Archives for category: mothers

Cards and comic books

A short while ago Max came home from school with a pack of baseball cards that he and my dad had picked up from a local card shop on their way home. It was a grab bag of different cards from the early 90’s, as I scanned through them many I had when I was a kid. Max had been learning about baseball in school that very month and was very excited about being able to look through the cards with me. Seeing Maxs excitement Brandy said that would be a great thing for he and I to do together, we could collect cards. Max loved that idea. Over the next 24-48 hours I however did not share the excitement. Within 2 days I had went out and purchased some comic books because I felt that was a better use of our time together. A comic book can be read and well it’s only so much fun to read the back of a baseball card. I worked to sell the idea to both Max and Brandy, describing how it would work and how we could collect them.

What I missed was everything important about the entire interaction. In my task oriented nature I had to justify our time. I had to see a beginning and an end. It’s as if the thought of doing something without a start point or an end point was foreign to me. I missed the very heart of the matter.

I found myself questioning my actions, why couldn’t I let Maxs joy be enough to guide me. If Max is excited about collecting cards with his dad why couldn’t I be excited about collecting cards with him?

It seemed that I again found myself consumed with buying into the idea that what you’re doing even matters at all. All Gracie and Max want is me, not what I give them or the things that surround or frame our time together. As I have come to realize how much Max seems to like baseball, I realize my errors in being so caught up in being task oriented. As parents we can spend days, weeks and months doing things but failing to redeem the time missing the heart of the matter completely.

I originally posted this in 2011, I am reposting in honor for all those without a voice.

The short bus

I am the father of a special needs child, that rides a special needs bus, and goes to a special needs school.

The special needs bus is a bus filled with hope, filled with redesigned dreams. As a parent of a special needs child that bus represents life, it represents a struggle that encompasses every hour of every day.

The special needs bus is filled with kids that have faced and beaten odds that most people will never have to think about let alone face. Kids that were never supposed to make it, that had been counted out.

The parents that walk or wheel their kids to that bus are parents that have walked the darkest halls and been deep in the belly of hopelessness. I am inspired by the parents I’ve met that for decades have lived the life of a special needs parent. The lack of understanding, the countless looks and the stares.

The thing about being a parent of a special needs child is that it’s tough to keep your shoes clean, from the tears of pain, the tears of joy, the sanitizer that spills from the countless hospital rooms, and the dust that is kicked up while walking your son or daughter down to the special needs bus.

In the face of adversity it’s often to find a person or group in the midst of an identity crisis. Where the question who am I really, what do I have to give, am I who I thought I was? These questions flood the collective conscious. The desire to survive seeps in and begins to take over. Survival at its core blinds everything else including at times reality. The team, the group, the organization, the family all face the moment when what’s been and was good enough isn’t enough anymore. When the mirror is no longer kind when it looks back.

Much like the pitcher who realizes how much he’s really lost on his fastball, not in the comfort of his home but on the mound in front of millions. Facing life altering circumstances is like that being on the mound, under the lights nothing but eyes fixated on every movement. There’s a harsh edge between success and failure with nothing in between. This is the point where many stop, they set the ball down and head to the dugout and eventually all the way home. The circumstances too loud, the lights too bright and the haunting voice of impending failure oh too loud. The man, the woman that walks off the mound on any given weekday in any given home or office conceding the circumstances too difficult, too great.

When facing life altering circumstances rarely are we presented with a clear honest picture. The emotion of the moment is fear. Fear then manifests in anger, hate and blame.

The stress is the worst, feeling like the house of cards is coming down. Laying awake at night, waking up stressed. Yet the house still stands, all the stress and hours fearing the worst sit still unfounded. The circumstances may still look bleak and the outlook darker still.

Faith can be a lot of things, what I know to be true is that when faces with mounting adversity faith is the ability to stand. To stand not for standings sake, for ego or arrogance. To stand for the lives that depend upon your foothold, the lives that count on you to continue to stand.

Hope is not lost until you stop standing. Whatever your circumstances, no matter how dark continue to stand.

Scott what do you think about it?

Recently I found my Facebook page overtaken by post and reposts about a family that has a child with autism and the horrific experience they had at a local salon/spa. The recounting of the story has invoked an entire spectrum of emotion. The most recent number I had heard was that the story had been shared over 26,000 times and pages have been started to boycott the business.

As someone squarely in the middle of the world of having a child with special needs some folks have inquired about where I land on the situation? I will say as I read about the events as they unfolded I was both broken hearted and angry. I know how painful it is to find yourself in the midst of a world that few really understand and that some could care less about understanding.

I don’t know the owner of the salon nor do I know the family that was impacted, and in no way want to minimize what happened. However the situation is one that is much common then it seems the general public seems to realize. The only difference is that no one was there to write about it, the families at time feeling too embarrassed to even recount the story and just want to forget that it happened. The thing I believe that has sparked such outrage is the very public arena this all took place in. I know thousands of people that I’m sure have both made scathing comments about the owner and taken the moral stand that they would never do something so outrageous. Yet to a family it’s not always the grand public situations that cut the deepest. Often time it’s the sideways glances, the stares. It’s the eye rolls and huffs. It’s the look of frustration on the faces of passengers sitting on a bus, a tram or some other mode of transportation as a wheel chair is being loaded. Having to ask someone to please move in order to navigate a wheel chair in a crowded restaurant and the over exaggerated motions that follow. Know this the heartbreak for a parent isn’t just in the big things. I don’t need to have someone yell at me to be disgusted by society. At the same time I don’t intend to vilify anyone, so much of this is because of a significant lack of education and a lack of compassion. On any given day many people will use the term ‘retard’ or ‘retarded’ as a normal part of their vocabulary. The belief that it’s such a common phrase that no one would be offended or hurt by it anymore. The mindset seemingly being ‘Why should I have to change the way I talk so I don’t hurt someone’s feelings… I wasn’t talking about anyone specifically.’ Its commonplace in comedic routines for someone to play the role of societies stereotype of a person with mental disabilities, we laugh at these are actors and comedians… because well they aren’t real people.

The story circulating broke my heart, but it didn’t surprise me. The outrage is well intentioned, but I wonder if it ever moves beyond this point of intense attack on one spa owner. Will any of the 26,000 people who have shared be more compassionate next time they are in a store or a restaurant? In a month or two with the situation has cooled, and the posts are no longer spreading like wildfire will anyone still be concerned about the rights and the treatment of the families in the special needs community. The family impacted will never be able to forget this incident, my concern is that most everyone that has spread the story and signed up for the boycott will.

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The moments when I’m acutely aware of my own failures, are the worse. When I feel like I’ve become a fraud, fearing that I’m moments away from being exposed.

I question who I’ve become as a father, I question my capacity to adapt. The road has changed, the pedestrian sterile path is gone, replaced by a grinding rarely traveled path. No wider then needed, the fullness of the forest closes in on those not strong enough to carry on.

It’s not my ability to physically proceed but my soulish desire to go back. I fear I’m not strong enough mentally and emotionally to continue the journey. Some days the light cuts through shining the most amazing light, others the clouds seem to create a haze so thick its virtually impassable. All I can do is sit and wait, providing just enough time for my mind to twist and turn. Everything comes into question.

I know I’ve got no choice but to carry on. One proverbial step in front of the other. Ignoring the selfishness within, trying desperately to hold on to the joy of the journey.

As I was sitting this morning in a random hotel breakfast area, windows full of a dull grey sky. I find myself looking across the table at my daughter. She doesn’t pay attention to me as she’s wrapped up in the task at hand which happens to be finding a way to eat the plate of syrup she has that happens to have a pancake somewhere hidden within. She doesn’t realize it but her spirit has lifted me up this morning, her joy for life has brightened even the dreariest day. I find I’m overwhelmed by thinking about who she’s becoming. The life she’s lived, the pain and struggle she never asked for. I look at my little girl and find myself in awe of the way she’s handled what life’s presented to her. I cherish the moments when I get to watch her be a seven year old girl.

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The pageantry of the moment isn’t lost on me. After being given a 5% chance to live the boy they said wouldn’t make it (multiple times over the years if i might add) is turning 5 years old. I would be amiss if I failed to capture the symbolic nature of this event. With only a few days left before Max turns 5 its only natural to find myself Meditating on how monumental it all really is. I remember the faces as if they were still standing in front of me. I’ve told the story of that morning countless times, yet it still sends shivers down my spine. Out of a cold lifeless body clinging to existence itself 5 years of pain, of tears, of joy and of laughter have culminated in a definitive moment of life.

I realize that much of this I’ve written about in the past, but with the passing of time we’ve been blessed to have so many people enter into our lives whom are just starting their journey with us. I’ve tried so often to truly thank those that have been impactful along the journey, is worry that I’ve not done them justice. Without the support of so many I shutter to think where we would be.

So many of the moments have and continue to shape me. The vision of my son slipping away, on the verge of death. Sitting as a father hearing that his son, the one that he had so many plans may never talk, or walk or even have a personality at all. Having to sit on a bed while your 5 year old daughter asks if her brother is going to die and having nothing but the truth about what the doctors said to tell her. A man does not walk away from moments like that the same.

Ive never seen my story as tragic but a story of faith and hope. A story about a gritty underdog that against all odds went through hell and came out of the other side and has been smiling every step of the way. The hero in this story is a little boy that melts everyone that meets him and whom has a thing for the ladies. Max over the last 5 years has inspired so many, his story has been told by so many and continues to be told. He was a beacon of hope through sickness, his picture is held close by many. The words ‘if that little boy can survive so much then I can make it through this’ have been uttered so many times.

I don’t know what the coming years will bring, and I’m sure I’m not ready for it. Ive been so afraid so many times I never felt I had the strength anyway. As I’ve been sitting here the memories serve as reminders of the intensity and depth of the journey so far. It’s an unfolding narrative that I still count myself to be blessed to simply be a part of. Maddox and Victoria Grace continue to be best of me, and that means everything.

Scott

As another mothers day passed on the calendar recently I found myself somewhat obsessively thinking about the fathers. Not in a celebratory way but in a deep rooted frustration way. Allow me a moment to frame-up the context of this line of thought. In my world I have an insiders view of the world of parents with special needs children. These men and women are some of the strongest and most honorable people I’ve been blessed to meet. What I also see is a much more sobering reality, that of the missing father.

I certainly understand that fathers walking away from families isn’t exclusive to the special needs community, nor is it any more painful to the families left behind. It seems most psychologists in discussing the difference between men and women and specifically father and mothers will point out that men are fixers and women are nurturers. Given that framework it’s not surprising that when faced with the mountain of parenting a special needs child it’s the father that seems to struggle the most. When put in a situation that not only as a father you can’t “fix” it but that all the money in the world still couldn’t “fix” it the walls begin closing in.

It seems that is the sticking point, can a husband, and a father accept their current circumstance while understanding that success means going against the very nature of the man. I am in no way presenting myself an expert or in a spirit of arrogance that I have beat the odds. As a father I have chose a path, a mindset, a view of my circumstance. I view my son not as broken or a child with special needs, or a statistic I look at my son and I see a work of art. I see masterful brushstrokes, intricate lines and textures, I see a mosaic of inspiration and beauty.

I see so many mothers passionately embracing the beauty of the circumstances and certainly lots of fathers as well, but far too many single mothers with stories of a father walking off into the distance to never return.

These are the mothers I found myself thinking of. These are the mothers that hold tightly their sons and daughters. Mothers that no matter the valley, the darkness or the mountain ahead they continue on. These mothers deserve more respect and honor then they will most likely ever receive. They certainly have mine.

Scott

I originally posted this in 2011, I am reposting in honor for all those without a voice.

The short bus

I am the father of a special needs child, that rides a special needs bus, and goes to a special needs school.

The special needs bus is a bus filled with hope, filled with redesigned dreams. As a parent of a special needs child that bus represents life, it represents a struggle that encompasses every hour of every day.

The special needs bus is filled with kids that have faced and beaten odds that most people will never have to think about let alone face. Kids that were never supposed to make it, that had been counted out.

The parents that walk or wheel their kids to that bus are parents that have walked the darkest halls and been deep in the belly of hopelessness. I am inspired by the parents I’ve met that for decades have lived the life of a special needs parent. The lack on understanding, the looks and the stares.

The thing about being a parent of a special needs child is that it’s tough to keep your shoes clean, from the tears of pain, the tears of joy, the sanitizer that spills from the countless hospital rooms, and the dust that is kicked up while walking your son or daughter down to the special needs bus.