Dear Internet: I'm Placing You on Notice

With Jumby's arrival I am once again the parent to a disabled child. In the three years since I've been required to tube feed or face a plethora of medical professionals, there has been one aspect of raising a disabled child I hadn't missed at all.

The stigma that is attached to a disability, to me as a parent of a handicapped child and to my child for being different.

I had forgotten how every time I venture out in public with my child we become the traveling circus, the free freak show for people to pointedly ignore or worse yet cast upon us their stares filled with pity and sorrow.

I didn't have a choice when Bug was born. Whether I liked it or not, I was initiated into this odd club of parents, where all the members had different stories but one common link. They all had children who the world looked upon as different. They all had to face the looks of sorrow or pity whenever they told the world at large why their child wasn't "normal."

I didn't want to be the parent to a different kid, dammit. I wanted to be the mother of the blonde haired, blue eyed baby boy I saw beneath the mask of his disabilities. I couldn't understand why the world never saw him the way I did: As a remarkable little human being who was just like the rest of us underneath his broken body and mucked up DNA sequences.

Then I learned the secret most people never have the opportunity to discover. The sheer joy involved in having a disabled child in your life.

This time around the parental merry-go-round, I had a choice. I actively chose to bring home a disabled child of my own. I made a choice to deal with every aspect of parenting a special needs child. I signed myself up for the freak show that follows us wherever we go.

I don't regret it for one second. Our family, our lives are infinitely better with Jumby in it.

But there is a difference with Jumby that is palpably noticeable. A shift in perception that wasn't visible to our family when we were blessed with Bug's life. My children were three years younger and a world less mature while Bug breathed. There were things about living with a disabled brother they never noticed because they were too young to remember life without him before he was born.

But death and puberty and time has swirled around them like the perfect storm and given them a clarity of life they once lacked. They see the difference between their bodies and Jumby's tight twisted little body. They see how difficult it is for Jumby to get through the day as they run and jump and play and take their own healthy bodies for granted.

Even more so, they are keenly aware of people's reactions to Jumby and to us when we take him out in public. It goes beyond the brown hair and his doey brown eyes. Beyond his cleft chin and the different noses on their faces. They are bonded with Jumby, united by the love the three of them share for one another and they don't understand why people can't see past his wheel chair or the way he holds his head to the side to see better, to see the spirit of the boy they so clearly see.

They have witnessed the social disparity between them and it's left them cold.

It is a lesson I knew they'd learn but one I wish I could shield them from.

I can't shield my children from this. Unless I choose to live in a bubble but let's face it, it's no fun to flash my boobs if no one is watching.

But I can stand up and tell the world to grow up.

To open their eyes and see past their own feelings and issues and take responsibility for their actions and the words they so carelessly toss around.

I can teach my children and the children around me that it is not cool to use the word 'retard' to make fun of someone or hammer a point home.

I can teach my children and the children around me that it is okay to touch a disabled person, they aren't contagious or filled with cooties. (Unless they are homeless and living under a bridge and even then they just need a good de-lousing.)

But can I teach the world around me? The adults?

I don't know, but I do know that when I'm on twitter I don't need to innocently click a link and have this image staring back at me:



Surely there is a better way to prove the point you are trying to make than to disparage a community of already challenged people. And don't tell me you can because you have disabled children yourself. That doesn't give you a free pass to be ignorant.

How are you protecting and advocating for your family if you are perpetuating this stereotype?

This isn't cool people. This is so beyond cool my head hurts.

Nor do I need to open up my email and find this in my inbox:



Seriously. Have you met me? Do you know I gave birth to that child you just made fun of? That I just adopted another who would easily become a caricature in someone else's life if I gave them the opportunity?

I don't need to read a joke about how it's National Retarded Day and guess what? I'm it.

Seriously.

That is my family you are making fun of. It's my sons, my niece, my father-in-law and my friend's children.

And with a small twist of fate, it could be yours, the same way it became mine.

I can't change the world or most people in it. The best I can do is set an example for my children and for those around me and educate them to the value a disabled child or adult can bring to a community and to society in general.

You may not agree with me and that's cool.

It takes all kinds of people to make this world the wonderfully interesting place it is. But if you are going to disparage a community of people who had the misfortune to have more health or mental problems than you can shake a stick at, you had better be prepared for me to bite back hard.

I owe it to Bug, to Jumby, to that man who shuffles his gait down the street because his feet are badly clubbed.

But mostly, I owe it to myself. There is a difference, a line, between what is funny and what is pathetic and rude. I see the difference every time I look in my son's eyes and see his smile illuminate brighter than a 100 watt bulb.

What I'm having a hard time with is trying to explain to my children why everyone else can't see it as well.

Don't make this harder for us, for me, for Jumby.

Or next time I won't play so nice.

Jumby

After careful consideration and deliberate ruminations, a name has been bestowed upon the newest little Redneck.

Thank you to everyone who participated and suggested a name. In the end, I completely disregarded and totally ignored each and every one of your suggestions because I am thoughtless thoughtful like that.

Regardless, I am entirely grateful for every suggestion sent my way. Really. Cross my heart.

The Kid, from this moment on, will be forever blogged as Jumby.


Jumby has been born.



Jumby, there will never be a moment in time where we aren't overwhelmed with gratitude and love for having found you.

You could have been adopted into a classier home, one that doesn't worship the makers of ductape or know the joy of streaking through the woods buck naked, but I guarantee you, no other home in the world could love you as much as we do.

Eight Years With Some Odds and Ends

It was my son, Shalebug's eighth birthday yesterday. 

Eight. He would have been eight years old. This means in some alternate reality I'm the mother to a buck-toothed eight year old instead of the mom to a forever almost five-year-old angel boy. Holy mind trip Batman. I can't wrap my head around the fact my baby would have been eight years old.



You know what this means?

It means it has been eight years since I was over two hundred and fifty pounds. Eight years since I was so damn large I couldn't drive because I had to push the seat so far back to make room for my ginormous pregnant belly that my legs weren't long enough to reach the petals.

Eight years since taking the kids to McDonalds (don't judge me peoples) and not being able to fit my fat-tastic body into the booth my kids wanted to sit at. And I tried, y'all. I attempted to wedge my body between the table and the back of the chair and basically found myself stuck.

Picture a pack of pimply teenaged employees gathered around my pregnant body as they tried to unwedge me by smearing ketchup around my belly and the table. Hundreds of opened ketchup packets littered the floor as they yanked and pulled my way to freedom. Meanwhile my demon spawn merrily munched on their Happy Meals and all the other McPatrons of the Golden Arches laughed at the wedged pregnant whale and wandered over to snap pictures on their cell phones to show all their friends and post on the Internet.

Good times.

It's been eight years since I gave birth to my last child. Eight years since it took my obstetrician yanking on the suction cap attached to my baby's head, my husband yanking on the obstetrician and a nurse yanking on my husband in an effort to free Bug from the locked jaws of my uterus.

When the choochoo train of tugging proved effortless the doctor brought out the ole rubber mallet and cracked my pelvic bones like an egg to provide Bug with the wiggle room he needed to claw his way out to sweet freedom.

I'd have preferred they tried the ole ketchup trick but apparently I didn't have much say in the matter.

It's been eight years since I had to relearn how to walk like a two legged human and not waddle like a two-legged duck.

Heck, it's been eight years since I've had any stitches in my cooter. 

Eight years. Damn. 

Nothing makes a parent feel the aches in their bones and see the lines on their faces quicker than watching their children grow up.

Of course, I can't watch ShaleBug grow up but that doesn't diminish the fact that EIGHT years ago I was threatening to rip the nuts off my husband as I panted my way through childbirth and then crying tears of sweet relief thanks and love over the birth of my beautiful boy.

Happy Eighth Birthday Bug. We miss you. Well, my cooter doesn't but all the rest of myself does.



In other news, I am one of the ten finalists for Best Canadian Blog in the 2008 Weblog Awards. Thanks to everyone who voted to make sure I'd be in the top ten. How much will I have to prostitute myself to get you all to wander over and vote? I'm not proud peoples and I have no shame. Keep that in mind. Wink.

Make sure you check out all the other categories because there are some fantastic blogs nominated.

The 2008 Weblog Awards



If you are looking for something funny to get you through your day and thinking about angel boys and my broken hoo-ha isn't working for you, try heading over to Cynical Dad's blog where he's gathered some of the best bloggers out there to hack my reputation into tiny little pieces. That's right, a Redneck Roast. Where the good times and public carving of Tanis runs all week.

You know what they say, they who laugh last has the last laugh or some such drivel. I'm sharpening my knives in preparation for my rebuttal. 

I don't play nice either.

And for those of you who would like the opportunity to roast me in real life, here's your chance. I'm not only attending Blissdom, but I'm speaking at it. Someone thought it would be a good idea to let the lady with the assless chaps and cheeto dust on her face have a microphone.

Silly peoples.

im_speakingtext Badges



 

I can't wait. Let the public humiliation good times roll. 

Like I said, I have no shame.