Post for Jumby

In a small town, there was a young girl, barely 17 years old, who could be described as neither beautiful or smart. She was just a plain girl, a quiet girl, the type of girl most people overlook; she was invisible.

Invisibility suited this girl fine, she preferred it as her weapon of choice, learning early on in her troubled life that she could avoid trouble, avoid pain, if she remained quiet and stealthy. No one quite knew what her pain stemmed from, what her story really was, but the haunted look in her eyes broadcast the certainty her story book did not contain the pages of much happiness.

An older boy saw her, barely a year older than her, but legal in the law’s eyes and for the first time she dropped her cloak of invisibility. This boy saw her when so many others didn’t. He was her dark eyed prince who made her feel invincible.

Together, in each others arms, they found solace from their troubled upbringing and united in their love they stood side by side against the world; ignoring wisdom and advice until one day they discovered they were pregnant.

They would be a happy little family.

But life isn’t so easy and the world’s harsh realities pressed against them at every turn. It wasn’t long before the girl abandoned her common sense and sought refuge with drugs, with her boy beside her.

The baby inside her could only take so much and soon her body rebelled, the drugs forcing an early birth of their baby. After only 24 weeks of pregnancy this girl and this boy were soon the parents of a 1 pound six ounce baby boy.

This baby boy fought for life, surprising everyone with his strength of will. He shouldn’t have survived his birth; his lungs were too fragile, his bowels perforated, his heart weak.

But survive he did, and thrive he began. To the doctors surprise, the girl stayed steadfast beside her baby’s side. The baby’s father, fancying himself a real man now, worked during the week and visited his child on the weekends.

This routine went on for five months until the child grew strong enough and big enough to be released into the custody of his young parents. The baby was a miracle they declared. They had no explanation for how healthy and normal he was, instead attributing it to the boy’s will to survive. The doctors worried about sending home this child they had worked so hard to heal with such young, uneducated parents and they tried to prevent it but in the end the young lovers were able to carry their child out of the hospital as a small family and begin their real life.

It took only a month before the grim reality of providing for a wee infant proved to be too much for the young father. The young mother tried, but she too, was overwhelmed by the stress of life and once more they allowed intoxicants to soften the glaring hardships of their life.

In a fit of rage and stupidity one night, the young father picked his wee healthy boy child up and lifted him to the heavens yelling at the child to be quiet, yelling at the child’s mother to shut the kid up, while shaking the baby like a dog does a rag doll.

Thirty one days after the baby boy had been released from the hospital, doctors stood over him once more, trying to again save his life.

An investigation ensued and soon the young father was taken away in handcuffs as the mother sat beside her baby, dazed and confused as the drugs wore off and the doctors words sank in.

Her perfect healthy boy was no longer perfect; the swelling in his brain too severe to over come, brain damage, blindness.

For three months the boy fought to live inside that hospital, while his father remained in custody awaiting trial. Social services promised to protect the boy, to help the young mom, to do everything they legally could to ensure this baby grew up as healthy as his now damaged body could. The doctors, again amazed at the boy’s survival, shook their heads as they watched the mother take the boy home. Their hands were tied.

For another three months, the baby was safe as his mother stayed clean and doing everything she could to provide for her child. By all accounts she was a loving mother, a gentle spirit and for the many things she had done wrong, loving him was never one of them.

But the legal system failed the baby boy and soon the young father was released from jail. The restraining order ended and social services slowly slipped away from the young mother, taking their promises of safety with them.

The young mother tried at first, to distance herself from the man she claimed to love. She wanted to do right by her child but time and life wore her down and slowly the father crept back into their daily lives, bringing with him turmoil and drugs. The young mother wasn’t strong enough to say no to either.

For almost six more months life carried on quietly, the world having forgotten what this young father did to his son, the young mother losing her resolve to protect her child. She loved her child but she couldn’t stop loving this boy who saw past her invisibility.

Then one fateful night, while the stars twinkled quietly and the booze flowed freely, something went terribly wrong. To this day no one knows where the mother was at the time, and to this day the father maintains his innocence.

But in those moments of time as the world stood still, the wee baby boy, barely eighteen months old, blind, mute, and barely 14 pounds heavy, fought for his life once more and was left to die.

Fate finally intervened, and in the morning hours of the next day strangers found the child and stuffed him into a taxi cab. His young parents didn’t want to call an ambulance because they didn’t want the police to question them.

The boy barely made it. For three days the left side of his brain hemorrhaged. The doctors fought valiantly to save the boys lungs, to treat his chemical burns.

The boy endured another five weeks of hospitalization as the doctors worked to repair the damage. His hearing couldn’t be saved, his brain damaged beyond a level where any normal adult function would ever be possible. The doctors and nurses, horrified, whispered of attempted murder, sexual assault, and other such savagery as they bandaged the boy back together.

The police stood guard to ensure the boy stayed safe, trying to banish the image of the child’s broken body from their minds.

The young parents never saw their child again. The young mother abandoned any pretense she held about being able to care for the child, of being able to protect him and signed over her parental rights.

The boy’s young father fled, worried he’d be arrested as the government and the police worked together to investigate the violence. Eventually he was caught, but justice was denied his child as the courts ruled there was insufficient evidence to proceed to trial. Social services took no chances this time and terminated the father from his rights to the child.

The baby boy, more so a baby now than ever before, helpless in his own body, found his way to one foster home after another. Eventually, with the seeds of love and the blankets of safety wrapped firmly around him, he began to heal and grow into a new version of himself. A version that never should have been.

Then one day, just over a year ago, the baby boy found me. His social worker, while searching for a forever family, stumbled across my name. She was looking for a family who could see past his limitations, his disabilities and instead see the boy with the spirit of steel and boundless joy.

She said she knew this boy was meant to be our son when she read my file. We are survivors, this boy and me. Our family, desperate to be healed, had the one thing this boy needed: love. Together, she thought, we could heal one another.

She was right.

I’ve waited a year to tell this story, Jumby’s story, of how he came to be, of who he is and what he endured to finally find the family every child deserves to have. It’s taken me this long to find the words to deal with the horror of his past.

I waited a year to tell his story because my son was the victim of violence and his perpetrator remains at large, unpunished for their crimes.

I waited a year to tell his story because I was unsure whether I wanted my older two children to learn of their brother’s past. To do so would mean stripping more childhood innocence away from my kids, who have already been robbed of so much when they buried their brother.

But the time has come to share Jumby’s story, now that he is safe and legally ours. I publish these words here, at Violence Unsilenced because I’m not ready for my children to read them just yet, but I needed to write them.

I need the world to know that Jumby is more than just an adopted child. He is more than just a child who is blind, deaf, mentally disabled and quadriplegic to boot.

He is a survivor.

He was a child who was robbed of his health. His future was stolen from him, first by drugs and a premature birth and then by the violence delivered unto him by the very people who were supposed to protect him and love him most.

The promise of who he could have been and what he could have achieved was stripped away one violent act after another until all that remains is my sweet boy’s unconquered spirit and his joy for life trapped in a body so broken there is no hope for release.

He deserved better than that.

All children deserve better than that.

Jumby survived. He was lucky that way.

But there isn’t a beat of his heart that I’m not reminded that not every child is as lucky as he was.

Jumby is more than my son. He is my hero.

*This post was originally published on Violence Unsilenced.

Ode to Billy Ray Cyrus

Dear Billy Ray,

I have made it no secret on my blog, my facebook account and my twitter stream that I am your most ardent redneck fan. Since the day you busted out singing about your Achey Breaky Heart I just couldn't help myself.

You're my flame and I'm your moth baby. The way you shake those hips of yours makes me tingle in a way that makes my husband jealous.

While the world didn't see your true genius, instead fixating on your follicularly challenged image, I just wanted to run my fingers through your shiny brown locks and tell you it's all right.

RAWR.


It was you and me up against the world Billy Ray, and I was all right with that. After all, I was country when country wasn't cool and your shiny kicks were meant to be paired alongside mine.

I have forgiven you a lot Billy Ray. I have looked past your twangy cheesy song choices, I looked the other way when you pretended to be a doctor, and I'm still loyal even when your wee daughter smacks her arse for all to watch. Destroying your wholesome family image and parents dreams of chastity all over the world.

I'm your bitch Billy Ray. I always will be.

But there comes a time when a woman has to draw a line in the sand.

And that time is now.

It's not you Billy Ray. Not really. I blame myself. You see, I spent one too many moments of my life teasing my sweet husband Boo about looking more like you. I'd urge him consider growing a mullet. I'd take him to country bars and force him to line dance with me all the while saying, "You know Billy Ray would do it for me."

Heck, I've even been known to DVR episodes of Hannah Montana and stick toothpicks in between my husband's eyelids while he's duct taped to the couch in an attempt to torture have him soak in your greatness and transform into your likeness.

Hannah Montana: The new waterboarding.

I've fought the stereotypes and taught my children to sing proudly about embracing their inner Thrillbilly. I've endured endless mocking and lost readers and respect for praising your beauty and talent to the sky.

And I'm okay with that. Until now.

Because it seems now, my husband listened. Which, after almost thirteen years of holy matrimony and sixteen years of passionate romance, is not a small feat.

He heard me yodel loudly (and somewhat drug-induced. I mean, I did just have back surgery after all) about wanting my mullet back. He listened, and after his ears stopped bleeding (cuz apparently I sound surprisingly similar to a cat in heat while singing) he decided to make my dreams come true.

He didn't decide to forgo haircuts for the next few months and embrace his inner Billy Ray. No. What he did was so much, well, more.

You see dear Billy Ray, while your number one Redneck fan was laying flat on her back recovering from having her back sliced open, a surgery necessitated by years of me graciously bestowing him with the gift of offspring and life, he kidnapped our youngest child and smuggled him out of the house to the hair salon.

I know this sounds innocuous in and of itself, and in fact could be used as an argument for thoughtful parenting; but what you don't understand Billy Ray, is the fact I have spent months growing my dear Jumby's hair to be exactly like the style you are sporting now.

Jumby would have rocked this look if only Boo wasn't such a child stealin', hair shearin' fuddy duddy.


He was so adorable. In perhaps maybe a month more, Jumby would have been a spitting image of Hannah Montana's daddy and I could proudly continue my delusion of being your invisible lover with Jumby as proof of our mutual love.


Sure his hair was a pain in the ass to brush and tended to mat in the back as he lay on the floor and played. And I'll concede his hair hung in his face and covered up his beautiful brown eyes. But dude, my kid is BLIND. It's not like he needs those eyes to see. It was for fashion. And as you well know Billy Ray, there is a price for fashion, one I happily had my young son pay so that he could look like you.


For months I ignored the ridicule of others and continued to caress the sweet luscious locks of my darling Jumby. Whenever someone (namely his father and every other relative the poor kid has) would chastise me and urge me to cut his hair, I'd bend down and whisper sweet words of encouragement into Jumby's hearing aids.

"Don't you worry my sweet baby boy. You are gorgeous and your hair is beautiful. Don't you listen to all the haters. Just think of what Billy Ray would do."

It became our special thing, his and mine, the thing we bonded over.

And then his father abducted him and held him hostage as a pair of shears attacked his head. All the while I lay unknowing in my bed far away.

Forgive me Billy Ray, but when my husband brought my baby back to me and held him out for me to see, I gasped.

The shock was too great.

My husband, the loving rat bastard he is, MULLETED my child.

WHAT THE F*CK???


Jumby is now, indeed proof positive it may be time to scale back my infatuation with you.


"What??? I thought you wanted him to look like Billy Ray!!" My husband defended himself as I screeched unholy words at him. "You kept telling me you wanted your mullet back! So I gave you one!"

I learned in that moment dear Billy Ray, that you are the only one who can truly rock the mullet. All others are posers. And my poor Jumby's hair has broken my achey breaky heart.

Sure it's all business in the front. Sure his hair no longer hangs in his beautiful face and gets tangled in drool by his mouth.  But when he turns around and I see the party in the back, a party which is almost as long as my own hair, a little piece of me dies and I'm suddenly wishing I had focused my energies of loving the dreadlocked Axl Rose.


I'm sorry Cyrus, but I can no longer defend the mullet. My kid, already sporting a kick me sign on the back of his wheelchair for being blind, deaf and drool-tastic, is now just one hair away from being beat on the play ground.

He doesn't look like our love child. He looks like a *shudder* hillbilly.

Poor Jumby. He's less Billy Ray and more...this.


And it's all your my Boo's fault.

I just ask, the next time you are sitting in that salon chair and deciding on the next hair cut, think of me. Think of the public. Think of the disabled kids with their crazy ass mothers and their dumbass fathers.

Because somewhere out there is a little boy who may get saddled with that hair cut. And there just ain't enough cute in the world to make that look cool again.

Signed,

Tanis Miller, the Redneck Mommy, your biggest (mullet-hating) fan.

P.S: Don't worry darling. No matter what, you'll always be my Romeo.

P.P.S: You can be my daddy anytime. *waggles eyebrows*

Be Careful WHERE You Blow Your Horn

I was five when I took my first air plane ride. It was a class field trip and I remember my Mom was one of the parent supervisors. I don't remember much about that short flight which basically just circled over our city and then landed, but I do remember the lovely shade green my mother was sporting that day.

It was that flight which set my imagination ablaze and since then, I love air travel. I grew up fantasizing about being a pilot or a flight attendant and spending my days in the sky. I always felt robbed that I wasn't born with wings. Instead, I managed to get hammer toes, a brittle spine and elf ears.

(With those features it's amazing I ever get laid. My husband is many things but apparently discriminating isn't one of them.)

It's not like there aren't parts of air travel I could live without. I'm not so keen over the airlines bending me over and raping me every time I need to purchase a ticket to go somewhere. Nor do I love having to walk past the first class customers as they stretch out in comfort as they sip their complimentary alcoholic beverages as I struggle to schlepp my held-together-with-duct-tape luggage past them to basically sit in some stranger's lap becausee the airlines like to cram us together and then toss pretzels at our heads in an effort to distract us from our discomfort with salty stale carbs.

(Don't even get me started on Delta Airlines and the attendant at the gate who told me I could have pre-boarded since I am hobbled with a cane if only I knew about that policy; a policy in which, since implementing new boarding procedures, they don't want to publicly announce in case they are flooded with the disabled and old folks wanting to rush the gate.)

(Damn those elderly people and the cripples. Totally ruining it for everyone.)

But once that plane starts barreling down the run way and hurls itself into the sky, I forget all about the annoying parts of air travel. Every time I'm amazed by the technology that allows us to fly through the heavens and above the clouds. Each time I'm mesmerized by the view above and down below.

When I'm up in the sky, I'm closer to where my angel boy Bug is and it feels like I can almost reach out and touch him.

It's a magical experience for me.

Until the person sitting next to me farts.

Nothing yanks you out of the heavens, back down to earth and into an oversized sardine box faster than the malodorous redolence of some stranger's natural funk.

It's not that I have anything against flatulence in general. It's a natural body function everybody has and more often than not, it's the one bodily function which produces the most comedic reaction. Who doesn't secretly love a good fart joke now and then? The look on a victim's face as their nose tells them they've been crop dusted is priceless and many a man can testify to the joys of partaking in a good dutch oven with a mate.



I don't think there has been a single person in history who hasn't fallen victim to the ill-timed release of pent up gas. Who hasn't cut the cheese and wished to be elsewhere as the stench floats it's way to one's nasal hairs and threatens to burn off one's eyebrows?

Gas happens. If you are really lucky there is a child or dog nearby you can blame it on.

Breaking wind is as natural as crying when cutting an onion. It's all part of the gassy circle of life and should be quietly celebrated.

Unless of course you are trapped inside a tin box with poor ventilation and sitting next to a tooter who is in dire need of some Bean-O. Then there is nothing funny about flatulence.

It's almost criminal when someone lets one rip up in the sky. I don't know what it is about being on an airplane and needing to toot a silent stinker into the seat cushion, but people fall victim to this every day. It's an air current of the variety no one wants around. Heck, depending on what you ate and the type of steel your guts are lined with it could bring a flight down. The tooting terrorist. Imagine having to live with that headline following you around for life.

Farting on airplanes ought to be illegal.



Because when your seat mate drops a silent stinker just inches from your nose causing your eyes to water and you must fight to remain in your seat instead clawing your way to fresh air the way your nose demands; it doesn't matter how natural passing gas is, nor does it make a difference how mature one thinks she is.

The ONLY thing that matters at that moment is surviving the scent.

And praying like mad no one thinks YOU are responsible for the back door breeze.

Let's just say it was a long flight home while the dude next to me practiced blowing his butt bugle all the way home.

Like I said, farting on an airplane ought to be criminal. Unless of course, it's you.