Guest guest Posted February 4, 2005 Report Share Posted February 4, 2005 Great point Hannah. I know when Leigha was only one month old I got very defensive when a stanger would remark on her head...hey she was my baby and deep down I knew something was up but didn't like knowing others were staring. Maybe had some of these strangers said " Hey I know what it might be.. " instead of " My her head's a little flat arent you worried? " It would have been more helpful in the long run. A lot of these moms might not react well because deep down they probably are worrying about things and trying to dismiss it as nothing..believe me the worse thing in the world is to think something big could be wrong. This is probably the reason why the parenting magazines and all aren't spreading a lot of awareness(its all about avoiding law suits and not being liable in the medical field and keeping parents happy so they don't overreact to things that are simple.) But after the initial shock the info that is given tends to set in. I looked online for lots of things way before Leigha was diagnosed. When I finally found bicoronal cranio I turned the computer off that first night and went to bed telling myself nothing was wrong and the specialist would tell me it was no big deal although the picture of the baby looked just like my daughter. The morning we saw the craniofacial surgeon I still kept thinking " This is stupid, the peditricians are right its a waste of time. " Deep down I knew that we were not going to hear what we wanted that morning but it still hurt to hear " She has to have major surgery and I want it done in less than a month. " Surgery-helmeting cranio/plagio...ALL this is no fun our kids are supposed to be perfect and no one prepares you for even the littlist stuff (I still hate the ordeals of colds and sickies) BUT once you start to find answers and find support even if it takes a week or a month..maybe longer...these parents you talk to are eventually going to think " Okay what if.. " and at least you gave them a starting point. You might see them pop online OR never hear from them again but someday I am sure you will get thanks(even if it waits until you move on from this life.) Leigha's web page has had over 7000 hits and I havn't heard from 7000 people but I feel good knowing its one more piece of info and one more way to find tons of support. Besides, sharing our stories just gives us proud parents one more way to brag on these kiddos =). {{HUGS}} Mel > > Hi Christy > > I just wanted to add that just because someone doens't seem > immediately interested or receptive doesn't mean they won't hear > what you have said. I once told a mum at playgroup about Lucia and > she said her little boy had exactly that (which he did) but she was > very dismissive of what I told her (I didn't actually talk about > him, just about Lucia, repositioning and websites). She even told me > she wasn't worried as he was a boy. I felt completely stupid and > embarassed to have mentioned it. However, it must have hit home, as > I didn't see her for a few weeks (by which time I had convinced > myself she had actually left the playgroup after I insulted her > son), but she came in and told me she had been in touch with Dr > Blecher, my specialist. In the end she decided with him not to band > as it was moderate, and she repoed him very successfully from about > four and a half months onwards. The last I saw of him, his plagio > was almost unnoticeable- the repo worked great. > > So- best to just plough on, put the info out there, and don't look > for thanks- most people would be defensive or upset hearing their > child has a problem. Someone told my friend that her six week old > baby had a genetic disorder at a barbeque. Now in the end she was > glad- she found out about it further and in the main it is > treatable. But she didn't thank them at the time! We are all > precious about our kids- you are doing the right thing by sharing > your story and pointing out to people that there is help out there. > > Hannah (mum to Lucia, London, UK) > Cranio grad > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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