“If you could snap your fingers and change her into a normal kid, would you do it?”
This year, it is a boy in the back of the class who is asking. Last year, it was a young woman in the second row, the year before that, a girl in the front row. Every year since Eliza was diagnosed with mild cerebral palsy at 18 months -- her autism spectrum disorder was not diagnosed until she was seven – I have come to talk with the Disabilities Studies class at the local university. Every year, I get asked this very same question.
I know the answer they want to hear.
I usually visit late in the semester after the students have spent months reading about disability; the politics of disability, civil rights and the potential for empowerment that comes from self-identification and finding a community and culture of those with similar life experiences. The silence that follows their question pleads with me. They are young. They want to believe that the world is – or can be – a just place. Like the rest of us, they do not want to believe that life can be capricious, unfair or disappointing.
I like them. I like their earnest idealism. I admire them for signing up for a class called “disability studies” – not exactly sexy. I think they are brave. I wish I could give them the answer that they so want to hear.
I want to smile, tell them that, yes, it has been difficult, but it’s all been worth it. I want to be able to say that I would never change her disabilities because that is who she is. I know this is the right answer, the one that restores a sense of order to life.
But I cannot.
Every year, my answer is the same: “Of course. I am her mother.”
This, after all, is not television with its simplistic message of strength through adversity. This is real life. And my daughter’s life is hard, too hard for such a little kid.
When the pediatric neurologist first diagnosed Eliza, he said, “Look, she is the same child that you had two hours ago, she hasn’t changed. You will take her home and love her just like you always have.” I hated him and his patronizing platitudes. There has never been, will never be, a question of loving my daughter. I love her more than anything else on earth and would do anything for her. But the doctor lied: she was not the same child. Two hours earlier, she had been a child with an easy future.
How can I make the students understand that wanting my child to be “normal” isn’t a rejection of who she is or a failure to love and appreciate all that is unique about her? I feel bad that my answer has disappointed them.
Most years, a student will also ask me if having a disabled child has changed me.
Yes, of course, Eliza has changed me.
But then every child changes his or her parents – it doesn’t matter what that child is like. At this point I will usually talk with the class about our cultural notions of a “core personality:” the idea that we have a stable self that moves through life and the world while experiences bounce off of us, versus the alternative notion that we have no pre-set stable core self, but are, rather a summation of our experiences. This less familiar notion of self means that we are, every day, actively engaged in what ethnomethodologists would call “doing being ourselves.”
For the students, this is a particularly unsatisfying response. My answer is suitably academic, but what they want me to say is that parenting Eliza has made me a better person. They want to hear that I have become more patient, kinder, less judgmental – better.
But it’s not true.
I don’t think that parenting has made me any less kind, less patient or less open to difference. But watching Eliza struggle to fit into the world has made me angrier and more frustrated with the world. Just ask any parents of kids who are different about school and you will open the door to a flood of parental frustration, worry and longing for a school – any school – that would at least try to understand and appreciate their children. I am angry that school will never be a given for my daughter, the way it is for “normal” kids. Facing bigotry hasn’t made me a better person. It has made me sadder.
And I worry more. A lot more. Because my daughter is an only child and my husband and I will die while she is still relatively young. We will make sure that she has a place to live and that we have done all that we can for her before we die, but eventually she will have to be out in the world on her own. And the world is not kind to people who are different.
One year, and only one year, a student asked me, “If you could have known what it was going to be like with Eliza, would you have had her?” This is, of course, a variation on the first question, but a more complicated one. My answer was also more complicated. I didn’t answer with complete honesty. I told the students that I didn’t know how to answer that question because, of course, I didn’t know…and I still don’t really know because Eliza is still changing and growing.
But if I am completely honest, the truth is that some days I have regrets.
If I had known how difficult Eliza’s life and our family’s life was going to be, would I have been more vigilant with the birth control? Some days, the answer is yes. Pregnant at age 38, my doctor required an amniocentesis. If cerebral palsy and autism had shown on it, what would I have done? I don’t know.
Try to understand – I am not saying that I don’t want my child, or that I don’t love and adore her. I think she is amazing and I am always, without exception, her biggest fan and champion.
But some days I just want to have a normal life. An easier life.
I have often heard parents of young children muse that they simply cannot imagine their lives without little Bobby or little Suzie. I wonder what is wrong with these people? Perhaps the sleep deprivation of parenting has dulled their imaginative capacities.
One afternoon last year, I was sitting outside a play therapy meeting with the other mothers of the boys and girls in the group. Eliza was new to the group, so I was just meeting the mothers for the first time. We could hear yelling from inside the room. I commented, “That’s probably Eliza.” Sure enough, a few minutes later, the therapist came out, dragging Eliza, while Eliza desperately tried to bite her. We got kicked out of therapy. Again. Most of the other mothers looked at me with pity or with smug pride that their own child was so much better behaved than mine. Except for one mother, the mother of an autistic little boy in the group. She put her hand on my arm and said, “It’s okay. You are among friends here.” Then she paused, and cautiously said, “You know, there are many days when I imagine what my life and my family would have been like if I hadn’t had Jason.” It was one of the kindest things that anyone has ever said to me.
Maybe all parents secretly imagine their lives without their children sometimes. If they do, I wish they would admit it once in a while.
Then maybe I could better understand my own complicated feelings and better explain them to the next group of students enrolled in the Disabilities Studies class.
Friday, May 21, 2010
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wow, what a touching post, thank you. Your right, most of us do not admit to some inner feelings, we hide it telling ourself it is extremely wrong to even have a thought of it. You are brave, stay brave. And yes, i too have thought it once before. what would it be like if my 4 boys had absolutely nothing wrong with them? but then i would not be the person i am today. i have always been a helper, but i am more now than ever. i am also a bigger child advocate than i would have been if i didn't have 4 children with different needs.
ReplyDeleteHi Sarah. I'm conflicted about this post... I believe each parent needs to make peace with their own - really true - feelings about this often painful journey. For some, if they are honest, they will say - no, this is not the life I would choose and if given the choice, I would make my child 'normal'. I admire and profoundly respect their candour.
ReplyDeleteBut in my case, I have dug deep, and the answers are different for me. While it may sound unrealistic or cliche or like I am in denial, I am not. I genuinely believe that I would not 'de-autize' Simon, even if I could. In fact, I know it in my bones.
The Simon I adore more than life itself, is autistic. Autism is an integral part of who he is in this world. It is also, I believe deeply, an integral part of the gifts he is meant to share, the lessons we are meant to learn from him, the beauty that is uniquely his and would not be without his autism.
So... the reason I am conflicted about the post is because the language you use seems to make mothers like me out to be deluded, to have 'dulled imaginative capabilities'. I hope that you did not intend your words to convey those messages.
I know that some days it can feel like us vs. them - the NTs vs ASD kids, the bullies vs. the victims, the happy moms vs. the struggling moms. But life is much more complicated than that, and if there is one thing my son has taught me, it's that we are so much better together than apart.
Caitlin
www.welcome-to-normal.com
Thank you for the post. You are very brave and very articulate. I think most parents who had their children later in life remember their lives before children and have feelings of regret--regret that they are no longer young, regret that they don't have as much time for their partners as before, regret that they have a new 24x7 job for the rest of their lives and this job is not easy. This job is particularly difficult if a child is disabled and there is little hope for the child ever being independent. The hope for eventual indepedence is what sustains me through the hours of therapy every week. And yes, if I could fix the issues that make my child's life more difficult than that of his peers, I would do it. I think all parents want to make their kids' lives easier, we just don't always know how to do it. I am very lucky to have tremendous family support. I hope you have support from family and friends who are there to help you in difficult times.
ReplyDeleteFirst, let me say that you have a wonderful way with words. You make me *feel* what you're talking about. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteMy son is high-functioning - his disability is almost exclusively social, with a bit of impulse control and self management issues thrown in. He's also very bright, caring, and enjoys being with me and showing me things he's done.
Many times when he was little, when we had many many tantrums (he's 12 now, hasn't had a tantrum in years, but to this day I still shudder when I think of going to Home Depot), I *did* wish he'd been born more "normal". But which I mean, with more self-control, with more social "sense", better able to understand how to tell when I or my husband was getting annoyed with him so he should stop, *now*.
He is fortunate that he is getting the support he needs from his school and his teachers. I wish he wasn't content just to have one main friend - I wish he was more interested in finding out who he knows that lives in our neighborhood, so he could hang out. I wish he was more interested in finding other kids who like the same things he does. I wish he was less hesitant about trying out new skills, like swimming.
Things are pretty stable now, but when he was little, he put a huge strain on my marriage, to the point that I started thinking I'd made a mistake in even getting married in the first place. I fantasized about how my life would have been like had I remained single. (I am introverted and, I suspect, mildly autistic myself. I also suspect that my husband may be on the spectrum, too.)
My daughter is 2 years younger than he is, and she is NT, and something of a tomboy. I look at her, and I know that it wasn't my parenting that made my son be the way he is. For that I'm grateful.
The one thing I would change about my son, is that I wish he had been more temperamentally compatible with my husband and I when he was little. The strain was terrible, and I think cost him a close relationship with my husband. My husband laments the lack of closeness with our kids, and that is partly because of the personality mismatch between them.
Your post is one of the very best on this subject I've ever read. I have a 'blog of my own and I write from time to time about my daughter, 10, who is a high-functioning autistic. Our problems are irrelevant compared to those of families dealing with CP and autism combined, but there are days I wonder, "why me?" I feel selfish when I think like this, but there it is. We homeschool but have not escaped the social ostracism that comes from having autism in our midst -- the girl scout socials that we don't get invited to, the birthday parties we hear about after the fact, etc. It's painful, especially when my daughter enthusiastically says, "yes" when asked if she has friends. She doesn't, not one. Our family, her siblings, a handful of children she knows in passing -- those constitute her "friends" and with the exception of her siblings and family members none of them seek her out to play or talk or do things with. If I could change that, I absolutely would. No mother likes to witness painful and prolonged situations involving their children and I think we are being disingenuous to say otherwise. Thank you again for having the courage to say out loud what so many of us think or feel in secret.
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