After some reflection on recent conversations about what my
son might do to “fill his time,” I have the following thoughts to share. First,
if one more person suggests to me that he should join some community activity,
I’m going to just explode. Do you seriously think we have not tried? For the
past 18 years, do you think we have just been sitting on our hands, swinging
our feet, whistling, watching the world go by? Do you think we have chosen this isolation over better
prospects of a meaningful social life? Of course not! But there is always a reason he doesn’t fit in – the
language barrier, visual barriers, the need for physical abilities, the need
for cognitive abilities, you name it. For those among us who have not
experienced rejection, I encourage
you to go look up the word. Look up “social norms” while you’re there, too.
Which brings me to my second point.
Someone else told me recently that, “we all go through things in life.” Let me explain something – my son
is NOT “going through something in
life.” This IS his life. On a daily basis. Yesterday when he collapsed in my
arms crying, shaking uncontrollably, I cried with him. He was broken-hearted
over the loss of three new “friends.” I could not, in good faith, tell him that
it would get better, that this will pass. You see, that is the difference. When
typically-developing teenagers cry over friendships or romantic relationships,
we know it will pass. We can hold
them and tell them so, even though we cry for them in the meantime. But we know
it is a phase of life they go through as they struggle to find and define themselves.
We understand the value and the power of these peer relationships in an
adolescent’s overall development. We know they will have other opportunities to
make lasting relationships as they continue to learn how to develop them and as
they begin to identify who they want
their closest friends to be. My son doesn’t have choices like that. And he
never will. He takes what he can get. Period. The end. I can’t hold him and
tell him it will pass, because in his 18 years of life so far there is zero
evidence of that being true. And it ain’t looking any better.
That said, I am doubly saddened when I think of what he has
to offer if the world would have him. He
is brave beyond all measure. He is determined. He is inquisitive. He has a
great sense of humor. He never gives up. What he could do if only he were
allowed to try. And by try, I mean
meaningfully so.
Take a moment, if you will, and imagine yourself as a teenager again. Imagine
attending the same school that the neighbors’ kids attend, going to football
games (maybe even playing on a team), dating cheerleaders, starring in the
school play, singing in the chorus, skipping school to head to the lake for the
day with your buddies. Imagine working in a job you want to have, a local pizza
joint maybe, because your friends are working there too. Getting excited about
graduation, the prom, applying to colleges, dreaming of the life you want for
yourself – big things! Right?
Now imagine all that was taken away before you ever got the chance to even
experience it, or worse yet, taken away while you watch all
of your peers get to experience it just fine. Instead you are bussed to a
school an hour or more away. You don’t know the neighbor kids. They can’t talk
to you because you speak a different language, and they think you’re weird
anyway. Your prom “date” is one of the professionals hired to work with you. You
want to work, but no one will hire you to do anything you want to do unless you
work in a place which is supported by the local community resource center for
individuals with disabilities (think assembly lines – which isn’t actually viable
because the bone structure in your wrists doesn’t allow them to rotate properly).
You want to go to college, but… lol, never mind. Hell, you just want to go to
the store for a cold soda on a hot summer afternoon, but it’s a bit of a walk
and of course you can’t drive, never will. Can’t ride a bike either because of
balance issues. And well, it’s very hot outside, and your heart condition can’t
take the stress of that walk. Oh, and you don’t know how to count money so you
have to trust you won’t get cheated, and the clerks behind the counter watch
you like you’re trying to steal something, or they call 911 and report an
apparently lost and disoriented teenager (who is neither lost or disoriented).
Then the cops call your mom, and you’re humiliated in front of everyone in line
behind you. And then you soil yourself.
But hey, you know what you should really do? Take everyone’s
advice, stop whining, and join a club or something. “We all go through things
in life.” Good luck with that…
[And this is what is known as the presence of the absence. It’s when that which we are missing is
blatantly obvious every single day. Not sometimes – but every day. Pearl Buck
once wrote of her daughter with cognitive disabilities, “I miss eternally the person she cannot be.” It’s a living loss for
which we are not permitted the social spaces to grieve. It is the ever-present
absence.]
P.S. I'm not whining here. Just trying to help people understand the reality we live with. But those statements, however well-intended, make me feel like I must look like a terrible mom to them or I'm not doing my job because I'm not getting him "more involved in things." And it's just not realistic.