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live in the moment

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Today Savannah is reminiscing about the wedding last year when I was the MC and I danced a special dance.

Now that I work from home, it is a mixed blessing.

My children and my husband love having me around and I find we are using our time more productively. I wake up everyday excited to meet the day. I can’t remember ever feeling like this in my whole life.

For those families who have a child with a disability, you will know why this dynamic is precious. My daughter Savannah is witty and funny and kind and thoughtful. She is also different in her way of thinking and feeling.
She is my ever-long learning course. Teaching me all that I don’t know and often after working hard at understanding her point of view, I come back to the realisation that I just can’t reach all the depths that her mind wanders too. As an autistic person, she sees life in a way that I work very hard to understand; only to find that I fail.

So often I fail. My struggle to keep up with the “normal” world collides with trying to grasp her view; and I become frustrated, and angry at myself. At her. At this life and it’s persistent demands. Yet, I have to live in both worlds. I have to try so hard to keep up with life so that I can be part of it’s rat race and try to earn a living to provide for all our children.

Governing all that we do, like so many families like us, is that we must try very hard to earn more than a living.
We must provide for Savannah long after we are gone. And that is what keeps me awake till the early hours or gets me out of bed long before the sun rises. Working from home while also being a caregiver, a companion and all that encompasses being Savannah’s mother, is my “more than a conqueror” daily challenge.

If I could stay at my desk all day, I would not eat or drink because truly writing feeds me like nothing else does. But my reverie is broken every time when Savannah calls me. Sometimes what she needs is reasonable and makes sense that she called me. Other times, she calls me to tell me something so far off base from the moment that we are in, that I throw my hands up in the air and proclaim out loud that I don’t need to know the tit bit of information that she is supplying. She doesn’t grasp that I can’t know what goes on on her head and so we tussle with memories until I either get what she is on about or I give up and walk away.

For example, a month ago she suddenly jolted to March 2014 and for several days, she recounted everything she remembered about that time. Everything. Details like what earrings I wore and who we saw. People who I have long forgotten. She remembered their earrings, their watches and who said what, when and where. As I fight back the urge to weep for what feels like the hundredth time that she calls me to say something that I cannot see the relevance in; I ask myself if anyone else lives in so many spaces all at once? And if so do they survive themselves?

Right now, I am in the middle of writing about Domestic Abuse for the UNWomen’s Campaign and it takes me back to times in my life that I have closed the door on. Yet, now at forty, the shock of what I was allowed to be privy too as a child, washes me afresh. I have several other writing projects underway and a new client who I have to do some research for. So my mind is a little more than preoccupied on a daily basis.

Then Savannah calls. Again. Not being sure if she needs physical assistance or if it is just another newsflash from the past; I walk to where she is because that’s my life.

Looking back over the years, I’m most in awe that while I was trying to glue my heart back together as a teenager who learnt too much about the hypocrisy of the adults around her, I somehow kept my sanity as I became Savannah’s mother. Over these twenty-two years I’ve listened to the same story that my heart didn’t have the words to utter when Savannah was little. Parents grappling with the heartbreak of the unknown as their child begins life in a world designed to set itself against them. The most competent of people, crumble as they understand the force that will be required to help their children live their best lives.

Each time, I’m stunned anew that a girl like me became Savannah’s mum. What was God thinking to trust me with her? It has never been easy. There are days when I wish I did not know of the things I have to know. But I survived and I have learnt how to thrive right where I am. Having Savannah at eighteen was probably the worst thing to happen in a life already falling to pieces. Yet years later I understood that being Savannah’s mother saved my life. Who knows what I would have become, had I not have to fight for her in all the ways imaginable and unimaginable? Would I have known how to fight for myself or for that matter would I have known that I could change the course of my life?

Even now as I try to juggle housekeeping, children, writing, keeping up with everything, Savannah calls. She is now remembering December 2017. She wants to play the song I performed at my cousins wedding. I’m not in the mood for this and I grumble something to that effect.

As I walk away from her with the clock ticking and the checklist running in my head of all that I have to get done today, I hear her say: “Pretty mum the wedding. My mum good dancer. Well done.”

Savannah and I decked out at a wedding last year.

I can’t help looking back at her as she gives me a big grin. Maybe I am wrong again. I don’t think I am looking after her at all. I think she is looking after me. Drawing me away from the square boxes everyone is fighting to fit themselves into.

If you have heard me speak you will know that one of my key points is that there aren’t answers to everything that life throws our way. For those moments, there is always dance.

And so as Savannah played the song “Tere Bina” from the Bollywood movie Guru for the umpteenth time this morning, I took my own advice; and I danced. She clapped and squealed and made her happy sounds.

No one ever tells us that the lines of our broken hearts, make for the most polished dance floors. Or that dance is meaningless unless someone gives you a beat to dance to.

Desirae and SavannahI have been struggling to write. A recent awareness day event about Cerebral Palsy touched a chord within me and messed with my heart. I was a guest speaker at the event which focused on inspiring younger families with children with cerebral palsy about what possibilities life held for them and that the diagnosis was not the end.

I listened to the stories of hope and sacrifice and achievement. I understood what it was to be the mother who spoke about these things. But that day I felt desolate and even defeated. I felt that we did not belong to a day about hope and inspiration. What inspiration could we offer? We had hoped. We had sacrificed. And our daughter had known what it felt like to defy the odds. But now? Now our truth was that we are also the family of a child who is regressing.

Our daughter is no longer on an upward trajectory. While Savannah is not diagnosed as having a terminal condition, the words “thriving, will develop, recovery, achieve, learn” and such; are not part of the vocabulary used by her doctors to describe her future. We are not the story younger families want to hear. We are the parents whose love is not enough.

It is not enough to keep her on the upward curve. It is not enough to keep her as healthy as she needs to be. It is not enough to stop the ache in our own bodies each time we lift her. It is not enough to keep myself calm when her obsessions make me feel like I am losing my mind. It is not enough to stop her physical pain. Our love is not enough to save her from her suffering.

When Savannah was younger, we felt isolated from our family and friends because they could not understand what we were grappling with in coming to terms with having a child with a disability. But we had solace in the community of other families like us. Now though, we feel the pity and the awkwardness from other parents because we are a treacherous reminder of the other possibility for people like Savannah. The possibility that some children grow up into adults who are going nowhere slowly.

And no one wants to know that this possibility exists. Other families who are parents of adult children with similar challenges know the unpleasant feeling too well too: When we are sought for our wisdom but held at a distance for our truth. We are great inspiration as long as the story is about how our children are thriving. While caring for an adult child with complex needs can be inspirational, no parent wants to pay a price like this for the title of being inspirational.

Last night after Michael’s shift with Savannah, I went to lie with her from about three in the morning. As I felt her trembling body and listened to her ask for what felt like the millionth time “Mum, God heal me? I be better?”, I realised how lonely we are. Lonely yet again. There are books, websites, talks, seminars, support groups, something where mothers of children with different needs can find a sense of belonging.

Where do you go when you are grieving the living? Who can relate to being able to answer the question “Why?” when their autistic adult child can’t make sense of her physically disabled body, that is in regression. How many mothers have looked into soft brown eyes and answered “I don’t know”? How do you say that sometimes I don’t want to do the thing that makes her happy because I just can’t face doing the same thing again? Who has the capacity not to judge you when you want to say “I just can’t do this again today”?

Am I angry? Am I sad? Am I frustrated? Am I tired? Yes, I am all of these in different proportions at different times. Do I think life is unfair? Yes, I do. It can be unbelievably hard to face each day not knowing what Savannah will be going through while we still have to be part of “life as usual” in other aspects.

What then do I believe about God and the purpose of life?
I believe this: Mary birthed a Son. He came, under what must have been terribly awkward circumstances for her. Both Joseph and Mary loved Him for the time that was given to them. When the worst time of that child’s life unfolded; Mary had the strength of all the world put together when she stood at the foot of that cross and watched Him suffer and then die. God did not spare even her, the mother of Jesus; from the truth of life. It hurts to love.

I can’t say I have the same strength as Mary did, but I can say this:
You don’t stop being a parent when it hurts. You can lose the whole world for the sake of your children but you never lose your children for the sake of the world. My heart will break again and again. Michael and I know both joy and sorrow. We already have the ability to weep with one child and then to laugh hysterically a moment later with another. We will talk late into the night about how amazing all our children are; how we are sad for some things and how our “hard” is so unrelatable to most of our friends except for a few parents.

Our love is not enough to give us the outcome that we believe Savannah deserves and that we as parents will find easier to cope with. Instead we continue to dig deep and continue to find ways to make life wonderful and spectacular. When you have lived with grief for a long time, you realise a few truths about life:

• To know grief is to have the choice to choose joy.
• To acknowledge that you cannot do anymore, doesn’t mean you have given up. It means that you       simply cannot do anymore.
• To be able to live in the moment is usually learnt through great heartache.
• Worry is a captor who was given the keys to the prison by the captive.
• Children don’t need superhuman parents who can fix everything and make it all better. They also     need parents who have the strength to hold them when it can’t be fixed and when it won’t get             better.
• The best people are those who don’t need you to fall apart to know that they are there for you.
• It is a conscious effort to make sure that you can remain soft when most of what you understand       about life can make you hard or indifferent.
• From the moment we are born, we are all dying. When that makes sense to your soul, you will          appreciate the magic of each morning.
As sad and morbid as that may sound; really..it is the beginning of living beyond grief.

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