When Lydia was born & I was first combing the internet trying to learn about families of individuals w/ Down Syndrome, I came across the hashtag #theluckyfew, & honestly, it shocked me. “The Lucky Few? LUCKY?” I wondered? That seemed like toxic positivity to me—reaching too far. ‘Delusional,’ was the world that came to mind, actually. “These poor people,” I thought, “faced with no other life, have convinced themselves that this is a GOOD thing as a way to cope.”
. . .
I knew nothing about the disability community. What I DID know, the opinions I HAD been exposed to up to that point in my life, whether subtle or overt, were largely steeped in prejudice. And this was the result. I viewed my own daughter’s birth as an impossible tragedy to overcome, & could not FATHOM ever calling ourselves, our life, “lucky.”
. . .
Oh friends. If you learn nothing else from me, ever—please learn how dead wrong a person can be, because I was. You may look at our lives & see hard (and you know what, me too 😅) but hard exists in every life. And IN SPITE of the hard, in spite of the heart surgeries & the upcoming pacemaker stuff & even this week’s RSV vacay to the ER, I am telling you—NO ONE IN THIS HOUSE WOULD TRADE IT. No one. We all believe that we are LUCKY 🍀 to have this girl & her extra chromosome in our lives & to have the opportunity to learn all the extra lessons we get to learn—and experience all the extra JOY and LAUGHTER and HOPE and LOVE and MIRACLES we get, because of it. It is a singular thing. It is phenomenal. I did not know before Lydia. I did not understand. But now I do. Now I KNOW (bone deep) that those w/ disabilities aren’t just to be pitied or tolerated or a good service project… they are INDIVIDUALS & friends & we can learn SO MUCH about others, ourselves, the world & Bigger Things by being w/ them.
Now I hope to show other people these opportunities that I was missing thru inclusion, while at the same time opening doors for Lydia. Truly, everyone benefits.
. . .
I always say Lydie gave me new eyes & that she changed everything. She did.
“I once was blind, but now I see.”
RSV 2024
Lyds got home from her little 36 hr (or whatever) hospital RSV stay last night and walked straight up to me and requested “Songs?” So I felt this image of her listening to her Taylor Swift playlist on the Yoto was appropriate. It’s literally one of her favorite pastimes. 💛
***
Every winter my feed is full of our sweet little T21 friends spending time in the hospital, usually for respiratory issues. Down Syndrome often comes with tinier airways and low muscle tone—both make fighting colds extra hard. We’ve been pretty lucky as far as avoiding severe illnesses goes… with the exception of a couple of dances with RSV. 👎🏻 That one seems to always get us. Fortunately our time in the hospital was short. 🙏🏻 It wears on you, just the same. I alternate between laughing—like last night when we found out my son was supposed to have a fully painted, weighted, assembled pinewood derby car dropped off at an activity & I had sent him—late—with a cut piece of wood—no paint, no wheels, no weight, good luck, kid! Totally clueless🥴😂 Poor boy. (Luckily we had another day to prepare before competition.)
And crying—finding myself having a breakdown over a ridiculous, nonissue to Dan, knowing that what has me wound up is not 100% the issue at hand at all, but rather an accumulation of bad health news this month and stress, trying to find an outlet. 🥵 Fortunately I’m far enough down this road now that I can recognize the symptoms and try to build in some grace for myself.
***
Being a medical mom is hard. Not a lot of people get it—the relentless weight that falls on your shoulders while things like science fairs and pinewood derbies and life just keep on going… The way you get unexpectedly punched in the stomach by surprise bad news (major pacemaker surgery coming up! Could be this month, could be in 5, stay ready!), or a hospital trip, and you just have to roll with it and get back up again, over and over. Some of the most chill people I’ve ever known are the ones who have to face crisis over and over and I get it—you have to be. To adapt is to survive. But it’s exhausting. At least for the type As among us 🙋🏼♀️😅 But I’m learning. I’m learning. And onward we go.
Messy Bun & Tutu
Tiny poems in this little black & white dance series.
Whirl
Messy bun detail.
Dancer
Twirl 🩰
Presence
“Hurry, hurry, drive the fire truck,
Hurry, hurry, drive the fire truck,
Hurry, hurry, drive the fire truck,
Ding ding ding ding ding!”
It’s a children’s song we learned from Ms. Rachel—one of Lydia’s favorites—but also semi-reflective of certain states of mind? Rushed… chaotic… random alarms at the end… 😆
I was in fire truck mode on the way to school drop off today, “Hurry, hurry!!” lost deep in my own thoughts on a random subject. Lydia was chattering away in her own jibberish like she does in the seat behind me. I wasn’t paying any attention at all, until I caught the slightest giggle & pause.
“Kaboo!” Giggle.
‘Kaboo’ is Lydia’s shortened version of “peek-a-boo,” & I realized w/ a start, when I turned my head to see her face buried in her winter hood, that she was actively trying to play a game w/ me on the way to school.
Having no other words at her disposal such as, “Hey Mom, look at me!” like a typical 5 year old would use, or “Mom, I need you,” these giggly moments are bids for attention that she throws out. And I had almost missed it. Lost in translation & the weedy ways of my own distracted thoughts.
The magic of knowing someone like Lydia is that they teach you how to notice, how to feel, how to care—about all the subtle things & people that we normally miss.
Is the sun in her eyes? I better fix that, because she won’t tell me. Is she upset or acting out of character for some reason? Better play back the day & figure out why.
What makes her happy? Have you ever NOTICED how satisfying different textures are when you run them through your fingers or when you dangle a ribbon in the light just so? Or how soothing it is to be rocked in a swing under the trees for hours?
Does she love me? It’s in the way she plays w/ my hair, starts a game, whines when I’m in another room & the door is closed between us. Believes me when I tell her a procedure might hurt but I will be there & things will be alright.
Little things. Little, little, things that contain worlds of significance. Teaching me compassion, teaching me joy, teaching me presence one moment at a time.
My Own Desert Places
I like the desert. I remember the first time my family drove south headed from SLC UT to Phoenix AZ. I was around 10, seated in the backseat of a minivan w/ my own disposable camera. As soon as we hit St George & I got my first glimpse of palm trees at gas stations I started clicking away. More than a few choice shots of half inside van/half crooked palms made up that roll 😅
The desert has that effect on me, though, & always has. I’m always amazed at the exotic nature of it—the fact that things LIVE there. And not just ANY things; some of the most beautiful & delicate-looking things live in the desert. There are fierce cacti w/ gnarly thorns that can almost bite through a shoe, and yet when those same cacti bloom, it’s often w/ the most ornate, delicate, magical flowers…
And that’s how it is out there. Wild, ferocious, violent landscapes (canyons, scorpions, cacti, desolation, heat) juxtaposed with breathtaking, fragile, exquisite tableaus (sunsets, geological formations, wildflowers, raging rivers, delicate ecosystems). It’s a wild & precious marvel to me, every time, reminding me of both how fragile & fierce life can be.
I think there’s a bit of the desert in me. Maybe because I was raised here, but more because of the forces & events that have shaped my life, like the wind & sand shape Arches. I recognize my prickly cactus bits—the parts where trauma has left me w/ difficult to navigate sharp edges, always worried & storing up “water” against the dry season. Protective. Guarding. Dangerously defensive if caught unawares. And I recognize the wild sage in me—blue ocean wild under the expansive desert sky, throwing my hair back in the wind under the stars. Even the canyon, carved & beautified by water—tears?—and time, providing shelter & home to smaller, more vulnerable things. More generous than you would expect in the desert. A baby canyon, a gorge, maybe, looking up to the giants for guidance.
Yes, I like the desert. Full of color, full of texture. Full of unexpected life & mysteries. You cannot tame it, but you cannot forget or leave it, either. A place of extremity, and beauty; and beauty in extremity. The perfect place to see and feel and learn and be.
Snow Haze
Winter golden hour is so magical. It only lasts a split second but man it makes everything sparkle & glow. ✨
Work Hard Play Hard
The first day back to school & therapy was rough, but it ended with snow play (sledding, throwing, stomping!) & sun so we’re calling it a win ⛄️☀️
Snuggle Yawn
Hahaha 😆🥱
Disability, Cuteness, and Authenticity
Disability is not cute; that’s where we get it wrong. Too often, people try to capitalize on disability and call that advocacy. It’s easy to do—so many times moments with the disabled cut straight to our hearts and show us something poignantly real about ourselves. If not handled carefully, this can snowball into a quick-fix trivialization of an entire population; or in today’s content-hungry culture, a steady stream of carefully-curated feel-good dopamine hits. I’ll say it again: disability is not cute. Disability is AUTHENTIC.
[Edit: I’m talking in broad terms here, about society as a whole, not any specific person or account. I have seen many clips published by any number of companies or accounts go viral featuring individuals with DS and wondered why. I have had many people tell me my daughter is so cute (and she is) but then proceed to do tasks FOR her, and then wondered if they see her as MORE than cute.]
It’s scary as a parent-advocate to walk the line between wanting to portray your child in the best light to a society who, for the most part, is blind or has limited experience with the true gifts & positive contributions this community has to offer, while also needing to be honest about the things that are hard—because this too is advocating and necessary to bring about change.
I am learning to stand in the in between. To witness the dualities of life. And to represent it fairly. Truthfully, I don’t know if the internet is ready for that. But I know that mothers are. Moms have long known that love and struggle walk hand in hand. Light contains the full spectrum of colors—some of which our eyes can’t even perceive. Truth and life are like that, too: dualistic, full-spectrum, exquisite.
Authentic. But not cute. And that’s ok.
Permission to be real is granted here.
Christmas Card
I’ve always wanted to make a Christmas card with just pictures I’ve taken from the year before, and this year I finally did it! 🥰 This is what I got into photography for—documenting my family’s story. Maybe next year I’ll get over my two-year hiatus from hiring someone to take our family pics brought on by that one time Lydia had an epic meltdown during the entire shoot and also by the fact that you CANNOT POSE HER for love or money 🫠🤗 Lifestyle/candid & mom w/her camera it is!!! 😂 Merry Christmas from our house to yours. May we all take our hot messes and throw them in the beautiful light of a Yosemite epiphany once in awhile and see the full-fledged honest beauty of it all. 💛 (front of card; back of card)
Shine On
She was still brand new. It was just days, maybe a few weeks, from our life-changing dual birth diagnoses of DS and congenital heart disease, and I had not yet recovered. Definitely not from the birth, physically, though I was barely conscious of that; but it was the birth trauma and demanding medical needs of my newborn that had me reeling. What would this mean for us and the rest of our lives? I had no idea. Everything at the moment was medical tubes, monitoring devices, doctors’ appointments, and fear.
I cried a lot. I couldn’t answer texts. I crawled the internet looking for answers and hope like I was dying of thirst in the desert. And I kind of was—that’s how thin my knowledge was at the beginning of this.
I remember so clearly the first flame of hope. I had read a lot by then—devoured blogs and books and pamphlets in record time. But what broke through—what really broke through—was so simple. It was a video clip of a sister with a guitar, sitting on the floor in a hall, singing casually but so sweetly, “You Are My Sunshine,” with her baby brother who had Down Syndrome. Her voice was beautiful and clear. Her behavior was natural, as if they did this every day. “You are my sunshine, my only sunshine, you make me…” She paused in her singing and waited for him to sing back, which he did: “Hap-py!” I bawled. And then I knew: There was hope.
Today, on winter solstice, that memory was buried in the past when I walked into Lydia’s room. She greeted me with her customary, “Hiiiiiii!” which always makes me grin. As I helped her change into her clothes for the day, I asked if she wanted to sing sun songs? As I started to sing You Are My Sunshine, I thought about her radiant light, and it all came back. Eventually I stopped singing, but Lydia continued, all the best parts ringing out clearly: “happy,” “love you,” “sunshine.”
My heart almost burst. It was the darkest of dark nights, but oh what a radiant sunshine was born. Let her shine, let her shine, let her shine.
Measuring Stick Reminders
Sit with me while I overcome that IEP. It might take a minute. While I rock back and forth and ask the same old worrisome questions: “Is it enough? Are we enough?” Enough therapy. Enough support. Enough advocacy. Enough pushback. Enough movement in the right direction. Enough seeing her potential. Enough.
“Is it that different,” I wonder, “This same old sickness that’s plagued me my whole life?” Except now the targets have moved. The subjects have changed. It’s not me we’re talking about, with my academics and worthiness and social rankings… it’s her. And haven’t we learned this lesson already? To throw out the damn measuring sticks they (society) keep thrusting in our faces and just keep offering the only thing we wanted and needed all along? Love?
Here’s some more, dear heart. Try to remember. Let it be enough.
Run Towards that Light!
I drove away from school drop off today crying. I got to watch Lydia greet her favorite aide with gigantic smiles and waving arms and watch that woman’s heart light up in response. I then saw Lydia turn around and watch her classmates get off the bus and she broke out in an ecstatic high-stepping happy dance at the sight of them. Her joy was overwhelming and infectious and uplifting. And this was after we had driven to school singing Ruldoph the Red Nose Reindeer, laughing together (“ho ho ho!”).
In my quiet car alone, my misty eyes full, I poured out my heart to God, thanking Him for letting me keep this girl. For letting me experience HER. For letting me know the full unrestrained beauty of Down Syndrome & “special needs.” I remember how much I feared it; how much I misunderstood. If you have ever worried about having a child with Down Syndrome—please don’t. I won’t say it’s easy, but I will tell you what it’s like. If you’ve ever seen a movie montage (think the movie The Giver) about the full spectrum of the human experience played out in its upmost cinematic form—the highs, the lows, the high resolution, wide-angle, full color, surround sound, all-in, rock your soul essence of life portrayed before your eyes; the kind that leaves you breathless & grateful to be alive to just learn and love and experience it all…
It’s like that.
We should be running TOWARDS these beacons of light, not away from them.
God bless the extra chromosomes. 💛
Christmas Crazies
It was stop number five in four hours. I was checking out at the cash register and opened my purse to get out my wallet only to discover to my shock that it wasn’t there! “Uh, just a second…” I said, fumbling through receipts, loose bills, and tubes of chapstick, “We might be in trouble…” Trying to save the situation, I scrounged up three dollar bills from my purse, but my charge amounted to $11.23. “I must have left my wallet in my car,” I apologized to both the cashier and the woman in line behind me, “I’m so sorry! I’m losing my mind!” “Tis the season, Honey,” the woman behind me said warmly, placing her items on the counter, “We’re ALL losing our minds.” The young cashier cleared out my purchase awkwardly and collected my non-receipt. I turned to go, completely embarrassed, mumbling something about looking in my car, when I immediately discovered my wallet tucked neatly UNDER MY ARM. 🙃
Only two weeks ‘til Christmas! Hang in there, Magic Makers! 🤪⛄️🎄
**Image: Annual Christmas PJ unwrapping.
Sacred Conversations
This week… has been a week. In preparation—preparation, mind you—for the upcoming IEP, I have filled out 12 behavioral surveys, conducted two phone calls with therapists, and met with the school principal. Let’s not count the emails or times I’ve opened the Calm app 🤪 I do finally feel like we’re making some headway, however. Finally. 🙏🏻 This sweet child whose short edu has been plagued by pandemic and spotty Zoom therapies 🙄 and health issues and who by KINDERGARTEN has already attended 3 schools. (Because that’s what they do in this state for special ed kids.) For the FIRST TIME since she was born, this Mama is feeling like, “HEY. Let’s get these ducks in a row!!” And maybe the scraggly little ducks are trying. We’re trying. 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Anywho. Sacred conversations. They pop up sometimes. Always when you least expect it, and I got one today, sitting in my pajamas on my bed. Miss Lydia wandered in, climbed up, and sat on my lap. I stared into her eyes, half hidden by her adorable strawberry bangs, and thought, “You are worth it. This whole crazy week.”
“Comb hair??” She asked.
It is one of her very few verbal requests. Count them on two hands few. She doesn’t even say my name, but she will ask to spend time with me—just the two of us, and this is how she does it: “Comb hair?”
“Of course!!” I say immediately, knowing this. I want to snuggle with you too! Then, seeing her pause and look around in frustration, “Oh! Let me go get a brush!”
“Go get brush,” she repeats, slowly, staggeringly, but knowingly.
I freeze, halfway to the bathroom. Because this is monumental. Three words. Together. That I’ve never heard before.
“Yes. I’ll get the brush,” I repeat, in awe. And I do. Then I sit back on the bed with my girl on my lap as she lovingly combs my hair before laying her head on my shoulder for a sweet hug.
“Worth it. Forever and ever and ever worth it.” I think.
She is coming. She is growing. She will get there. We will never stop.
Waiting
December 1 means the winter solstice & the return of the light is right around the corner… 💫
Stories
As a senior in high school, when asked why English matters, I wrote “Everyone has a story and something valuable to share with the world.” This intense belief became a guiding light in my life as I chose my career: English teaching. I recognized the power of writing and expression to unleash personal stories, and I wanted to help empower others to share what they had with the world. Communication has always been very important to me. Fast forward many years, and then there was Lydia. She has managed to rearrange & expand my perspective on all my core beliefs, including this one. Truthfully, my heart has ached over how hard spoken language is for her. But there has NEVER been a moment in her life when we have not communicated. She and I share a unique bond that transcends words & I believe time. Some of my most sacred moments as a mother involve “talking” WITH Lydia through difficult, even heartbreaking struggles. The bond is so real that even when she was a 5 month old in the hospital after her surgery, doctors commented on it. WE just ARE. 💛 And thus I learned that “communication” can mean many things, and is a layered concept. I long for words. I long for HER words. And I believe they will come in her own time. An update: Lydie is “nonverbal” in that she understands many words but volunteers few. She will ask to “eat” or for “water” or “toy” or a few other single-word requests if highly motivated, but that’s it. Sometimes she says “bye!” or echoes “love you!” 🥹 She knows many signs, and many SONGS. Music is our biggest key—she memorizes well and will sing to herself often. Lots of times it’s unintelligible, but we first started catching melodies, and now phrases. We play Taylor Swift & Miss Rachel constantly for these reasons. She knows her ABCs & their sounds, but the majority of her sweet classmates are also nonverbal & we are trying to get her in an environment that will better help her speech development. It’s a tricky world and we are always learning. We love her so much. She has taught me to LISTEN with my eyes, my body, my ears, and my whole heart. Someday those words will come. Her story, however it’s written, is worthy.
Fall in the Mountains
Outside things. 🍁 Trying to create more because it’s healthy for me. 🙃