Thoughts of a Mom
Jun 26th, 2006 by woodstone
Some of you may have seen this before, I posted it on my old blog. This is one of my favorites though, and it seemeed like a good time for a repeat…
Thoughts of a Mom
Many of you I have never even met face to face, but I’ve searched you out every day. I’ve looked for you on the Internet, on playgrounds and in grocery stores. I’ve become an expert at identifying you. You are well worn. You are stronger than you ever wanted to be. Your words ring experience, experience you culled with your very heart and soul. You are compassionate beyond the expectations of this world. You are my “sisters.”
Yes, you and I, my friend, are sisters in a sorority. A very elite sorority. We are special. Just like any other sorority, we were chosen to be members. Some of us were invited to join immediately, some not for months or even years. Some of us even tried to refuse membership, but to no avail.
We were initiated in neurologist’s offices and NICU units, in obstetrician’s offices, in emergency rooms, and during ultrasounds. We were initiated with somber telephone calls, consultations, evaluations, blood tests, x-rays, MRI films, and heart surgeries.
All of us have one thing in common. One day things were fine. We were pregnant, or we had just given birth, or we were nursing our newborn, or we were playing with our toddler. Yes, one minute everything was fine. Then, whether it happened in an instant, as it often does, or over the course of a few weeks or months, our entire lives changed. Something wasn’t quite right. Then we found ourselves mothers of children with special needs.
We are united, we sisters, regardless of the diversity of our children’s special needs. Some of our children undergo chemotherapy. Some need respirators and ventilators. Some are unable to talk, some are unable to walk. Some eat through feeding tubes. Some live in a different world.
We do not discriminate against those mothers whose children’s needs are not as “special” as our child’s. We have mutual respect and empathy for all the women who walk in our shoes.
We are knowledgeable. We have educated ourselves with whatever materials we could find. We know “the” specialists in the field. We know “the” neurologists, “the” hospitals, “the” wonder drugs, “the” treatments. We know “the” tests that need to be done, we know “the” degenerative and progressive diseases and we hold our breath while our children are tested for them. Without formal education, we could become board certified in neurology, endocrinology, and psychiatry.
We have taken on our insurance companies and school boards to get what our children need to survive, and to flourish. We have prevailed upon the State to include augmentative communication devices in special education classes and mainstream schools for our children with cerebral palsy. We have labored to prove to insurance companies the medical necessity of gait trainers and other adaptive equipment for our children with spinal cord defects. We have sued municipalities to have our children properly classified so they could receive education and evaluation commensurate with their diagnosis.
We have learned to deal with the rest of the world, even if that means walking away from it.
We have tolerated scorn in supermarkets during “tantrums” and gritted our teeth while discipline was advocated by the person behind us on line.
We have tolerated inane suggestions and home remedies from well-meaning strangers.
We have tolerated mothers of children without special needs complaining about chicken pox and ear infections.
We have learned that many of our closest friends can’t understand what it’s like to be in our sorority, and don’t even want to try.
We have our own personal copies of Emily Perl Kingsley’s “A Trip To Holland” and Erma Bombeck’s “The Special Mother.” We keep them by our bedside and read and reread them during our toughest hours.
We have coped with holidays. We have found ways to get our physically handicapped children to the neighbors’ front doors on Halloween, and we have found ways to help our deaf children form the words, “trick or treat.” We have accepted that our children with sensory dysfunction will never wear velvet or lace on Christmas. We have painted a canvas of lights and a blazing Yule log with our words for our blind children. We have pureed turkey on Thanksgiving. We have bought white chocolate bunnies for Easter. And all the while, we have tried to create a festive atmosphere for the rest of our family.
We’ve gotten up every morning since our journey began wondering how we’d make it through another day, and gone to bed every evening not sure how we did it.
We’ve mourned the fact that we never got to relax and sip red wine in Italy. We’ve mourned the fact that our trip to Holland has required much more baggage than we ever imagined when we first visited the travel agent. And we’ve mourned because we left for the airport without most of the things we needed for the trip.
But we, sisters, we keep the faith always. We never stop believing. Our love for our special children and our belief in all that they will achieve in life knows no bounds. We dream of them scoring touchdowns and extra points and home runs. We visualize them running sprints and marathons. We dream of them planting vegetable seeds, riding horses and chopping down trees. We hear their angelic voices singing Christmas carols. We see their palettes smeared with watercolors, and their fingers flying over ivory keys in a concert hall. We are amazed at the grace of their pirouettes. We never, never stop believing in all they will accomplish as they pass through this world.
But in the meantime, my sisters, the most important thing we do, is hold tight to their little hands as together, we special mothers and our special children, reach for the stars.





Maura… thank you for posting this today… I found myself in a puddle of tears that just keeps getting bigger and bigger today. Some thankful tears, worry tears, sad tears, scared tears… all kind of tears.
My oldest came to me early this morning with a knock on the door and said she only makes it through the day because she knows I love her no matter what and that she feels she needs help, with her ‘moods’. I can’t tell you how much that meant to me to hear those words. To know that standing by her all this time, when everyone else saw a regular teenage girl being ‘bad’- aways saying “TOUGH LOVE!!!” Save yourself, get away from her – she wrecking everyones lives!!!, I saw MY troubled child in the fight for her life.
Through all of this, our 2nd daughter has ‘leaky valves’ around her heart… She has opted out of surgery…congestive heart failure is the most common side effect, little to no warnings. People are sympathetic to that.
Then Ashlynn, she appears “happy and ‘normal’” to the world.. but she has a mild case of Spina Bifida. She can run and play but her spinal cord is tethered and everything could change with in seconds. People care about this.
My son Trey, he is flat lined in one ear, he had a tumor removed from that side of his head when he was just 6 months old. People understand this.
Some days I just wonder why? Other days I just thank God it’s not worse, then on some days I just say Thank you God for giving them to ME! They humble me. The make my life full, sometimes over flowing, but I’m so blessed and thankful… and I have found that through all this with my daughter, most people are tolerant of physical disabilities, but not mental disabilities. How sad is that? People telling me I need to hammer down on her, turn my back on her, show her tough love, that it’s a choice and she controls it all… sure perhaps some things, even I thought that up until I really saw that everything in her life is connected and controlled by her mind, which is unstable and confused at times, very much beyond her control. She needs us more than ever.
So I’m thankful for my friends and moms that belong in this sorority… because really, no one else can understand.
Thank you,
Kimberly
Oh, Kimberly, I would love for you to contact me via e-mail if you would like. Mood swings can be very difficult to live with, both for the child/teen and the family. But there are things you CAN do.
Also, there are things you said in your comment that really reminded me of some days I have had before . . . so much on the plate, but loving each blessing in our life, but then something else happens . . . not as big in comparison, but big nonetheless . . . and sometimes it feels it tips the scales, if for a moment, until, like you said, you’re reminded, and you pull up your boot straps, and put on your smile, and get loving your blessings again, in gratitude.
And thanks, Maura, for the lovely story.
This is beautiful. Thank you, Maura.
Thank you for the reminder.
Thank you very much for posting that. It is wonderful and a nice remember to everyone.
Thanks for this post Maura. I’ve said before, I think you’re an angel and I’m so grateful there are moms on this earth that are so wonderful with their kids. I shudder to think about other kids with needs who aren’t getting those needs met.
I log onto a forum quite a bit and one of the posters is a disabled woman in South Africa. She ends every post with:
“Courage does not always roar. Sometimes it is the quiet voice at the end of the day, saying ‘I will try again tomorrow’.”
I always liked that.
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