Regaining her strength
Alex Coolman
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The following is the first in a four-part series
focusing on the struggles and triumphs of the disabled, their families
and those who live and work with them.
Her first reaction was not one of joy.
When Sandi Ames realized that her newborn daughter, Shanel, had Down
syndrome, a host of other emotions flooded her mind, crowding out any
simple reaction to the birth.
There was confusion and guilt. There was sorrow. And there was fear
about the future.
What there wasn’t -- at least, not initially -- was the kind of
delight that inspires a parent to plan for the future. The pain of those
first moments wounded Ames’ ability to hope.
When you talk to the 41-year-old Costa Mesa resident today, however,
it’s apparent that Ames has regained her strength. And when you watch her
interact with Shanel, who is a vivacious, slightly mischievous
7-year-old, there is a love so fierce that it seems like a physical thing
in the room.
Going from that initial reaction of fear to a position of strength,
Ames said, was not something she could have done alone. She drew on the
experience of another parent who had a daughter with Down syndrome,
finding encouragement and support in her story.
“It helped me open up my doors of understanding to what the
possibilities were,” she said.
WATCHING A MIRACLE
On a recent afternoon at the city’s Downtown Community Center, Ames
watched as Shanel walked gingerly across a balance beam. An instructor
held her hand at times, and at other times she balanced alone.
Like many others with Down syndrome, Shanel has low muscle tone, which
can affect her health and motor skills. But she has kept up in the
gymnastics class, which is not geared specifically toward students with
disabilities.
Ames said this kind of scene -- watching her daughter move with grace
and pleasure through complex physical tasks -- was not something she
thought about before she began to speak with other parents.
It was only through their encouragement that Ames realized that her
ideas about having a disabled child were darker than they needed to be.
“I got a chance to see how my image of the development of Down
syndrome was maybe not a reality,” Ames said.
Not only were there possibilities for Shanel to have a happy life,
Ames decided, but many of those possibilities depended on the attitude
that Ames took toward pushing her daughter to grow and learn.
The sorrow often felt by parents of disabled children can be crippling
at a crucial time in their child’s development, said Linda Smith,
director of Family Support Network, a Santa Ana-based organization that
aids Orange County families.
“These are parents who thought they were going to have a beautiful,
gorgeous baby, and something happened,” Smith said. “They’re grieving,
they’re scared, their dreams have been shattered. It’s a very rough
time.”
A SOURCE OF STRENGTH
What the Family Support Network and other organizations like it try to
emphasize is that parents of special-needs children can learn from each
other, draw strength from each other and help their kids to develop as
much as possible.
“A lot of times, the best support you can provide is just to have
somebody listen,” Smith said.
Ames compares the experience of raising the special-needs child to a
poem, “Going to Holland,” familiar to parents in her situation.
It’s as though you had planned for months and months to travel to
Italy, she said. You read book after book, you learn a little bit about
the language, you buy all the right clothes for the journey.
Then the plane lands, and the captain says “Welcome to Holland.”
“At that point,” Ames said. “You have no other choice but to get used
to it.”
But that doesn’t mean Ames and other parents have to do it alone. Like
the woman who helped her, Ames now serves as a counselor. She volunteers
with a group called Parent Connection to assist other parents of children
with disabilities.
And it doesn’t mean that the experience of parenting has to be any
less joyful than it should be.
Ames couldn’t help laughing at the antics of Shanel in her gymnastics
class, and at her daughter’s tendency to ham it up in the presence of an
audience.
“She’s a little girl with a long ponytail, with a zest for life and a
big smile and an ability to get in trouble,” Ames said, watching Shanel
stepping across the beam. “And oh yeah, by the way, she has Down
syndrome.”
FYI
Here are some places that can help:
Parent Connection, (888) 372-2229
Family Support Network, (714) 543-7600Comfort Connection, (714)
748-7491
TASK (Team of Advocates for Special Kids), (714) 533-8275
Regional Center Family Support Services, (714) 796-5299
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