I am not a special needs mom!

I am a mom!   

 
I am the mom of an amazing daughter who has special needs but I am not a special needs mom!

My needs are not specials. 

What I want for my daughter is what you want for your kids. 

I want her to learn and grow 

I want her to reach her full potential

I want her to be happy and a little silly 

 
I want her to have friends and be part of a team

 
I want her to fall in love

I want her to contribute to society

I want her to mater

I want the world to see her the way I see her 

 
What I want for my daughter is not special at all. 

I am not a special needs mom!

I am a mom! 

 
What is special is what I had to and still have to do to get Emily anywhere near what we both (you and I) want for our kids. 

What is special, is the people that we will need to help her get there. 

Many doctors will continue to stare at her, study her, poke her. 

Many hours of therapies will be required.  Physiotherapy, Occupational therapy, Speech therapy…

While you were buying soccer equipment or ballet shoes, we were looking at walkers and communication devices.   

Because, just like you I want my child, to walk, run, play, jump around… Just like you I want my child to talk to me! 

 
When we dropped Emily off for kindergarten, we already had many meetings to discuss Emily’s abilities and challenges. We met her specialized educator (or educational assistant) and knew she would be safe. We do that, every year. This year will be her 13th year of school and I will still do that.  Because, just like you, I want my child to be safe and comfortable at school. I want her to learn and grow. 

A specialized education plan is required.  Your child will follow the group, mine will fall behind.  But regardless how far back she is, she is still learning and she deserves the opportunity to continue to learn. 

When you are thinking about how you are going to pay for college and university, I’m thinking about how I am going to pay for tutoring. 

When you will help your kids relocate for school or work, I will be teaching mine life skills and we will be looking at moving to a house where she can have her own space. 

When your child will go for a job interview and start their career, I am hoping mine will too. 

Because when all is said and done, I am a mom and what I want for my girl is what you want for your kids. 

I want her to learn and grow 

I want her to reach her full potential

I want her to be happy 

 
I want her to have friends 

I want her to fall in love 

 
I want her to contribute to society

I want her to mater

Nothing special, really!

Next time you look at a kid with special needs and feel like the world has to bend backward for him or her, please take a second to think that what we want for our kids is no different than what you want. 

What is different is what we will do to get there. 

 
I  not a special needs mom!

I am a mom!

 

Interview with Kathy! Let’s meet N.

Soon, I will be reaching out to my Cri du chat family, once again, to ask if anyone is interested to answer questions and be featured here, on Lessons from my daughter.

You might not get the comments and you can’t see how many views my posts are getting but each time I post an interview, we as a group, get more exposure.  You share my post, your friends read it and they share or ask questions…

Slowly, we help spread the words about Cri du Chat Syndrome but mostly, we show people how amazing our kids are and how incredible are their achievements.

We raise awareness, together; and for that I thank you.

So today, we chat with Kathy!

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Hello Kathy, let’s start with you telling me about your family?

My husband and I were married almost eight years ago and have two boys. M is our five-year-old and N is our two-year-old, who has Cri du chat syndrome. N is our surprise baby. We were planning to adopt because my pregnancy with M. was incredibly difficult. So N surprised us in more ways than one.

We live in Texas and love being together outside — biking, hiking, swimming, trying new restaurants and doing various activities around town. Our faith is important to us and has been helpful to us as we’ve walked this road of having a special needs child.


Tell me about your loved one with cri du chat syndrome.
N was diagnosed at two weeks old. My husband, who is a physician assistant knew right away something was wrong. He kept asking me if his cry sounded like a cat and I responded with “I don’t know, honey I’ve never owned a cat before!” When we got the official diagnosis the geneticist’s first words were, “Congratulations dad, your diagnosis was correct.” It hardly felt like congratulations, especially since she went on to say that I would need a home health nurse in order to take a shower, curl my hair, or do my nails. I’m not sure why she felt compelled to say those things since I rarely do the later two anyway. Her presentation of the diagnosis was very difficult for me to process.

N is an incredibly sweet baby. He’s resilient in the face of many medical complications. He’s an observer, yet he’s already communicating in his own little ways. He’s very patient, but also incredibly motivated by the things he wants such as crinkly toys to chew on and being held and cuddled. He has great eye contact even from when he was an infant.


Tell me about doctor appointment, therapies or school.

We feel so blessed by some amazing doctors and therapists. N sees a lot of doctors: Neurology, Ophthalmology, ENT, Pulmonology, GI, Cardiology, Neurosurgery, Ortho, Urology, and Nephrology. it seems there aren’t many specialists he doesn’t see. We also added a doctor of Physical and Rehabilitative Medicine to the list last year who has been very helpful in creative problem solving and giving guidance with our therapy regime.

As his mom and main caregiver I am constantly trying to provide N the right mix of therapy. What types (OT, PT, ST, music, aqua, etc.)? How frequent? At home? In a clinic setting? I am learning that this is an ever-evolving process based on what N can handle physically, what I can manage within the schedule of our entire family, along with the skills and personality of each therapist. Just when I think I have it all figured out I discover that something needs to be added, taken away, or changed.
N’s biggest ongoing medical issue is gastrointestinal and urological complications. He’s chronically constipated and has been diagnosed with neurogenic bladder. At ten months he had surgery for a tethered spinal cord in the hopes that it work help his bladder/bowel function. We are still in “keep an eye on it” mode as he has high grade kidney reflux that has yet to resolve. His right kidney isn’t doing virtually any work and is prone to infections. We are still trying to learn more about what’s going on inside his little kidneys.

Tell me a success story.

Since birth N has not been able to eat by mouth. When he was in the NICU I was frustrated that the professionals wouldn’t let me try and feed him. He had a G-tube placed at five weeks old. Now I am grateful for their early advice because he is starting to do some tastes of food and has no oral aversions. He is doing vital stim therapy, which I believe has been very helpful to his progress. We have to drive a long way, twice a week for the therapy but I think it is paying off. He is also crawling, pulling to stand, saying “ba, ba, ba,” and never fails to giggle at his big brother.

The even bigger success story to me is not what N is doing, but how my heart is changing and falling more in love with him. I struggled to bond with him during the first year. I was overcome by the burden of his diagnosis and unable to see the blessing of his person that is buried in this syndrome. One of our favorite NICU doctors said, “Go ahead and learn everything you can about Cri du chat syndrome. Then, throw it out the window and be a student of N.” I am slowly letting go of my expectations for him based on his diagnosis and accepting who he is and who he is becoming. Two books were particularly helpful to me in that process were The Power of the Powerless by Christopher DeVinck and Disability and the Sovereign Goodness of God by John Piper.

What else would you like the world to know?

We are different because of N, but we are also the same. We still enjoy doing the same things, being with the same friends, the same things make us laugh. Our dreams have changed however, but in many ways for the better. N has inspired us and enriched our lives by showing us what is truly important. That is, he is teaching us that acceptance and love go far beyond your abilities.

Thank you Kathy!  You have a beautiful families, both of your boys look adorable and N. sounds like a fighter!  I really hope to meet you and your family one day!

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If you are a parent of a child with cri du chat syndrome and would like to be featured in one of my interview, please send me a note or add a comment here 🙂

If you enjoy reading my blog and would like to read other similar posts, please click on my top mommy blog icon, it will take you to a wonderful site where you can select the type of blogs you like to read.  Lessons from my daughter resides in the Special needs category, you will find other great blog in our group but their are tons of great reading in thee.

Go ahead, give it a try!