Adaptive Swimming Lessons Queen of the Waves Teaches Mom
Who’s the adaptive swimming lessons queen of the waves in guest blogger Ellen Stumbo’s town? Her daughter Nichole, of course. Today, Ellen describes what she learned during the first day of her daughter’s swimming lessons for kids with special needs.
Adaptive Swimming Lessons Queen of the Waves Teaches Mom
“I qui oh the way!”
At our first adaptive swimming lessons, Nichole repeats the line from one of her favorite Barbie movies, “I am the queen of the waves!”
Grateful for Poor Speech
Her speech is poor, and she has a long way to go. But after a couple of laps around the pool, an older boy approaches us with a loud, “Oh, oh, oh!” All of a sudden, I feel grateful for Nichole’s speech and the fact that she can communicate with us. Most likely, she will speak fluently by the time she is the boy’s age. I feel myself tense as I do not know how to interact with the boy, so I ask him, “Can you sign and show me what you are saying?” But he responds with more “oh, oh, oh!”
Overwhelmed by Special Needs
When we first walked into the adaptive swimming lessons, I instantly felt overwhelmed by the different special needs swimming in the water. I held Nichole close to me and thought, we don’t belong here. My first instinct was to turn around. I felt scared, taken out of my comfort zone, yet surprised by my reaction. Don’t I have two children with special needs? I can do this, I reminded myself, these are my people.
“Oh, oh, oh!” The boy continues. His mother comes over and explains he is singing us a song. As I swim away with Nichole, the woman begins to sing along with her son, he is delighted, claps his hands, and hugs his mother. She smiles at him from a deep place so full of love that it is hard not to feel moved by the interaction. I realize I have much to learn about disability.
We Have It Easy with Down Syndrome
I like Down syndrome. Down syndrome has changed me. It is familiar. Nichole and I swim in the pool, she is the queen of the waves, and I am a student, learning what it means to really embrace disabilities. Not only those that I am familiar with, but all of them. I am learning to look at the person, not the disability.
I come home and tell my husband, “We have it really easy when it comes to special needs.” I tell him how I felt, and how much I have to learn.
For the next class, Nina is signed up for the swimming lessons too, and we have permission to bring our oldest daughter. I prepare the girls telling them about the big boy that cannot talk. As soon as we enter the pool, we hear the unmistakable, “Oh, oh, oh!” The girls are not scared the way I was, they just get in the pool and have fun. When they swim by him, they wave and say hi.
My Children Accept Disability
My children have a greater acceptance of disability and of people who are different. Sure, Nina has Cerebral Palsy, she knows she is different, but she is also open to those that have more challenges than she does. She finds something good and positive and praises those qualities. Nichole is too busy being the queen of the waves, but I wonder what she will think when she realizes that other people look at her as different. As for Ellie, her sisters are her sisters— they are normal. Every individual with a disability we encounter is a person. Perhaps they have a disability, but it does not matter because everyone has talents, gifts, and even abilities. My children know what acceptance really looks like. I will follow their lead and look past the disability to see the person.
What I Learned in Adaptive Swimming Lessons
The adaptive swimming lessons is a place where kids with special needs learn how to swim. Nonetheless, it is a place where a scared mom continues to learn how to swim in the world of disability, acceptance, and unconditional love.
What Have You Learned from a Child with Special Needs?
Our kids with special needs teach us lessons all the time. Leave a comment about a memorable lesson your child has taught you? Tell us how it’s changed the way you live or see the world.
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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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