Hear My Battle Cry

"You're such a retard."

"That's so retarded."

I've heard both of these sentences spoken within my earshot within this last week.

A family member spoke one of them.

Clearly the years of my campaigning on the internet to end the use of the R word have not translated well in my real world experience. It's easy to stand up on the internet and write essays on why you shouldn't use the R word, to place the internet on notice. But I'm finding it much more difficult to stand up against the endless waves of ignorance when I can see the whites of peoples eyes when they drop the R bomb in my lap.

It infuriates me that I have to keep educating on how dismissive and demeaning this word is, not just to my son, and to me but to everyone who loves a person who may be labeled with the dreaded R word.

It breaks my heart when my niece comes up to me and excitedly announces she has a joke she wants to tell me and the punch line is about being a retard.

My extended family drops the R word. My siblings have used the R word. They love the Jumbster. I can see it in their faces when they hold him, it reflects with every careful cuddle they share with him, every loving kiss they drop on his forehead.

But the reality of raising Jumby and raising Jumbster's siblings doesn't impact them immediately, unless I thrust him in their laps and try and cajole them into changing his diaper. Their reality is far different than mine. Jumby is just another family member, one they accept as their own but one they don't really understand.

It doesn't occur to my family members that every day I shoulder the weight of what it really means to parent a child with such extreme disabilities. They understand he has to be tube fed, and chauffeured around in a wheelchair and diapered. They know he can't speak, or walk or dress himself.

But the nuances of his life and what it means to live with a plethora of disabilities doesn't affect them. They don't have to worry about the endless medical appointments, they don't struggle daily to keep him limber, and they don't worry about breaking his bones every time he needs to be dressed. They don't feel the weight of a thousand boulders resting on their chests thinking about his medical stability and worrying that this moment may be his last.

Nor should they have to. Boo and I adopted Jumby, no one else. They shouldn't worry about whether Jumby has a thousand tomorrows or just one. They don't have to lose sleep about the quality of Jumby's daily life, or worry about what his future holds. That's what Boo and I signed up for. It's our problem to solve about Jumby's long-term life goals. To agonize over whether he should be institutionalized or not in the future. The only real responsibility Jumby's extended family has is to ensure his safety in their presence, to love him and to make him know he is loved.

So when they drop the R word, they don't know they just shot a hundred arrows of hurt into my heart.

The R word continues to slip out. And I continue to stand up, both in real life and in the online world to say that is not okay. That is my son you are talking about. That little retard you just made a joke about, that could be my child.

It still affects Fric and Frac. It breaks their heart and chaps their arses when it is a school friend who pollutes their ears with this word.

We are all standing on the shores of ignorance and discrimination, fighting for the world to see the boy we love and to cease the unending use of such a hurtful world.

It's tiring. It breaks my heart. And I stand before you to shamefully admit that more than once I've heard that word used by someone I know, or like or even love, in real life and in the cyber world and have done nothing. Said nothing. I remained silent; because it was easier, because I'm tired of pointing out that every time you unthinkingly use that word you are minimizing the struggles of disabled people and their families. You are demeaning, mocking and disrespecting a society of people who have been forced to endure more hardship and struggles than most, simply by nature of their birth.

It's exhausting. And being the primary, often single caretaker of two teens and a fragile, overgrown, forever infant already exhausts me..

But that doesn't mean this isn't a battle that isn't worth fighting, just because I'm often too overwhelmed to pick up the armor, to busy plucking out the arrows of your hurt from my heart. My children deserve to live in a world free from this contagious ignorance.

So today, I'm once more standing up before you, asking everyone to think before they speak. And I'm thanking people like Ellen Seidman who has stood beside me, for her own family, her own child and wrote a powerful post on what happens if you ask people to stop using the R word.

It's not easy standing up for what you believe in when the cacophony of the world threatens to drown out your voice. When the internet says you have no dog in this fight simply because of the title of your blog. When strangers blatantly mock you and your family and when the world wants to simply stick their fingers in their ears and pretend they can't hear you.

I may not change your mind; you may still use the R word. But I will continue picking up my shield to fight this battle. Even when it seems exhausting and futile to do so.

Jumby deserves it. And so do you, even if you don't know it.

Fric is getting ready for battle. I'm right beside her.


Where I belong.

Seeking Sunlight

Jumby is growing. Which, for a child, isn't particularly surprising. But as a kid who faces an uphill battle and who was dangerously underweight when we brought him home, is a cause for celebration around these parts. Every ounce he packs onto his teeny little frame means it's one ounce less I can see his ribs sticking out of his body.


My boy? He's a bony little thing.


But with every drop of weight he adds to his body, I worry.


The week before we adopted Jumbster was the week I damaged my back unexpectedly. We brought him home and within days I was broken, flat on my back for the better part of two months, unable to move. It wasn't the best way to welcome our fourth child into our family and since that time I've had back surgery and a very long road to recovery.


My back isn't what it used to be. While for the most part I'm no longer hobbled with constant pain, my back is damaged enough that I can barely bend to put my socks on without groaning in misery. Lifting Jumby means forethought and caution and more often than not it means wincing in pain.


There is no spontaneous sweeping my boy into my arms and swinging him around with joy. There are few moments of me holding him in my arms and dancing along with some music as he bounces in my arms.


There is a whole bunch of carefully assisted lifts and holding him in my arms as my back is carefully supported and praying to God the kid doesn't bounce my spine out of my skin. My kid, God bless his cotton socks, seems to think I'm his own personal trampoline.


I'm managing for now, what with the Jumbster being only 35 pounds or so. I'm managing with my teenaged kids doing most of the heavy lifting of him as often as possible, picking him up and passing him to me so that I don't have to bend and stand up with him.


But I'm acutely aware there will be a day when Jumby weighs too much for anyone to simply bend over and pick him up. There will be a day, not far off into my future when Fric and Frac have stretched their wings and flown the coup to find their own freedom, leaving the Jumbster and I alone to our own devices.


And I'm worried.


I'm worried I won't be able to lift his wheelchair into the back of our vehicle. I am worried I won't be able to pick him up to diaper him, clothe him, to love him.


I'm worried there will come a moment when he simply exceeds my limits. Every hard fought ounce my kid puts on brings us one ounce closer to that moment and I'm scared.


I'm scared his health will take a sudden turn for the worse. A seizure will take what gains he has made away from us all. An infection will set in that he won't be able to bounce back from. I'm worried he will simply stop, the way my Bug stopped. No warning, no explanations. Just another long walk out of a hospital holding the remains of what was once my life.


The fear, it seeps in and steals my breath and I struggle to find air to get through it.


I worry about his schooling and how utterly unprepared our school board is to handle a child with such complex needs as the Jumbster's.


I worry about his adulthood and wonder what that means for Jumby. What will he do if I'm not here to help him? Visions of him being stuck in a nursing home, in a chair or a bed all day bounce in my head. My kid would die if he couldn't explore his world. He seeks the sun like a cat, follows it all day long, chasing rainbows and sunrays.


I've never seen a grown man slither around on a floor before, would he be allowed?


Fear taunts me and creeps in unexpectedly. It finds the chink in my armor and needles its way into the core of my being. It haunts me and tries to rob me of the very joy that is being Jumby's mother.


Every day I smile through the mist of fear that swirls around my feet, trying to kick it loose, shake it free.


I'm scared I won't be able to be the parent my son deserves. I won't be able to give him the life he has earned. I'm scared he won't know I love him as much as I have ever loved anybody else before; that he is so very much my son even if we don't share the same DNA.


I am scared he doesn't know I'm his mother. That he loves me only as much as he has loved every other stranger that came before me.


I'm scared I love this kid so damn much if anything ever happens to him I wouldn't be able to survive it.


So I'm just here, whispering truths through this fog of fear, waiting for the sunlight to peek through once more and carry with it the joy that comes from loving Jumby.


Carry on.


Joy.

Fighting The Silence

When I was 11 I was kicked square in the face by a horse. As fate would have it, that horse probably knocked some sense into me but that's neither here nor there.

The important part of this story is what happened after I flew twenty feet through the air and landed in a hay pile, stood up dizzily and noted the ground by my feet was slowly turning red from the blood pouring out my face and then found myself stuffed into a vehicle to be raced to a small town hospital's emergency room all the while being told they may have to amputate my face by my also 11-year-old best friend while I couldn't even remember what had happened to me.

Luckily for me, modern medicine saved my face and no amputations were needed. Also luckily for me, 11-year-old children aren't doctors for a reason.

It is what happened to me after this horse decided to almost kill me and rearrange my facial features with her hoof that has stuck with my all my life. I called my daddy after the accident, to let him know I survived the brutal attack of a vicious she-beast from Hell and my dad (irritatingly) asked me why I walked behind the horse in the first place, especially since I knew better.

My reply to him was less than stellar and I mumbled something through my swollen face about not remembering, all the while trying to swallow my irritation with his less than sympathetic response.

He stayed silent for a moment and then said, "Well, I guess you'll remember from now on, won't you. You'd better be sure to hop back up on that horse," and I muttered an indignant, "fine," while silently vowing to never go near a four-legged animal bigger and smarter than me ever again.

Except I did. I got back on the horse. Not that horse, because she was a vicious she-beast sent from Satan himself to destroy me, but a horse nonetheless.  I've also never walked behind a large, unknown animal again. She-beast or not, I learned very quickly that horses are a lot like humans: they tend to be skittish around strangers.

At the time, I was less than thrilled with my father's seeming lack of compassion for my predicament. In my melodramatic mind (that had recently been rattled around my skull quite nicely) I had assumed my father would take great pity on my pain, offer to slay the she-beast and whisk me off to recuperate while holding my hand tenderly and vowing to never let another creature harm me again.

AS ANY GOOD PARENT SHOULD HAVE.

(Sorry. My 11-year-old brain suddenly reemerged. I'm left with an odd affection for Skittles and a yen to listen to Justin Bieber. Dammit.)

As an adult, twenty odd years later, I understand what my father was trying to teach me. Actions have consequences and to never give up. Blah, blah, blah.  My life, it's just waiting to be made into an after school special.

Blogging lately has been my horse. It's the she-beast sent from Satan to torment me on a regular basis. There has been a giant monkey on my back for the better part of a year and I cannot shake it, nor am I allowed to write about it. And this invisible monkey has chained up my creativity and sucked the life out of me like one of Sookie's vampire boyfriends.

I can't tell you how many times I have looked at my blank computer screen and been tempted to shut the laptop and walk away from this part of my life permanently.

But then the words of my father start ringing in my ears once again, "You'd better be sure to hop back up on that horse," and I remember, I'm not a quitter.

So I'm climbing back into this saddle again, a little bruised from this past year, my words swollen and tattered, but I'm hanging on, vowing to find a way to let the joy back into my writing while ignoring the demons screaming in my ear.

It may be a rough ride for a bit but my daddy taught me how to hang on tight and embrace the bumps.

Thank you to everyone who has held on tight alongside me.