We’ve
all had them. That tiny sliver of time when your life changes forever. That
time where everything stands still and there is silence, even if it is noisy. It’s
kind of like a nothingness as your brain tries to process the news. And when it
does, the enormity comes crashing down. For me, that moment came just minutes
after I gave birth to our second son. For the rest of my days, I will remember
that moment with perfect clarity. A bunch of people murmuring around my brand-new
baby as he lay on the warming table. No words of congratulations. Just
whispers. My husband would eventually emerge from that group of people, his
face telling the truth that he could not tell me in words. I cried out my plea,
“Will someone please tell me what is
going on?” And finally, someone did. They rocked my world with two little
words. Down syndrome.
In
those early hours, days and weeks after hearing those two words, all I did was
beg for someone, anyone, to tell me that it was going to be ok. For hours in
the middle of the night, I would google “Down syndrome” and read every single
thing that popped up, page after page after page, seeking something I would
never find there. All I saw was the hard and the unknown. And the only
possibilities I saw were the scary ones. All of this made worse by the fact
that this was nearly a decade ago, long before the time of social media where
you could see what life is actually like for people who love someone with Down
syndrome. All I had was a Wikipedia article telling me my son would have
“mental retardation.”
But
as those early days gave way to weeks, our baby began to unfold himself to us,
to show us who he was. Our Ian. And while those google searches in the middle
of the night told me about the hard, the unknown and the scary, they could
never tell me about the greatest truth – his light. What they don’t tell you is
that you would move mountains for this kid. That the hard is not as hard as you
think it will be because you LOVE this kid.
That the hard makes you appreciate everything else. That the hard makes you appreciate the gift of the ordinary day. That this kid will make you appreciate the gift of the ordinary day. And that he will make the ordinary extraordinary because of who he is. That so much in life you thought was so very important doesn’t even matter. That he will be the answer to every big question you ever had about the universe. That you will wonder how you ever lived without his light.
That the hard makes you appreciate everything else. That the hard makes you appreciate the gift of the ordinary day. That this kid will make you appreciate the gift of the ordinary day. And that he will make the ordinary extraordinary because of who he is. That so much in life you thought was so very important doesn’t even matter. That he will be the answer to every big question you ever had about the universe. That you will wonder how you ever lived without his light.
Our
son has this light that draws you to him. He has the power to bring joy, to
give perspective, to heal. That Wikipedia article had it all wrong. None of us
is the sum of our struggles. None of us. We are the sum of what we do to
overcome them. How we connect and uplift. How we support and hold on and love. How
we make something from the struggle, from the dark. How we find the light.
Times
of darkness only set the stage for the light. And when it is really dark, the
coming of the light is redemptive. It reminds you to be grateful, to be kind. To
lift someone else up. To give a hand or a shoulder or a hug. To be good. And all
of that stuff, all of that good? Our Ian already knows that because of who he
is. He makes you better. He makes you want to be better. He already knows the
secret to life. Enjoy each day, be grateful, work hard, love without limits and
live big.
And
the biggest lesson of all? Our Ian is who he is not because of Down syndrome.
He is not the stereotype that “people with Down syndrome are always happy.”
(Because, well, who is?) To attribute the way Ian lives his life to a
stereotype would take away from him, take away from who he is. He is not a
stereotype. He is Ian.
He
lives his life out loud and shines his big, beautiful light. Blessed are those
of us who are able to bask in it. And for all my searching for reassurance that
it was going to be ok? It is not ok. It is better than ok. It is great; it is
wonderful; it is life-affirming. Life is better with Ian. Life is better because
of Ian. I never had a baby with Down syndrome. I had Ian.
Laura Feiler is a wife to her husband (and best friend!), a mom of two boys (one of whom happens to have Down syndrome), a passionate educator of students with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and an advocate for the value and inclusion of people of all abilities!
Laura Feiler is a wife to her husband (and best friend!), a mom of two boys (one of whom happens to have Down syndrome), a passionate educator of students with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and an advocate for the value and inclusion of people of all abilities!
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