Being SPECIAL ,...

oops Strawberry, going Mt Faber is only for EIPIC am & pm...we went today actually not Mt Faber, is SAFRA Club @ Mt Faber...Jiaxing got her flu jab from her PD liao, so din get the free one, but heard the 2nd one have to pay.

You all so good hor go shopping, i seldom go since the #2 came last Nov, but recently, since Jiaxing is in Childcare, i try to bring her out more often, cos see her face like a bit blur blur...
 


Yukee
doesn't mean seldom go wor... try to bring them out for fresh air lor... ar bo everyday is cc,home,cc,home....etc.. boring wor... GSS coming in 2 days!!
 
Hi to the mummies here.

Very interesting on listening to your kids stories. I mean no offences ok, and i do admire you for your courage. I can't imagine myself being able to cope like u.

My son is also G6PD deficent and it is also running in my own family. On top of g6pd, i am a carrier of thassameia alpha and as a hearing-impaired mummy, i led a very normal life, everything can do including being a ftwm. I am grateful to my hubby for his help too.

Dun worry i believe u can do everything and dun think u r unlucky to hv such kids with special needs. Nothing to do with karma or watever.
 
G6PD ... carrier of thassameia alpha and as a hearing-impaired mummy ... wow, so what u work as?? Hearing-impaired since u bb or like the Xiao Fang Fang? Life also not easy!!
 
Strawberry

what is xiao fang fang?

Yes i am a carrier of thalassameia alpha. Only discovered it during my first preggie. my son is g6pd and so are my younger brother and youngest sister. I lost my hearing at age 3 and since then, i was raised like any normal siblings and cousins.I m a civil servant.

I dun think so as i always live life to the fullest and entrust everything to my good Abba to take care of although it can be hard at times.

My hubby helped tend to my son at night when i cannot hear his cries. so far he is now a toddler n he understood that his mummy cannot hear.
 
June
When i only have Jiaxing, i use to bring her out almost everyday...cos staying with IL, can;t stand their life style (excuse me)...so i fly out of the house everyday with my gal...when #2 came, she is a 'harm bao'(cry baby) bring her out very 'pai sey' until i give up bringing her out...but now my #1 go childcare, so i use the time to bring #2 out...now she don cry so much, mayb big liao, so easier to control.

Btw...haiz...no extra cash to go to the GSS lah...also figure still haven't go back normal, no point spending the money...you all enjoy your 'sa-ping'...
 
Nowadays the medical technology is so advanced that i really envy the new generations. U see, at the birth, most babies are screened for any sign of hearing loss and then at 3-6 months, another screening on hearing loss. If discovered, then the hospital wil do something like early intervene on mininise the hearing loss, unlike my generation time, (like 70s-80s),

So you whose child are special, ought to hv faith in the medical technology who are so advanced and continue to hv research being done now.
 
Ocean@heart
You are oso a brave mummy..YOu've gone thru so much to walk to this stage.. you deserve a big big pat on ur back...

Yukee
Let me recall how my mum manage to bring me and my 2 brothers out when we were young... Hmmmm.... oh! She will ask me and me 1st younger brother to hold onto her shirt while she carry my youngest brother to the market... den we will walk in this way wherever we go lor... haha
 
Ocean@Heart ...

what is xiao fang fang? Aiya, she's an actress who lost her hearing slowing, now one side can hear only. Heard Feng feiFei who using 1 ear to listen.

R u on hearing aids? If not, how do u 'hear' or understand what ppl wants? I very swah gu!!
 
Ic ic ic ic...

I am deaf in both ears. jsut that i can hear a bit in the right ear. unfortunately cannot hear very soft sounds despites i wear a hearing aid sometimes.

Thanks to my mummy and sis, they helped train me on speech from younger so thus i can lip-read with hearing-aid n could talk abit only in english mainly. Never learn chinese before so not good at understanding hanyin pinyin.

Luckily my hubby is normal so he would help coach our son with chinese when time for him to enter pre-school in near future.

Not me only, got few frenz whom i know, are married to normal hubbies n can hv families.
 
June...yes yes...me & my sis also hold onto my mum shirt left & right and she carried my small sis, so my mum can 1 person bring 3 kids out...but my JiaXing naughty leh, she don't even want to hold hands...

Ocean@Heart, sad to say that the advanced medical technology can't make my gal better...now she is young, still can go therapy to improve her physically...btw, she is 2yr, still can't walk properly and cant even speak a word, when she is older, donno what will happen....haiz...
 
Yukee

oh dear, what is actually happening to your girl although i read this thread and cant understand.

I can remember during my sch days, i used to get pissed off every time people stared at us(me and frenzs), the way we sign n gestured as our form of communication. Guess people pity us, dunno why but do u know that we, people with disablities, want to be normal like u very much n some of ppl outside also mocked/imitated our gestures and laughed at us. We hate that behaviour. however i learnt abt Jesus n understood that i may be normal pax minus hearing and learnt to forgive those who mocked in the past. So naturally i can understand those feelings that ur child might be experiencing when going outside if the public stares at your girl. Now that i m a mum, i dun give a damn of how ppl look/think of us(hi ppl).

As for your daughter, maybe if she cannot speak a word by the age of 4 or 5, as her mother, u hv to allow her to learn sign lang so that she can communicate with u in sign lang. As for the not walk, i dunno how. I can undstd that it will be very tough in the long way and if i can overcome many obstacles in my life, so why not u. Be positive ok.
 
I lived in swah ba so never gone shopping with mum. She works part-time aft we moved to HDB. As big sis, I took care of 4 younger siblings - only Pri6! We very gwaigwai, aft sch all will walk home ourselves and eat the long long ago prepared food. Our enjoyment is tv and play hide n seek on our 10th floor - the running always ended up downstairs neigbour came knock our doors+complain to mum.

I so swah gu that time, 1st time:
-watch movie at 16yrs old
-eat fast food (BK) at 16yrs old
-know what's a shopping ctr (Yaohan Thomson) at 17yrs

Sym also cant talk (characteristic of her syndrome), slow in everything .... genetic issues so no matter how advance medical technology also cannot repair or add in missing chromosome.
kao_cry.gif
 
Haha.... Strawberry, you liek tat call sua gu ar?? Den me even more sua gu lor... 19 yrs old 1st time step into pub... Lol....

Ocean@heart
Despite the advance medical technology, there are still mani things which are still under going studies. But i am glad to read on the paper the other day tat a public member's bloodcord had save a 5 mths or 6 mths old child(can someone confirm). This is one big break thru. And i am glad that i donated my son's blood cord to the public.

Yukee
Sama sama!! Seems like our mums know how to make use of their shirt to bring us out huh...
 
Oh yes, i did read abt it in newspaper. the cord blood saved a 2 yr old toddler boy and making a speedy recovery at KKWCH now.

Hv faith ok.
 
Ocean@heart

You're one brave lady and mummy. Kudos to you!

How did it feel when you had people staring at you when you sign? People also stare at my girl when she uses her cane, or show trouble negotiating steps. some stare because they're curious. That i don't really mind. But others give a very disgusted look, as if my girl is some kind of alien or monster!

When we go out, and she wants to have a closer look at something, she needs to get up really close, and stick her head at it. We have people giving rude stares and telling me to take her away! Sigh! I can't go round explaining she's blind!

There are 2 advances I am most interested in for my girl. Of course the medical advances in re-generating retina cells, but that is actually a long way off! More importantly is IT, like computers and machines that can enhance access for the blind.

Even if my girl can't benefit from the medical research of retina transplant for normal vision, I know that IT can help her live a better and more normal life!
 
Cowandchick

Oh i did not mind if ppl looked at our sign for the first time if they never have any encounters with any hi before. it is understandable but i find it very rude if ppl laugh. it does not mean they r okay n we not okay. then one day something bad happen to them who laugh then how? Every pax with disablity is still special to God as the normal ppl to God. I dun know if u r a christian, u would have come across some parables abt jesus feeling very compassionate towards blind/deaf/mute ppl, think in the chapter of matthews. Hmm i wont preach here leh.

Even if others wont understand why your girl is like that, they shd not behave like that, so digusting n disrespectful. I think your girl is similar to a colleague of mine here. He is also working here but doing simple work. everytime he read something, he will use his magnifying glass to read the words. Really not easy. there was once where the building shook after the earthquake happened outside the spore, think shd be ard 11am in the mrg, many ppl rushed down the staircase and this colleague cannot see clearly so i n another few colleagues helped take turn to guide him by his hand safely. Wont say he is blind totally but he could see only light and things by 50%. maybe u have to pray for a miracle that your girl will be able to grow up n lead a normal life if highly possible and able to do things independently in future.

Ever thought of bringing your girl to US or oversea where got successful operations done on transplanting retina cells.
 
And one more thing is i m enternally grateful to my parents for doting on me the most n that they still wanted me despite my hearing loss when i was very younger. I also know that my daddy constantly worry for me due to my disablity and that i might not able to survive in the society when i came out after finishing school. In the end, i DID it. and now i can assure my dad that i am able to lead a normal life. next thing, my dad worried again when i dated a normal guy(he is not hi). My hb(then bf) assured him n mum that he is fine with me and he looks at me as normal, and now things are okay,
 
June - u step in pub, I hv not even step into pub or disco yet .... hitting 40 soon!!

Ocean@heart - sch din recommend Sym sign lauguage, pic exchange (only a few tries) or any speech therapy ... they felt she not ready (turning 5 soon). I got photostat some simple sign lauguage gestures. At one stage (in EIPIC), we still sign to 'keep' and 'more' but ever since in PCMH, not a single sign made! Sym cant even point with finger nor nod/shake her head correctly ... she shake head for fun!

Yukee - can Jiaxing walk a few steps when u hold her? Got use sch's k-walker? If cant stand with support, must train her in standing position so she knows legs r to support her!

Sym 19mths crawl then a few mths later creep. 2+ hold hand to walk. Rented 2x K walker home during sch holidays to practise. Just aft 3yrs old could walk with wide gap ... now still not v stable, cant stop and pause, need to hold for support.
 
Oh my heart ache when i hear your postings.. to think your girl is more worse than me. Very disheartening n sad.
 
Ocean@heart
yup you DID it! and well done!! Ppl give funni expression when come to such disabilities. To me, i respect and sympathise them.

erm.... have anyone of you tried frog leg porridge?? Heard tat can strengthen legs....
 
June...i win liao...i 22 then go disco...hahaha...

Ocean@Heart & Strawberry, jiaxing is a down syndrome girl, downs children have weak muscle tone, so they start to walk quite late, some as old as 3 or 4yr, but Jiaxing is consider as very good, cos she start walking by herself when she is 19mths, but cant balance well, falls quite often...thought she will improve as times go by, but seem like her improvement is very very slow, and the problem is she likes to run so fall more often...yes, jiaxing knows some sign language, EIPIC teach abit of it, but most the sign we learn thru books & DVD, we learn as well as teaching her...anyway, physically should be no problem, all she needs is more practise...the thing i worry is her mental development, now she seem ok, but next time donno how lah...

June, have tried frog leg porridge, also heard can strengthen legs, even the meat for porridge is also leg muscle meat, also heard can strengthen the legs muscle...

I have keep my #2 cord blood, cos i heard downs are more prone to leukemia so just keep lor, in case (choy choy touch wood touch wood)...
 
Yukee
by keeping cord blood with the cord blood bank, there will be a charges incured to it. I forgot how much to pay for it to keep it with a private one. But the public one(Singapore Cord Blood Bank), it is totally FOC. Coz all the cord blood donated will go to the public in need of these cord blood. My gynae even recommand me to donate the cord blood to the public.. Hehe..
 
lately got one case of cord blood - the boy benefit from public cord blood. My pte gynae n KKH didn't mention about donating when I pregnant. Only lately then heard of cord blood.

Frog leg, brown rice, ... all these were suggested by many ppl when Sym still couldn't stand up! I believe work/training + internal input=good!
 
I think this cord blood thing is still rather new in Singapore. Plus if you keep the cord blood with cordlife(www.cordlife.com) there will be a storage charge of $250 per yr. On top of that, you will have to pay abt 1000++ to them for some service charges. Not saying that by not keeping the cord blood, you are doing harm to your future child, but you are actually doing your child some good things. Who knows, in future, when you need help, there is someone out there who is willing to lend you a helping hand.
 
Ya, I also hungry with all this talk about frog leg porridge! But yesterday i walked past this seafood restaurant, with frog legs on its menu. When I saw those froggies in the tank, I nearly freaked out! I always so scared of frogs!

Cord Blood
Do you know that present technology does not allow us to keep cord blood for a long period of time? I think the maximum preservation is around 10 to 15 years. After that, there is no guarantee that the cord blood cells are stable for effective use!
Let's hope technology comes up with something soon to prolong it life!
 
June, i keep the cord blood with stemcord, when my #2 came in Nov they have a offer, so i pay $300 for service charge and yearly storage fee is still $250. During my #1 time is ard $2000, that's why didn't keep lor.

Cowandchick, the sales person didn't tell me about the life span of the cord blood, but they did tell me my #2 cord blood, if being use by herself is 100% suitable, if for my #1 is 75%, for parent is 50%...but the news said the person can't use her own cord blood if anything happen...so abit blur lor...anyway, hope nobody will need to use it...
 
Btw, if you cooking frog leg porridge for your kids, please boil it with water and use the soup to cook porridge. That day my aiya MIL blur blur boil the frog leg together with the porridge and the frog muscle quite chewy, my #1 can't swallow so gana choke, lucky she manage to throw out everything including the porridge and the frog leg...heng arrh...
 
Any one read the ST special on Special Children and Education? I think it's a very "nice show", a lot so far from reality. Nothing much about the struggles parents have to go through! Sigh!

I'm going to give them my 2 cents worth!
 
hey all mummies... my share of 'heng-ness' here...

http://www.singaporemotherhood.com/forumboard/messages/5/288318.html?1131932731

she also in EIPIC, but in balastier special sch. juz started in mar cos all along i dun noe wat to to with her, except keep sending her for her 'repairs'. already resigned to the fate of being a carer of a special child.

when we took a huge leap of faith and went on holiday in april, we did our wills, make sure my sis is the legal guardian, handed them a set of all our important documents (like insurance, house), a set of 'operating manual' on how to handle my ger, b4 we went. where got parents do tis kind of thing when go holiday one?

rachael's chromosome disorder doesnt hv a similar case in the world, so heng my frens say they tot this kind of case oni read from reader's digest! maybe i shd write her story for them to publish 1 day. she also got so much medical problems since born, and yet face look normal, but cant even sit or crawl at age 2.5. i take care of her until the new nurses at KK think i'm a nurse myself cos i can handle all the 'procedures' better than some of them even, like feeding her thru her stomach button, changing the stoma bag when she had an op last year. they say i shd be a nurse since i already hv half the knowledge. pianz... nw my child seldom see doc. i self-medicate since there are oni so many medicines she can take, unless she needs antibiotics or wheez then i bring her in. we 'special mothers' so clever hor? :p

i also did lousy confinement. how to do when they told us she wouldnt survive beyond 2 wks? every day sit in hospital play with her, come home close door and cry. my CL so free, she made flowers and vase from materials recycled from my hampers! but she was v kind lor, she noe i will go hospital from 9am-5pm, so she will wake up at 4am to cook so i can hv a gd brekke and tabao food to eat for lunch & dates drink, n a steaming hot dinner when i bac. anyways she can nap whole PM.

i also one who would hv 'surrendered' my bb if i knew she was going to be 'special'. really hope she die b4 we do, so we tell her she can oni live till 30yrs old, cos we would prob die by 60yrs old aft all the stress we go thru!
 
Hi mummies,

plz do not give up hope.. Now, there is a new serial show airing on Channel 8,9pm. It seems like it has been brought to Singaporean's attention that there is Special kids in Singapore whereby parents will need to spend extra time and effort to take care of them. Mummies, you are brave and strong. It's a tough and long battle..

Recently, i've been listening to Fm 93.3.. There is this adver whereby a mummy who oso has a special child, this is what she have quoted,"Now tat they are young, we are still able to take care of them. When they grow up,thou they might be independent, but we will still be worrying about their future and what will happen to them when we were to go before them. That is when Singapore needs a lot more special schools to help them."

Mummies, i may not be able to understand what you are going thru now, but still, you are special!
 
Hi, this thread had stop for a while...

Recently my gal went to check her eye and discover her eye is squint...doc said need to have a minor surgery to adjust the eye ball back to normal...haiz...

Always feel that my gal is a lucky baby, cos most of her classmates have this problem that problem...she is 'heng heng' all the way...hope this is not the beginning of the problems...
 
Yukee

Squint is quite common, even for normal kids, so don't worry too much. Your girl may need an eye patch after that, to get her to use both eyes equally. But not all kids need that.

When is the surgery? Where will it be done?

All the best, and take care!
 
Cowandchick, patching is for lazy eye, she got that too, patch for 6wks liao, only slight better, need to stimulate her eye more and hopefully this will improve the squint abit. The doc say need monitor for a few months to see how 1st, not sure when is the surgery, but should be before she turn 3 (ie Apr08)...shd be in Mt E lor, the eye doc is there...is a day surgery, heard she say the cost is abt 3K+...haiz...donno how many + lor...
 
Hi Yukee,
I'm new here, happen to chance upon this thread.
Just to share with u that my son went for his left squint op when he was 3, his doc was oso at Mt E but he had his op at Mt Alvernia as it is cheaper, but i cant remember the charge, the op is abt 30-40mins.
Everything went on fine and he has perfect vision till he was abt 5 when we noticed that the squint is back again. So have to help child take care of eye even after the op.
But we have since changed to another doc, she is Dr Pauline Cheong, her clinic is at Gleneagles. We went there to seek a 2nd opinion. She recommended that my son wears glasses though his degree is minimal so as to force him to use his lazy eye , patch for 2hrs a day and do eye exercise daily too.
 
WahWah, thanks for your sharing...actually my HB thought of going polyclinic to ask for a referral letter to a specialist, mayb the medical fee will be cheaper...donno is it a good idea or not.

Btw, my gal's eye doc said if the family member had squint case, the chances of getting it again is higher, but if no such case, the squint most probably will not come back.
 
Hi mummies here i really look up to your strength and this love for your special kids.. i might never fully comprehend your pain but i hope this article about autistic kids will encourage u and see your special children with lots of possiblities and hope,..do take care

Don't Mourn For Us
by Jim Sinclair
[This article was published in the "Our Voice," the newsletter of Autism Network International, Volume 1, Number 3, 1993. It is an outline of the presentation I gave at the 1993 International Conference on Autism in Toronto, and is addressed primarily to parents.]

Parents often report that learning their child is autistic was the most traumatic thing that ever happened to them. Non-autistic people see autism as a great tragedy, and parents experience continuing disappointment and grief at all stages of the child's and family's life cycle.
But this grief does not stem from the child's autism in itself. It is grief over the loss of the normal child the parents had hoped and expected to have. Parents' attitudes and expectations, and the discrepancies between what parents expect of children at a particular age and their own child's actual development, cause more stress and anguish than the practical complexities of life with an autistic person.
Some amount of grief is natural as parents adjust to the fact that an event and a relationship they've been looking forward to isn't going to materialize. But this grief over a fantasized normal child needs to be separated from the parents' perceptions of the child they do have: the autistic child who needs the support of adult caretakers and who can form very meaningful relationships with those caretakers if given the opportunity. Continuing focus on the child's autism as a source of grief is damaging for both the parents and the child, and precludes the development of an accepting and authentic relationship between them. For their own sake and for the sake of their children, I urge parents to make radical changes in their perceptions of what autism means.
I invite you to look at our autism, and look at your grief, from our perspective:
Autism is not an appendage
Autism isn't something a person has, or a "shell" that a person is trapped inside. There's no normal child hidden behind the autism. Autism is a way of being. It is pervasive; it colors every experience, every sensation, perception, thought, emotion, and encounter, every aspect of existence. It is not possible to separate the autism from the person--and if it were possible, the person you'd have left would not be the same person you started with.
This is important, so take a moment to consider it: Autism is a way of being. It is not possible to separate the person from the autism.
Therefore, when parents say,
"I wish my child did not have autism,"
what they're really saying is,
"I wish the autistic child I have did not exist, and I had a different (non-autistic) child instead."
Read that again. This is what we hear when you mourn over our existence. This is what we hear when you pray for a cure. This is what we know, when you tell us of your fondest hopes and dreams for us: that your greatest wish is that one day we will cease to be, and strangers you can love will move in behind our faces.
Autism is not an impenetrable wall
You try to relate to your autistic child, and the child doesn't respond. He doesn't see you; you can't reach her; there's no getting through. That's the hardest thing to deal with, isn't it? The only thing is, it isn't true.
Look at it again: You try to relate as parent to child, using your own understanding of normal children, your own feelings about parenthood, your own experiences and intuitions about relationships. And the child doesn't respond in any way you can recognize as being part of that system.
That does not mean the child is incapable of relating at all. It only means you're assuming a shared system, a shared understanding of signals and meanings, that the child in fact does not share. It's as if you tried to have an intimate conversation with someone who has no comprehension of your language. Of course the person won't understand what you're talking about, won't respond in the way you expect, and may well find the whole interaction confusing and unpleasant.
It takes more work to communicate with someone whose native language isn't the same as yours. And autism goes deeper than language and culture; autistic people are "foreigners" in any society. You're going to have to give up your assumptions about shared meanings. You're going to have to learn to back up to levels more basic than you've probably thought about before, to translate, and to check to make sure your translations are understood. You're going to have to give up the certainty that comes of being on your own familiar territory, of knowing you're in charge, and let your child teach you a little of her language, guide you a little way into his world.
And the outcome, if you succeed, still will not be a normal parent-child relationship. Your autistic child may learn to talk, may attend regular classes in school, may go to college, drive a car, live independently, have a career--but will never relate to you as other children relate to their parents. Or your autistic child may never speak, may graduate from a self-contained special education classroom to a sheltered activity program or a residential facility, may need lifelong full-time care and supervision--but is not completely beyond your reach. The ways we relate are different. Push for the things your expectations tell you are normal, and you'll find frustration, disappointment, resentment, maybe even rage and hatred. Approach respectfully, without preconceptions, and with openness to learning new things, and you'll find a world you could never have imagined.
Yes, that takes more work than relating to a non-autistic person. But it can be done--unless non-autistic people are far more limited than we are in their capacity to relate. We spend our entire lives doing it. Each of us who does learn to talk to you, each of us who manages to function at all in your society, each of us who manages to reach out and make a connection with you, is operating in alien territory, making contact with alien beings. We spend our entire lives doing this. And then you tell us that we can't relate.
Autism is not death
Granted, autism isn't what most parents expect or look forward to when they anticipate the arrival of a child. What they expect is a child who will be like them, who will share their world and relate to them without requiring intensive on-the-job training in alien contact. Even if their child has some disability other than autism, parents expect to be able to relate to that child on the terms that seem normal to them; and in most cases, even allowing for the limitations of various disabilities, it is possible to form the kind of bond the parents had been looking forward to.
But not when the child is autistic. Much of the grieving parents do is over the non-occurrence of the expected relationship with an expected normal child. This grief is very real, and it needs to be expected and worked through so people can get on with their lives--
but it has nothing to do with autism.
What it comes down to is that you expected something that was tremendously important to you, and you looked forward to it with great joy and excitement, and maybe for a while you thought you actually had it--and then, perhaps gradually, perhaps abruptly, you had to recognize that the thing you looked forward to hasn't happened. It isn't going to happen. No matter how many other, normal children you have, nothing will change the fact that this time, the child you waited and hoped and planned and dreamed for didn't arrive.
This is the same thing that parents experience when a child is stillborn, or when they have their baby to hold for a short time, only to have it die in infancy. It isn't about autism, it's about shattered expectations. I suggest that the best place to address these issues is not in organizations devoted to autism, but in parental bereavement counseling and support groups. In those settings parents learn to come to terms with their loss--not to forget about it, but to let it be in the past, where the grief doesn't hit them in the face every waking moment of their lives. They learn to accept that their child is gone, forever, and won't be coming back. Most importantly, they learn not to take out their grief for the lost child on their surviving children. This is of critical importance when one of those surviving children arrived at t time the child being mourned for died.
You didn't lose a child to autism. You lost a child because the child you waited for never came into existence. That isn't the fault of the autistic child who does exist, and it shouldn't be our burden. We need and deserve families who can see us and value us for ourselves, not families whose vision of us is obscured by the ghosts of children who never lived. Grieve if you must, for your own lost dreams. But don't mourn for us. We are alive. We are real. And we're here waiting for you.
This is what I think autism societies should be about: not mourning for what never was, but exploration of what is. We need you. We need your help and your understanding. Your world is not very open to us, and we won't make it without your strong support. Yes, there is tragedy that comes with autism: not because of what we are, but because of the things that happen to us. Be sad about that, if you want to be sad about something. Better than being sad about it, though, get mad about it--and then do something about it. The tragedy is not that we're here, but that your world has no place for us to be. How can it be otherwise, as long as our own parents are still grieving over having brought us into the world?
Take a look at your autistic child sometime, and take a moment to tell yourself who that child is not. Think to yourself: "This is not my child that I expected and planned for. This is not the child I waited for through all those months of pregnancy and all those hours of labor. This is not the child I made all those plans to share all those experiences with. That child never came. This is not that child." Then go do whatever grieving you have to do--away from the autistic child--and start learning to let go.
After you've started that letting go, come back and look at your autistic child again, and say to yourself: "This is not my child that I expected and planned for. This is an alien child who landed in my life by accident. I don't know who this child is or what it will become. But I know it's a child, stranded in an alien world, without parents of its own kind to care for it. It needs someone to care for it, to teach it, to interpret and to advocate for it. And because this alien child happened to drop into my life, that job is mine if I want it."
If that prospect excites you, then come join us, in strength and determination, in hope and in joy. The adventure of a lifetime is ahead of you.
 
Hello ladies ... I'm back ... guess who am I!!

Wow, toy collector got quite an info on Autism (saw in another thread)

Yukee, when u went KK? I went on Wed to see the usual neuro. Sch teacher organising a personal outing to Ubin on Wed, hope weather fine and not too hot + mosquitoes dont crave for our blood .... think u know who I am sh sh sh
 
Strawberry? u change nick?

I didn't go KK, i went Mt E...i went last Thurs, will be going again tomorrow, cos JiaXing need to x-ray her neck and hip...she had runny nose for the past few weeks so it had been postpone and postpone lor...

Toy Collector, though my gal is not autistic, but i agree that no parents want their children come out to be not normal...when i know my gal is a down, i am really sad, at the same time i am also very disappointed, cos all the plans that i had made, for her or myself, during my preggie was no longer needed...the article really touch my heart.
 
well i have not much choice but to find out cos my closest and dearest relative child is suspected to be one and it is a blow to all of us cos all our dreams our expectation are like all gone.. even my son is so scared of that child cos he screams a lot and cant go into our house..

just imagine we can go do CNY visitation at the corridor cos the child cant even come in for long and we cant even eat in a enclosed place like restaurant etc.

City and yukee i might not be in the same shoe as u 2 but i also very sadden by this cos i love the child so much but after reading the article above i comfort myself that even if it is alien from outer place we will still love them.

but it easier to do if u have a choice to return the child back to outer place but when it your own blood n flesh u have to live with them for the rest of our lives...it really not easy..that why i look out to all of u.. u all have the patience n love that i can see in my relative's faces when they bring him out is remarkable..

i also had a bad scare after i gave birth. the PD observed my son and said he has only 1 line across his both palms and suspected him might be a down.. All my dreams are dashed at the moment.. i tried sooo long for a down child? i cant sleep after i delivered i cant eat well i surf the net like mad.. n it took many months to be released from that fear after seeing my son is developing well.

so do hang on! i pray one day we will know the answers..maybe the happiest and most contented people living are the special ones or maybe God has placed them in our life for a special reason..

but do take care of yourself the caregiver cos they need you!
 
Hi Ladies
yup.. no parents would wan their child to turn out this way... Plus, when the child had to turn out this way, usually, parents are the 1st one to be blamed.. We will be given names, being scolded.. etc... Which parents doesn't want their kids to be normal, healthy and be like the rest.. Who does not want...

When my son fall ill with fever the other time round, my boss threaten to deduct my pay.. Yes, i was angry but later on, i tell myself, now is no that pay that matter, is your son tat matter the most to you... Not sae money not important lar.. But tat you carry him in ur tummy for 9 mths and now he is sick.. ur heart will ache and u will tear... Mummies, dun give up hope.. you will harvest wad u have sow... Jia you!!

Strawberry,
u change nick ar???? Aiyo.. regarding the selling thread matter izzit????
 
Huh? Strawberry gana banned? Why leh? U naughty har?

City aka Strawberry(??)...i donno how to activate my pm lah...hee hee...

Toy Collector, my frend ever told me that God give the special one to us is to teach us to be patient...i guest is true lor, cos all the while i have been 'gan jiong' this 'gan jiong' that, everything have to be perfect and fast, so mayb this is a lesson to me lor...also not all down got 1 line across the palm lah...my gal had 3 lines...
 

Yukee,

hope so ba... I am leaving here after CNY(i know veri long)... Muz wait till i get my bonus den i run run run.. Dun wanna stay on... Haiz...
 

Back
Top