Finding something “Wrong” with your Child

When I was engaged to my husband we went to the mall to pick up a few things (back when malls where still cool). During our time there my husband had to sit down on the bench and take a break. I was teasing him about being young and having to sit on the bench. That is where I learned that he had an extra bone in his knee that required his mussels and tendons to pop around it giving him a dead leg while he walked. I also learned that he had a genetic bone disease called hereditary multiple exostoses or heredity multiple osteochondromas. This is a genetic disease that grows extra bones throughout your body while you are growing. They can not cause a problem at all if they are small and in certain locations or they can cause all sorts of problems like loss of movement, deformities of the regular bone, they can impose upon nerves, tendons or blood vessels, interfere with normal movement or circulation which causes severe pain.

As I talked with him I learned that he had surgeries throughout his youth when the need came up. He had multiple bones removed and others left alone depending on where they were at. He said he was sick of surgeries while he was a teen and should have had the one on his knee removed but hadn’t. It was hereditary which made it a possibility that our children would have the same disease. He had gotten it from his mother who passed it down to him and two of his other siblings. Our children had a fifty fifty chance of getting the disease.

Fast forward many years later and we welcomed a bouncing baby boy! He was perfect and the calmest baby we could ask for. My mother-in-law came to visit us when he was about six months old and quickly found his first extra bone. I knew it was a possibility but learning he had it made me very sad for him. My husband and I at that point had been married for over six years. In that time we had the bone (ended up being two bones) in his knee removed and he had been rejected from joining the military because of the bones in his knees. I was learning more about this disease that he had grow up with and understood that my son would have to go through the same thing and would encounter similar set backs. Sure enough we took him to a specialist when he was 18 months and they confirmed that he did have the genetic disease.

Now, what I wasn’t prepared for was the worry and concern I constantly had for my son and this disease. I was told by the specialist that when he has loss of movement that is a cause for concern or if there is pain then that is a cause for concern. But to a mom….that leaves a world of possibilities. When he complains of pains in his legs is it a bone? Is it growing pains? You don’t want to jump to conclusions but what if you are not on top of it enough and your child’s leg becomes deformed? Same with his upper body. How bad does he have it? It varies from kid to kid on the severity of the disease and where they appear. My husbands family who had gotten it went from mild cases to severe with one cousin having over 20 surgeries in his youth. We are on a schedule to see the specialist once a year but if anything occurs to come in sooner…. this leaves it wide open and to a mothers worried mind it does not ease the concern that she might miss something.

With that being said we have been on this journey for 8 years. During those eight years we added a brother to the mix and he received the genetic disease too. I was on a flight home and he was asleep in my arms and I found his first bone at six months as well. I cried on that flight as I experienced the same sadness that I felt for his brother. I have stories to share of victories and fails with this bone disease. The pain it has caused my sons without us knowing is frustrating. Having a parent who has it helps a person who doesn’t have it know when to fight for their child. Even with that knowledge from my husband it has brought up different signs and complications in my sons.

Watching my mother raise my sister with down syndrome helped me know how to fight for my child. That I would need a tough skin as I made decisions for my boys and stuck with them. This disease is not easily seen on the outside. Sometimes it is but for the most part my boys look like everything is fine and most of the time everything is fine. I take my children to Shriners and what my sons deal with seems so minimal to what I see while I am there. No matter how minimal it seems to what others deal with it isn’t minimal to you or your child. As a parent, similar decisions have to be made for the welfare of your child and although you may think it is small it is not small. So keep fighting, we are all in this together as we do what we feel is best for our child’s health.

Rachel

** The picture below is my oldest around the time we found his first extra bone.

Life Sometimes Stops Progress

As we are trying to write down the past and advocate for children with all different types of disabilities or conditions that they carry I found that life has gotten in the way of writing. Shortly after my last post in March my grandmother passed away. Along with a few other life changes and before I knew it fall has come. My children are back in school and half the year has gone by. Although this blog has always been in the back of my mind to get back to, I haven’t taken the time to make it happen. I am going to be posting a lot more frequently. I am sorry for the break to the three people who read this blog.

Our goal when we started this blog was to celebrate all people. Not only the people with disabilities or health conditions but everyone who works everyday to get through life. The parents who are lost in a sea of information on their child’s condition and who are figuring it out one step at a time. The mistakes made, the triumphs, the pain, and the success.

With all this we have to be forgiving of ourselves and our shortfalls. I wasn’t prepared for my grandmother’s death and then as I was figuring that out, all of a sudden summer hit and all my kids were home from school. It was just about all I could do to keep them and myself sane throughout the summer. So now that they are back in school we are trying to get back into the swing of things. Our goal is to post more and even have some extra posts waiting for the weeks that we can’t keep up with life. Our main focus has been on my mothers story with Down Syndrome but as time progresses I want to share my story and others stories and similarities in all our situations as well as differences. Like our blog states People CAN Persevere and I believe that we achieve great things even when we feel like we aren’t making any progress at all.

To those who read the blog, thank you!

Rachel

Happy World Downs Syndrome Day

It is World Downs Syndrome Day and I couldn’t not write today! My favorite person with Downs Syndrome is my sister! Anyone who has read the blog so far has started to hear the story of my sister. I was her younger sister so I didn’t know the world any different without Annie in it. She was my older sister and that was how life was. She has a personality as large as it gets and she has an opinion that she will let you know exactly what she is thinking. She is a lot of fun to be around and she was a great sister to grow up with.

Growing up with Annie was always an adventure and it led me to have to navigate a world that I didn’t realize I was navigating through. I had to be bigger for her. I had to make sure she got what she needed when she needed it. I was twelve and we participated in Special Olympics together. I was the volunteer that walked her from event to event. I made sure she was taken care of, that she drank her water, that we found all the events, and that we found my mother when it was time to take her medications. It was all a part of growing up and I am grateful for it. It made me have a completely different outlook on life. One that was bigger then myself.

Annie showed me the world through her eyes. I saw her work hard for everything she got. She was determined to do everything all her siblings were doing. She didn’t let her handicap slow her down. She had two congenital hips when she was born and my mother was told she probably wouldn’t walk but she walked. My mother pushed her and she in turn didn’t let life slow her down all growing up. It was amazing to watch her grow and learn throughout our childhood.

One of my favorite stories of Natalie happened on her birthday. My husband and I were poor college students and we picked her up to take her to dinner and a movie. After we picked her up we told her we would take her to wherever she wanted to eat dinner (thinking she would pick Chilies, or a fast food restaurant) . Without skipping a beat she said Red Lobster. WHAT!?! We were poor college students we couldn’t afford red lobster. My husband talked her into wingers and we got there and she wanted the largest plate of wings on the menu. I think the wings were just as expensive as Red Lobster would have been! It was a great night but we learned to give her select options after that! 🙂

Anyway, I love her so much and am grateful that I grew up with her! Happy World Downs Syndrome Day, the world is a better place with you in it!

-Rachel

Peoples Opinions and Choosing to Follow My Gut

I didn’t realize, and wasn’t aware that as someone who was given a special needs child that it was going to change me, my perspective, and outlook on life. I was a young mom of two boys when I was given my special baby. I learned within the first week that I was going to be going against the grain of many opinions. I learned quickly that the world had placed many boundaries on my child and because I was her mother, on me as well. With the bad also come the good. I watched people advocate for me and my daughter and work quickly to get a support group in place for me and my family.

My friend who had watched the boys while I was in the hospital was a part of the congregation of my church. She made sure meals were brought in. Ladies were there to help clean and watch the kids. As I recovered and worked with Annie. I later found out that they were instructed to sit and listen to me while I talked and expressed my fears, cried, and started to work through all the emotions of having the responsibility to raise a special needs child. They were also told not to compare their children to mine. They were to find joy in each child and their accomplishments. Those times were vital to me. I was able to talk with ladies who were not in the same situation as I was but was there as a shoulder to cry on and support as I started to navigate this new world. They were there when I would be hit with the next step of Annie’s progress and growth. We found joy in our children’s progress, on time or delayed. This was a major help in the process of starting this new path. They honestly cared and wanted to help and as I look back it was a life saving step in my progress.

On the other hand I had others who thought they new what was best for the child and that I didn’t. There were people who believed that I was inadequate for this task. My mother called and came to “help” with the baby. I found it a little odd because she hadn’t come to help with my two boys. I agreed to have her come and was relieved and excited that my mom wanted to help me out. I was unaware that she had different intentions. When she arrived she made it clear that she believed I couldn’t take care of this child and that she should and could raise my child for me. I was devastated. My husbands family wanted me to institutionalize my daughter and my own mother, the one who should be my support and the one who should take my hand and tell me I can do this was telling me the opposite.

I was not a person who typically was loud or confrontational. If I felt like I wasn’t wanted in a situation I withdrew. But the second she let her intentions known I knew that I no longer could be the silent one. I let her know that she in no way would be raising my child. That she was my baby and no matter her shortcomings and mine by hell or high water we would make it. As I stood up for Annie and myself I realized that I was going to have to consistently stand up for her. I would have to observe and learn what she needed and push for her to get it. When people didn’t believe in her or me I had to push that aside and do what was required. I was now a mother of someone who had downs syndrome. A mother of a child who needed a voice, and I would be hers.

The Start of our Fight

Freshly home from the hospital I was on a mission to help my daughters Jaundice as much as possible.  Our doctors appointment for the test was Monday.  Throughout the weekend we sat by the window so she could get some sun but to no avail the Jaundice became more and more apparent. Monday morning came and we left for the doctors appointment.  They took her blood and then we waited for the results.  During her appointment I mentioned a few things I had noticed during the weekend.  The doctor took note and sent us home to await the news of the test.

Later that day the doctor called with her results.  The count was high, really high, and we needed to take her to the children’s hospital and have them do a more accurate test.  If the results were similar to the test performed at the doctors office she would be hospitalized.  A danger of having a high bilirubin level is brain damage.  My mind was in overdrive as I went to the children’s hospital to see what the accurate test said.  We arrived at the hospital and had her tested.  The doctor at the children’s hospital arrived, examined my little girl, and explained that the test results were high. That meant we were going to be here for a while.  He further explained that she would be under the bilirubin lights, an IV, bottle fed, and countless lab tests. When she was born the Thursday before she had a hole in her heart but when the doctor checked again today it was closed.  That lifted my spirits a bit. That was one problem I could cross of my list.

As we waited to be admitted to the hospital I was dealing with a torrent of emotions.  I felt helpless, guilty, sad, and alone. I felt I was walking a path I knew nothing about and was trying desperately to learn.  I saw mom’s who looked like they were very comfortable at the children’s hospital as if it were second nature.  I held my baby and wondered if I was every going to get to that point.  My husband and I were trying to juggle all we had going on with a small family and I felt like I already wasn’t keeping up. We were four days into this and she had landed back in the hospital. I tried to do everything I could to keep her out of the hospital but she had still ended up there.  I had failed! I had tried and I had failed!  I wondered if this is what the rest of my life was going to look like.  Trying and failing!?!

After a four hour wait we were finally admitted to the hospital. As the nurses took her to get her settled in her room and under the lights, it was late at night. I had to leave her in the care of her nurses so that my husband and I could pick up my boys from the sitters.  As I left I was numb, I had a headache from crying. We put the boys to bed and waited for the morning to come.  At breakfast my little boys asked where their sister was.  I had to explain that she had to go back to the hospital.  As I said the words I still felt like I had failed her.

As I arrived at the hospital the next morning I walked in and her head was half shaved so they could place the IV. As I saw her I was overcome with emotion and started to cry.  I wish that she didn’t have to be here! All of a sudden a nurse looked over at me and said, “Your baby is handicapped, what are you crying for?”  I was appalled at the callus way the world looked at her.

In the last 4 days I was told by multiple people not to care or worry about this child because she was handicap. I was presented with multiple options on how to “deal” with her. I knew I didn’t know what I was doing and I was not experienced, but I also knew that no little baby needed someone to give up on them right from the start. I didn’t feel like that was fair for her. She needed the love and help of all those around her.  I felt a strong need to fight for this little girl.  Three days into the hospital stay she was so mad at the nurses and the IV cords that she turned over in her bed.  I saw the fight and the stubborn streak she had and my heart grew! Yes, she was handicapped, and yes, she would have her limits, but I was going to push her to those limits. As hard as she was willing to fight, I was too!

-Gail

The Scramble

As we meet our little girl, the doctors started talking to us a mile a minute. I felt like I was walking into the woods at dusk with fog rolling in. I can see a few steps in front of me and then quickly I can’t see anything at all. I am guessing what I am doing. I am guessing the path but never before had the path been so important. I hear what they are saying but I feel completely inadequate to be the one making decisions for this precious baby. Each decision I made at this point mattered. It wasn’t a choice about the outfit I would take her home in, these were choices that would affect my little baby for the rest of her life. As the doctor’s continued to talk they asked me if I had any questions.

Questions?!?

I screamed in my head. I don’t know enough to have any questions. I am looking at my little girl and I don’t know what to ask, I don’t know how to help, I don’t know what to do. All I know is she is mine and I have to make these decisions for her. My daughter’s pediatrician said we would start with an X-Ray to determine if her heart was on the right side of her chest. The X-Ray would also help determine if she had congenital hips, and any other physical issue we would be dealing with. She also reminded me that I needed to make sure to call her office and order the test for Jaundice as soon as we left the hospital. As she mentioned this I reminded her that both my boys had Jaundice. I was pretty sure she would have it as well. We were off and running and I was holding on for dear life, as I tried to wrap my head around it all.

If dealing with my new baby and her needs and making sure our two boys were taken care of wasn’t enough we started getting the families opinion on the matter. My husbands parents didn’t want us to keep the baby. We were a young couple and they didn’t want us to have to carry the “burden” that this child would bring. They wanted my baby to be institutionalized. My husband firmly let them know there was no way that was going to happen. Our little girl would not be thrown to the waste side before she had a chance to be anything. We would figure this out, the best we could.

As I was dealing with all the immediate needs my daughter had my children’s pediatrician was setting up the beginning of a support system for me. She called the different state agency’s involved in handicap children and parents to get the ball rolling. They called me while we were still in the hospital. We set up a home visit in three weeks and a parent group that would start teaching me how to work with my handicap child. Both the state worker and I were impressed at how fast my pediatrician got the ball rolling. As I got off the phone I was grateful for my pediatrician and the help that she had given me. I didn’t feel as alone knowing she was setting up a way to give me help. I just had to make it three weeks.

After all the tests were done and we were told what we were dealing with it was time to take my daughter home. Her heart was on the correct side of her chest but she did have congenital hips. With this information and a promise of more information to come we were ready. As we were preparing to take her home they asked me again if I had any questions… again, I didn’t know what to say. I hadn’t had time to think of any questions. I am sure I had some but what were they? I told them I didn’t have any questions at this time but I knew the second I left the hospital a million questions would flood my mind. As I buckled her into her car seat I was on full survival mode. I didn’t know what else to do but go home and introduce her to her two older brothers.

-Gail

Getting Ready for Baby

Excited, YES! My friends all said it looks like I am carrying a girl. With two little boys ages 2 & 4, having a girl would be the cherry on top! I dreamed of her dancing just like her mama, and maybe running track as well. I would have my perfect princess and as my due date approached my excitement to welcome my new little on was mounting.

My labor had a false start. The contractions would start and then stop. More waiting continued, then at 6 a.m. my contractions started but they were hard and they really hurt. This was completely different then both of my boys. I called my sitter and got everything arranged so I could go in as my labor progressed. I wanted to time it just right and labor at home as long as possible. As time passed I got a gut feeling that I needed to see my doctor. I needed his medical comfort and reassurance. I called him and he told me to come right in.

I got to his office, he confirmed I was in labor and the nurse loaded me onto a wheelchair and rushed me across the parking lot to the hospital. It was go time! The time had come for me to meet my little human.

My labor was hard, harder then my boys. There was the typical buzz in the labor and delivery room. My doctor signals me to push and out comes the baby, it is a girl, my friends were right! The excitement of the delivery room quickly changed. My rosy pink baby turned grey, I only saw a glimpse of her before she was taken out of the room. I saw her cute little ears which had a point and her cute tongue that stuck out, that was all. My doctor on the other hand saw far more.

As they took her out of the room, I prayed everything would be okay. I anxiously waited to hear some news about my little princess. I waited, and waited, and waited. I heard no news from 1 p.m. until 7 p.m. when my children’s pediatrician stepped in to talk to me.

“Your baby, we think has Down Syndrome.” The doctor said. She continued, ” Now we have to test for a hole in the heart, obstructed bowls, congenital hips…..” as she continued to speak to me my mind started to recall what I had been learning in my child psychology class. I knew medically it was bad. As she spoke with me she was looking for my reaction. Was I going to reject the baby? Would I not accept the news? Would I be angry? The reason that they waited so long to speak to me was very clear now.

Before the baby was born I had set up the ability to feed my baby through out the night and I looked at my doctor and said, “Do you remember the order I had to feed my baby through the night, I still want that carried out.”

She replied, “Do you understand that your baby is retarded?”

“Yes,” I replied firmly, “But she still has to eat.”

As soon as I said those words the doctor visible relaxed and immediately took us to see our little girl and explain the symptoms of this big unknown, with the name of Down Syndrome.

-Gail

Life Changes in Seconds

A birth, an accident, old age, cancer, a heart condition, a stroke….the list is endless. In a matter of seconds we can all have a life altering event. Just when we think we have life figured out it throws a curve ball and we are now trying to figure out the new world we have been thrown into. When my life has met these challenges I have approached the problem in one of two ways:

#1 – I attack it head on and I am proactive at finding a solution.

#2 – I dig in my heels, hide in my bed, and resist the inevitable. I will get to it in the morning!

My first child was diagnosed with ADHD Extreme. My training started with him. I had to start figuring out the “Problem” (what made him react a certain way, how to change his environment to improve his behavior, where was the limit and line I couldn’t let him cross) I had to study his behavior, create a plan, and carry out that plan.

Many times the plan didn’t work and I had to change the plan through trail and fail, reevaluate and attack it again. My son’s behavior started my training. The mom training for the curve ball, life was about to throw my way.

My son taught me to PERSEVERE.

I have learned to hold my ground.

I have had to figure out and research how to help my child to the best of my ability.

I have learned to implement the plan and if the plan fails to let the plan go and start again.

I have learned to be an advocate in my children’s care and fight for what was best for them, even when the idea wasn’t the typical answer.

And then I learned to pick up my feet and DO IT.

I know how it feels to have life change in a matter of seconds. It started with my son but it didn’t end with him. A few years after I had my first child and as I was learning to work with his behavior I prepared to welcome my third child. Little did I know that my life was about to be completely changed and I would enter a world I know very little about….

Being a parent of a special needs child.

Gail