Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Growing up With Jared: Flying High...walking proud

Growing up With Jared: Flying High...walking proud: 3 nights a week, I pick Jared up from his pizza shop job before heading home for our family dinner. While I used to feel a bit put out that...

Growing up With Jared: Flying High...walking proud

Growing up With Jared: Flying High...walking proud: 3 nights a week, I pick Jared up from his pizza shop job before heading home for our family dinner. While I used to feel a bit put out that...

Flying High...walking proud

3 nights a week, I pick Jared up from his pizza shop job before heading home for our family dinner. While I used to feel a bit put out that I had to go get him in the middle of making dinner, lately I've come to like that few minutes. I go early,park where I can see the entrance, and wait for Jared to come out. And when he comes out, he does the same thing every time and I watch, just for a few seconds. I watch as he navigates his world, assesses his situation, scans the lot looking for me. My hand hovers above the horn, because as soon as I beep, he will look left then right before striding out into the parking lot. I hesitate because I pretend, just for a moment that he is on his own, that he is like the scads of young men and women who go to work, get that  paycheck, sighing with relief when the clock says it's time to go. When he doesn't see me, he reaches for his phone. I beep, because I want him to know I'm there. He sees me, hikes his backpack up onto his shoulder and walks out to my car. But he doesn't just walk; he sort of dances, some might call it a strut, yes a strut, definitely. As our eyes meet, I smile because I'm not quite ready for him to be on his own, but I'll get there. It will happen, sooner rather than later. The nice thing is, it will happen, and then I will fondly remember our pre-dinner rides back to the house, heads bopping in unison to whatever song comes from the radio.  He still needs me now, but each day brings him closer to that time when he will walk out of work, and head home on his own.
Happy Down Syndrome Awareness Month to all of you...

Saturday, September 13, 2014

College Dreams

We dropped Jared's application in the mail today. He wants to go to college,and I have promised him I will do whatever I can to get him there. So, that's it....application in. Now we wait for a scholarship. You see, Medicaid won't pay for it because the program is not inclusive; isn't that ironic? Because Otsego Academy is a college for individuals with disabilities only and not open to the public, medicaid won't help Jared out. It's silly, don't you think? So we will wait for that chance, that chance for a scholarship that will make Jared's dream a reality. He just wants to live in a dorm, hang out with friends, and learn how to be even more independent than he already is. And if he does this around other people like him, I don't think that's bad at all. I think he will have fun. So, when the envelope was sealed and sent today, I felt some hope. Jared and I are going to hold onto that hope for a bit and see what happens. That must be what it feels like to have options, to do things even if others say it can't be done.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Growing up With Jared: Brothers Still...

Growing up With Jared: Brothers Still...: They argue; they fight; they say they will NEVER hang out when they are older. They wonder why Jared is so grumpy sometimes; their frustrat...

Brothers Still...

They argue; they fight; they say they will NEVER hang out when they are older. They wonder why Jared is so grumpy sometimes; their frustration displays itself in the form of teasing, arguing, and tears. They ask when he is going to move out. The older one never says it, but I think he wonders who will "parent" Jared when I'm gone. He's nervous about that one, I know. That too, keeps me awake at night. I want to assure him that I am doing everything I can to make sure that Jared will be taken care of and that they will just have to love him.  And they do; love him I mean. Because given all that they say, yesterday, when I followed the sounds of  cheering and clapping and yells of encouragement, I found them...one holding Jared tightly and saying "peddle! peddle! peddle!" The other jumping up and down screaming, "You can do it! You can do it!" as Jared, flanked by his two brothers, with a huge smile on his face, peddled a much too small bike up and down the driveway. And each time, when he fell, they were there.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Growing up With Jared: I've been thinking about Blanche, one of the tragi...

Growing up With Jared: I've been thinking about Blanche, one of the tragi...: I've been thinking about Blanche, one of the tragic characters in Williams' Streetcar Named Desire , a lot lately as Jared continue...
I've been thinking about Blanche, one of the tragic characters in Williams' Streetcar Named Desire, a lot lately as Jared continues to embark on this journey towards adulthood. You see, Blanche, on a few occasions throughout the play, states in that simpering voice of hers, "I always depend on the kindness of strangers". I think about this as Jared and we continue to craft for him a life that can exist without the daily management of us, his parents. Because, much as I would like to believe I will grace this earth forever, this is not true, and Jared needs to be in a world where he can depend on the kindness of strangers. I lack trust. We parents of kids with Down Syndrome have had a lot of disappointments and set backs raising these kids, and it makes us a little pessimistic; ok, it makes ME a little pessimistic. Why am I always surprised when people are nice to Jared? I seem to be always waiting for the proverbial second shoe to drop. So when things work out, and the world is kind, it still catches me by surprise.  Take the people at Great Northern Pizza. I think they really want Jared to succeed! They have told him he is one of the managers now. And I can't think they are getting something out of this other than a young man who will work harder for them than any other employee there. Jared recently told me that, "Great Northern Pizza is my life! I love EVERY day that I work there!" I'm so happy for him when he says that. The kindness of strangers, now turned bosses, now turned friends, still surprises me every day. So, I think over the next few posts, I will be examining this kindness, because let's be real here; it HAS to exist, doesn't it? Because, right now, I'm holding on to it, tenuously, depending on it to be there for my son even when I can't some day.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Mother Guilt

Why is it that, when we have a child with special needs, we feel that we have to experience everything with them as they grow up? Is it like that for our typical kids? I think about that a lot lately, because Jared is growing up and finding his own interests and activities; he is involved with his new world, his grown up world with friends I don't know and a schedule I don't follow. Often, he goes to events that I used to frequent, probably because he needed me there to support him, and probably because I needed to be around other parents like me. So, now, he goes alone; he meets his friends wherever he is going. And I do things that don't include him.  That has to be ok, right? Then why the guilt? Is it because we have been such an integral part of our children's lives since the day they were born, holding our breath as they navigated every step in their new world? Apologizing to society with words or a look when they did something that didn't quite fit the norm? Helicopter parents, not often by choice, but by necessity. When do we stop hovering and say to our adult child, "It is ok to go now. You don't have to look back at me over your shoulder to read my face in order to gauge my reaction. It is ok for you to not tell me everything. Frankly, I don't want to know everything. I want you to have safe secrets, young adult secrets that don't require my input"? You moms and dads out there with kids like Jared know that look. Our sons and daughters obtain so many social cues from our faces, don't you think? I look forward to the day that Jared too looks forward, rather than back at me and makes the right choices for himself, and goes through life his self-appointed master.  Right now, I will continue to gently nudge him; however,  I will give myself permission to let Jared do things without me having to be there, without having to organize and protect every last move that he makes. I will do right by him if I do that, don't you think?

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Growing up With Jared: 21 years 21 years...

Growing up With Jared: 21 years 21 years...: On the night Jared was born, the book, the pregnancy bible said, "be sure to pack a snack for your birth partner. And so, when labor b...

21 years 21 years...

On the night Jared was born, the book, the pregnancy bible said, "be sure to pack a snack for your birth partner. And so, when labor began in the wee hours of March 7th 1993, I packed carrots and a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on whole wheat bread for Jared's father to eat during labor and delivery. I packed peanut butter when I should have packed hope....and perserverance...and unconditional love....and humor; I would need a lot of that...and flexibility; I would need even more of that. And while I'm at it, that book would have been more aptly titled: "What to Expect When What You Expect Does NOT Happen". That would have been a good book I think. That might have prepared me for the next 21 years, years that began with a hearty cry from my infant, whom doctors would soon tell me was different than other babies. An infant that might not talk right away, walk right away, perhaps might not be the most independent of guys.... This was a time when the first books I pulled from the library used words like Mongoloid and Mental Retardation. And from these, I was supposed to learn? And so, the next 21 years commenced...
 If I had to classify these years, it might look something like this:
 Momentous-Jared surviving two heart surgeries, meningitis, and pneumonia;  Possible-Jared dancing the night away at the Gigi's Playhouse Gala the other night. Momentous-Jared talking clearly and being able to tell me what he needs or wants; Possible-Jared giving a speech about shredding the R-word to an entire high school student body in a couple of weeks-twice! Momentous-Jared learning to walk and dress himself; Possible- a paying job at the pizza shop 3 days a week and courses at the local college... Momentous-Jared telling me, his mom,  that he loves me; Possible-Jared telling his girlfriend that he loves her and wants to go to the prom with her and maybe marry her some day... Momentous- Jared hearing me sing to him after the doctor said he may lose all of his hearing when he was sick; Possible-Jared recording his first single where he sings of the love of that girl... Momentous-Jared learning that letters make words and words make sentences; Possible-Jared being the author of his own blog, one he created for parents of kids like him, he tells me. Momentous-Jared holding his fork and feeding himself for the first time; Possible- Jared walking to the car tonight after work with a bottle of hard cider from a co-worker that he has been charged to enjoy tomorrow, on his 21st birthday.
So, you see, when what you are expecting to happen doesn't really happen as you thought it would, you still have those momentous occasions, but more importantly, you find out that so much is possible, that so much more than you ever thought, is possible.
Happy Birthday to my son, my boy who just came up behind me and gave me a most precious gift, a kiss on my cheek, a cheek that is 21 years older and that has been softened by tears, by laughter, and by time...