During our epic eight year battle with infertility, I would regularly make little bargains with God in a last ditch desperate attempt to make things work. “God? If you give me a baby, I’ll stop swearing at other drivers.” “God? If I get a baby I’ll donate all my Christmas presents to Goodwill.” “God? If it works this time, I promise I’ll give a penny more often than I take a penny.” But the one thing I could never bring myself to bargain over was the potential ability of my child. Never once was I ever even tempted to say, “God? You can give me a baby with whatever challenge you’ve got. I’m willing. I just want a baby.” Never once. I was so terrified at the thought of raising a child with special needs, so sure I did not possess the mix of tenderness and patience and ferociousness it requires, that in all my fruitless bargaining I never even hinted at the offer.
I had known a few of those moms over the years, and I would marvel at their capabilities. I’ve known families that adopted child after child with profound needs, sacrificing wealth and worldly ambition to nurture these little spirits. Their lives seemed holy to me. I was sure that these were a special type of people, gifted with benevolence that the rest of us mortals could never obtain. They seemed like saints.
Despite all my fear and the certainty I had about my own limitations, my own calling into the Sisterhood of the Special Needs came. My son Atticus was born at 28 weeks via emergency C-section, spent 3 months in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and a couple months into his hospital stay the doctors found some brain damage that resulted in Cerebral Palsy.
If my life were a movie, this is the part where I would go out walking through a late night rainstorm, railing at the heavens and cursing the God I believed in. But nothing so cathartically dramatic was available, so my husband Jared and I spent two days catatonic in front of the television, the floor littered with Cheese-It crumbs and Ho-Ho wrappers as we tried to eat our feelings. Once we found the strength to leave the couch and wash the orange dust off our hands, we made our way back to Atti’s bedside to discover that he looked exactly the same as he did before the diagnosis. He was still our teeny little super guy. He was still the hard won little blessing that we had rejoiced over before. He now just carried this label that left everything else up in the air. I was overwhelmed with love for him, but the visions I had of my future were terrifying. I had no idea how I could be the mom a kid like this would need.
Suddenly I found myself in this club of sainted women, only I was a bundle of neurosis with a short temper and serious self-doubt. But since I was still in the club whether I wanted to be or not, it meant that you didn’t have to be some paragon of virtue to belong, which meant that those women I had always admired weren’t some rare breed of perfection but regular old women who were just doing amazing things. And since I was just a regular old woman, maybe I could get there too. This realization gave me the faith I needed to straighten my shoulders, take a deep breath, and get to work.
It’s been nearly two years since he was born, and we’ve spent three or four days a week shuttling between doctors and therapists of every stripe. Every few months Atti accomplishes a new skill on his way towards independence. His progress is slow, so slow that if you didn’t know what you were looking at you’d think he was stagnant, but it is progress nonetheless. We have become cheerleaders for every independent movement, recognizing how many muscles and systems have to coordinate just to eat, and thrilled on a day when he poops. He’s growing into such a motivated and stubborn little kid, I think he’s going to prove the doctors wrong with a smirk on his face.
My journey into motherhood was so very arduous, on the surface it probably seems to bear little resemblance to the majority of mothers out there. I still find myself choosing to say “when Atti was born,” instead of “when I gave birth” because that emergency trip into the operating room and then three months away from my baby seems to have almost nothing to do with the typical experience. But I think my experience carries what is true for every mother, just compressed.
Motherhood seems to carry those moments for everyone – moments when you are convinced you don’t have it in you, moments when you feel at the absolute limit of your capabilities and you’re still being asked for more. It’s easy to put moms like me in our own category of saintly special cases, but it’s just not true. Getting this diagnosis did not come with a special gift basket of great character traits. When my worst fears were realized and I was forced to confront what I was going to do, I didn’t do anything more or less than most mothers do daily, I discovered more in me than I thought was there, and I did what my child needed.







Hi Tresa,I've been popping by and reading your blog for a few months now. Though I've never commented before, I just wanted to tell you how much I adore your uplifting perspectives. Your son is indeed a beautiful miracle and your posts are always inspirational (I'm also envious of your mad crafting skills!) Happy New Year to you and your lovely family!
Hear Hear Tresa, I wholeheartedly agree… it goes right along with the "You're so brave, I couldn't possibly" comments, we had when Amy was ill.Nope, you just do what any parent does get on with it…That's not to say you aren't doing a great job mind, and I know you have days when you are anything but a saint… we all do!
Three cheers for mums and dads everywhere, whatever the battle of the day is… we all deserve them, and treasure every moment I cannot believe my baby is nearly a growed up.
Tresa, how open, raw, and empassioned. My brother has profound special needs, and my mother has often made similar statements: that she's just not some super-mom, but a regular person that this really unusual thing happened to just making the best of our lives. Thank you for articulating this so well…it really helps me to see more of what my mom must have gone through as a young mother.
Teri
Beautiful reese. I'm cheering that you can feel these thoughts of self-appreciation & empowerment & "hey I'm doing a great job" while you're in the middle of it all – sometimes people only have these epiphanies decades later, instead of now – when you need them the most. We're all in your corner, here's to year #3!
As more and more times goes by, I become progressively more worried that if/when we do finally conceive, we will have to deal with Downs Syndrome or some other disability. I'm terrified of how I will be able to handle it, wondering if, after all the other trials we've faced in just trying to be able to have kids, that would be the straw which broke the camel's back. I hope, if we're called upon to bear that challenge, we'll handle it with some semblance of the grace and strength you've shown.
hi tresa, ( sorry for all the other comments i have left you and for as long as i have been reading your blog i never spelled your name right (teresa) so this is a first for me this new year…sorry about that). love this post!!!!! you are amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!! best to you and your family this new year.
Atti is so darn lucky to have you–I'm sure he'll realize it sometime. You are amazing, I've always thought so–It's no wonder he's a fighter, when he's got a "trainer" like you for a mom. Love you!
I don't care what you say. As someone who has not yet had children, I find you and every mother in that Sisterhood to be amazing.If, when my time comes, I find myself on a similar path I can only hope that I'm half the mother you are to Atti.
Tresa, that photo at the top of your post…oh man, it made me cry! Beautiful, so full of emotion, so personal and private. thank you for sharing, it illustrated everything you wrote underneath. Atti is gorgeous…what a sweet little boy.xx
Hello Tresa,A friend of mine shared your blog with me…we are both moms with special little ones…your story is amazing…my little guy is 13 months old, and we were told he had Down Syndrome when he was 7 days….it has been a long emotional road for us, but we are loving our calling…we have a 2 year old son as well who adores his brother! feel free to stop by and check out my blogs…the boys each have one, and then I just started a personal one… <3<3<3http://www.blogger.com/profile/13402864148200416874 (Levi is our son with DS)Bless you!Rachel
and I was just crying so much I would like to tell you, but the tears pouring from my eyes like rain …