There is just something special about the father of a
special needs child.
I remember being newly married to my husband and negotiating
with him as to when to have our first baby.
It went something like this:
Me: “I want to have my first baby before I’m 30.”
Him: “I just want to see how it goes and enjoy life for a
while.”
Me: “Before I’m
30.”
Him: “How about we
try in five years?’
Me: “Two years”.
Him: “Well, I am not going to make any promises, but we can
settle on three years for now.”
So indeed, 3 years later, I was pregnant and I had my first
baby at 29. Life was to be
spectacular. I had a great husband. We had a cute little house in a great city. I was in love. What could go wrong? Such is the thinking of a 29 year old.
I always loved my husband.
Dearly. But I never really needed
him until we had Marley. Everything
changed in an instant. The blows just
kept coming. She was premature. She had a bout of apnea. She was in the NICU for a month. She was diagnosed with a severe brain
bleed. I could hardly breathe I was so
scared. Then the therapies started. And the medical tests. The MRIs. The EEGs.
And the list goes on…
And there was a new part of my husband emerging. This man held me up when I could barely
stand. He let me cry on his shoulder endlessly. He kept positive when all could talk about
was how scared I was. He reminded me of
how much we love her and how it would get us through. I truly don’t know how he tolerated me in
those early years. But the truth is
that, things would get much worse before they would get better.
As Marley grew, we were starting to feel a bit better
because she was an adorable, sweet, attentive, active baby. But at the same time, her sensory system was
in overdrive. She didn’t like to be
held. She barely slept. She always had gastric distress. We found out at 7 months old, that she had a
severe allergy to dairy and eggs. We did
everything we could think of to help her.
So we plugged along, enjoying this sweet, attentive child until
everything changed at about 18 months old.
She received her shots…and well, you know the story. Downhill from there. We were told to get her into the TEACCH
program. Get her started in OT, in
speech therapy, in developmental therapy.
She has a pervasive developmental delay. (Now, we know that was just code for
Autism.) And again…here came the
tears. The dread. The fear.
I read about how usually it is the mom who has to convince
the dad that something is wrong, and the child needs to start therapy. But my husband…ever the realist…was right on
board. “We will get her whatever she
needs.” Then he would smile and
say…”Just look at her….she is beautiful.
She will have it easier in life than you think.” I know he was doing whatever he could to make
me not hurt so badly.
He was then and still is a wonderful daddy. He played with her. He danced with her. He read her stories. He gave her baths. He tucked her in at night. (over and over and over again.) His patience was unwavering.
And he did the not so pleasant things too. The things that come with being an autism
parent. The parent of a sick child. He changed lord knows how many horribly messy
diapers. He cleaned the poop off the
walls. He held her down when she
tantrumed for over an hour at a time. Several
times a day. And in his rare spare
moments, he helped me research what to do about all of it. He was the one who found the DAN! (Defeat
Autism Now!) website and the news about their annual conferences.. And when I said, “I don’t know if we can
afford for me to go”, his response was “I don’t think we can afford for you NOT
to go.”
My love for my husband was growing, as was my determination
to heal my child. I had a partner in all
things autism. He would not let me do it
alone. If I ever doubted, he would bring
me right back to reality. And when I wanted to introduce yet ANOTHER biomedical
intervention, he was right there to support me.
He had my back. The cost was no
matter. He would do whatever it took to
bring her back to us. And his positive
outlook is something I still look forward to each day.
We have since had two more children together. Our children bind us together. They make us realize what is important in
this world. They make us laugh. They make us cry. They teach us daily. They force us to be patient. And they make us shake our head in disbelief
sometimes.
Today, Marley is thriving.
As are her sister and brother. We
do not live a typical life. We have
special diets and daily supplements and therapies galore. But we are fighters. (Each in our own way.) And we know there will
be more battles to fight. But we will do
it together.
So here’s to Chris…We love you. And we need you. Thank you for everything you do.
Like I said, there is just something special about the
father of a special needs child.
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