I am a mom, and I am a special education assistant … but it was becoming a mom was what gave me a better understanding of the people I would be called upon to assist … the students and their families.
In my job I am very aware that God has entrusted ‘my’ students:
first, to their parents …
and w a y down the line, to me.
I am also aware, because I am a mom, that I do not know what is best for them … God didn’t entrust the students to me first.
I am not always right … ask MY kids!
I work with ‘my’ students about six and one half hours a day, for a year, maybe two or three … their moms are with them for life.
To be a mom of a child with special needs means living with public scrutiny, public embarrassment and public shame.
To be a mom of a child with special needs means living with a large host of professionals who ‘are better educated’ about your child’s ‘needs’, than you.
To be a mom of a child with special needs means constantly having to hear what is ‘wrong’ with your child.
“I know God will not give me anything I can’t handle.
I just wish He didn’t trust me so much.”
Mother Teresa
But …
To be a mom of a child with special needs also means …
being a mom to a son or daughter
who you have dreams for
(what good mother doesn’t?)
who you have fears for
(what good mother doesn’t?)
who you love, with that unconditional love that is called ‘Momma Love’
(what good mother doesn’t?)
PERIOD!
I remember well the day I realized how heavy the weight can be to be a mom of a child with special needs. The mom was
bringing her daughter to school, and I asked how the new ‘special’ air mattress for her child was working. The mom’s reply was that she had just had her first full night’s sleep in YEARS. Now I do not mean one or two years … this ‘child’ was about sixteen years old …
Then there is the mom with a child who, as a toddler, would sit still on a blanket when out at the park. And the other moms of toddlers would tell her how ‘lucky’ she was that she didn’t have to run around after him … when, inside, she so wished that her son would need her to run after him.
Then there is the mom whose son is mostly non-verbal, and can be violent and aggressive. She spends most waking hours ensuring that she knows where he is, as he is a flight risk. When her son does express affection, adoration and love it is never to or for her, because her son only has eyes for other males.
Then there is the mom who spent many years doing homework with / for her son, so that he would not be embarrassed that his work was obviously ‘inferior’ to that of his classmates.
Then there is the mom who has taken on the task of raising the special needs child of another woman. And that child’s special needs are the direct result of the actions of the child’s birth mother.
Then there is the mom, whose child has been so discouraged by teachers, leaders and other adults that don’t ‘believe’ his diagnosis, preferring to think that this student is simply ‘lazy’. And this child, so beaten down by the bad attitudes of some teachers, leaders and adults in his life that he has chosen to be viewed as bad over being seen as stupid. And his mom has picked up the phone far too many times to hear the school principal’s voice to tell her of another antic causing harm to people or property.
And then the mom of the child with Down’s Syndrome (Trisomy 21) who NEVER goes out in public, with her child, without facing strangers staring at her child …
“Hey, keep staring at me and you just might cure my disability.
Then we can work on YOUR social skills.”
Anonymous
How many of us, as parents, as moms, have said, ‘I wish my son, my daughter could stay a baby forever’? To the mom of
many special needs children, that wish of yours can be like a curse to them. As they might have a child who will never live independently, or have a job, or learn to drive, or learn to count, or be toilet trained.
I like to think that I have thick skin, but I know that mine is nothing compared to the mom of a child with special needs.
For anyone out there who is the mom of a child/children with special needs, may you know that …
I don’t know more than you, about your child
I don’t look at your child as a disability to our society
I don’t look down at you
I don’t know how you feel
… and there are many more, who feel the same way.
All that to say, I just wanted to give you some positive ‘air time’. And to tell you, that if I have worked with your son or daughter, I have respected, appreciated and prayed for you …and may God hold you in the palm of His hand.
“Perseverance is not a long race.
It is many short races one after another.”
W. Elliot
Really well written, I have spent years admiring toddlers running around at the mall and wishing mine could have done that. I looked at other moms telling their toddlers to sit quietly, no talking and I wished I had that problem!!!
Pascale, Thank you for your generous words. Isn’t it interesting that the signs of a child being ‘typical’ can be the ones that parents often try to contain, while others, like yourself dream of such a ‘problem’. I look forward to checking out your blog, and getting to know yourself and your daughter (and I see you live in the province I grew up in). May you be encouraged more than discouraged, cared for as much as you care for others, and loved beyond expectation. And know, that for today, I have lifted you up to our Creator. Blessings, Carole
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