As the old adage says, 'Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me'. That may be true when you are four, but the older you get the more you'd prefer someone to throw a stick at you than say what they are going to say.
In my job as a one-to-one special needs assistant to very young children with Down's Syndrome, I see their parents going through what I have been through over the years and while I can do nothing to prevent it, I can at least offer a little moral support.
One of the most painful things to deal with when my daughter was growing up was the results of professional assessments. If you are a parent of any child with a disability, you will be familiar with that sinking feeling as you sit there in someone's office and watch your child either fail some task that is deemed to measure their progress or just not co-operate as they don't know this person from Adam.
This professional then tramples with their hobnail boots over any small glimmers of hope you have in your heart by telling you that your child is still at the toddler stage. Not so bad when your child is still in infant school, pretty devastating when they are approaching adolescence.
Now I recognise and accept that these assessments have to be performed in order to get an idea of progress and to plan how to help the child move on in their physical or mental development. I do wonder however, if the professional giving out the verdict ever considers the feelings of the parent. I'm not saying the information should not be passed on, just that it should be passed on sensitively.
Are they aware that the parent is generally already trying their hardest to help their child meet developmental milestones 'on time' and that the slightest knock to their confidence can be incredibly hard to deal with? Or perhaps the parents are not dealing with their situation well due to personal circumstances, family pressure or even denial, and this information could tip them over the edge?
In my case, I am a very 'stroppy' person - tell me something can't be done and I will move heaven and earth to prove you wrong if I don't agree with you. After my daughter's birth, professionals told me she would never amount to anything, remain a vegetable and destroy my life. Sensitively put. So, 24 years later, now that she has been through mainstream school, attended college and is living a fulfilling life as well as bringing me great joy, I can mentally stick my fingers up at those people and know in my heart they were wrong.
But what if you are not so able to cope with something like this? Is it ever considered?
The same goes for giving out false hope - things like 'cures', remedies, putting even more effort into trying to jam information into your child's head. Sometimes that can be just as demoralising, especially when what you try and pin your hopes on fails miserably.
The above is something I feel strongly about but do not really have any answers to. As the parent of a child with special needs you have to develop a very thick skin and learn to take everything you are told by people outside of your situation with a hefty pinch of salt. After all, who knows your child better than you yourself? Each child who has Down's Syndrome is very different from the other - the tendency for some professionals to generalise and lump them all into the same sterotype is high. There is the dreaded phrase 'They do this....' They? Who? Each child with Down's Syndrome has their own personality, talents and rate of development, just the same as any other 'normal' child. It's something everyone has to learn to accept, including the professionals.
Tuesday, 20 March 2012
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How lucky those other parents are to have you with all your positive stroppiness :-) Moral support is very important, feeling that you're not alone is vital in any situation where it's easy to get down. Such a shame there was so little around when you were going through the tougher years earlier, you and your daughter are amazing people.
ReplyDeleteHeartening to read this Caroline.
ReplyDeleteYour words must give hope and/or comfort to new parents finding themselves in a similar position to the one in which you found yourself all those years ago.