“It’s hard raising a child with disabilities.” If I had a quarter for every time I heard or read that statement. Bear with me while I flip the coin for a moment. No story is ever one-sided.
When I watched Wil walk off to his cabin for his first overnight camp, without even a glance back at me, my chest literally felt like it would burst open. Every part of my being begged to melt into an all-out uninhibited sob and fully feel all the emotions flow through and over me.
It felt like I had a million birds fluttering in my chest, crying to burst out. Each bird a story built upon another story that brought Wil and me to this very spot; stories of backward steps that said we’d never make it, stories of forward steps giving hope that we just might. Stories of angels on earth that took my hand and walked me through hardships; stories of those that withdrew emotional support and left me to walk on my own. Stories of my own inner growth; my own inner strength, my own education and devotion to this life. All of these stories now bound together begging to fly high together and exclaim in one unanimously strong and beautiful Hallelujah!
But I couldn’t let the birds free. I couldn’t give way to my sobs. I’d embarrass Wil. So I allowed tears to stream quietly down my cheeks. And that’s how almost every success Wil’s had has been. We work for it and work for it, and when it appears he’s like, “Yeah, what’s the big deal? We’re here now. Moving on.” We are like ducks paddling in the water—I know the destination, but I’m working under water. Coaching him how to paddle his legs. Sometimes he listens, sometimes we speed ahead, and sometimes we go backwards, sideways or float for a while. Sometimes I have to change course; sometimes I need to be patient with the course we are on. But we always arrive somewhere, and when we hit land, I surface and take a big breath in of the fresh air. The joy of the destination we worked for overtakes me. Wil looks around proud himself but with an inner knowing, like yeah, I knew we’d get here. You do know by now this is on my time and not yours. So here we are, right on time. Get control of yourself, lady!”
To Wil, I’m just his mom. I support him, I annoy him, I push him, and I spoil him. He’s moving forward in the way he intends to do. To him, this camp was right on time. To me, I knew what it took behind the scenes to get here.
We parents raising our kids are often called saints. That often puts me off because it puts us on a pedestal, rather than walking the earth right beside them.
I’m no saint, I’m just a mom that does what she does because she loves her child. But I have touched heaven being Wil’s mom; many times. Most recently I was standing on a little patch of grass at a summer camp, watching my son walk independently away. So maybe the saint-callers do have a point, because I would never have known that level of joy if I didn’t know the depth of the flip side.
No story is ever one-sided.


