Archives for category: special needs

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

“Max danced at school today” I let the words wash over my spirit and soul. What power in the statement, power to shift faith and belief.

It’s not always a walk through peaks and inspiration. For every second that I find myself overwhelmed by an awe inspiring moment it seems I spend a thousand searching.

I search for purpose and meaning in the journey, I search for ways to share Maxs story and ways to inspire others as the walk through their own valleys. I search for strength within to keep going, and sometimes I just search for peace.

I have come to expect great things from my son. When you’ve seen what we’ve seen and walked the road we’ve walked you cant help but expect the impossible. Some days deliver and others don’t. I question at times what my place in the story is becoming. Am I becoming detached from the story? Am I becoming more of mouthpiece for the story and less of an active participant?

This is the place I found myself in when I heard the words “Max danced at school today”. The mechanics of the dance are of little importance, it’s the spirit of the line that captures the heart and mind. Hearing these words reset context, they bring the journey back into focus.

Scott

Don’t give up-
The challenge to any family with a special needs child is to operate within a society that is structured for normalcy. Children with special needs often don’t come with a handy instruction book or on/off switch that will ensure they are well behaved and subdued as to not disturb the general public. The looks you shoot us wont help.

As Maxs dad I struggle with the idea of inclusion. Inclusion isn’t easy, it’s not comfortable and is often painful and emotionally draining. It’s not that I don’t want to spend time with Max, but if I’m running to the store often it’s just easier to go and leave Max with his mom or grandma or grandpa. So the question to be asked is, does Max want to go to the store? I am pretty sure Max couldnt care less about the specific location or what store it is, but I know he wants to go. He desires to be included, to go places that his
Dad goes and to go the places his sister gets to go. That’s when the fight for inclusion gets personal. Am I willing to spend the extra 10 or 15 minutes it will take to load him up and get all his gear in place. At first glance well of course I am, but day after day, week after week it gets a little more cloudy. Sometimes it’s late, it’s cold, it’s raining, snowing or too hot. All of which at times are concerns, but they are all easy excuses. Really that’s when it gets the most difficult to fight for inclusion is when the excuses are so readily available, friends and family are always enabling and really who’s going to call me on it.

Stores have handicap buttons to open the automated doors, they have handicap accessible bathrooms and elevators. Restaurants have a table or two for a wheel chair to roll up to. All this is good, but none of that helps with the frustration of trying to fit a wheel chair in between isles or table or clothes racks that are far too narrow. The difficulty of employees that are happy to help but much happier to get out of situation. None of it helps when other patrons and shoppers send looks of frustration that their meal is being impacted or the comments asking to ‘get control of your child’. This is the struggle every special needs parent faces, not once or on a rare occasion but every time they leave the house at lease in some variation or another.

I am writing this not for me but for countless parents that have chosen to stay home. The parents that gave up trying because the frustration just isn’t worth it. I can only offer encouragement that it is worth it, our kids they need to be taken out, they need to see the world as well as to be seen by the world. This is our tribe, a tribe of parents that fight through the snow, the rain, and every potential hurdle. If have to climb 5 steps or 50 steps with my son and his 60 pound wheelchair I will but I will not let him be kept from the top of those stairs. Personally I continue to fight to take Max every where any 4 year old boy would go.

Scott

Impact and Honor

What will you do with it? What will you do with the lessons and experiences? What will you do with the seconds and days allotted? Will you own the gifts you have received and live a life worthy of those gifts?

I was discussing my story, more specifically Maxs story and my role in it. As I attempted to described what drives me the answer came to me in a different way. It came in the blink of an eye, I do it to honor Max. I do it to respect the gift of the last 4 years. I do it because the idea of doing nothing is unimaginable.

I think we all are blessed with relationships that change us and that shape us. Friends, parents, grandparents these are the people that we try and honor with how we carry out our lives. I realized in a moment that I am seeking to honor him with my life. In how I help others, in how I stand up for Max and countless others that don’t have a voice. I honor him by not being afraid to take steps without a safety net. I honor him by living a life worthy of the gift I’ve received.

Scott
“living in Max optimism”

You see someone struggling to walk and crippled, I see someone who was told they would never walk.

The thought hit me as I was driving home from work recently. I was driving along my mind shifting from the stresses of the day and the upcoming stresses of the next day. I wasn’t particularly dialed in to my introspective self not was I looking for a life altering epiphany.

In the distance I saw a women crossing the road, as I got closer I could see she was moving very slow with every step labored and shaky.
I watched her as I passed and was overcome by the thought that at some point in life, maybe at birth, maybe after a terrible accident but at some point that she would never walk. Maybe her parents wrestled with the statement that their child would never walk, maybe her kids and spouse sat in a hospital room as the doctor delivered the news. Just maybe every step taken is another victory, a testament of what is possible and the strength and power of the human spirit.

I believe it’s human nature to see a struggle like that and look on with sympathy or sorrow at how bad life must be. Yet we have it all wrong, the pain is not the sorrow producing kind of pain. The pain the struggle they are of the mountain climbing type. The pain of hope, the pain of proving the doctors, the circumstance, the statistics, the whole world wrong.

If you were to tell a person that has faced the darkest of circumstances that you feel sorry for them, I can tell you the response you’ll get from that individual is that they feel sorry for you, because you may never now how much power you have and what you are capable of overcoming. I can say that with conviction because in many ways I am that person.

Scott

As we picked up speed on the downhill I took a moment to look back at the trailer I had in tow. It only took a second for my heart to melt. In the trailer was Gracie sitting quiet and still, smiling as the sun washed over her. On her left shoulder laid her little brothers head. Max with a look of complete comfort and happiness. For any father the sight of you kids enjoying each others company is a blessing, but for me on this day it meant the world to this father.

Over the last couple weeks I have been working on an article titled ‘The other child’. ‘The other child’ is about parenting siblings with a special needs child. I don’t pretend to be an expert on the subject, but it seems that a lot of people think Brandy and I have done an alright job. Over the last 4 years we’ve heard lots of professionals comment on how balanced and adjusted our daughter was and how much love she has for her little brother.

Anytime I have the opportunity to tell my story I am quick to start with Brandy and I sitting in the hospital room after receiving Maxs diagnosis. We were very purposeful at that moment to begin the dialog about what this means for out daughter. It was the start of a dialog that is still taking place, and a dialog that I don’t believe will ever really stop. My hope is that the article once finished will offer encouragement and serve as a loose set of ideas to help other parents navigate the rough waters of parenting with a special needs child.

As I have been trying to capture the spirit of what we have sought to do, what I really needed was to look back and see my kids together full of joy and love for each other.

The house was dark except for a small lamp giving a shadowy glow over no more then half of the room. The house was free of any ambient noise, free from the volume of daily life.

As I sat gently rocking back in forth, I found I was more present in a singular moment then I had been in a long time. It’s strange days and weeks can pass by and I can honestly say I’m not sure if I was present for any of it. I was of course present in the sense that we are always physically somewhere, but not present in the cognizant sense.

Minutes before Max had cried out the way he often does. He was in pain, not the rush to the hospital pain but pain none the less. The type of pain that can only be comforted by a mom or a dad.

As I held my son in my arms gently rocking it was with an intense presence. I was not thinking about the future or the past, about joy or pain. It was if I was identifying with each second as it passed by. The minutes seemed never ending. It was as if I had unknowingly tapped into a new area of my psyche and emotions. You often hear chefs talk about tasting the individual components of a dish as if they were never mixed at all. They gush about the joy of tasting each ingredient separately on their refined palate, rather then the way most people taste food as the end result of the mixed ingredients. I had become a chef of time, every second seemed to be exploding with life. It wasn’t long before I laid Max back down in bed, the awareness and presence was gone and time began once again moving in its blended form.

As the day unfolded it was marked at the beginning and end with my eyes welling up with tears.

It was a day marked with the closing of a chapter in Maxs story. It was a goodbye to a pair of individuals that have walked with us over the last 3 1/2 years through all the highs and lows. They may never realize the impact they had on our family. A pair of women that I’m sure rise everyday conflicted with hope of the day to come and a level of hurt that awaits. I know that to commit your life to helping children that have been betrayed by their own bodies and minds is a path few are made to walk down. I have watched how they have poured their hearts into my son, its never seemed manufactured or trite. I can only imagine the struggle to be connected and yet distant. To pour into each child with all that they have to offer, but keeping a necessary separation because failure to do so would certainly lead to emotional turmoil. For over three years they were far more then Maxs therapists, they were a shoulder to cry on during the darkest moments and seemed to generate the loudest cheers during those moments when Max was achieving what we were told was not possible.

It was in what was Maxs final visit that the reflection on their time intertwined with my family. Celebrating his graduation, I felt in some ways like we were losing pieces of the team. Members of the core of Team Max, I suppose I was naive to think that it wouldn’t happen but the reality was no less hard to accept. I know of few ways a person can truly show appreciation for what these two women have done, and yet it’s simply what they do and for that my family will be forever thankful.

SB

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.