I wasn’t awesome today.
Please do better than me.
Please do better than me.
Today is the babies “half birthday’ (six
months) and we decided we’d celebrate by eating out for dinner at our favorite
restaurant.
I was teasing my son (quadriplegic with cerebral palsy/autistic), playing, and he was being his cheeky self right back at me. Laughing and quipping, it got a little noisy.
That was until a young woman sitting at the next table said loudly, with intent to be overheard, to her friends,
I was teasing my son (quadriplegic with cerebral palsy/autistic), playing, and he was being his cheeky self right back at me. Laughing and quipping, it got a little noisy.
That was until a young woman sitting at the next table said loudly, with intent to be overheard, to her friends,
“Maybe she should shut her stupid retard up!”
We all fell into a silence, smarting with shock.
I looked across at Jack. His head had dropped. All of his animation, his light, his laughter was extinguished. His gentle gaze was into his lap when he quietly said the worst thing he could of possibly said,
“I’m sorry, Mum.”
I cancelled our orders and we left.
I didn’t throw a heroic quip at the girl. I
didn’t insult her. I didn’t even look at the table. In fact I accidentally ran
Jack’s wheelchair into the doorframe as we were leaving because I couldn’t see
through the tears pouring down my face.
No matter how much you think you know it, unless you live with a child with special needs you don’t know how hard it is. How complex and difficult it can be. How much a thoughtless, ego-driven line like that girl’s will decay my son’s confidence. Jack and I live this journey, 24/7.
Its hard.
I’m not sharing this with you for sympathy.
I’m sharing this because I have an awesome
community of friends on here.
You are, each and every one, awesome.
So please, do better than me:
You are, each and every one, awesome.
So please, do better than me:
when you’re out amongst life, be awesome.