For many raising a child with a disability, the rewards far outweigh the challenges - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 05:09 PM | Calgary | -16.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British ColumbiaPoint of View

For many raising a child with a disability, the rewards far outweigh the challenges

Parenting a child with special needs can be filled with incredible lows and breathtaking highs. How can you make sure they're seen as more than just their disability?

Parenting a child with special needs can be equally terrifying and terrific

Children are so much more than their disability. (Adobe Stock)

This story is part of Amy Bell's columnParental Guidancethat airs on CBCRadio One'sThe Early Edition.


Parenting can be an overwhelming endeavour filled with chaos, doubt and daily fears for your child's well-being.But if you are aparentto a child with a disability of any kind, you might feel those battles more keenly than othersand face fears most parents can't even begin to fathom.

Through no effort of my own, I have been blessed with two remarkably ordinary children, but for parents with more extraordinary children who have disability and needs unique to them parenting can be a time filled with confusing lows and incredibly rewarding highs.

White Rock resident Leslie Stoneham wasn't expecting to give birth to a child with Downsyndrome 31 years ago. When she had Kierra, she was provided with outdated information and was still presented with the option of giving her newborn up for adoption in 1988!

But she knew instantly that she was going to raise Kierra just as she had been raising her older daughter, and that meant plenty of love sometimestough love compassion, and joy. It also meant focusing on Kierra as a whole person and not just someone with special needs.

Leslie has also had to fight and advocate for Kierra to get the assistance and government funding she is eligible for, and wishes that it wasn't such a battle for parents to get the support their children deserve.

Can there be too much support? Not really it takes a village, after all but as any parent knows, there are times you need to push your child so they can fully realize what they are capable of .

'Give her that opportunity'

Lucia Arreaga is a Bowen Island resident and the mother to a brilliant, boisterous six-year-old girl named Maya. Maya has ADCY5-related dyskinesia an incredibly rare genetic disorder that causes uncontrolled movements and greatly affects Maya's mobility.

Yes, she needs a great deal of assistance from her family, friends and community.But her familyis very conscious of the fact that while Maya does faces many challenges, part of what will ultimately help Maya is knowing when to take a step back.

"It's that fine line of staying close but not too close", saidArreaga. "Give her that opportunity to prove to herself that she can do it."

Parents such as Leslie and Lucia and countless others just want their children to be seen as people first regardless of any special needs they might have.That they not be defined by their disabilities and that everyone realize just how lucky they are to have these children in their lives.

"She's been my teacher. She's taught me to be a better person, " saidStoneham.

Arreagahas the samepraise for Maya: "She's an incredible, incredible human being ... who has changed so many people's perceptions in life."

All too often, we view people with special needs and disabilities by what they can't do,instead of celebrating all that they are capable of and capable of becoming.

Young kids are oftenmost open to children with disabilities,but somewhere along the line to adulthood, weforget that natural acceptance and focus too much on what people are lacking.

As parents, we need to work hard to instill and keep this kindness and openness in our children.This will only continue to make a more inclusive community for everyone,which ultimately benefits those with disabilities and those without.