea was actually, “A Different Kind of Down Syndrome.”  But when I mentioned that term in a comment, a fellow mother of a child with DS  told me this was divisive.

So I changed it. Divisive is the last thing I would ever want to be within the community that needs to be bound together in order to support each other and advocate for our children.

But I am finding that there is division.

A friend expressed that she is afraid to tell of her son’s accomplishments. She finds herself apologizing that her child is doing well when others struggle so greatly.

There are moms like me whose children function at a much lower level and have additional diagnoses. We feel hurt and cheated that our kids “aren’t there “and may never be.

The young people on Born This Way are all – pardon the term, because I know many don’t care for it – high-functioning. But even the father of the young man with Mosaic Down syndrome himself said his son was higher-functioning.

And as I watched, I mentally pictured a collective eye-roll among many of my friends who can’t relate. I confess, I’ve rolled my eyes. I’ve thought, “If he just had Down syndrome,” or” If only he could talk.”

My heart sank as I read comments of friends and their friends on Facebook Wednesday morning. Many cried as they watched. Others won’t watch because they knew it would be too painful.

I know that pain. I quit attending Down syndrome association meetings and Buddy Walks after Josh’s ability to participate in the activities ceased. As autism became part of our reality, watching his peers pass him by developmentally sent me into a pit that took me years to climb out of.

Some days I still claw my way up from that dark place where I could only see through disability-colored lenses. The place where I didn’t think other moms “got it” because their kids could talk and sing in circle time and went to the bathroom and held a pencil and wrote and drew and read books and sat still at a table without turning it over.

After all, their kid had “just Down syndrome.”

I still get the cheated feeling.

Yesterday, my youngest son was in a Christmas program at our church. Before I had children, I used to dream of my kids being in precious pageants and watching them play on sports teams and dancing on a stage.

I’ve gotten to watch three.

But not Joshua. Never him on the church platform. Never him singing, filing in with the others and me seeing his face on the big screen as the camera pans to each child.

While some children with Down syndrome can, Josh cannot.

I know what it’s like to be smile with joy for my other children through tears about another.

I felt their pain and anger – anger about a show that is to represent Down syndrome, yet seems to only highlight the brightest and the best. Resenting the fact it doesn’t accurately paint the broader and wider picture of what Down syndrome looks like in many lives.

But I have to say I did not feel that pain or anger as I watched. I don’t know if I somehow detached myself or if it’s just where I am in my own in my journey.

Many days have been spent with me on my face before my God and Him showing me that my path is my own and not anyone else’s.

And that He chose my son for me.

As I quit comparing him to others, and only to him, was I able to see him for whom he is and he is not the sum of his limitations, nor his accomplishments.

In turn, it has made me be more open to those of all abilities and simple celebrate people. I write and tell our story because I want people to know that while having a child with special-needs is life-altering, it is not a tragedy.

Will this show help change the perception of Down syndrome? Can it accurately do so if it doesn’t represent the community as a whole?  Do we as parents want the most positive or the most realistic picture presented of living with DS?

These are questions I am not sure how to answer, because if I’m honest, my feelings are fickle and can change at a whim. I don’t always know what I feel about Josh’s disability. Some days it’s no big deal. Other days it is all-consuming.

I just know what I feel about him. And that absolutely nothing will change the depth of love I have for that precious soul.

Will I watch tomorrow night? Most likely. Simply because I want to and because I can now. I may not have been able to before. And that would have been okay.

A few tears may fall from my eyes for the young woman who cannot bear to hear the words “Down syndrome” because it makes her feel uncomfortable. Or be angry toward her mother because for taking her 20 years to accept her.

I may laugh because some are witty and I may even have to shoo my youngest out of the room if they begin talking about more adult subject manner.

I may cry because certain days it hits me harder and just because it didn’t last week doesn’t mean it won’t.

Stay tuned…

 

 

Aware

Today is Autism Awareness Day.  A day I never thought I’d be writing about, let alone living.

We are aware of autism every day.

While pregnant with Joshua and learning his diagnosis of Down syndrome, I developed a sinus infection induced by crying.   The doctor reassured me, “Down syndrome is the ‘Cadillac of disabilities’. I’d much rather have that than autism.”

Just as I was getting used to my Down-syndrome-may-not-be so-bad life, it reared its head – The Scarlet “A”.

There is no prenatal test. No blood test. Not even a really definitive test.

Not like with Down syndrome in which chromosomes glare black and white declaring disability.

Autism sneaks in and overtakes without warning. I did not see autism coming.

I never knew autism could co-exist with Down syndrome.

“Josh is way too affectionate to have autism. He smiles and hugs and looks me in the eye.”

An unscrupulous thief crept into my life and robbed me of all the possibilities I was told could be for my son with Down syndrome.

My heart broke bit by bit as I listened for newly-babbled new words which had faded into non-existence.

Hard-earned skills exchanged for obsessive and destructive behavior.

Play drifted away and excessive video-watching became the only interest.

The gap between milestones reached by his peers with DS widened and soon the chasm became too obvious to ignore.

I wanted the diagnosis to prove I was not in denial about Josh’s limitations.

A dual-diagnosis brought relief.

Relief that my son was not “just low-functioning”, but had something else “wrong”. That it was not that I had just not done enough.

Because I thought “enough” -enough therapy, enough hard work – all those things I was told would be “enough” – would make this helpless little baby reach his full potential.  After all, that is what we are all told. With the proper resources and opportunity, people with Down syndrome can be contributing members of society.

So I hunkered down and did it all – therapies and specialists, meetings and workshops. I reluctantly put my baby in school at the ripe old age of three and waited. I waited for it and all the experts to make it “work”.

During this time, I had another baby and wondered if this contributed to Josh’s regression. Others seemed to have more time to devote to their special needs child, yet I couldn’t seem to “do it all” with four children under eight.

Accolades to the moms whose children did so well cut me to the core, as I couldn’t keep up.

Slowly, the little boy with Down syndrome drifted into a little boy with no words and upsetting meltdowns, overturning tables and biting classmates.

My precious little boy once praised and adored by his teachers became a problem.

My quest to find answers was met with opposition and seeming futility until at last it came.

The diagnosis of autism simultaneously comforted and terrified me.

My dreams shattered yet again as I grieved again for the son I thought I would have and the black hole deep in my heart grew until everything became clouded by a disability lens.

Wondering how my son could ever fit into this world where achievement rules, ability is applauded and being the brightest and the best is the goal.

Nothing seemed to apply to Joshua.

No sermon preached. No Bible verses studied. No meeting attended. No one seemed to have my “problem’.

My different kind of normal was again challenged. I felt alone in my noisy house-full.

I was afraid to tell my friends within the Down syndrome community that I prayed for Joshua to be healed. I feared judgment and criticism for not accepting him. Or worse – that I didn’t love him.

But my heart ached because of my intense love for him. My mother’s love, fierce and protective – burning against those who were deeming him a difficult child and raging against those who looked down upon him.

Offended at those who thought he needed to be healed and angry at myself for wanting him to be.

And not strong enough to live this kind of existence without help from God.  I had cried to the Lord upon his diagnosis of Down syndrome and a severe heart defect, “God, I can do one, but both?? I am not strong enough for this!”

The wonderful thing is that I don’t have to be.  When I am weak, He is strong.

God has allowed the different than what I ever expected and yet, He has shown me that I have been given a great honor in being Joshua’s mommy.

And that jealousy and comparison have no place. I need not compare him to anyone.

And as I continue to pray and ask for God to help me bring up this lovely creation He made in His image, I am reminded that He is my strength.

I am reminded that all feelings of failure and defeat are not of God, but as I lean not unto my own understanding, I find a path.

A path often rocky and dirty yet cleared by His grace little by little to guide me each step of the way as I muddle through this journey.

And while I am aware every day of autism, I am also aware that every day has new mercies, new opportunities and a new awareness of things wonderful and to be celebrated.

Lord, help me to live aware. Aware of all the wonderfulness that is life.

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