When I first received the news that Elijah has Down syndrome, I assumed the worst. I thought of institutionalized kids; slack, blank faces who comprehend little to nothing; and physical features that set them vastly apart from their peers. My expectations for what my child would look like and what my child would be capable of were devastated. Then, I started talking to and meeting ACTUAL, real people. People who have children with Down syndrome. It painted a significantly different picture. The children I met were part of loving, active families, with faces full of joy and wonder, who did look a little different than the average child...but who were adorable and beautiful just the same! I started to realize that, Wow.This isn't going to be quite as different and scary as I imagined it would be. Where did my preconceived notions even come from? Certainly not from any real knowledge based on people that I personally knew! So what formed this sad expectation I had?...
Now that my initial expectations are adjusted to fit a more realistic picture of what Down syndrome looks like, I work on controlling my expectations about how fast Elijah will learn. I am starting to understand that he will learn, he will develop, but it will be at a pace that is different from what my firstborn did. When he's 30, will it matter if he walked at 12 months or at 24 months? No. It really won't.
My other struggle, which is especially frustrating, is in the area of State and Government help. There are wonderful programs set up to help us, but I feel like they are designed purposely to have you jump through impossible hoops so that you'll give up, go away, and leave them clinging to the dwindling funds they have left. So, since Elijah is doing relatively well, the hoops get more complicated. I feel that I have to down play his improvements to have anyone take me seriously! I just want to shout, He has Down syndrome, people! It's not going to just "go away"! Elijah turned 6 months old today. I should be happy, but my happiness is clouded by the System. At this point, we have no therapies in place to help us work with Elijah. I'm makin' this shit up on my own and hoping I'm not creating some bad habits that some therapist down the line is going to tell me I've added to. So I struggle not to second guess myself. I call. I rant. I leave messages. I kill with kindness. I convey concern. I advocate. It's all I can do, but sometimes it just doesn't feel like it's working. And I have no control over it all. That's right about what it boils down to, isn't it? Control. Control and Expectations. I expect to be able to help my son, but I have no control over whether I will or not. I'm finding it's much more emotional to feel helpless when you have been put in charge of helping a baby survive on this planet. When it's just about me, and the expectations and control issues are about myself...well, that seems pretty inconsequential right now. I'm doing all I can. Literally. And I'm trying to give myself a break, give Elijah a break and remember that things are going to work out...but they'll work out the way God planned, not the way I planned.
When I can do it (which I'll admit is not often enough), letting go of the Expectations and Control is...well, FREEING. My claw-like grip from how I think things should go, relaxes. In it it's place is Surrender. Ah, Surrender. When I have visited you in the past, you have calmed my mind and my fears. Standing face to face everyday with the expectations I have to redefine, forces me to take a good long look at my Ego and how that fits into this picture as well. It's humbling. ....There. I said it. I have an Ego. It wants some things to be a certain way. But that "way" might not be in the big picture. So, I re-adjust. In some ways, it's kind of amazing. I just might have gone through my life expecting that things will always go the way I want them to. What's happened instead is that I don't know what's next. It's an adventure. I have no doubt that my Expectations about life, and milestones, and what therapies we should be receiving will get the best of me now and again. Like I said, God upped the ante. And some days, like today, will cause me to be a little weepy about it. But I'm okay with that. My expectations are high because I want to be the best possible person I can be. I want to be the best possible Mother to my children. I want my children to have the best possible life experiences. My crazy expectations come from a really positive place. That's not all bad. The person who ultimately suffers the most when I let these expectations take over my life, is me. I will aim to be the best possible person, Mother and life-experience creator for my children, but I also need to know when to Let Go. And I'm working on that balance...
Happy half-birthday to my littlest sweetie!! Here are some pictures from this weekend, while a friend was holding him. (Try not to be distracted by his pants being pulled clear up to his chest. I promise not to let him go to high school like that...) :)










