I’m no born-natural. I’m not made to raise a child with Down syndrome.
But here I am. And working as a paraprofessional, no less. I have a lot to offer, we all do. But I have a lot to learn; that’s exactly why am I where I am. Not because I was born with a special gift. I’m here because I have reason to care. And I do care; I care a lot.
The children I work with now have very different skill sets than Wil. Navigating these little humans’ ways of processing their world has been a great challenge and a great joy. I have good days and I have bad days. The bad days are hard. I beat myself up, and I’m working on that within myself. But I’m working with humans, and when I make a mistake it hits me personally. The upside is this is a high motivation for me to learn more – I’m always trying to figure out how to do things better the next time.
Raising a child with a disability I have come to learn one truth: life does not move in a straight line. When you think you’ve got one strategy down, you get thrown back 3 feet the next day. It reminds me of a game my Grandpa used to play with my sister and me as young kids. He’d sit on the back porch, leaning back in a cushioned chair blowing out smoke rings from a Viceroy cigarette. My sister and I would stand all the back at the end of the yard. He’d call out if we were to take small or giant steps forward and back. If we forgot to ask “Mother May I” we’d have to go all the way back to start.
Some days there is this invisible trigger within these children that I trip, and just like forgetting to say Mother May I, I get sent all the way back to start. But I get smarter, and I learn more and forget less. And finally, when I’m able to help one of these children through their emotional distress and they open up in communication, and they look up and smile at me, I float higher than one of my Grandpa’s smoke rings that I loved jumping up and catching on those long, summer days.
My work is hard. Raising Wil is hard. But so is just about everything else that we at first do not understand. Seek first to understand. Within those four wise words is enrichment in life. I’ve never lived so deeply as when I fully accepted my son. I still revert at times. I still go back to wanting the kids I work with to just do it my way. It’s easier that way – for me. But it’s not their way. It’s not the way their brains were made to work. And it’s also not all about everyone having their own way either. It’s about learning to work together.
Wil and I are recovering from Influenza A. He was all excited to get out of the house, but when it was time he got stuck. I sat down with him. I asked him what his upset was. Wil takes time to process and time to share. So I just sat there for 5 minutes. Not because I’m made for this, but over the years I made myself for this. And we unwound his wound-upness and we left the house without further issue. No one pushed anyone. We both had our say. It’s just time.
That’s what I am navigating now with the kids I work with. I’m learning again like I learned with Wil. I’m learning their way of doing things. Their way of thinking. And when I find that patience within myself, and I give these kids the space they need, it’s the most enriching experience ever. But sometimes it’s really, really hard to get there. Sometimes I’m just worn out from a 45-minute bout of emotional deregulation with still no progress and I walk away in tears. Because this is a human being and I’m disappointed in myself for not finding a way, and I’m tired and frustrated. Again, I’m not made for this but I’m finding my way because it’s so worth it. But like that game with my Grandfather, even though it can feel like it’s a setback, it’s really a setup for growth. A setup for being made for this. I get smarter, and I do better for these kids.
Inclusion is not easy, but it’s not evil either. On paper, it looks beautiful, and there are many proponents of inclusion that are more in love with the thought of inclusion than the reality of it. On the flip side of the paper, I still hear people say they “don’t want my kids with those kids.” Both stances are ignorant. Inclusion takes work. Inclusion takes listening and understanding what our kids with disabilities need just as we do for typically developing kids. It’s a game of Mother May I. When Wil had his first behavior plan in middle school, the first thing the educators told me was that it was a very fluid plan. We knew where we wanted to go, and we set parameters to get there, but the exact timeline and the exact steps would have to be navigated and adjusted along the way. What mattered most was that everyone at that table cared. We cared a lot. And that is what got us all through Wil’s puberty years to successful high school years.
No one is special and we all are special. We all belong together, no matter how pretty or messy it is and how many steps it takes and in how many directions we have to go.
The only requirement is to care. And that I know is natural within all of us. We just need reason to find it.


