Sunday, January 18, 2015

Sometimes there are bad days

Choices will continually be necessary and -- let us not forget -- possible.  Obedience to God is always possible.  It is a deadly error to fall into the notion that when feelings are extremely strong we can do nothing but act on them. - Elisabeth Elliot

I am in the habit of practicing the discipline of gratitude.  It has helped me keep perspective and my sanity. But I am going to take a break from this for a minute and get real.  Because if I hope to use this blog to help others in my shoes, then I should write it all: the good, the bad, and the ugly.  If you're someone who reads my blog for the positivity, you might want to skip this one.





Most weeks I'm all like, whatever, man. God made every individual unique and beautiful.  We need to embrace our differences.  Well, sometimes being different sucks. There I said it.  And this week, for me, is one of those weeks.  I am not really sure what triggered this.  There has been no major event.  There were no major emergencies, surgeries, or trips to the ER.  Everyone in my family is alive and mostly healthy.




Perhaps it was the two separate instances this week where I noted Willow's peers being mean to her.  I saw them pushing her away and telling her no when she attempted to play with them.  Part of me thought that it was typical toddler behavior.  But then part of me wonders if they know.  Part of me wondered if, even at two and three years old, Willow is a target, because she is different.  It makes me sad.  It makes me want to curse.  It makes me want to fuss at other people's children.  But I do not.  I restrain myself.

Perhaps it was because this week I have been around more typically developing children than I usually am, and it serves to highlight our delays.  I see what things should be like or could be like, and then I start complaining.  I have complained inwardly mostly and outwardly some every time I have hauled Willow's heavy self around on my hip, because I want her to walk so badly.  I try so very, very hard to show grace when other people make insensitive comments.  I try.  Most of the time, I am successful.  This week I was not.  Comments like, she will walk before you know it, and then you'll wish you hadn't been in such a hurry were pretty much unbearable.  I am sure that I will not wish that.  I am sure that she can get into whatever she wants, and I will not care.

Kelle Hampton is probably one of the most popular bloggers in the world of Down syndrome. Her blog was the first one I found when I googled Down syndrome and blog one night while Willow was in the NICU and I was pumping.  I am not a Kelle Hampton hater. She has her fair share out there, but I am not one of them.  I love to watch her daughter Nella grow through Kelle's photos and videos, and her story is one of the ones that inspired me to write my own.  Nella is so cute and Kelle's voice is one of optimism and hope.  I see the videos she posts of Nella dancing and twirling.  Most days, I find these adorable. This week I found them annoying. I found them a harsh, fluorescent spotlight on the fact that Willow is not only delayed compared to her typical peers but also compared to her peers with Down syndrome.  For Nella, Down syndrome seems just like a word on a paper.  Her delays have been slight, and she has had almost no medical problems.  For Willow, Down syndrome has been the thing that has affected pretty much every organ system in her body: eyes, ears, brain, heart, GI, and musculoskeletal.  It is the thing that has affected her development and made learning each and every thing an obstacle.  Every milestone is an obstacle that is overcome by therapy and our work and repetition. Nothing she has learned has been learned easily or without effort or intention.  We go to Down syndrome clinic and hear that her tone is low even for a kid with Down syndrome, and those words stick.  Her gross motor delays are severe, even for a kid with Down syndrome.  They predict she will walk around four years old, which is the the later range of what is considered normal. We smile and act like it doesn't matter, but sometimes I feels like it does.

 I have utilized social media much more since Willow was born as a way of connecting with other moms of children with special needs. It was really a lifeline in my first year and has been for many times since then.  It has helped at times when I cannot sleep because of the worry, and I send out a cry.  I get immediate responses back of I know how you feel and I feel that way too followed by advice on what to do.  I am able to share the guilt over feeling like I am not doing enough.   They understand the worries that come along with the stories about high functioning individuals with Down syndrome.  Because if there are high functioning individuals with Down syndrome, there also has to be low functioning.  I hate those terms.




I say all of that not so you would feel sorry for us or to whine and complain. Our lives are very full and a combination of beautiful and messy, effortless and hard, just like most people.  There are so many people out there dealing with harder things: death, cancer, mental illness.  So if I sound ungrateful for my life, forgive me.  I say these things in case someone out there feels these same things and thinks they are alone. You are not.  I also say them, because it helps me to speak my fears and worries out loud or write them down. They seem to have less power after that.  I also try to remember that I will not feel like this every day.  I speak it.  Sometimes cry about it or yell about it.  I tell a trusted friend.  I give myself a moment to feel it, whatever that fear or tough reality is.  But only for a moment.  Then pick myself up, brush it off, and throw it away.

This is what I am doing.  I have felt it.  I have told my trusted friends.  And now I am writing it down and moving on.  The best way to do that for me always will be to take a moment to remember everything I have to be thankful for.  So here goes:


This week I am thankful for the following:

1.) Willow is alive. This is one statement I should never grow tired of saying. I should never forget that this is a gift. She is a gift that could've so easily and so quickly been taken from us.  Thank you, God.

2.) Willow is happy. For all of the delays, the therapies, the doctors appointments, she is genuinely one of the happiest children I have ever met.  This happiness is what reminds me to chill out when I get all like, Am I doing enough? Why aren't you walking yet, dang it?  I am the one with the problem. She is content to learn and grow at her own pace.

3.) For every child who is mean to Willow, we know ten more that have shown us so much kindness.  Willow has three cousins who love her so much.  They try to cover for her if she is disobedient and give me the stink eye if I try to discipline her, even if it is for pulling their hair.  We have friends with children who do not seem to notice Down syndrome and who treat Willow with such gentleness.  We have parent friends who teach their children about acceptance and tolerance of others' difference.  These things do not go unnoticed.  We are thankful.

3.) I am married to a man made of more character than anyone I have ever known.  When I first met Josh, I, like many who meet him, underestimated him.  I knew he was good looking. I mean, that's a given, people. I knew he was an animal whisperer. (Remind me to tell you the story about the time he kissed a hummingbird at the zoo. True story.) And I knew he played the drums.  These things are all just at the surface.  I have since discovered a man capable of loving, serving, and leading our family so well. I could go on and on but was told early in my marriage not to brag about my husband too much or other women will hate me. So I will stop there.

4.) I am thankful for the incredible grace that I am given every day by my Savior who loves all people despite our doubts and flaws.



  


But he said to me, My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness. Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me. - II Cor. 12:9

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Happy New Thanks-Christmas!

But the angel said to them, Do not be afraid! Listen carefully, for I proclaim to you good news that brings great joy to all the people.

Happy Thanksgiving, Merry Christmas and Happy New Years from the Wickers.  Yes, it has been that long since I have last blogged.  Please insert appropriately apologetic excuse here.  I hope that you all have enjoyed your families, friends, and communities as much as I have during these holidays.  We went to Charleston for almost a full week to visit my family.  Everyone was there: my sister and her husband all of the way from Haiti, my younger brother who is usually too busy taking over the world to stay anywhere more than twenty four hours, and my older brother, his wife, and their three kiddos.   Of course my parents, Babushka and Grandpa, were there as well as my Nanee, but they somehow did not end up in any of my pictures.  This is what happens when you have kids around, I guess.  I do have one picture of my Nanee in her bathrobe Christmas morning, and even though she looks like a movie star even in a bathrobe, I am pretty sure she would faint if I ever posted it (or swoon. I think that's what its called when Southern belles do it).  I remember my brother (pre-kids) teasing his wife's family about how all they did is sit around and watch kids all day long. Now, with four kids in our family, that's pretty much what we do.  And I tell you, it's actually pretty entertaining.  The week was beautiful and chaotic.  We tried to fit in all of the traditions we had missed the past several years: Santa, presents, James Island County lights, White Christmas, a Christmas Story, Elf, Babushka reading the Christmas story, and a new one, a backyard oyster roast.

Y'all, I cannot even begin to name all of the things I am grateful for this year. But to name a few:
1.) I am thankful for the messy, refining, and wonderful thing that is family.
2.) I am thankful for our small community of Greenwood where Publix is a big deal and we know all of our neighbors.
2.) I am thankful that 2014 has been a healthier year than 2013 and that we have seen fewer IV's, OR's, and ER's.
3.) I am thankful for adoption that has brought so many lovely souls into our family over the years.
4.) I am thankful that for the first time in a very long time I had both Thanksgiving and Christmas off in the same year.
5.) I am thankful for God who is ever present in joyful times and even more in trials.

Below are some pictures of the merriment:

Boyish charm in an old man sweater.


Cheesing.


Look what I found.


Talking on the Phone.... or a toothbrush...or whatever, y'all. I think this may be a glimpse into our teen years.


Uncle Kiss [Chris] working on the legos. It's serious business.


Dads make great jungle gyms.


Rockstar in the making


With all of the new presents from family and Santa, one of his favorites was this mustache whistle that he got as a prize out of the poppers we had at the dinner table.  Go figure.


I am just so happy to be here for Christmas!  And my older cousins are the best.


Concentrating hard


Someone play with me... please.


Wherever there is a Josh, there are board games.


Concentration. How do I work this thing?


I can now play the harmonica and the guitar at the same time.  Get your autographs now, folks, because one day he will be way too famous for all of us. 


I've got ya', Baby Wee-yoh!



Pig tails and Christmas dresses.


Oh, and then there is the challenge of trying to take pictures of four kids at the same time.  Somebody is distracted by their new watch.


Now only one is looking. But look at the adorable moment captured to the left.


I think this is the best one that I got even with the mustache whistle.


Wicker wish list for 2015:
1.) I pray that this year will be the year of walking for Willow. Dear Lord, for the sake of our backs, puhleez.
2.) I pray that Willow will be able to wear a bikini this summer at the beach because she has had her PEG tube removed (tentative plans for removal in February 2015).
3.) I pray that we will find a church family and settle in.  We have been roaming since our church plant closed down over a year ago and still miss our Oasis family many Sundays.  But it is time.  It is time to plant our feet somewhere and stay. We have been hurt by the church, and church is hard, especially for families of children with special needs.  But it is time.  (Read about why church is difficult for families like mine here.)

Thank you all for reading my journey. Thank you for your gracious, kind words. Thank you for sharing your stories with me.