Today (June 1), Ben is the age that Julia was when she died...2 days shy of 5 months old.
On June 2, he will have surpassed her age.
I'm not sure how to think about this.
My boy is such a sweetheart...now. But it's been a rough road. I expected, after everything we went through with Julia, an easy baby. A baby that did exactly what the books and blogs and experts said a "normal" baby would do.
He has reminded me, instead, that Julia's road, though admittedly harder than most babies', was not as far removed from "normal" as I believed it was. The one thing I wanted most with Ben was a good breastfeeding relationship, because Julia and I couldn't have that...and neither could Ben and I. I've cried and whined and felt like a terrible mother because of it. I have felt like I'm failing him when I buy hypoallergenic formula because I'm not giving him "the best" (aka breastmilk).
Due to severe silent reflux that required trials of two different medications, a dairy intolerance that took quite awhile to pin down and caused intense eczema all over his body (causing him to scratch and bleed), milk that just came too fast for him, and a mouth that just wasn't formed to breastfeed easily, breastfeeding was not for us. We went to more specialists to figure out his eating aversion than I took Julia to. I was desperate to salvage our feeding relationship...and I couldn't.
Kind of like I couldn't save Julia.
I almost had a nervous breakdown. And I don't use that term hyperbolically.
I wasn't prepared for how difficult it would be to have an infant who wasn't doing what I deemed normal: who didn't sleep, who didn't eat enough, who wasn't smiling enough. Wasn't hitting the milestones I thought he should be hitting.
In hindsight, I can see it: Ben is a normal baby whose poor belly hurt All. The. Time. and made him so miserable. Now that we've got all of the factors under control, he is delightful and such an interested, interactive little fellow (though he still doesn't like to sleep). Things aren't perfect, but I'm emerging from the hormonal haze and feel more stable, most of the time.
Since he was born, I have wondered: when Ben is 5 months old, when he exceeds Julia's age, will I worry about him as much? Will I be more confident, more peaceful? Will I know with more serenity that he will not die? That he in all likelihood does not have a feeding disorder, a developmental disorder, a neurological disorder, cancer? Because I have diagnosed him with all of those.
Now that he is just about there, I do think that maybe there is something magical about that age for us. Five months. Julia never got to be that age. It's been a long time since Natalie was a baby, and I can't always remember what "typical" babies are supposed to do.
He is laughing. Laughing! And rolling over! He is so strong. She never got to do those things. When I think of my boy, and all that we have been through together already, I feel like I know him so well. I see his personality shine through more and more each day. But Julia...we never got that with her. Her heart defect prevented us from really seeing who she was, and we were just starting to hear the beginnings of a giggle from her. I mourn that all over again...not just that we lost her, but that we never really got to know her, not like we wanted to.
I have been so caught up in all of Ben's issues over the last five months that I would tell people, and myself, that I didn't have the time to think about her, to miss her. But the truth is, instead, that through my hurting heart for Ben and my anxiety about all he was experiencing, I was grieving her in a new way. I grieved her suffering and death and my own powerlessness amidst it, and I (sometimes wrongly) put those feelings into how I felt about Ben and what he was experiencing. It didn't matter that literally everyone I spoke to told me that Ben looked wonderful and was beautifully healthy...I could only see a very sick baby, almost like I had a mild case of Munchausen Syndrome by proxy.
Julia, you affected us. You mattered. We miss you. I wish your brother could know you.
Julia's Heart
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Saturday, February 28, 2015
Benjamin Crosby
I have been trying to put some thoughts together about how
I’m feeling in light of Ben’s birth regarding Julia’s death. The truth is, I haven’t had too many
thoughts about anything…I seem to be on autopilot sleep-deprived mommy brain
while adjusting to two children, for the second time.
Julia |
It is different this time. Julia was an “easy” baby who slept a lot and was content
doing almost anything; in the first week of his life, Ben cried more than Julia
ever did. But my heart ached for
Julia every moment of her life.
The heart surgery was supposed to give her life; sustaining her life for
5 months prior to it was a monumental task. My anxiety level was so high; how could I possibly fulfill the
heavy task of keeping her alive until the surgeon performed his miracle? But her story was, instead, that we
were able to know her for five months before she gained true life while in the
hospital under utterly competent care.
Ben |
Ben is definitely not an “easy” baby, but we are still
grateful. To us, he is so advanced:
he cries when he needs something, or just because he wants to; his bowels work
the way they are supposed to; he eats greedily; he is so very strong! It is much easier to wake multiple
times per night to feed a baby when he calls to you, rather than setting an
alarm to feed Julia, who thrashed and choked and simply wanted to sleep for 12
hours at night, despite it putting her health in peril.
Nat and Ben |
Sometimes I walk Ben around the house and point out Julia’s
pictures to him. I tear up,
wishing he could have known his second sister. And yet, there are times when her life seems like a
dream…did we really have her? Did
we really experience all of the emotions and difficulties that I remember? But I always think of Ben as my third
child…I have never been tempted to call him our second.
The women’s ministry pastor at our church pointed out
something beautiful to me: that Ben will always have a special connection to
Julia, because I carried him while grieving her. Perhaps in some way he will always have a special
sensitivity to others because of the tears and emotions I had for her during
his formation and development.
Natalie and Julia |
Ben’s life does not seem like a resolution to the “problem”
of our grief, as I wrote about previously, but he does seem to fill an absence
that I felt in our family. When I
was pregnant with him, it felt so odd to be a family of five, but to only have
one child present. Now, with the
clamor and mess that accompanies having two children in our home, I honestly
don’t have the time or emotional space to process Julia’s absence in the way
that I was able to in 2014.
Nat and Ben |
Ben |
I recently came across some words that Taylor wrote to me on
my birthday last year, written two months before Julia’s death, and I marvel at
how true those words were:
“This is my prayer for you this year: that you hold on. That you are granted deep peace in a
tumultuous time. That you are
shown mercy in big ways and in little ways, and that God continues to pull back
to curtains for you to see even more of his little mercies. That Natalie and Julia and I would be a
blessing to you as you are a blessing to us. That the Lord would lead you to quiet waters and restore
your soul. And that we would look
back on this time in our lives and realize that it was a crucible that
strengthened our marriage, our faith, and our love for each other.”
All of those prayers have been answered, but not in a way
that I ever would have foreseen or asked for. Julia will always be an important part of our family, and I’m
so grateful for the many people who have walked with us and remembered her
through this time.
Friday, December 12, 2014
One Year Later
(I wrote this on Dec. 11, even though I am publishing it on the 12th.)
It is very hard to believe that an entire year has passed
since Julia went to be with Jesus, that two years have passed since I learned I
was pregnant with her.
We of course have been thinking about this day
for months, and now it is here. I
find that yesterday, the 10th, was actually harder than today. Yesterday involved reliving the surgery
and her death, which, even though it technically happened on the 11th,
was at 1 or 2am, so it felt very much like the 10th was the day that she died.
I had prayed often that today would be a sunny
day. We have had a lot of short,
extremely gray days, with very little sunshine. This has so closely mirrored my mood, and I begged the Lord
for a beautiful day today, to remind us that Julia is fully satisfied in
heaven, and to help with our own sadness.
I must admit I was surprised when the Lord answered that request with a
cloudless blue sky this morning.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, Lord.
We had a providentially scheduled counseling
session today, which has been so beneficial for us as we have worked
through all of the difficulties associated with losing a child. Our counselor cried with us, sad that
we lost Julia, but joyful that through the trials, Taylor and I did not lose
each other: we have grown closer together, even through periods of weighty relational and situational stress.
Through October and most of November, my
overwhelming emotion about Julia was thankfulness for her life. I am just so grateful and in awe of how
much she taught us about Jesus and faith.
We have grown deeper and become more compassionate people because of
her. Her life and death in the Christmas season reminds me of another Baby who
came to the world to save us and teach us to do the will of God.
You see, many people in our lives have made
comparisons between our story and the Christmas story. For instance, I laughingly referred to
Julia’s conception as the “immaculate conception," for various reasons that
don’t need to be shared here! :) We, like Mary and
Joseph, were in desperate circumstances when Julia was conceived, and we, like
that couple, traveled to Ohio – my home “town”/state – in order for Julia to be
born.
Today, it occurred to me how like Joseph Taylor
probably is. Matthew 1:19 (ESV)
says, “Joseph, being a just man and unwilling to put her to shame, resolved to
divorce her quietly.” That is,
until an angel appeared to him in a dream telling him not to do so. I imagine Joseph quietly taking care of
things and possibly hiding the reason for the divorce from family and
friends. He was a good man who
wanted to take of Mary. That
temperament reminds me of Taylor.
Joseph trusted the angel in his dream, though,
and married Mary. He probably gave
up a lot – his reputation, his cultural status, and probably endured a lot of
mocking about his pregnant fiancé.
Maybe he was even ostracized in his synagogue. He likely gave up so much
more than we even know about in order to obey God and take care of his pregnant
wife-to-be.
Taylor has done that this year, and last
year. He has given up so much
professionally and personally in order to best serve his wife and child. He has done so humbly and, in some
cases, without a lot of explanation.
But, as I told our counselor today, in so doing, he saved my life. He rescued me from a deep pit of
despair and showed me deeply and clearly what the sacrificial love of Christ
truly means.
I am blessed not only to have had Julia, but to
have Natalie, our spunky toddler, baby boy on the way, and Taylor, my beloved husband.
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Good News
We are 25 weeks pregnant with a healthy baby boy, due
January 6!
People cheer, laugh delightedly, praise God. They say that it’s wonderful
we’re having a boy, instead of a girl, after…well, you know. Thoughtful, routine questions ensue, about if we
feel nervous about having a boy (answer: it takes a lot to make me feel nervous
these days), about his name (it’s a secret that even we don’t know the answer
to yet), about how Natalie feels (more on that later).
Whenever I share with people this truly wonderful news, I
feel quite a bit of trepidation. Something, or rather someone, is usually left
out of the conversation, despite the fact that she never leaves my mind. Rightfully or not, I often feel like
people think this new baby is a solution to our grief. This is why I’ve shied away from sharing
a pregnancy announcement on social media: I’m not quite sure how to fully
capture how I feel.
A sticker that will always be on our refrigerator |
At church a few weeks ago, we listened to a young pastor’s
wife tell of her family’s journey with Huntingon’s disease. She had lost three family members to
the disease, including her mother, and she was about to lose her sister. She told her own fear of the disease, and the resulting trepidation she had about having children or even marrying. She then related that when she became
brave enough to face genetic testing, she learned that she was not a carrier for
the gene and will never have the disease.
The auditorium erupted into cheers and applause. It actually made me viscerally
angry. Did they not just hear the
rest of what she’d said? Did they
not see her tears? Her sister is still about to die. Her journey
has been long and hard. She does
not know who else she might lose or when.
I looked at Taylor mournfully, with tears running down my face, while he
nodded and said, “They just don’t understand.”
I do understand that there are definite limits to how people can
interact in a setting like an auditorium. I found myself wishing that we as the body of Christ had
other ways to express feelings. I
thought of the applause of people with hearing loss, where they rotate their
hands in the air: that seemed more respectful. I thought of the word “Shalom,” and wished that churchgoers
could instead express “Peace be with you,” instead of clapping.
People want a happy ending, so we clap when we hear what
sounds like resolution. But the
only true and real happy ending is eternity with Jesus. Some of us who have lived more privileged
lives (myself included) have trouble with this idea. It seems so fatalistic. We [white Christians in the United States] have come to see
God’s provision in our lives as normal.
But ask a Christian in Iraq, or a refugee in Africa, or a person who is African-American in Ferguson where their hope lies. Things don’t seem to be getting too
much better on earth. When some of
God’s blessings - of health or job or love or babies - are absent, we question Him.
In actuality, it was our expectations
that were skewed: we forgot that God has given us everything we have, and each provision
– of which we have so many – is a
gift.
One of my favorite pictures of Julia in her first days of life |
Julia, and Bryer and Mercy and Archer and Ethan and Hope and
Cam and Ellis, are all BETTER off than any of us are. But we miss them so very deeply, and that keeps our focus
where it should be: on heaven and on Jesus, and not on the cares of this
world. Does it keep me perfectly
heavenly-minded? No. But Julia is my constant reminder to
turn my eyes to Him, even as I continue to figure out how to be in this world
when all I really want is see her again.
So how does one respond to someone who is grieving? (Grief, as far as I can tell, has no definite end.) Natalie’s recent innocent responses to
our pregnancy have been instructive. It wasn’t until after baby boy’s anatomically perfect 18-week
ultrasound that we felt we could talk with her about her new brother. We knew that Natalie would have
questions, so we wanted to wait until we could offer at least some hope. Nevertheless, we live with the question
of if we might lose him unexpectedly; it has happened to us before.
Natalie, who is three years old, is now very aware that she
is having a baby brother. Though
she seems to have in many ways forgotten about Julia (a fact for which I am
grateful, as I did not want her to experience anxiety about loss at such a
young age), she knows intellectually about her, because she sees her picture
and hears us talk about Julia.
There have now been four instances where, when her “new baby brother” is
brought up, Natalie has said, “I love babies! I’m excited to have a baby brother! And then we are going to get Julia
back!”
A few weeks before Julia died |
The first time that she said this, I went into the bathroom
and cried. I’m not sure where she
came up with this idea, but it is illustrative of how much toddlers’ minds work, even when they can't put it into words. My guess is she deduced that, just as she can’t see
baby brother, she also can’t see her sister, whom she knows is in heaven; so
they must be in the same place and will both be part of our lives eventually. We have talked each time about how
Julia is in heaven and we won’t get to see her until we go to heaven (which
triggered many painfully wonderful questions about how we get to heaven and
where is heaven and when we will go there and will it be via airplane), and
about how baby brother won’t replace Julia but will be a gift to us
nonetheless.
Natalie is so joyful about the idea that baby brother’s
arrival accompanies getting Julia back.
She isn’t afraid to remember Julia in the same breath that she rejoices
in the news that she is getting a brother. She is innocently unaware that talking about Julia could be
painful; she does not realize that the pain is something Taylor and I rejoice
in because we know that Julia’s life is not forgotten. And when Natalie doesn’t understand us,
she isn’t afraid to ask (A LOT) of questions about where Julia is, and Jesus,
and heaven. Each of these
sentiments from Natalie would be and are equally encouraging from friends and
loved ones.
We are so grateful for the kindness and joy that people
display when we inform them of our pregnancy. However, though it rarely seems to come in the same
conversation, we also can’t help but remember how very recently we were
pregnant with our second precious child.
Be joyful with us, but know that as much as our pregnancy seems like a
resolution to the desolation of grief, to us this good gift of a baby boy is
simply part of our story, which God continues to write.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
Mother's Day
Painted by Patrick Dominguez, our pastor in Raleigh |
– my great-aunt Eileen
This Mother’s Day is a strange one. I read beautiful messages on Facebook,
conveying heartfelt sentiments directed to women who are not mothers and want
to be, and to mothers who have lost children. I forget to put myself into that category, and then it hits
me: this sentiment is for me. The
person writing this may have thought specifically of me when typing these
words.
I have been to hell:
I
know the torment of waiting for a daughter whose life will not be typical, and
wondering what she will be like.
I
know the isolation of caring for her.
I
know the constant anxiety of monitoring each milliliter of milk that she has
taken, wondering, “Is it enough?”
I
know hope deferred, waiting for a lifesaving surgery.
I
know deep separation, handing over my precious baby to medical personnel,
watching her cry as she observed my tears.
I
know the agony of hearing hospital machines scream that something is wrong, and
no one can fix it.
I
know the utter “from dust to dust,” as I leave a hospital room splattered with
my daughter’s blood, and leaving her behind.
I
know an abyss of grief, wondering, “Why?”
I have been to heaven:
I knew the prayers of thousands that covered us during the time that we waited.
I knew the prayers of thousands that covered us during the time that we waited.
I
knew the meals and gifts that came to us as we were so isolated.
I
knew the doctors’ gentle encouragement that we were giving Julia exactly what
she needed.
I
knew an extra month of time with my little girl.
I
knew that she was in the best of hands at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, that
the hands that took her from me loved our little girl.
I
knew a deep, abiding sense of God’s presence with us as those machines screamed
and mocked us, and I felt His sorrow.
I
knew a supernatural reality as a man prayed with us over Julia as she passed in
to the arms of Jesus, and as we experienced the same sorrow as God Himself experienced when he watched the agony of His Son on the cross.
And
I know that the answers to the “whys” don’t exist for most of us who have
suffered: who have cancer, who have lost children, who starve, who have no
hope, who are hurt by an adulterous relationship, who are addicted, who are abused, who are mentally battered. Instead, the kingdom of heaven comes as we mourn together and become more
like Jesus through suffering.
I knew hundreds of encouraging notes and letters as we grieved.
I knew Julia's first giggle, just a few days before she died.
I knew the joy of watching Natalie love her baby sister.
I knew the perfect peace that surrounded little Julia, as she patiently waited.
I knew the way she loved me, with her eyes following me everywhere I went, though she couldn't vocalize or move in the way typical of infants.
I
know that Julia was rescued, that she was saved from this world and its
limitations.
I
know that Jesus has overcome this world, and His resurrection offers hope that
my Julia is safe and restored.
I
know that Julia Christine is His, with her name literally meaning “Young
follower of Christ,” and her first two initials reminding me of my savior,
Jesus Christ.
It’s not the heaven I wanted. No, I wanted heaven to be simple and happy and peaceful –
and full of the things that I desired.
But I was instead given an enlarged heart and soul, and a love for
people with Down Syndrome.
Gradually, I was given a deeper appreciation for life, though at times
it did not seem to be worth living.
I was thankful for a God who did not expect me to feel a certain way,
but embraced my sorrow as I sought Him.
Mother’s Day marks exactly 5 months since Julia died…and
also marks that Julia has now been with Jesus longer than she was in my
arms. This is a heavy moment, but
also in some ways lighter than I anticipated. I’ve realized that, for me, it’s not so much the
anniversaries that are hard, but that every day is hard…with each day getting a
little easier. Today is no
different than yesterday, or tomorrow…I’m just one step further along in my
grief journey.
And this little light?
She is doing beautifully.
She experienced deep confusion as she grappled with what it meant to lose
her sister. She worried about her
mom and dad, and these anxieties caused her to develop a stutter and lose some
of her hair. The stutter is gone,
and her hair is growing back now, and all of our spirits are growing back,
too. Natalie has forgotten some of
what has happened, and now it’s just a fact in her memory, detached from the
emotions: “Julia’s in heaven with Jesus.
Because He wanted her to be with Him. I want to go there, too!”
Amen, little one. But, not so fast! You're staying here with us, as we've reassured you many times.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
How Julia Died
Anxiety…such a pervasive difficulty in our human
experience. I myself have
experienced more anxiety in my life than most might admit to. I know what a panic attack feels like,
and I also know transcendent peace.
In fact, I believe I told several people that right before Julia’s surgery that I
felt a “peace that surpasses understanding” (Philippians 4:7). It certainly surpassed my own understanding.
But prior to Julia’s surgery, I could not have
claimed that. In the early months
of Julia’s life, I worried…a lot.
There was so much to think about.
Life had been open and free, and now it was constrained by what Julia
would need. It was scary to think
about all that we would need to do, about all of our dreams and goals that
would be changed and given up.
Probably one of my biggest regrets now is that I spent so much mental
time worrying about the future.
During Julia's life, we spent an unbelievable amount of energy worrying about
germs. We had to. We had hand sanitizer on every level of
the house, we gulped Airborne chewables like candy, and we dosed Natalie on
immunity-boosting supplements. We
enforced hand-washing rules; our hands were cracked and bleeding from washing
them so much. Julia never went anywhere,
other than an occasional outdoor outing when the weather was good. Natalie too was confined, as toddlers
are such little germ magnets. We
attempted to disguise our anxiety when the rare visitor did come to our house,
as we were so grateful for the support of friends and family. When I would return from a solo outing,
I would scrub my hands, sometimes multiple times.
And still, despite all of this effort and anxiety, we caught
mild colds that Julia in turn experienced. She tested positive for rhinovirus (a common cold) at both
scheduled surgery dates, but the second time, it was a mild enough version that
the doctors felt confident that it would not affect her during surgery.
So when she died, I immediately blamed myself. I had not kept her well; I had not
protected her enough. I had not
left the house, literally, during the two weeks before her surgery, but I still
felt that I should have known she was not well enough for the surgery. How could I have failed my daughter in
such an enormous way? I had been
charged with her care, and yet I had not held her back from surgery despite her
having a mild cold.
This was how I felt for about 6 weeks after Julia’s
death. The weight of this began to
subside slowly, but it was still there.
Encouragements from various friends helped me to know I wasn’t thinking
logically, but I was “stuck.” And,
having the upcoming autopsy meeting didn’t help.
I was afraid that the doctors would tell us, on February 4,
that the rhinovirus killed her. Or
that a nurse had made a mistake (which I had preemtively found ways to blame
myself for). As the meeting
neared, Taylor and I were a mess.
When we arrived at Nationwide Children’s Hospital that day, we were
frozen in the car for about 15 minutes.
We knew we should pray, so we gave that a feeble try: “Dear Lord,” I
prayed. “Please help me not to
throw up. And other things. Amen.” (I’m serious!
That’s all I could muster.)
Do you know what we learned at that meeting? NOTHING.
What would they have done differently? NOTHING.
Guess what her autopsy showed? NOTHING.
Our doctors have no idea why Julia died. They were nearly as upset as we were
about her death, because there is no rational explanation for why she
died.
What’s more – she was negative for rhinovirus. She did not have a cold at the time of
surgery. (My jaw hit the floor
when they told us this.)
Julia has taught us an extremely uncomfortable, difficult
truth. The truth is that even when
you do everything you can do, we are not in control. You can move to another state in order to get the best medical
care for your daughter, you can love strongly and deeply, you can advocate for
the best care you can get, you can quarantine your family, you can follow all
medical instructions perfectly – and you are still not in control.
I have often been counseled not to worry about things because the worst is so unlikely to happen. With great sadness, I share that that was not our outcome. Against all odds, the worst did occur…and yet, in an unlikely paradox, that has freed me from many other anxieties. My counsel to myself is now, "Don't worry. Terrible things happen in this life, but nothing can separate us from our loving God."
I have often been counseled not to worry about things because the worst is so unlikely to happen. With great sadness, I share that that was not our outcome. Against all odds, the worst did occur…and yet, in an unlikely paradox, that has freed me from many other anxieties. My counsel to myself is now, "Don't worry. Terrible things happen in this life, but nothing can separate us from our loving God."
Safe with her earthly father before her surgery. |
“God has taken what is misjudged by the world to prove
His great love. A life that would be thrown away by some, God kept close to
Himself, close to heaven because it is so precious to Him.”
And that, dear friends, is why Julia died.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Important Meetings
One of the many reasons that we moved to Columbus, OH, was because of the very large Down Syndrome association (DSACO: Down Syndrome Association of Central Ohio). Over 500 families belong to this group, and they have been such a huge source of support for us, both before and after Julia's birth and death.
One of the many
things DSACO did for us was to connect me with other "heart moms” whose children with DS had the same heart defect as Julia. These women were such a huge source of
support for me. I remember one woman's encouragement about heart surgery was that it was like a
second birth. “Except this time,”
she said, “your child will truly come alive.”
I did a lot of emailing with them, but I never met their children, due
to our quarantine, until after Julia died.
So, I made it a
recent priority to meet these two beautiful girls. First, Natalie and I played with M last week. M is 20 months old and is full of zest
for life. She is feisty and
active, and I can foresee that she will not be held back by low expectations! She is absolutely beautiful, with striking blue eyes and long blonde hair. I
hadn’t prepared myself for the emotions I would feel during this meeting, as it
was our first play date since Julia died. As soon as I met her, I sobbed.
So many people
have thoughtfully asked if it’s hard for me to see children who are the
same age as Julia, or if they shouldn’t talk about their children. I’ve told them that I did so much
grieving of the loss of “normal” when Julia was born that seeing typical
children actually doesn’t get to me all that much. But meeting M was a deeply beautiful, sorrowful encounter
for me. I grieve the loss of the joy we would have had with Julia as she climbed her
mountains.
Like any smart
toddler, M didn’t warm up to me right away. But eventually, I was able to coax her into my lap. She had gotten tired and thus allowed me to enjoy cuddling her.
“She likes hands,” her kindhearted mother told me. The next ten minutes held a beautiful
ritual that I won’t forget. M
traced my hands with her fingers, over and over. She threaded our fingers together; she touched my
wrists. She waved my hands in
space, observing closely and quietly what happened as she controlled my
movements. Were it not for Natalie
and I needing to get home for naptime, I would have continued that ritual for
much longer.
As I buckled
Natalie in to the car, I felt the need to explain to her why M’s mom and I did
not intervene more strongly when M pulled Natalie’s hair (Natalie was a champ
when this happened; I have had so many moments recently where my heart has just
burst with pride at Natalie). “Did
you notice that M’s eyes looked a little different than yours?” I began. Natalie looked at me, wondering where
this was going. “M has Down
Syndrome, and Julia had Down Syndrome, too. When people have Down Syndrome, it takes them a little
longer to learn things. So M
didn’t pull your hair to be mean…she is just still learning how to get along
with you.” Natalie mulled this
over. “Does that make sense?” I asked. Natalie responded, “I have blue eyes, and M has blue
eyes, and Julia has blue eyes. And
we all have Down Syndrome!”
WOW! Convicting moment for me. I had chosen to focus on what Natalie
may have noticed as being different about M, both with her eyes and her
speed of learning. What did
Natalie do? She focused on what
was the same, on the beauty of our shared human experience. I am learning so much from my toddler,
just as I learned from Julia.
A few days
later, Natalie and I met four-year-old G.
G had a crash in the hospital similar to what Julia experienced, but after
four weeks, she was able to go home.
Natalie and I loved playing with G, and it was so much fun to see G
taking care of her younger siblings. I admired her dappled auburn hair and her precious smile. She was just like any other child: she was so verbal and active. Unlike some other preschoolers :), she was great at sharing and was so
very sweet.
On this day, I
was ready for any emotions I might experience, and as such, my only tears came
when G’s mom related to me some of the hurtful comments people had made about
her daughter. Comments like, “We
want to offer you prenatal testing to make sure you don’t have ANOTHER child
with Down Syndrome.” If that had
been me, I think I truly may have slapped that medical provider. We wanted and loved Julia, and all that
comprised who she was.
Sisters playing together |
You see, Taylor
and I feel like we’ve been let in on a precious secret. I know the truth now, in a deeper way
than I ever did before: that these children, these people, are so much more
valuable and beautiful than how the world judges them. They know something that the rest of us
are not in touch with. I can’t put
it in to words, and so I hope to encourage you to get to know children
with special needs. I am not
saying they are perfect; I am just saying that these special people enable us
to know what is truly important in life.
The medical issues and daily concerns are so taxing, but who these
children are defies explanation until you get to know them.
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