With Jumby’s arrival I am once again the parent to a disabled child. In the three years since I’ve been required to tube feed or face a plethora of medical professionals, there has been one aspect of raising a disabled child I hadn’t missed at all.
The stigma that is attached to a disability, to me as a parent of a handicapped child and to my child for being different.
I had forgotten how every time I venture out in public with my child we become the traveling circus, the free freak show for people to pointedly ignore or worse yet cast upon us their stares filled with pity and sorrow.
I didn’t have a choice when Bug was born. Whether I liked it or not, I was initiated into this odd club of parents, where all the members had different stories but one common link. They all had children who the world looked upon as different. They all had to face the looks of sorrow or pity whenever they told the world at large why their child wasn’t “normal.”
I didn’t want to be the parent to a different kid, dammit. I wanted to be the mother of the blonde haired, blue eyed baby boy I saw beneath the mask of his disabilities. I couldn’t understand why the world never saw him the way I did: As a remarkable little human being who was just like the rest of us underneath his broken body and mucked up DNA sequences.
Then I learned the secret most people never have the opportunity to discover. The sheer joy involved in having a disabled child in your life.
This time around the parental merry-go-round, I had a choice. I actively chose to bring home a disabled child of my own. I made a choice to deal with every aspect of parenting a special needs child. I signed myself up for the freak show that follows us wherever we go.
I don’t regret it for one second. Our family, our lives are infinitely better with Jumby in it.
But there is a difference with Jumby that is palpably noticeable. A shift in perception that wasn’t visible to our family when we were blessed with Bug’s life. My children were three years younger and a world less mature while Bug breathed. There were things about living with a disabled brother they never noticed because they were too young to remember life without him before he was born.
But death and puberty and time has swirled around them like the perfect storm and given them a clarity of life they once lacked. They see the difference between their bodies and Jumby’s tight twisted little body. They see how difficult it is for Jumby to get through the day as they run and jump and play and take their own healthy bodies for granted.
Even more so, they are keenly aware of people’s reactions to Jumby and to us when we take him out in public. It goes beyond the brown hair and his doey brown eyes. Beyond his cleft chin and the different noses on their faces. They are bonded with Jumby, united by the love the three of them share for one another and they don’t understand why people can’t see past his wheel chair or the way he holds his head to the side to see better, to see the spirit of the boy they so clearly see.
They have witnessed the social disparity between them and it’s left them cold.
It is a lesson I knew they’d learn but one I wish I could shield them from.
I can’t shield my children from this. Unless I choose to live in a bubble but let’s face it, it’s no fun to flash my boobs if no one is watching.
But I can stand up and tell the world to grow up.
To open their eyes and see past their own feelings and issues and take responsibility for their actions and the words they so carelessly toss around.
I can teach my children and the children around me that it is not cool to use the word ‘retard’ to make fun of someone or hammer a point home.
I can teach my children and the children around me that it is okay to touch a disabled person, they aren’t contagious or filled with cooties. (Unless they are homeless and living under a bridge and even then they just need a good de-lousing.)
But can I teach the world around me? The adults?
I don’t know, but I do know that when I’m on twitter I don’t need to innocently click a link and have this image staring back at me:

Surely there is a better way to prove the point you are trying to make than to disparage a community of already challenged people. And don’t tell me you can because you have disabled children yourself. That doesn’t give you a free pass to be ignorant.
How are you protecting and advocating for your family if you are perpetuating this stereotype?
This isn’t cool people. This is so beyond cool my head hurts.
Nor do I need to open up my email and find this in my inbox:
Seriously. Have you met me? Do you know I gave birth to that child you just made fun of? That I just adopted another who would easily become a caricature in someone else’s life if I gave them the opportunity?
I don’t need to read a joke about how it’s National Retarded Day and guess what? I’m it.
Seriously.
That is my family you are making fun of. It’s my sons, my niece, my father-in-law and my friend’s children.
And with a small twist of fate, it could be yours, the same way it became mine.
I can’t change the world or most people in it. The best I can do is set an example for my children and for those around me and educate them to the value a disabled child or adult can bring to a community and to society in general.
You may not agree with me and that’s cool.
It takes all kinds of people to make this world the wonderfully interesting place it is. But if you are going to disparage a community of people who had the misfortune to have more health or mental problems than you can shake a stick at, you had better be prepared for me to bite back hard.
I owe it to Bug, to Jumby, to that man who shuffles his gait down the street because his feet are badly clubbed.
But mostly, I owe it to myself. There is a difference, a line, between what is funny and what is pathetic and rude. I see the difference every time I look in my son’s eyes and see his smile illuminate brighter than a 100 watt bulb.
What I’m having a hard time with is trying to explain to my children why everyone else can’t see it as well.
Don’t make this harder for us, for me, for Jumby.
Or next time I won’t play so nice.










lurker
what i find interesting about blog-world is how willing you all are to accept other people’s discriminations. you say “if you don’t agree, that’s cool.” i’ve noticed a lot of bloggers use this kind of diplomacy. but the truth is discrimination is NEVER OKAY. fuck diplomacy, it is not okay ever to condone the type of prejudice you talked about in this post. i just wish you and other bloggers would stand up and own that position.
Lee of MWOB
This scares me. How people act blows my friggin’ mind. What you talk about in this post, the sheer ignorance and sometimes blatant discrimination, is the one thing that scared the crap out of me when I was pregnant with my first – bringing a child into a world filled with stupid people.
Yeah, I’m not sure what, if anything, will change the person who send that to you in your inbox or the person who provided that asanine link on Twitter but I wish something would.
I guess all we can do like you said is educate our own kids and our own sphere and that’s a start.
Sheri
Tanis,
I’m a big girl….fat, plus sized whatever. I’m offering to sit on whatever asshole sent you those tweets.
I have my own blog, but I just can’t seem to put my feelings into words as you do. You have a gift and I’m forever grateful you use it.
I have 3 children. All 3 of them are on the autism spectrum. It really pisses me off when we get the sideshow stares. In my experience, it is adults who have the most problems with someone who is different. I insisted my oldest (he’s 19) be educated in an inclusionary setting. Our school system threw a fit and wanted to wait until he was in first grade before doing that. I won and it was the best thing that ever happened to him. The kids just took them under their wing and loved him. When these kids come home from college, they stop by and take him out. He has 350 friends on Facebook.
Adults really have to grow up and get over themselves.
Congratulations on Jumby and God Bless.
Elizabeth Kaylene
I hate the R word. I really do. It’s not okay, at all.
Thank you for this post.
Miss Ash
THANK YOU!
Your voice has been heard.
nancy
i’ve worked with intellectually disabled (that’s the newest term)adults for 23 years now, and in a way, i get it. there’s always a fool out there saying something stupid in public. that said, my husband and son both have a good number of mental health issues: add, adhd, tourette, odc, anxiety and panic disorders, depression and anger mgt issues. when you pitch them all together in two people, they are a handful. i have dysthymia and sad. one of the ways we cope is to make mental health ‘lunatic’ jokes to each other. but we NEVER make jokes about other people. my son corrects kids who do this. always open your mouth and say something when you hear bad things. some people just need to be educated. you and your kids will make more of a difference than you know.
Jackie
I have Asperger’s Syndrome, I’m 27. I still live at home with my parents, which I don’t mind at all, compared to how I felt after high school. When it seemed like all the cool kids were moving out or going to college. Now I know, the reality is they had parents who think raising a child should come with a set time limit. You turn 18, buh-bye! Good luck! Hope you don’t end up on that Girls Gone Wild thing!
I think parents who have disabled children, understand how completely insane that is, not just for disabled kids, but for NT (neurotypical, a.k.a “normal) kids as well. You hear all the time, that these kids cling to a most likely negative peer group, after being basically thrown into the world with no actual skills with how to deal with it.
I’ve heard in most other countries it’s more normal for kids to live at home with their parents, it seems to be another American trend that has become a societal problem. We really should learn to listen to other countries and cultures, yeah?
Those images make me angry too, but I try and think about how completely sad and pathetic someone has to be to target people who are truly suffering. Then I think, what a miserable life it would be, having to depend on finding other people you can make miserable in order to find happiness.
Really having to live a life, where your only goal is to see how miserable you can make others, in my opinon isn’t a life. It’s a travesty of a life. Sure you can say, well do you know these people’s pasts, what if they were abused, ect. Does it really matter?
I personally would rather put up with my Hyperacusis (sensitivity to sudden loud noises) and my issues with my Asperger’s Syndrome, than be a cold uncaring, broken person. Who perhaps could be a sociopath.
If you’ve seen the show Most Evil from the Investigation Discovery channel, you realize that sociopaths aren’t born they’re created. The people who make these images most likely have some characteristic, that is involved with a diagnoses of sociopathy. For one, the clear lack of empathy is a major issue.
Also, there are kids who are trying to be cool with their friends, and may not really understand how hurtful this is. I know, being a tomboy, that there is an insane amount of peer pressure amongst guys. I mean, you have to wear the right clothes, speak the right language. It makes me feel that it’s almost a shame more Aspies are born male than female, cause at least girls will give each other a break once in awhile.
The Special Olympics is hosting a global campaign to end the use of the R world:
http://www.r-word.org/
Jeni
I just want to give you kudos on this blog. I heard about your blog on CNN. I am also a mother of a special needs child. My son “Trey” is 4 1\2 years old he weighs 20 pounds, we often get looks and comments and at times it is very stressful, but its worth every minute of it, stressful or not. I would not take anything for my precious little angel…He is full of so much personality, and he has nothing but love for everyone. I just want to say thank you for standing up for all of us.
People should be more considerate and caring, think before you speak people! YOU NEVER KNOW WHO MAY HEAR YOU! Our children are not “retards” THEY ARE PRECIOUS LITTLE CHILDREN!
WM
I don’t know how I missed this post but seriously thank you for writing. This should be a must read for all!
Tony
Tanis, if I may be so bold as to use your first name. I recently discovered your website and blog and I must applaude you for your honesty and sense of Humour. I must also applaude you and your Husband on your spirit and your willingness to be better human beings. To adopt a child with unique challenges is something that I had always thought of doing and never had the courage or the wherewithal to do. I have in my career hired challenged people and spent considerable time and care teaching them the ways of doing their new jobs. My reward has always been the smiles and the joy they find in doing and being part of a “regular” (I use the word only to illustrate my point) Job. I amazes me at how quickly the rest of the people that work with thier new friends come to accept them and soon start treating them no different than the rest of the people working there. Which just goes to show that for all the differences these special people may exhibit, they are no different from anyone else and in fact are more special because they try harder and a more often proud of their accomplishments everyday, unlike the rest who take it for granted that what we so everyday is not that note worthy.
So to you who has more courage and fortitude than I (and where I able to do it over again, I know I would find the courage and the fortitude) I thank you for your blog and for the love you and your husband share with us.
Jen
This is a wonderful post. I work with special needs children (specifically, visually impaired) and am currently training to be an advocate…I agree, it’s so frustrating when people can’t see the awesome kid first, who just happens to have some differences.
Al_Pal
Awesome post!
I have two friends with Autistic boys, and I know they’ve had to fight for mainstreaming and getting the help they need.
I’ve taken “lame” out of my vocabulary, after realizing awhile ago that it is inappropriate.
I think that quite possibly, with any minority group, it is all about making it personal — once somebody actually MEETS someone who is different, they realize that we are all people underneath.
Well said!
K D
I happened upon this post in my web surfing.
I share these feelings and look forward to reading more of your writing.
Denise
AMEN. Well said.
Janice (5 Minutes for Mom)
Perfectly said. Perfectly lived. You go girl!!!! Your children, the blogosphere and the world are so lucky to have you!
marypeck
Beautiful!