Thursday, December 24, 2015

SIXTEEN IS FOR SCREWING HOLLAND

The concept, mind you, not the country.  I've had some great times in Holland and am fond of the Dutch in general.  I even proudly sport a Dutch surname, so really, it's not personal.  Here's the thing:

In 1987, Emily Perl Kingsley wrote a brief essay about how it feels to be the parent of a child with special needs.  The gist of the essay goes like this:  When you are preparing to become a parent, it’s like planning a trip to Italy.  You’re incredibly excited for your Italian vacation, and you buy all sorts of guide books and plan your trip meticulously.  Then, when your plane lands, the flight attendant announces you have landed in Holland, and there you must stay.  In short, this sucks at first because it’s not at all what you planned, but once you get used to the idea you realize Holland has all sorts of amazing things going on and if you spend your whole life wishing for your lost Italian vacation, you’ll never really be able to embrace the Land of Tulips and all those wonderful Dutch people for who they really are.

After becoming the parent of a child with special needs, countless people referred me to this essay.  When first wading through my stress and grief, Kingsley’s words brought me comfort as they affirmed what I was slowly beginning to understand about my child: Her life will never be like that of her peers, but frankly, that’s okay.  It will be an amazing life none the less.

But since those early months of stealing hope and recognition out of the fog of grief, I’ve developed an ongoing annoyance and disappointment with this concept as my daughter now approaches her sixth birthday.   I get it:  She’s different.  Our life is different.   My problem with Holland and the idea this essay represents is that it simply doesn’t go far enough.  I thank Kingsley for her thoughts, which have no doubt inspired and comforted thousands of special needs parents over the years.   I’m simply asking for more.

I now realize that even though Holland is great, you can still see Italy, because on this magical and metaphorical map of Europe, Italy is right next door.  You can see your friends and family frolicking in the Tuscan sun while you’re trying to teach your child to walk in wooden shoes.   And somehow you’ve got to get your kid to understand how delicious Gouda cheese tastes when she can see all her peers slurping up gelato right across the way.  This is the reality of being a parent with a child who is different.  And the greatest pain comes when you realize all those kids running around Italy can still communicate very clearly with your Dutch child.  Even though they speak different languages, she still somehow understands every remark, jab or unkind question about her disability.   Yet she can’t seem to get a word of Dutch in edgewise. 

So I’m proposing a new metaphor, because I think we could all benefit from looking at the landscape of disability in a more realistic, inclusive light.  I would like to tell every special needs parent that having a child who is different is like landing, along with every other family, in a foreign country.   We’re all flying blind when it comes down to it.  But let’s say, for the sake of metaphor, we land together in France.   It’s a brave new world out there, and we are all bound to have a trip with lots of ups and downs, but the reality for a family whose child is differently abled is that it will be a very difficult, very challenging experience for them.  They will see the other families wolfing down a baguette, just to realize their child will never be able to chew bread, or at the least is wheat-intolerant.   Other people will zip all over town to see the sights, and for the child with a disability, the trains will often seem on strike.  Families will travel in huge groups to the Eiffel Tower, and the families of those with disabilities will have to acknowledge that their child may never get to see the top.   This is the reality.   We’re all here, all together. Placing the disabled and their families in the metaphor of a “different” country does not help any of us see, embrace, and work like hell to make the reality something more kind, more realistic and more humane exist for all of us.  

It wasn’t until the birth of our second child that I realized how painful and isolating my experience of the “Holland” concept felt. Before giving birth to our son, a big healthy boy, I’d begun experiencing anxiety about his arrival in full force.  Having a healthy baby somehow meant straddling the fence between Holland and Italy, explaining to a child who could go and do anything, that unfortunately, our family life was in Holland, but we’d do our best to make sure he could visit Italy as much as possible.  Would having a second child force us out of Holland, a place we’d worked so hard to create, love and accept?  How does a parent in this position mediate the needs of both children, and deal with the stress of a “bi-cultural” life?

That’s when I decided to screw Holland, and invite other people to join me.  Nothing against the lovely Dutch and their country, but we’re moving to France.  And yes, the rail won’t always work for us.  I’m sure at times the people will be rude.  We may have to pass on the baguettes, but somehow and someway we will find an existence that incorporates all of our needs, and doesn’t allow us to isolate ourselves or our family because our first born is different.  Nor does it allow other people to isolate themselves from our challenges, because they can and do exist and it is part of the human condition for everyone to recognize that.  Hopefully, with a 35 hour work week, we might even have time to talk about it.


   
Here is what my backpack looked like after arriving back in Austin from a transatlantic flight. Seemed like a pretty great metaphor for the wear-and-tear of constantly trying to shuttle back and forth between two countries.  Like my backpack, it often leaves special needs families feeling tired and haggard. So vive la France, ya'll!

FIFTEEN

Is the number of kids one of you single ladies should have with this dude.  Never married, no children, hero of the world.  Let's at least see if we can talk him into freezing some sperm.  The world needs more guys like this.  So somebody get their ovaries pumping and let's make some.

To learn more, watch this perimenopausal porn /  documentary which is available via Netflix:









Wednesday, December 23, 2015

FOURTEEN IS FOR FRANCE

With all that France has been through this year, I wish this post was more overtly political, but sadly, it's not.  Unless it's political to say I admire someone's way of life and living, which in a way I suppose is political at base.  Learning to respect peacefully another culture's way of being, and not allowing fear to affect the way we live our lives, both seem like two of the essential questions at the heart of world security today.

Like most of the free world, I've often admired the French from afar from the way they live, including but not limited to their food, drink, life philosophy, and style. Here are a few little jewels that have captured my fancy over the past few years, happily bringing out my secret Francophile:

-All the books by Mireille Guiliano, the author of the classic French Women Don't Get Fat.  It's the only book about "dieting" that I've ever thought was worth a damn, as her advice is practical, healthy, and relevant (the importance of eating seasonally, etc.).  She was written extensively on everything from French culture and lifestyle to fashion, and I heart her.  I can't say that I actually finished it, but French Women for All Seasons was on my nightstand for a while and I would love to get back to it.  Can't remember why it got bumped, but I definitely found it light and entertaining.

Emmanuelle Alt from somewhere on the intrawebs
-Emmanuelle Alt. This lady is so freaking hot and she wears the same thing all the time, bringing me back to the point that my life would be so much easier if I just had a freaking uniform.  Something to aspire towards in 2016.

-A Lover's Discourse:  Fragments by Roland Barthes.  Hot French philosophy, all the way.

-And for those people wanting to think more practically about finding and losing of love, La Seduction: How the French Play the Game of Life by Elaine Sciolino, the longtime Paris bureau chief of the New York Times.

-I've mentioned it in another Advent post, but Mademoiselle C is definitely worth the eye candy and the fact that it's free and fast on Netlflix.  And dang, is that lady french in, like, all the right ways.

-And finally, this piece which has been circulating about the differences between American and French girl's style.  The model, Camille Rowe, is actually really funny and it seems pretty spot on to me!

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

13

What to say?  Such a complicated number and so mistrusted.  Except by Mary Kay Ash, the cosmetics mogul.  If you haven't heard about her obsession with her lucky number 13, you can read all about it here.

Personally, I love her pluck and sass.  If you're worried about bad luck for any reason though, here's a good read to give you some food for thought.  I read it over the summer and am still trying to implement the life changing magic described, though I really did love the book philosophically and feel like it asks great questions about our relationship with stuff.

Just a few thoughts on a long winter's night.  Almost the longest, in fact.  Happy belated Solstice readers!  I've got a busy few days of catch up ahead.  

THE 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS

What is it with the freaking holidays?  They just always seem to unleash so much chaos in the world.  And for me personally, that usually comes at the time of year when I need and yearn to be the most still, the most rested, and the most reflective.  I so desire a personal season of celebration that reflects my own values and beliefs around the holidays.  Yet it seems no matter which way I approach it, the reality of this symmetry coming to fruition is quite a process. One thing that has evolved in my own little family over the years is getting a handle on the gift giving/receiving bit.  This year things feel particularly pared down in the best of ways.  I would love an Advent and Christmas season that focused on reflection, time together, shared meals, and down time and kept the material exchange to a minimum.  Is this possible?  Certainly.  It just makes me feel a bit like an alien in some circles, and when connecting with any media source.  In this vein, however, a colleague of mine suggested adding this book to my list and I think I might just do it.  Maybe in time for next Christmas!

 

What do you think?  Possible?  Enjoyable?  I'll let you know if and when my family and I get on board. 

Monday, December 21, 2015

11 WAS MY BREACHING AGE

Does anyone remember this term from college?  I think I first encountered it in a Shakespeare class.  At any rate, the idea (at least as I hazily recall it) is that little boys would wear skirts until the age of 8, at which time they began to wear "breaches" or pants.  So 8 was considered the "breaching age".  Just a little Elizabethan trivia to get your day started, though I do love the ideas and questions behind it with all the gender and gender development talk floating around our ethosphere right now.

I've been working on my personal life over the past year (Read: THERAPY) and it's been interesting to excavate back as I also work on the here and now.  Like everything, family systems inevitably come into play.   11 was definitely the age when I had to put on my big girl pants, and the rest is fodder for the ages.   With all this in mind, as well as so many of the thoughts and questions we entertain raising a child with special needs, I was MASSIVELY psyched to get this book in the mail from one of my close friends recently.  It's been on my list for two years, and is next on my to-read list.  I might even gift it to a few people myself!  I'll report back once I'm done, but I've had many trustworthy sources confirm it's awesomeness so if this kind of thing is your bag, I would definitely add it to your list for the New Year.



10 MAKES A DECADE

When I consider aging, I think a lot in terms of decades.  What can I expect my life to be in each decade?  How glad am I not to be in my twenties anymore?  And how much am I looking forward to my forties?  I found this little piece of fluff from an online British publication and chuckled, though I agreed with a lot of what they said.  Or at least I would agree in theory if my thirties hadn't been almost solely dedicated to gestating, birthing, nursing, diapering and running after children.  It's been an awesome decade, but very labor intensive, making me seriously psyched about my forties.  But never fear!  The same site had this to say about why THEY will be our best decade by far.  Admittedly, they were a little less convincing, siting things like "nobody gives a toss what you look like" as one of their reasons, leading me to believe all the people working for them are probably 22 and fantasizing about what in the hell it might be like to grow up.

On a side note, they also had this picece up on their site:

27 Tweets about tequila that everyone regretting their life choices will relate to

and this one, not to be missed,

You can now buy condiment's for your pet's food

Hope you are having a wonderful advent.  More soon! Lots more.  Advent is going fast!

Here's the little nugget who helped kick my thirties party off.  And this is pretty much how I've felt ever since.  Up to my neck in it!