Disability and Special Needs Are Part of Life
Photo Credit: stock images at www.freedigitalphotos.net
A trip to the grocery store proved to Ellen Stumbo that disability and special needs are a part of life. In today’s guest post she describes how shopping with her daughters, two of whom have special needs, shows others that disabilities and special needs are a part of every day life.
Life with Disabilities: A Part of Life
I pushed a grocery cart, and behind me three little girls followed close by, each pushing a customer in training cart. We were the perfect display of a mother duck being followed by her little ducklings. We got smiles, waves, and many comments, “Looks like you got some little helpers with you today!” “How adorable!” On that trip, disability was inconsequential to our adoring audience.
Two of my daughters have obvious disabilities. My middle daughter has cerebral palsy, making it hard and clumsy for her to walk pushing a little cart. My youngest has Down syndrome, and what can I say, she’s a cute little rascal, but you can tell by looking at her face that she makes an extra chromosome look good.
But there we were, pushing our carts. Our little family parade. And don’t get me wrong, because grocery shopping with three girls is not one of my developed skills, nonetheless, I know we did more than shopping, we gifted plenty of smiles.
I was a frazzled mama trying to keep it together though.
“Nichole, watch where you are going!”
Thankfully we avoided all collisions, but we were close.
“Just a second girls, the walker just fell…again.”
I did my best to balance the walker on the bottom of the grocery cart.
When we arrived at the store, the girls went straight for the customer in training carts. My daughter with cerebral palsy wanted one too. I was not going to deprive her of the fun just because she needs a walker. It makes the trip more complicated, but it also makes her just one of the girls. The walker fell out more times than I wanted to reposition it. It got to be a frustration, but we just kept moving along. Nobody gets left out.
By the time we were half way done, my youngest was done pushing her cart and ready to ride in mine. I left her little cart in the middle of an aisle and let one of the workers know.
We checked out and Nina got her walker back, thank goodness! As we walked out of the store and headed to the car, a lady followed us.
“Excuse me.” She said, “I wanted to give you this.”
She handed me a grocery bag. “It’s for your girls. A thank you for making my day.”
I looked inside the bag and there was a bag a puffed corn. A bag Nichole had wanted to get and I’d said no to.
“Thank you!” I said.
“No, thank you.”
As we drove home I thought about our grocery store adventure. My little ducklings, and me, the frazzled mama. Disability was not invisible, but it wasn’t scary, and it wasn’t bad, and it wasn’t something to look away from. Disability was just a part of life. A mother shopping with her three girls. Disability was normal, because disability is part of life.
And every day we do this, as we do life, we show the world that disability is just a part of life. Disability happens. We balance the walker and sometimes it falls, perhaps more than we want it to, but we pick it up and keep on moving. And we can see people smile and recognize the pleasures of being a family, just a family, like everyone else. And sometimes, this is what it means to live life with disability.
Is Disability or Special Needs Part of Your Life?
Have disabilities and special needs become an integral part of your life? How did it happen? How has your attitude made disability more integral for others, too?
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By Ellen Stumbo
Ellen Stumbo is a writer and speaker and the mother of three girls, two with disabilities. To read more of Ellen’s writing, visit her blog at www.EllenStumbo.com. She can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.
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Elise,
I’m so glad Ellen’s story spoke to you. She is such a gifted writer, and as her story shows, a gifted mom, too.
Jolene
Anita,
Thanks for your reminder of how far the special needs cause has advanced over the decades. Thanks to your family for being part of that change.
Jolene
Wonderful post and I can picture you and your little ones so clearly in my mind. Your family members are great ambassadors for the disabled and for teaching compassion and acceptance to others. My disabled sister was born during the early 1960’s. Times were different then. It was commonplace for parents to leave the disabled at the hospital and never take them home. My parents were told to leave my sister at an institution and forget about her. My parents brought her home and she was just another sister to us. (There are six girls in our family!) My mother modeled daily love, self-sacrifice and devotion to our sister. Our lives were changed, and the world around us was changed as people learned compassion and acceptance. You are changing the world! May God bless and encourage you today.
I LOVE this sweet story! It is so true– disability is a part of everyone’s life. And you used a sweet activity with your daughters to brighten the days of many grocery store customers. I 100% commend you for putting in the extra work to let your daughter with CP help, too. “No one gets left out” is an awesome way to view things. With just a little bit of extra work, you were able to brighten her day more than any of us will ever know. Thanks for spreading the message of inclusion everywhere you go!