Thankful for
First Day: He was so proud to have his pic taken with the backpack A passed down. |
...And determined to walk with it all the way out to the car. |
Little-Big Boy |
After working for months trying to get K to start saying "Mama" again (it was his first word at 1 year, but he dropped it from his vocabulary months ago when he started adding more words), we have reached a victory of sorts. I am sometimes Mom or Mama, but for a while I was mostly "Bob!" From another room of the house, I hear "Bob! Bob!" I am supposed to come running. At the kitchen counter I feel a tug on my jeans, "Bob!" On a good day, it's endearing, a funny story to share with friends. On a long day, it grates.
My sister Kait got a doll for Christmas one year, some kind that were all the rage with the five and under set. He has a crazy shock of blonde, curly hair akin to a miniature toupee or a small head of cauliflower. He has a particularly large bottom. He is not cute. Kait christened him "Bob Junor," for reasons unclear. We laugh about that doll to this day, since now my kids like to play with him. At holidays, out come the Bob Junor jokes, the ones only we think are funny. "Bob Junor, Met Life," someone extends Bob's dirty-pudgy hand out to me. (The name made someone think of an insurance salesman at one point.) The line, both well-worn and nonsensical, still curls us up into fits of laughter. So every time K calls me "Bob" in his little man voice, all I can think of is poor, naked, big-bottomed Bob Junor with the cauliflower hair--insurance salesman extraordinaire. That's me. At your service. Then I read a few weeks ago that "children with Down syndrome often call Mom Bob, having difficulty with 'm'" (Estreich 126). Huh. At least I'm not alone.
Why do we have to work so hard for a word we had and lost? One reason might be a mild but persistent hearing loss--we will know more in April after K has an extensive hearing test. But hearing aids may be on the horizon.
At a Charity breakfast our friends put on a couple of weekends ago, I try to look useful as a volunteer but I'm really not that busy. When "not that busy" I tend to people watch. I check out the family with the middle school boy who has Down syndrome. I often watch families with older children with an intensity bordering on scrutiny. I am taking notes. What will twelve years old be like? Eight? Six? Heck, what will next week be like? The boy is small of stature. He eats quietly in his chair and from the look on his face, I know he is relishing every bite. He is also without vocal communication. But he can talk! I see him sign with his mother. And I see how his family all dote on him. I also see a mischevious twinkle in his spirit that our K shares, as he sidles up to me looking for more juice. I heard/saw his parents tell him "No more."
He looks up at me, head tilted to one side. He signs "apple," then "juice." He's grinning at me like I won't be able to understand him--an excuse to take more? "The juice keeper didn't know, Mom!" I look at him and grin back, "No," I sign. "All done!"
He smiles congenially as if I've told him to please help himself and side steps back to his dad to try to work one over on him. I love the exchange, this boy whose eyes are the same almonds as my K. And I am reminded. There is no set model for ages and stages for children with special needs any more than there is for typically developing children. Every child is unique. My notes yield not a category defined but an appreciation for a young boy I just met and very much like.
Snow Day! |
Lately, we love how she assumes a big sister role when E is away at school, playing with and tending to her little K-love. She's sensitive to him emotionally in the way that E is sensitive to his physical wants and needs. It's very sweet to see her enjoying him and even competing with him at times. It adds a new, dynamic nature to their relationship that she can be both older sister and equal playmate depending on circumstances. At home she enjoys drawing, reading, and playing babies. Hot on her reading list lately are Robert Munsch books. She always has loved a silly story.
Backyard sledding |
Complementing each other to get the job done. |
Mark and I are holding steady in the exhausting whirl three children creates, but we're also asking ourselves some important questions about the future. "Where do we want to go, if anywhere, from here?" Not just in the physical sense, but in the big picture sense. Questions about education, career, and home have come up. Questions about K's future frequently come up out of necessity; when you parent a child with special needs, there is an urgency to both the current moment and the one ten paces ahead of you. I don't quite know how to explain it, but it's different than with the girls. So there are questions. These moments usually get me excited. I like the prospect of change. But Mark, who works within a different set of confines than I do (namely the confines of being the primary bread-winner for now) does not find as much appeal in the process of making big decisions. The biggest decision we make may be to stay right where we are. In the meantime, we continue to think about future needs and wants. There is much to be thankful for in this, since where we are right now is a good place to be and where we see ourselves going holds promise, too.
Bodie, our resident scoundrel :) |
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