Showing posts with label fear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fear. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2015

Starting With This Moment

I really wanted to post a follow on to my time with Robert.  It will come.  But today, I am moved to share the following.  The last week has been filled with great connections and imagery creation that I will start sharing later today but I must lead with this and I am hoping it will be the last time I write about self-doubt and motivation...it is time to get a move on!!

I have spent an enormous amount of time thinking over the past year while I tenuously try to maneuver through the weeks as a mom, wife and photographer.  I feel like there has been lots of thinking, lots of stress with minimal output.  Ironically, for the very first time in my life, I have discovered my life passion.  Since the lightbulb finally went off on what I want to do in life, I have struggled to understand why things just are not falling into place.  I've heard for over two decades now, "Figure out what you are passionate about and then follow it.  That is the key to happiness and "success" in life."  

I feel so lucky to finally be able to put a finger on what drives me but instead now feeling like I have a direction to go in I have felt paralyzed.  I have gone from a person of action, living in the moment and not worrying (too much) about how the future will unfold to someone that wants to know that I am taking the right steps to achieve the visions I have dancing in my head.  It has been a frustratingly scary place to be.  Especially given my place in life...middle-age (that sounds horrible when you still feel like you are 25 most of the time), mother of two healthy boys, house in a great neighborhood, husband with a great job, healthy family (immediate AND extended), great friends...what do I have to be unsettled about??!!  I have the life I had envisioned in my head over the past 20 years of hard work.  Why can't I just sit back, relax and settle into the life we have created.  Why can't I find contentment in the photography career I worked my tail off to create?  The self-doubt, the questioning, the future and what I am doing every day to move towards it has been ridiculously exhausting.  I want to rewind the clock a few years, before I began unearthing my true passion.  Why can't I just thankful for all the great photography clients, family and friends I have.  But that is not life.  It truly is a roller coaster filled with highs, lows and infinite unknowns that are out of our control.  

So today, the first week of Q2 2015, I am going to release the seatbelt that I have strapped myself in with this past year.  And get back to living life and leading my life without worrying about how it will go, what people will think, if I make sense, if I will be misunderstood or if I will fail in reaching my "undefined" goal.  I am actually right on track with the rough plan I gave myself for this new "job".  Q1 would be planning, Q2-4 was for executing the plan.  I'm going to ignore that my "plan" is not clearly defined and celebrate that I am in action on day three of Q2.

Here is what I know:
--I believe in humanity and we can learn from and be inspired by the people around us regardless of where you are on this planet.

1995 Ha Rankakala, Qacha's Nek, Lesotho
--I have had a life-long wanderlust that on the surface appeared a lust to travel the world.  I have come to realize it is not travel to see the sights of the world that fuels my wanderlust, but the doors traveling opens to connect with people from all walks of life.  I have never traveled the world to tick off the countries, I just wanted to be in places where I was a complete fish out of water.  My desire to be immersed in the unknown (travel w/o an itinerary, w/o a fluency of the local language, w/o knowing anyone in the region) always forced me to trust strangers and people who were vastly different than myself.  For 20+ years, the living and traveling in different parts of the world fueled my passion...human connectivity.  Having new, unforgettable adventures & experiences with and because of strangers, this was the driving force behind my sense of wanderlust.  

--Since the idea for The World in My Backyard came to me in 2012, I have realized I could have similar experiences and powerful connections with strangers without leaving the city I live in.

--People all over this world are more the same than they are different, but in our society, we tend to see each others differences and stay separated because we don't know how to bridge the gap or we make assumptions about an individual based on the difference.  Creating our own perceptions of who we think people are, even though we know perception is always different than the reality.  If we can be open to new connections the gaps will get smaller.

--I got stuck in my first year of the project because I wanted everyone to get to have the unbelievable experiences I and my family were having just because we were meeting strangers in this city.  The stories I have managed to share have resonated with a few people.  When I started w/ this idea, that was enough.  Somewhere along the line I got worried about how I was sharing or should share.  What the end result for my project or best vehicle for sharing should be so I stopped interviewing and sharing.  But people still tell me something I shared with them resonated and impacted them.  So I just need to get back to doing.

--I have never had a clear road map for any of my "achievements" or jobs...so why do I think this experience should be different.  I need to return to my 20 year old self and jump in with both feet trusting that I will find my way and that I am able to do good things.

--Being self-employed can be tough because it takes 100% self-motivation.  I need to hear feedback to know if I am hitting the mark or way off...and unfortunately, my office walls don't talk back!  Reflecting on my 17 yr. photography career makes me realize that I had quite a bit of self-doubt that I was forced to overcome because I had clients who had no idea I was questioning myself.  Each time I delivered my work to them, they reminded me that I was on the right track.  My work was good enough.  I continued to grow and improve.  That is what I have to believe will happen with this process.  So if you are reading this and you stick with me in the weeks and months to come, I would ask that once or twice this year send me a thought you may have, good or bad about the content I am sharing or how it resonated (or didn't) with you.  

--The content I will be sharing will not be succinct or uniform for each.  I am going to let myself off the hook from having a standardized form in which I share the individual stories because that is not how I think or function.  If I give myself that constraint, I will continue to stay paralyzed.  Feedback on what works or how it can be improved will help shape the process and ultimately, I will find what works best.

--If my work does not go beyond this year, whether I run out of emotional/mental steam trying to produce this on my own or I need to return to my photography business I will try my best to remind myself that it will not be a failed venture.  My biggest worry right now is having my kids see me give up on my dreams and discovered passion.  If I do not try, I am not living the words I preach to them.  If it does not pan, at least I stood by my mantra that nothing can change if you do not try.

Today, I will get back to sharing stories of people in The World in My Backyard (WIMBY).  Adding one new facet...there will be stories "By Country" (continuing to follow the original goal of meeting one person from every country in the world living in Seattle) AND "By Day".  

In the middle of writing this post, I had to step away to attend a school event for my 3rd grader.  This song was sung by the 4th grade class and the timing could not have been more perfect for me.  I often feel like I have a tiny little voice and what is the point of sharing...this song provides a reason...

"Starting with this moment, we can make a change.
If we love those around us, maybe they will do the same.
Though we have a small voice, and just a simple song.
Let's place it in the heart of another, so they can pass it on.

It starts with; one hear loving another, two hands reaching out,
We can cover the world with love.

Two voices singing together, one song ringing out,
we can cover the world with love....cover the world with love.  Cover the world with love."
--Cover the World with Love by Jerry Estes

I am going to print these lyrics and put them by my computer to remind myself that although my voice is small and the experiences I am sharing seem so simple, I am going to pass them on.  The ripple effect can happen if we all chip away at our fears and start opening up to the people around us.

If you reached the end of this, THANK YOU!  If you follow the stories to come and feel moved by them (whether positively or negatively), please let me know and I ask that you share with others.  I am not sure how to amplify my "small voice" work, I am going to rely on you to help me spread the stories and images.  "Like" The World in My Backyard  & Human Connectivity Conservationist on Facebook, send me ideas, offer your technology or editing prowess to my efforts.  Any support you can provide, I will be so grateful!!

A WIMBY By Day story will follow very soon.
Thank you.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

This week, our country celebrated Martin Luther King Day.  In Seattle there was a march, online there were countless images and powerful quotes shared, throughout the country people entered theaters to watch Selma, a powerful movie depicting Martin Luther King’s campaign to secure equal voting rights via an epic 54-mile, 5-day march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.  I took my family to the movie and was moved to tears by the end of the film.  To read and hear the words of MLK, Jr., to be reminded of the courage of the human spirit to stand up and peacefully demonstrate for equal rights, fair treatment and hope for opportunity, to share this history with new generations...all of this is so inspiring.  But what about today and tomorrow… next month and in August??  The inspirations fade to the background and are replace with prejudice, presumption, fear, unrest, demonstrations, anger, resentment, questioning…We are approaching the 40 year anniversary of one of this country’s greatest peacemaker and I am saddened that, although progress has happened, prejudice continues to be pervasive in our society.  How can this move from conversations & inspirations to new & different actions to create change?
I am constantly wondering if pre-judgment is instinctual.  I know, as much as I hate to admit it, I make presumption about people ALL THE TIME  that keep me distant from them.  Depending on the day I am having, an experience from my youth, the choices I lean towards, the media I intake, the stories or gossip I have heard, I pre-judge even though I know that it is not fair, I DO IT. (My list of pre-judgment is long…I just based on religion, economics, age, race, education, beauty, material objects, associations, political choices, eating styles, occupation, culture…these are only top of mind topics, I am sure I could go on and on)  Sometimes I do it to make myself feel better about me and my life.  Sometimes, if I internally disparage someone else, I can avoid focusing on my own faults.  It allows me to justify keeping my wall up.  It really takes courage and consciousness to push the assumptions aside and connect (which, crazily, isn’t that difficult to do).  I would venture to guess that the majority of the times this happens in an honest, open way the prejudices fall away and the discovery of similarity or a learning moment happen.  But it takes work.  In the past few years, I am now realizing, I am becoming less and less tolerant of my instinctual dialogue, ignoring it and listening to another voice.  “Say hello, tell them you like their hat, their smile, their shoes.  Share what is on your mind and see what they think about it instead of assuming you know their answer.  Why are you holding back…just do it.”  Seriously, I have some little dialogue with myself.  9 out of 10 times when I open up to someone new, I get back way more than I ever could have imagined.  And I have a new, lived experience to counter stories I may have hear 2nd hand, from the news or on social media.   I am dispelling the perception I had with the reality I experience.
Have we been conditioned since our youth to accept perception instead of discovering reality?  We all know perception is never the reality, so why do we accept it?  We are bombarded daily with information to help us form perceptions.  Do we question our perception?  That takes more work.  That takes putting ourselves in uncomfortable or unfamiliar situations.
Here is a quick example that just popped into my head…from the global news, we tend to paint wide swaths…Islam terrorist killed 12 Parisians—Our societal take away…Islam is a crazy religion filled with violent followers.  Be guarded and questioning of all Islamic people.  Instead, we should realize that incident, those 2 Islamic men are the anomaly.  2 men in a population of exceeding 1.5 BILLION Islams (a quarter of the world population).  TWO radicals.  Two bad apples.  They cannot be our sole representation of Islam.  But we allow the news to sink in and be our knowledge, build our fear, keep us separate…this happens every single day just insert a different identifying factor (black, dropout, millionaire, Mormon, Russian, post-partum mom, unemployed man, politician, welfare…you choose the descriptive, there will always be a bad, horrific story to tag on and allow us to form our perception of that “group”).
So, I sit here super sad when I think about the vision, dreams, wisdom, inspiration and leadership Martin Luther King shared with our country 50 years ago because I see our behaviors and disconnection countering what I believe all human beings hope for and want to believe in.  We remember and celebrate MLK, we teach our children his words…but what we do with our actions will always be more powerful than anything we can pass on with words.  But, just like it was required of him to be great, it is required of us…it requires courage to reflect on our behavior and try something a little different. 
I, for one am experiencing the benefits every single day because I am trying to put myself out there.  Trying to ignore my prejudice and connect.  In person, online…wherever.  It isn’t easy.  Lots of times I want to shut down and listen to my negative instinctual voice, but I have had way too many experiences now to know that it is worth the effort.  Human connectivity really, really matters and can change lives.  And I know it can change our world to be the world MLK envisioned. 

What do you think?  Are you in?  Let me know…

Friday, January 16, 2015

Why Me??

How did I arrive at this place that has a strangle hold on my heart and head?  When what you are doing does not have a road map, you spend lots of time trying to explain the why (or at least that has been my experience).  There is not an hour in the day that passes without a thought, explanation, inspiration or experience that reminds me how essential and important human connectivity is.  The ongoing mental and emotional battle I struggle with is not being able to concisely articulate "The Why" of what I am doing because.  On any given day, my reason will be different (my husband will be the first witness to confirm that…which always has him scratching his head and thinking it would be better for me to stick w/ photography).  The list of whys is exhaustive.  Here are just a few that are rattling through my mind today:
  • Although there has been progress towards equality for all citizens, our country continues to be divided by color, religion, money, education, age, sexual preference, gender, politics and personal choices--ironically all things that make our country one of the best places in the world to live.  There is constant conversation about diversity and the importance of equality for all but how do we move from conversation to action beyond individual groups having to fight to be understood and treated equally?  
  • The pace of our society and technological innovation is creating a heads down (or in the cloud) culture.  Parents fear the amount of screen time their kids are having, but parents are just as heads down and tied into their devices and technology as their children.  Everyday the younger generations are seeing this behavior modeled, why wouldn't they follow our lead?  Technological connectivity is a part of life but instead of fearing and fighting it, we need to accept it and realize with the change we must consciously lift our heads and connect with the people in our reality.  Of course, it is much easier to stay heads down and now we have an excuse to do just that...we appear busy and connected but, more often than not, we are more isolated and lonely.  
  • I clearly remember when I was little (I'm a '70s girl), our society was based on hope and prosperity.  I remember consistently hearing this is the land of opportunity and anything is possible.  There was a strong sense of national pride around the USA being a melting pot.  Just a few decades later and the pride and positive messaging has been replaced with fear--fear of failure, fear of others, fear of dying, fear of not being good enough, on and on and on!!  All this fear keeps us disconnected, questioning ourselves, questioning others, staying in our safe/comfort zone…DIVIDED.  Human connectivity with people different than you is essential to quelling the prevailing fear-based messaging we are bombarded by daily.
Since starting The WMB, I began hearing, "This is the land of opportunity and anything is possible" again…from immigrant subjects.  They are not jaded by the overriding current cultural messages (not sure how to say that).  Most times, they are so grateful and excited to be in the United States.  Most live without expectations beyond getting education, finding jobs and working hard.  They make new connections, they do not let fear guide them. Often they prosper and impact those around them in positive ways.  I want to get back to living in a society that is filled with pride for being a melting pot, not spewing vehement hatred.  I believe it is possible!
  • When I connect with new people, they often reflect back to me the beauty and inspiration I do not see in myself.  This is fuel for my soul.  I know I tend to focus on what I am insecure about  It can be very depressing and isolating.                                                                      Acquaintances and strangers never see us through the same lens we see ourselves (and they are often too busy thinking about what they suck at or how they look to be as critical of you as you are to your self).  But it is scary because we assume people will see us for who we think we are…they don't…if you are open, willingly share a little about yourself, people will see you for WHO you are, which is a unique, one of a kind person.  
  • It could be a random 20 second or 20 minute connection…it doesn't take much…but when they happen, they can be spirit lifting whether it is a shared laugh with a stranger, a shared perspective with someone you wouldn't normally interact with, a new secret skill learned…it can make your day just a little bit better.  So why wouldn't you be open to lifting your head and saying yellow???  (That is funny, that was a Freudian typo…I was actually thinking while I was typing that it isn't really just hello that will open the door, but a different question or remark…so maybe try saying yellow, not hello and see what happens!!)
You are probably getting the gist--I could go on and on, and I am not even sure if any of it is making sense…insert image of whirling dervish!!  But the answer to each of the issues, I believe, is the importance of human connectivity.  It matters and I must put my own insecurities aside and push my thoughts out and push on.

The one real truth I know is that life is super hard.  SUPER HARD!  Nobody is immune to the life virus.  Regardless of who you are, where you were born, how old you are, how much money you have, what job you have, how much family you have…every single life is on its own roller coaster and no one is immune to struggle, hardship, illness, loneliness or fear.  I remember when I was in my early 20s, I had zero idea of what I "wanted to do with my life"(the WORST question asked incessantly to teenagers & young adults).  I remember thinking, "I can't wait until I am 40 because then, at least I will know the answer and what I am doing with my life.  It will be so much easier then…"  I'm there...my 40s...my self-portrait, resume, accomplishments and family have changed, but life is not any easier.  Maybe my assumption that this is true for all people is off, but I can only go with what I know. LIFE IS HARD!!  But what I have learned is that the connections I have made in my life and being able to share my truth and struggles with others has helped me better move through life, find support, find inspiration, find commiseration, find acceptance and self-love instead of diving off the deep end.  And so, at 43, I cannot fully answer the Why Me question, but I know that I cannot ignore it.  I found this quote before the new year that deeply resonated with me. 
I hope you will follow me down this path aways and then create a few of your own!  You never know when you will impact someone or when you will be impacted but both will happen if you connect!



Friday, September 19, 2014

Sister's Response

Months ago, I shared my last post and my experience from nine years about with my sister.  For years, I had feared talking with my sister, Tiffany, about the looks I saw flash past a strangers face as Tiffany and her medically fragile daughter walked past.  But now I am wondering why I waited so long, why I didn't have the courage to be honest and share what I saw and how it made me feel because my sharing opened up a little window of opportunity for my sister to share more with me.  As her voice was crossing the phone line, I wished I could rewind and record her immediate thoughts.  But instead, all I could do was ask if she could post a comment to the blog or perhaps write her thoughts down for me.  A few days later, she sent me an email with her raw thoughts answering my question, "Do you feel the looks?"  Ashamedly, I have hesitated sharing her writing here because it is lengthy.  And tinged with deep emotions.  I know her, I understand all the variables of her life.  I can understand what she is saying, but will a random reader?  I wanted to protect her from their judgement but I did not want to edit her words.  So I dragged my feet and let my last post hang opened ended.  But then I could not share other thoughts and experiences I had around human connectivity because I had not closed the loop of my last post.  I was stuck.  I would broach the idea of just skipping to the next subject or trying to figure out how to massage her response but neither option felt right.  And time passed.  And I told myself that is okay because nobody is really reading what I am sharing...nobody cares...
But I care.  Tiffany had shared her truth with me.  Her words are filled with realities that are often dismissed or swept under the rug.  By her, by family, by society.  It is what we do.  Avoid.  Pretend it will pass.  Disconnect...completely counter to what I started espousing.  We must connect.  So I will push past my own fears.
No sweeping here.  When we sweep, we miss connections that are real, we miss opportunities to learn from others whose lives are so different.   We miss opportunities to share experiences that may help others.   We miss opportunities to just be with someone, even if we cannot improve their reality. Standing with people provides an intangible support to counter the dismissiveness people often receive.  If this is read by two people or two thousand, it does not matter.  I have learned from this experience (from my sister and from my own behavior) and I am grateful for my sister's sharing.  Here is Tiffany's response written in July of this year. 

Written by Tiffany Vara, mother of five, living in Honolulu, HI.  

The question you asked me a few days ago, which lead to many other good ones, has been swirling around inside me since.
 Do I feel the looks?  Do I know people are looking at Abbie and I as I push her chair through hallways, down sidewalks, and to the mall?  Every. Single. Time.
 But, how it feels to me, and how I respond varies with each day, and sometimes several times within each day.  The key to understanding the choice of my response is envisioning the baskets I balance across my shoulders. Can you see them, filled with sand, pebbles and stones?
 Some days the baskets drag the ground, so overburdened by the load that the woven straw threatens to break.  These are the days when I am consumed with the fight, which is ongoing every moment of every day.  I have to fight the school system continuously, persistently, but with a smile, so that perhaps one day my sweet girl will be able to be in school every day with her peers.  I have to fight the insurance company for approval for things Abbie clearly needs.  These fights drag on for months, and are very disempowering.  Fighting an opaque structure, whether the school system or the insurance company, leaves me screaming into the wind, hoping that some faceless person in some cubicle somewhere who has never met my daughter will turn the lever to allow the things she needs to flow into her life.  To have a child so dependent on systems that are system-centric, with much less regard for her well-being than for their own convenience or bottom-line is excruciating. 
 Through Abbie’s journey I have been astonished by the goodness of people, but have been horrified to an equal extent by systems.  There is a direct correlation between the size of any system and the pain, frustration, and harm it can inflict on a child and family in need.  After ten years, I wish I could say my realistic point of view, and my experiences, have lowered the bar to the point where I can no longer be amazed by the inefficiencies, inscrutability, arrogance, and lack of accountability in the systems we deal with.  However, they continue to stun me, which is quite an accomplishment.
The energy, hope, and resilience that these systems sap from my family, and me in particular, cannot truly be calculated.  In the moments between the direct confrontations, the issues simmer in my mind.  I have to find a way to resolve things in Abbie’s favor, because she is counting on me.  I feel like David, but without a sling and stones, only words, and documentation, and law, which I find can be ignored at the pleasure of these systems.  The necessary involvement with multiple systems like these are a major differentiator between special and average families.
I am often made to feel like a beggar, a thief, a victim, irrational, unreasonable, and an object of both sympathy and scorn.  These are roles the systems have asked me to play in order to get what Abbie needs.  For years I went along.  No more.  It is liberating to stand up and say, “I am not a victim, nor a beggar.  I am not trying to steal something that is not needed or for which Abbie does not qualify.  I am not irrational, for I will outline the needs and requests using logic, data, history, and the law.  As I work in partnership, acknowledging the limitations and needs of the system, I am not unreasonable when I persist in my requests and will not accept a “no” based on system “preferences”.
These systems warp families.  They take stressed, but functional families, and tell them that they must become dependent to get any help.  In the years since Abbie’s injury the laws have changed so that for families with children like Abbie, they cannot get any support, nursing or otherwise, unless their entire family meets Medicaid criteria.  If they are just a smidge “too rich”, they are on their own.
Here’s what that means for a family of five with two working parents: in Hawaii it’s common for up to 50% of income to go to housing.  The baby of the family has exceptional needs  (trach, g-tube, wheelchair etc).  This is not the type of child you can get a babysitter for, only mom and dad are able to care for her.  So, dad works days, mom works nights, and they care for the child (and her siblings), when they are “off” work.
The solution offered to them, as they near exhaustion?  Lower their income, put their whole family on Medicaid, food stamps, etc.  Or, they can get divorced, since that would automatically lower the income and one parent could qualify for Medicaid.
On what planet are we living when a dad is told to stop providing as well as he can for his family, to stop trying to be as self-sufficient as he can, to become dependent on the state in order to get the help they need for one child?  And since when is divorce a positive solution for a need like this?
This is why I am so deeply involved in advocacy work, even though it doesn’t really resonate with me, and saps me of energy and peace.  I am blessed by being a stay-at-home mom, and we can afford a comfortable life.  This makes me feel guilty when I look at families like the (real) one I just described.  So I find myself giving a lot of time to meetings, projects, etc as a form of penance.  It doesn’t feel good, I often dread it, but feel that I must do it.  I am working on this, and may step away from advocacy for a while.  I realized recently, at a large disabilities conference (at which I struggled to find offerings that truly interested me), that my WHOLE life revolves around disability in one way or another,  so any time I am away from Abbie perhaps I should be filling up my tank rather than draining what little is in there.  It has taken me a decade to give myself permission to think this, and most of that delay relates to some very harmful people we had to let into our home and our life because of systems.
So, that’s a long way to describe some of the rocks that weigh heavy in the basket. 
And, when I am particularly feeling the weight I cannot look up and acknowledge the glances and stares.  I just want to be invisible.  My pain reverberates so powerfully sometimes that it feels like my skin has been stripped and I am walking, bleeding and raw, through a crowd, but no one notices.
It’s not just the systems I fight, it’s often Abbie’s own body, as it contorts after years of misaligned tensions and extreme stress.  Joints must be exercised to maintain movement, tissue must be given input to maintain structure and strength, bones must bear weight to maintain density, skin must be assessed and protected to keep from breaking down.  Lungs must be cleared, eyes frequently lubricated, and she absolutely must be put on her special commode chair many times a day because she detests using a diaper.  She can do none of this for herself.  So, much of my time and attention goes to doing things for her that most kids do for themselves, and then, after that, I have to find a way to teach her, since the schools have failed us miserably.
And, again, it’s not as simple as it once was.  Her vision is impacted by her brain injury, so I have to seat her just right and place the screen in the perfect position for her to see the material.   I have to come up with alternate ways to explain the hands-on portions of lessons, and recalibrate the quizzes and tests into multiple-choice format so that she can answer.  I have to come up with lesson plans, materials, and strategies that others can also use if I hope to have any help, as teaching Abbie is complex.  Many of her nurses read to her, which she loves, but teaching is a whole different level, and there’s no one that can move forward independently without great detail from me.
So, I am her physical, occupational and speech therapist day-to-day; I am a masseuse and body worker; I am her dietician and cook – figuring out what to feed her each day based on my own research and her reactions to food and supplements.  No one guides me on this anymore, as we are far beyond their traditionally-based levels of competency.  I flew up to the training for her communication system last year, when I stayed with you.  It is phenomenal for Abbie, and really opens the door to allow her to tell us what she is truly thinking.
However, making her communication book took 150 hours.  It is big and bulky, and she has to have a partner to make the system work.  Often, I know she has something to say, but my hands are busy doing something from the list above.  I am hoping that a computerized communication device will give her independence, but getting one entails yet another Abbie vs. The System fight.  So, for now we do what we can.  The school put it in her IEP 17 months ago – we were all going to be trained, and she would also use the book at school, so that she could become more fluent more quickly.  Only, the school hasn’t actually gotten the training yet, nor made a book.  So, it’s just me...pushing the rock up the hill by myself, surrounded by people explaining how hard their jobs are and how it’s so difficult to make the system work.  Good intentions from good people are nice to have, but they give me less and less comfort as time goes by and the intentions produce nothing.
These Abbie-shaped pebbles in my basket are always there.  I carry the weight of responsibility for her body, her education, her nutrition, her health, and her ability to connect with other people with me everywhere I go, whether she is with me or not.  I am never “off”.  I will never be able to do “enough”.  The pressure is inexplicable to anyone who has not borne this load herself. 
This is why so many special needs parents don’t open themselves up to others deeply.  There are two risks:  first, the other parent will try to apply their own life experiences in an attempt to understand the special needs.  “Oh, I know what you mean by sleep deprivation.  My two-year old still gets up in the night!”
I have had five healthy children.  I recall the depth of exhaustion I felt with twins who refused to sleep for the first two years of life.  It absolutely is difficult.  But, having walked both roads, I maintain that the invisible element, unknown and unappreciated by the uninitiated is the emotional and spiritual exhaustion that accompany, and often overshadow the physical exhaustion of caring for a child who needs you around the clock.  Comparisons to new-baby nights, although meant as a bridge, are actually a barrier.  Most special parents will not follow up and say, “No, really, it’s not at all like that.  Let me explain why.”  They will just smile, nod, and keep the conversation at the surface level.
Here’s why:  this life can be tremendously isolating.  Free time is precious and rare, so I can’t always be at the weekend barbeques, the sporting events for our other kids, or the girls’ nights out.  Sometimes I can’t even answer the phone.  And, most times I don’t return phone calls.  Believe me, I know I am flaky.  I know I probably come across as rude or ungrateful when thank-you cards, if they arrive at all, are three months late.  Connections with other people feel tenuous, as I wonder how long they will keep inviting if I have to keep declining because Abbie is in the hospital, or I don’t have a nurse to care for her.  So, when I do have a chance to be with other adults and explore a few hours of being something other than special needs mom (heels and lipstick are a major demarcation line), the last thing I want to do is alienate anyone.  I don’t want to be the dragon mom.  Tiger moms drive their kids relentlessly.  Dragon moms singe the hair off of other people if we honestly answer innocuous questions like “How are things going?” or “What have you guys been up to lately?”
Dragon breath happens when I talk factually, openly, about the details of our life with Abbie. It throws the innocent questioners into raging rapids without a life jacket when they really just wanted to walk on the sand with me.  It feels cruel, as I watch someone’s face go blank, then fill with pain and sympathy, and then go blank again...they simply don’t know what to do, and I feel responsible for their flailing. 
If you want to really connect with a special needs parent about the realities of her life, it won’t be through small talk, it won’t be through filtering her experiences through your own, and it won’t be all at once.  She’s got to trust you.  It’s hard to have the deepest pain in my life be apparent to friend and stranger alike, as I push Abbie in her wheelchair, so the pieces of my heart that I can protect, I do.  Ferociously.  That means there are very few who know those places, and as I think about it, all of them are special moms, too.
So, the connections we make, while important, rejuvenating, and valuable, also often feel a bit hollow at the core because I cannot truly share my struggles, stresses, hopes, and dreams.  Many times I feel like an observer of “normal life” in groups, not a part of the group.  This is transparent to everyone else, it’s just something I feel, for which I consciously compensate.
So, back to your original question about the looks.  The reason why I cast my gaze down on the days my baskets of challenges and heartaches feel especially heavy is because I cannot carry the bricks that others want to give me when they look at or speak to me.
Most of the bricks come from the Fear Factory, and people don’t even realize they are asking me to carry their brick of fear when they give it to me. 
When they say, “You are so strong.  You are inspirational. I could never do this”, they are actually vocalizing a coded prayer.  “God, please don’t ever make me do this!” Their words don’t have nearly as much to do with me as they do with their own fear of being me one day.  They may feel and express their admiration sincerely, but the root is fear, and the comments are a brick added to my basket.
Some days, when the baskets feel light, and I feel strong, hopeful, and courageous, I can accept the fear bricks with a smile.  It’s not that I am stronger, it’s that they don’t know some of my secrets.  They see a broken little girl in a wheelchair.  They don’t have the special glasses to see the heavenly princess, full of beauty, grace and mystery that I am privileged to push as divine star shine and glitter follow behind us.  They don’t know, and perhaps never will, that words are not necessary for communication, and actually get in the way of the deepest connections.  Abbie and I still “talk” all the time, but through our hearts and our minds.  We are bound in a way I could have never envisioned when she was a chatty two-year-old.  They don’t know what it’s like to have every day that Abbie is healthy and smiling feel like a come-from-behind victory.  And, I don’t think they know the power and depth of loving intensely with a heart enlarged by being smashed into bits.  A perfect heart loves easily and purely.  A broken heart’s love is a complex, multi-colored, defiant choice.  It is unstoppable.
On these days, I assure the brick-giver that, if it were their child, they most certainly could do it, they would do it, and then silently pray they will never have to.  On other days, though, I wonder if they have any idea of what they are truly saying.  Do they think I was chosen for this, Abbie was chosen for this, because I was strong enough to handle it?  No doubt we were chosen, but certainly not on my ability or strength.  Is the answer to the unspoken fear of having to give your own daughter CPR, or caring for a brain injury survivor, or losing a child, to continue to assure one’s self that only  “special moms” have the strength for that.  I wonder if the speaker realizes she’s programming herself for weakness, but that won’t prevent challenges requiring strength.
There’s another kind of brick that appears, and initially feels, very different from those embellished with kindness by well-meaning strangers.  Judgment hurts.  Judgments of the most tragic day of my life, about the worth of my daughter, about my responsibility as a mother are sometimes hurled like cinderblocks through glass.  Some are thoughtless, and not even meant purposefully for me.  Being in a group of moms, each relating in great detail how they are taking precautions with their pools, adding in a story of someone’s child who almost drowned, with requisite chords of horror and superiority in their voices.  I just hold my breath through these, and again tell myself, “they just don’t know.”
But, then, there are other people, “marksmen of vitriol” I call them, who aim directly at my heart, wind up, and fling the brick with all their might, hoping to destroy me to the degree I obviously deserve.  “How could that possibly happen to a child?”  “It’s just unacceptable”  “There ought to be laws, and more severe penalties to prevent things like this”.  And, yes, I’ve had this said to my face, with Abbie present, more than once.  It is like an atomic bomb going off in your soul, when you are a novice.
I no longer am.
So, I realized that their words, as evil and hurtful as they were, were ALSO not about me. 
They were about them, and also came from the Fear Factory.  They also want to assure themselves they will never be me, that their healthy children will never need tracheostomies, suction machines or wheelchairs.  Instead of pleading a lack of strength, as the Kind tribe does, they blame my poor parenting, my lack of awareness and control, and even my flawed being.  I’m the “horrible mother.” This makes me different from, less than them.  This means what happened to my family, my daughter, me....could never happen to them.  It is scary to imagine anything so life-altering happening to your child, but assuaging that fear at the expense of another person is cruel.  Doing it at the expense of a parent fragilized and exposed by having a special needs child is wicked. 
Same factory, same bricks, different transfer methods.  But, both groups are asking to add to my basket, the Malevolent tribe just hopes to bloody me a bit in the process.  This is why, on the days my baskets are blistering my shoulders, I cannot look up.  I just can’t take any more weight.
You can also now understand just how spectacularly blessed we are when those rare people come along who both insist on and know how to take some of our burden out of our baskets.  But, I’ll save those stories for another day...."

To learn more about Tiffany and Abbie go to www.prayforabbie.com.