The Truth about Special Needs: The Skies I’m Under
Different Dream welcomes Rachel Wright as this week’s guest blogger. Rachel is the parent of a son with special needs and author of the memoir, The Skies I’m Under. She and her husband are medical professionals, but their training went out the window as their son’s condition was unveiled. In her guest post, Rachel writes about the truth of special needs in her life, and how that truth seemed not to set her free.
The Truth About Special Needs
The glare of the theatre lights warmed my skin, as my body shivered. The cesarean section was about to begin. Everyone was poised, ready to carry out their designated duties yet I felt inadequate and out of my depth. I’d been in this environment before but this was different. This time I wasn’t a face amongst the milieu of professionals but rather a patient, a mother waiting to meet her child. Little did I know this role reversal would become the routine of my life; no longer a confident, qualified nurse but rather a nervous unqualified mother.
Ten weeks later, I sat across from another doctor and wished I was the nurse, not the parent. I had been in this room before. The room where the truth changes a life forever. but this time the news irrevocably changed my family; my son had severe and extensive brain damage.
Then you will know the truth and the truth will set you free.
John 8:32
As my son grew, the complexities of his disabilities were revealed. With each new diagnosis, life-threatening seizure, and ambulance ride, I was thrust down an unwanted road. So much of the medical landscape was familiar. As much as I understood the truth of the equipment and readings, my emotions were unprepared to watch my child hooked up to a ventilator, fighting for his life.
There were times I lay in the hospital bed next to my son wishing I didn’t know the truth, feeling the truth about special needs trapped me, rather than set me free. I was fearful of what a new day might bring. Too often, as a nurse, I knew the ‘truth’ about our situation before most parents and I longed for blissful ignorance.
Recently, I published my memoir, The Skies I’m Under. In the process of writing my story I walked around the darkest rooms of my past, lighting them with the torch of my memory. Telling my story caused me to sit and wait, until my eyes adjusted to the darkness. It was a painful process but eventually I became so accustomed to the shadows that I was able to rise up, throw back the curtains and allow in the light. This didn’t make everything easier. Sometimes the light brought with it a painful clarity.
Having just celebrated Easter, I am reminded that this too was the experience of the disciples. Although the empty tomb brought truth and hope, it didn’t take away all their grief or confusion. Easter Sunday wasn’t the fairy tale ending they had expected, but it did become the amazing beginning of a different rocky and remarkable road.
In writing The Skies I’m Under, I expressed afresh the pain of my own Passion Week Friday and Saturday, and in doing so I found the miracle of Easter Sunday. My Sunday is complicated, confusing and at times hard. It wasn’t the miracle I wanted but turned out to just as transforming.
Your Own Truth About Special Needs
Rachel ends her guest post with a challenge for readers. She asks you this: Have you ever thought about writing your story? Doing so might just change you.
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By Rachel Wright
Rachel is a nurse, author and mum living in Essex, the UK, with her GP husband and three wonderful boys. Her life changed the day her eldest son was born and introduced her to the world of severe disability and life-limiting epilepsy. As well as doing laundry and picking up Lego, she blogs at Born at the Right Time and recently published her memoir The Skies I’m Under which can be bought as paperback in the UK or as an ebook in the US and around the world.
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I just purchased the book. I’m eager to start reading it. Thanks.