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Markers of Time

March 30, 2011 in Featured, From Julia by Julia Roberts

I’m a fairly organized, detailed person. In fact, I’m probably borderline (ha!) OCD. This is all extremely helpful when parenting a couple of kids with special needs.

It also makes me want to record everything. That’s probably a good thing, right? I think I do it because I’m pretty sentimental. Plus, well, the kids have a life-threatening condition and so I feel like I have to. I have to.

One of the things I’ve noticed is that I can recall with certainty the date of nearly all medical events for my kids. Is that strange? I can almost tell you where I was when I received an important call (in the car when we learned my son would need EPO shots) or the details of a big visit to the hospital with one of the kids (the room color and temperature of the room where my son was diagnosed with a kidney disease). You know, little details.

I know I have my blog and scrapbooks at the ready so I don’t necessarily need to remember all the details, yet, I do. I think it is my internal way to honor their struggles. When I remember the details and can have long conversations with my kids about what has happened to them physically and emotionally I like to think that they feel like I was there; that they weren’t alone. In the isolating world of growing up with a chronic disease and learning difference I want them to know that I was there with them even though intellectually they know it.

A couple of times I remember haunt me. I think about what I could have/should have done differently. Many of of the time markers I hold on to are ones I can recall with pride that I (or the kids) handled everything the way I (they) should have.

A haunting: I wished I’d pushed harder one day before I did when my son had a horrible, painful surgery experience. It was night, he finally fell asleep but he was in horrible pain for a long time. It was his birthday. February 2007.

A good one: I worked around a doctor who would have allowed my daughter to go on dialysis but in a stunning turn of events they relented after a 2nd opinion and approval at another city’s transplant center. That happened in February 2009.

What are two of your time markers?

 

Joy through special needs

January 27, 2011 in Featured, From Julia by Julia Roberts

The week my daughter was born I had a lot of sadness. I also had greater joy because I was celebrating her birth! A welcomed and loved addition or our little family, I sent an email to friends the day after we got home from the hospital. I said something about welcoming our beautiful daughter into the world. I mentioned her amazing eyes, her long finger and toes and I said how happy we were she joined our family. In the second paragraph I told everyone who loved us about her failing kidneys and said we were sad about that but we needed for people to celebrate her life.

I think, without knowing it, I set up how I wanted to embrace the joys of this new life of parenting kids with special needs before the sadness.

Is the sadness still there? Yes. But are the joys I have sweeter? Probably.

When we asked the community to share their joys I realized that there was a similar theme. We all shared in the miraculous joys of daily mundane (not to us) events like walking and eating. We have and continue to celebrate the milestones our children with special needs. We particularly like typical events like siblings who play and learn from each other, when our kids make friends and when they laugh and smile.

We like to see our children thrive and have pride. Milestones come in many forms. One mom said she got to witness her son learn how to open his eyes – fused since birth – and thought, “Who else gets that privilege?” One mom said, “I once heard that when you have a child with special needs, you don’t just celebrate milestones, you celebrate “inchstones.”

Five or more years ago that I realized I do love to witness the little things (milestones especially) and I was (am) probably even smug about that fact. I reason that my challenges should at least afford me the opportunity to have something over my friends who have children with typical development. I probably should feel bad but I do not.

You know what? I watch my daughter jump up in the air about 4 inches on both feet. That alone probably does not seem that spectacular but it took her nearly 3 years of trying. Therapy. Falling. Frustration. Laughing. When my son, who struggles with confidence, is even a little bit proud of himself, even just a tad, I feel joy. Immense joy.

I’m not afraid to admit the struggles we face make the joys in our life sweeter; sweeter than those of you with typical families.

Special Needs, Special Holidays

December 8, 2010 in Featured Member by Sylvia Ross

Ahhh, the holidays. Time to relax and enjoy having family gathered around you, eating delicious, fattening food before renewing your annual resolution to lose weight, right? Sadly, when you have someone in your life with special needs, it doesn’t always work out that way.

Two days before Thanksgiving 2008, our family received a crushing blow. The baby we were expecting in April was diagnosed with what has been described as “the most devastating congenital defect compatible with life”. Spina bifida. My husband didn’t understand what the doctor was saying. As a nurse, I did. A pall had been cast on the whole holiday season. I had to get through it while worrying about how much it would affect the lives of our entire family. I had to explain to family and friends that we didn’t know how Micah would be affected until he was here and even then we would still have to watch and wait to see what he could do as he grew.

I wanted to hide. But I had a toddler who needed her Mummy to share the excitement of the season and the coming baby. I didn’t want there to be an “elephant in the room” at family gatherings. You know, the thing that is so overwhelmingly big that you can’t help but notice it, and wonder why no one else is talking about it? I didn’t know how friends would accept a “disabled” child. We don’t have family close by and didn’t really have any good friends either, having relocated to Ohio only a year before. My husband works for a school district and shared Micah’s diagnosis with a few of his colleagues. One of the librarians learned of it and after hearing that we didn’t have plans for Thanksgiving, insisted that we come to dinner at her home. I didn’t want to. Our daughter was young enough that she wouldn’t know she was missing out on anything, so why not stay home and not have to talk to anyone? Why not hide from the questions of well meaning strangers? But we didn’t.

I wish I could say I knew we needed to get out and live our lives as usual, but that’s not why we went. We went because my husband, an Aussie, has grown to love turkey drumsticks. And stuffing. And mashed potatoes. And pie. Any excuse to make a pig of himself with unlimited access to food? He’s there. So we went. And I’m glad we did. Yes, it was difficult. Vickie, his colleague, was kind enough to ask her questions about Micah’s health in private, and didn’t share with the rest of the group, so as far as they knew, I was just your average pregnant woman. It helped to know that I didn’t have it written across my face “I HAVE A CHILD WITH SPECIAL NEEDS!” It helped me realize that we will have lots of holidays to celebrate with both kids. Even though Micah has a disability, he has a right to celebrate like everyone else! Christmas was a blur spent with family and friends out of state. I went through the motions, and tried to just concentrate on my daughter’s pure joy over all the pretty presents, lights and fun.

It’s nearly two years later–and Micah has surprised us all. We didn’t know if he would even be able to stand on his own. He not only stands, he loves using his walker to chase his big sister. It has not been easy, though. So far, we’ve been through 7 surgeries and spent our 9th wedding anniversary, Palm Sunday, Easter, the 4th of July, and my birthday in the hospital, courtesy of those surgeries. How do we handle it? Honestly, first I cry. Then, I try to replace the tears with laughter. I bring in treats for the nurses who have to work those days. They don’t exactly want to be there either. My husband brings us food from our favorite restaurant since we can’t get there. Our favorite drinks taste just as good from a disposable plastic cup as they would from an expensive crystal goblet, right? When friends and family offer to help out, I try to find some way to let them help–accepting help is so important when you have a special needs child! One friend in particular brought me a pint of my favorite sorbet when I had to spend my birthday on the rehab floor with Micah, who was recovering from spinal cord surgery. She sat there and enjoyed her own pint of sorbet with me, since my husband was on a business trip. Was it how I wanted to spend my birthday? Oh heck no! I would have chosen to spend it at a fabulous spa being pampered and massaged and treated like a queen! But my little man needed me, so there I was. Sitting on the pull-out couch eating sorbet with a plastic spoon and laughing with a friend.

What have I learned from having kids with special needs? You really have to be flexible in every area of your life. If something isn’t going the way you wanted it to, don’t fight it. Accept it, and make the best of it. Celebrate, no matter what blow you’ve been dealt. As a youth pastor of mine used to say… fake it ’til you feel it. You’ll get there. And your family will thank you.”

There are side-effects to surviving

December 6, 2010 in Future Glimpse by Admin Dawn

Bee LavenderBee Lavender is the author of the award-winning memoir Lessons in Taxidermy: Diagnosed with cancer at age twelve and perilously pregnant at eighteen, surviving surgeries and violent accidents: Sometimes you can’t believe Bee Lavender is still alive; sometimes you think nothing could kill her. Lessons in Taxidermy is Lavender’s fierce and expressive search for truth and an elusive sense of safety. This autobiographical tale is stark and resolved, but strangely euphoric, tying together moments and memories into a frantic, delicate, and often transcendently funny account of anguish and confusion, pain and poverty, isolation and illusion. While staying conscious of the particulars of her circumstances, Lavender frames her life in the context of history, traveling, landscape, and freak show culture. Lessons in Taxidermy is apocryphal, troubling, cathartic, and important.

We interviewed Bee about her experiences to ask her what parents can do to help their children who are going through a medical crisis.

Children who have been seriously ill go to a place where they are absolutely alone and where their parents can’t follow. How can parents support their children as they face these very scary challenges?

The first and fundamental principle is simple: always tell the truth. No matter how difficult, unwieldy, or frightening, it is better by far to acknowledge what is actually happening. Yes, this is hard – especially if you are talking about painful and messy procedures, serious permanent disabilities, or the possibility of death. But even the youngest children have the capacity to understand what is happening, and developing a framework will help them cope with the process. Saying “this will hurt” is always better than pretending otherwise. Saying “we don’t know what will happen” is always better than promising a miracle that might not come.

Truth doesn’t hurt. Surgeries hurt.

In your book, you write about your ability to separate your body from your mind in an effort to deal with the pain of your cancer. Have you been able to come back to your physical self? Do you have thoughts about how parents can help their children retain that sense of self?

It is fair to say that sustained and routine trauma is not a desirable formative experience. In my particular case, I learned to compartmentalise. Pain and pleasure go in separate boxes, learning and love happen on their own. It took several years before I could even let the food on my plate touch, let alone the emotions or whatever you want to call the stuff boiling around in your brain and chest. I had to take small and incremental steps toward normal behaviour – the ability to think, yearn, fail, all at once, losing control, letting life happen, feeling it.

I still lack certain forms of empathy. I grasp that there are no hierarchies of suffering, yet I am dismissive of pain in myself and others. When my friends (or children) complain about something they find deeply important, I often catch myself thinking they should go get some real problems. Though at least I have learned to think it instead of saying it out loud.

There is no tidy way to help a kid in similar circumstances. There are side-effects to surviving.

How has being a writer helped you process your experience? Do you think parents should help their children journal (either via writing or pictures)?

From my earliest years I remember thinking that words were my friends, and putting them in a certain order to convey stories was a tremendous distraction from all manner of mayhem. From about age five or so I wrote fiction, and the activity was hugely entertaining and a much needed distraction. Other children might have a different set of needs, but I think that the desire for escape is valid and necessary.

Distraction, even obsession, can be better than therapy, when your life is organised around medical treatments. By the time I was eighteen years old I had several hundred surgical scars on my body and I would have rather stabbed myself in the eye than talk about my illness: dreary, boring, obnoxious illness! Cancer, cancer, cancer, ugh. Give me a movie, a concert, a new album to listen to, book to read…. art, literature, and politics offered solace and a way forward. For other people it might be sports, video games, knitting, whatever, just something external, something to think about other than the failures of the body.

I didn’t keep journals as a child, and never wrote directly about my illness until I was about 29. I don’t think it would have helped *me*, except to keep track of dates for later publication. In fact, I don’t think documenting the experience would have been especially healthy, because doing so would have been another way of assigning a privileged meaning. I think the most empowering thing is to learn to say “the disability is part of me, but it does not define me.”

Did you feel you had to protect your parents from your fears? Is there something they could have done to relieve some of that burden?

Yes, I wanted to protect them, and the need to do so was both explicit (I was told not to cry) and implied (being brave made it easier for everyone to play their part). I agreed with these values at the time and I still do. Life was seriously difficult for me, but my parents were there too. They had to watch me suffer, but they also had to deal with the administrative details, and pay the bills. Even now, with children of my own, I simply cannot imagine the anguish they were forced to endure. I was stoic, but my parents were heroic.

Decades later and thousands of miles away, my first thought when I have a medical appointment is how to prevent my mother worrying about me, or knowing at all. If I had one magical wish it would be to take away the pain that she suffered raising a sick kid. Both of my parents did their absolute best in a terrible situation, and asking for more – for niceties of behaviour or etiquette – is foolhardy at best.

The only way our collective burden could have been relieved was simple, and structural. My health insurance came from my mother’s job. The money to pay what the insurance didn’t cover came from the overtime both parents worked. I was literally alone, because they both had to work desperately hard – just to keep me alive.

The only thing that could have relieved our collective burden would have been universal health insurance. I believe that every citizen of a wealthy nation should have access to basic medical care. I moved to England six years ago because of the National Health Service, and I have no plans to move back home until health care reform is a reality instead of a promise. I do not want any of my loved ones to sacrifice their dreams to my illness.

Finally, medical issues force children to give up control of their bodies and their physical privacy in lots of ways. Do you have any thoughts about how parents can protect their children or give them some measure of autonomy given the reality of their medical needs?

In a purely practical sense this is an unobtainable goal. Whether you are talking about a crisis medical situation or long-term maintenance of a disability, you just can’t expect much privacy. Your body is being inspected for a reason, and the people looking are generally doing their best to help.

However, I do think there are limits. Speaking as someone with an “interesting” and rare disorder, there have been countless times when an examination seemed to be more for the prurient interest of staff than any clinical reason. Sometimes I have no choice but to cooperate, especially when using teaching hospitals. But I always make an effort to achieve at least a symbolic level of privacy.

This can be as simple as insisting on a curtain around the examination table, or an introduction to the people poking my flesh.

But privacy is more than just showing skin. It is about control, autonomy, narrative. The best thing that my parents did was allow me to own my story – to decide when and how to talk about the disease. Or not.

November is National Diabetes Awareness Month

November 10, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Almost 24 million Americans have diabetes and nearly 300,000 people diagnosed with endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases as their primary diagnoses receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits¹, according to Allsup, the nation’s leading Social Security disability representation company. Those numbers are expected to rise.

A recent study² found that hospitalizations for diabetes in the United States rose 65 percent over a 14-year span (1993 to 2006).

via November is National Diabetes Awareness Month.

Boy with Lowe Syndrome touches many

November 8, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Adam Carrillo has become something of a celebrity at Hope Children’s Hospital in Oak Lawn. When his mom and dad wheeled him into the hospital’s lobby on a recent afternoon, everyone greeted him by name.

“Adam! How are you?” phlebotomist Virginia Kolodziejczak asked, bending over to touch his shoulder. She’s taken his blood plenty of times in the past few years.

“He’s a sweetheart,” she said. “He’s so good-natured.”

It’s no wonder everyone at Hope knows Adam, considering how much time the 16-year-old has spent here. But Adam’s mom, Caroline, said this reception is typical everywhere they go, from Wal-Mart to the Hooters in Oak Lawn, Adam’s favorite restaurant.

“Adam has that effect on people,” Caroline said. “People say his hug is electric.”

via Boy with rare genetic disorder touches many :: The SouthtownStar :: News.

Welcome to our New Community Members

November 6, 2010 in Around the Site by Admin Dawn

We had a ton of people join our community this week so we wanted to do a quick weekend shout out to them in the order that they registered!

We also wanted to highlight our mission statement this week to make clear that we are an inclusive community and welcome diverse voices!

Special Needs.

It’s an all encompassing label, yet we let a diagnosis divide us among this powerful group of advocates and caregivers into categories of rare and not-so-rare diseases, genetic conditions, developmental delays and the unexplained afflictions. We have more in common than separates us and Support for Special Needs is the community that offers a chance to exchange wisdom and ideas among one of the most powerful group of people we know. Join us as we learn from each other about how to help our kids and ourselves.

Now let’s meet our new members! Click their names to reach their profiles and say hello to them! Ready? Set? GO!

Barbara – “Mother of 9 yr old child with special needs”

Linda

Heather Pierini – “I am the mom to two girls, almost 9 and 3 months.”

Karyn Climans

Jacki – “My daughter has ADD with Cystic Fibrosis and Cerebral Palsy”

Rachelle – “I am the mother to a wonderful most precious angel with special needs. My daughter Alyssa has OPCA (a degenerative brain disease), Cerebral Palsy, Microcephaly, ONH (optic nerve hypoplasia) Infantile Spasms (a form of Seizures), developmental delay (almost 2 and at a 6 month level) and has a G Tube. She is the happiest most beautiful baby girl I know. I was devastated at first but came to realize that God chose me to raise this blessing and I thank him every day for her. I stay strong so that she will stay strong. I used to pray for healing but them realize that in order for God to heal her he would have had to make a mistake when he created her. God does not make mistakes. Now I pray that he will just keep her happy and make her the best she possibly can be. I have my moments when I must cry and morn that child I dreamt of but I never let her see me. I use the shower for that release period. I know that for me to dwell in her short comings would only take away from the time I have her since with her degenerative brain disease I do not know how long God will bless me with her. She was born with 3 rare diagnosis so we say she is extra special 3x’s over. I love her more than anyone could ever know and I would not change her for the world. She is my precious angel.”

Keely Miller – “I am a Mom of 3 children with special designer genes. I have learned that “Variety is the spice of life” and we sure do have a variety of things going on in our family. Our Geneticist is working on finding the main ingredients! My youngest and I have been diagnosed with a duplication on our 13th Chromosome and my other two are in the process of diagnosis with Genetics.”

Lynne McKenzie – “Mum of two beautiful children. The youngest, my son, requires 24hr care.”

Julie

psmadel – “mom of child with EEC Syndrome”

Tanya Lewis

Alicia Harper – “Navy wifey; SAH mommy full-time to 3, part-time to 1; 2 year old son dx hydranencephaly; full-time psychology student; contact for the International Hydranencephaly Group for support/resources/information for families facing dx; and in love with my life!!”

Joy Owens – “I am a mother to a 10 year old boy who is living with a severe congenital heart defect. He has had 8 surgeries in the last 7 years with more in his future. It is a chronic and life threatning illness with no cure. In January of this year our 2 1/2 month old baby boy died because of a severe heart defect. all 72 days were spent in the hospital. We also have a healthy 11 year old boy and 7 year old girl.”

Caroline Callaway

Dan and Amy Stout

AidelMaidel – “I’m the 30something mom to a bunch of kids, including, but not limited by, one teenager on the autism spectrum, one 8 yo with Retinitis Pigmentosa, a visual impairment, ADD, APD, and some neurological impairments, and two more who are (seemingly normal). We’re orthodox Jews who live in NYC. :) I’m happily married and work a full-time, full-stress job.”

Lora Alexander

Nancy Powers – “Adoptive mother of two school-aged sons”

Jenny Fenner

Julie Renner

Cheryl Crisp – “I am the adoptive mother of a child who is medically fragile, ventilator dependent, and has multiple disabilities. In addition, I am the pediatric clinical nurse specialist at a diagnostic clinic for children with a wide variety of special needs including autism, developmental delay, mental handicaps, medical disabilities, and learning disabilities. Working with these children and families is my mission, and I will do anything I can do to help them in any way I can, because I know firsthand what having a child with special needs is like. I consider toys to be a very special type of assistive technology, because the allow children to communicate in a way that they otherwise might not be able.”

Laurie Sweeney – “I am 53 years old, working in a PhD in ED Psych. I have been an adoptive and foster mother for over 30 years. Most of my kids have been some combination of Bipolar, FASD, RAD, ADHD. GB is 7 and her parents’ TPR was approved on 7/28/2010. She will be finalized in a couple of weeks. She has FASD and Bipolar. I have an adult son, J, who is Bipolar and doing very well. I have 2 legally adult children, living at home, MK, who is Bipolar, FASD, EX-RAD and a new mother, and D, who simply isn’t functioning. We successfully adopted a 4 1/2 girl, Hope, on August 26, 2010 from a dissolution who is Bipolar, Rad, and had been diagnosed PPD-NOS (PPD-NOS has been removed). I will be a SAHM for a while, then finish my dissertation.”

New MRI scan will help children with mental illness

November 4, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

By using state-of-the art imaging technology, new research at the Alberta Children’s Hospital aims to better understand and treat mental health disorders in children and teenagers.

Dr. Frank MacMaster, an American researcher known for his groundbreaking study of brain biology and chemistry, says he was drawn to Calgary by the prospect of continuing his work with a third-generation MRI the hospital will soon install.

“Without these imaging tools, the only way to study brain biology was during neurosurgery, when you’ve got the skull cracked open, or post mortem, when it’s too late,” MacMaster, the new chair in pediatric mental health at the hospital, said Friday.

“We just didn’t have the tools until now.”

via New MRI scan will help children with mental illness.

Kids, Cancer and Clinical Trials: Parents Are Confused

October 29, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Fifty years ago, a diagnosis of childhood leukemia meant you needed to start planning your child’s funeral. Now it’s got an 85% cure rate, largely due to advances attributed to information gleaned from pediatric clinical trials. Yet those same pediatric cancer trials that are such a treasure trove of data are also causing parents of the sick kids considerable angst.

Unlike adult cancer patients, the majority of pediatric cancer patients — or, more accurately, their parents — are asked to take part in a clinical trial. About 80% of parents accept. (More on Time.com: Fertility Preservation for Young Cancer Patients)

Each year, about 10,000 children are diagnosed with cancer. Although it’s the second leading cause of death for children between the ages of 5 and 14, after accidental injuries, “childhood cancer is a rare disease and the only way we are going to make progress is to be very systematic about the way we do research,” says Steven Joffe, an ethicist and pediatric hematologist/oncologist at Dana-Farber/Children’s Hospital Cancer Center. “The pioneers in the field realized if we don’t make clinical trials an integral part of what we do, we will never make progress.”

via Kids, Cancer and Clinical Trials: Parents Are Confused – TIME Healthland.

Doctor stresses need for sleep screening for children with learning disabilities

October 29, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Doctor Louise Scott says there is a very good reason why humans spend one third of their lives asleep. Because it’s important.

That was the pediatric neuropsychologist’s message Saturday morning to a group of 25 parents and educators of children with learning disabilities.

Scott, who has a private practice, works at Grand River Hospital and has a learning disability of her own, was at Arc Industries to discuss the relationship between sleep, attention and memory and executive deficits associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and other learning disabilities.

Scott said the learning disabilities affect sleep and sleep problems affect the learning disabilities.

“It can be any or all of the above,” she said when asked if one affects the other or if they go hand in hand.

Scott said parents who think poor sleeping habits are affecting learning and attention spans need to be screened using an overnight sleep study.

via GuelphMercury.com – News – Doctor stresses need for sleep screening for children with learning disabilities.

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