Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 I too have been exactly where you are...child critically ill for years, feeding tube, nissen, open heart surgery at 6, massive developmental delays, language delays and their associated behavioral problems, progressive hearing loss, anaphylactic food allergies to everything, environmental, etc., depression from so much trauma at so young an age. What do I do...I cry, and cry and cry and occasionally throw things; write lots of emails; call my mother; create/write support groups; seek counseling; file complaints; testify in Senate hearings; flounder around and feel totally lost; never sleep; call every world reknowned medical expert/ audiologist/ engineer who might have an answer to help my child; have anxiety/panic attacks; wake up at night running to find the box underground that my child has been buried in because I must find the answer and find them before it's too late and they die...and then realize that it's a dream reflecting my panic over not having the answers, or not get ting them fast enough; suffer from stress related illnesses. I give up and wonder whether life is worth staying alive for and I get angry with God because it's not fair for someone so innocent to have been through so much pain and that that pain has been made so much worse by employees of the school system who were incompetent, apathetic and downright evil who have both unintentionally and intentionally caused so much unnecessary additional pain to my child and to us, his parents.When I'm in the pits and feel like I can't live this kind of life anymore, a little light dawns and offers me a path to take and I pick myself up, realize that life IS worth living, I pray to a higher power, I try to breath away the chest pains from the panic attacks, take extra vitamin B's to stay calm, and start documenting, writing, calling people who can make things change. Then I'm energized again...still exhausted but ready to battle. I take leadership roles in hearing loss organizations, advocat e for other children with hearing loss/developmental delays and spend ALOT of time trying to locate the top specialists I need to help my son and us. I research the internet constantly for information on hearing loss, the latest technology, philosophy's in education, how the technology works. But the biggest way I handle it is to try to find something special to do with my family to forget about it and to set up opportunities for my son to forget his hearing loss. We began to take our son to the Opera the minute he could read well enough to read the subtitles...luckily, god gave him the gift of reading before age 2. We started attending Japanese Anime conventions and getting into anime because all of their movies/dvds were subtitled and hearing didn't matter because the dialogue was in Japanese anyway. We offered him drum lessons, music he could hear. We also have a diabetic daughter who developed diabetes during the time that had emergency open heart surgery and was recuperating. He was always the focus of our life problems until that happened. She became so sick while going to Cue Camp with him while he was still recuperating from open heart surgery, that she was vomiting and in ketosis before we realized how sick she was. For the last 9 years, her needs and extreme problems have overridden many of his medical and hearing loss needs. She's now away from home as she's 21 and we have refocused on our son's needs again, but we were always juggling. Our marriage has managed to survive somehow.. And our kids have survived to date. I still have alot of reasons to cry, but now, more reasons to laugh. I look at my son, see how far he has come and how far he still has to go, but I listen to my mother who has always said that he WILL make it, maybe just a little later than others. She has always said, that everything will come AT HIS OWN TIME. And it always has! There are days when he comes home completely demoralized about his inability to socialize due to his hearing loss and suffers so greatly from the frustrations of being an auditory learner in a hearing world. He gets angry at his life and his massive allergies. Depending on my mood, I either give him a pep talk or I get upset with him and cry...trying to keep it for when he doesn't see, but sometimes letting him see because he needs to know I care. Either way, I end up making him fell better with his lot in life and he smiles, that deep, loving, content smile of his. Then he comes home telling me that his marching band where he is a key drummer, just won first place, that kids in his class said he was the nicest, tha t teachers complimented him for his knowledge and hard work, that he and his band are going to record a cd this weekend, that he's going to try out for the Baltimore Ravens marching band, and he's beaming...my husband and I are beaming....we call my parents, and they are beaming...We watch him play in a concert, play in a parade, play the guitar, play the drums, get A's in a college level Japanese class at age 12/13, and we smile and know it will be okay. It's a yoyo kind of life. People say, " Gee, I don't know how you do it! You must be so strong! I couldn't handle this like you do! " Well, what they don't realize is that you either survive and fight or you give up. You don't have any choice but to fight as you love your child more than anything in the world. So you pick yourself up and keep going..no matter what. You'll do lots of stuff wrong, but most often, you'll do more that's right. Maybe not perfect, but still much better than doing nothing. What will pick you up the best right now is to take Jill's great advice. Immediately write the school that you will hire your own audiologist to come in and provide the inservice training and support and then bill them. Simultaneously, make arrangements to do so if there is any way you can afford it. As she said, you are not qualified to do the inservice and don't need the extra stress. It's a really easy thing to do for someone who is experienced in the field. I used a similar strategy when the County refused to provide a CART reporter for on a school field trip and when Towson University refused to provide a CART reporter for a special drumming clinic they were sponsoring. It was going to cost me $800 each for a day's worth, but I already had contracted with them and advised them that I would file a complaint under IDEA and under the Americans with Disaiblities Act AND the Rehab Act of 1973, they both caved immediately and had a CART reporter hired within an hour. It would have been a strain financially, but I would have recouped the monies from them ultimately either through the complaint process or through litigation. I would find out who the attorneys for the Special Education Department are, and immediately fax them such a letter. Hang in there! I'm battling Verizon trying to get new cel phones activated to no avail after they cancelled our old ones when they shouldn't have, and of course there's a tremendous glitch...while I'm on a mandatory hold I can't hang up on, I see on the caller ID that the school is calling me, my husband is calling me frantically and I don't know what's wrong...the school can't figure out who was calling me and my husband is off in an area where I can't reach him again. Arrghh. So, as you see, life goes on as usual and I don't have any time to dwell right now on hearing loss and its implications. -------------- Original message -------------- Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side? Trish Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 > << I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side?>> Hi, Trish. I've not been posting very often but I saw this and just wanted to reach out to you. In the beginning (2.5 years ago), I was just frantically trying to learn everything I could so that I didn't have time to cry or to really realize what this meant for Emmett or our family. I didn't realize I was grieving because I was just doing what I've always done ... being efficient, learning what I could, being strong. Eventually, I made my way to a counselor and that helped tremendously. Do I still feel guilty? Yes. Do I still cry? Yes. But I don't do either of those things on a daily basis anymore. I'm still sad about it and I've allowed myself some really good cries. When I have those days, I make sure I hold it together in front of my kids. Our daughter grieves every now and then too, but we all realize that Emmett doesn't know what typical hearing is so it doesn't phase him in the least that he has to keep asking people to repeat themselves. We're grieving for what we think he doesn't have. I realize now that I have to grieve from time to time because it is sad to watch him struggling. But he's a strong kid and really resiliant, like all kids who face adversity. He's going to be just fine. Also, I read some Luterman, the titles of his books I cannot remember at the moment. But the man just gets it like no one else seems to except for other parents of D/HOH kids. My husband and I saw him speak last year. It was really wonderful for both of us. Feel like I'm rambling ... it will get better. Do what it is you need to do for you. You need to take care of yourself in order to take care of your kids. But have your grief. That's the most important thing I've learned from the Luterman books ... it's OK to be sad and to think sometimes that this just sucks (pardon the language). Hugs to you. johanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 > > Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side? > > Trish > > Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at > http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathon > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 Honestly - I don't know what I did. Ask anyone on here - I was a mess in the begining. It sucked and was frustrating and I just didn't know what to do with all the information. In fact, I didn't even want all the information!!! But now - I'm at a better place. How I got here? No idea. Time maybe? But it does get easier and those feelings of grief do go away. The hearing loss isn't so much our entire life anymore. It has kind of fallen to the background. I don't focus on it so much. I know its there but it just seems natural now. Trish Whitehouse chester2001@...> wrote: Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side? Trish Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 I cried myself to sleep the first night after we found out that it was ‘true’...then we moved on. It is tough, not doubt about it. But these kids will amaze you with their perseverance and willingness to get on with their lives. I always remember what ’s first teacher told her classmates when they questioned the hearing aides...She asked them, “Why do I wear glasses?”...answer “to help you see”...”Then why does wear hearing aides? They help her hear”... Jan Mom to (12 – moderate in one ear, severe in the other – aided – and doing her first ‘read through’ tonight for a community play)... (15 – hates homework and would rather be riding her horse)...and (18 – enjoying her freshman year of college WAY TOO MUCH – you know there are boys there don’t you?) _____ From: Listen-Up [mailto:Listen-Up ] On Behalf Of Trish Whitehouse Sent: Wednesday, September 13, 2006 9:28 AM To: Listen-Up Subject: Grief Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side? Trish Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at HYPERLINK " http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathonhttp://www.firstgiv-ing.com/bobbym ar-athon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 I think we were relieved when we found out...it explained so much of 's speech delay, singing songs, etc...Now, 6 months into HA's he has favorite songs on the radio he sings along with and actually makes up songs for just about everything...and uses new words every day and has become a much cooler kid...yea I feel guilty sometimes that we didn't figure it out sooner...I just thought he was ignoring me...but his late speech was justified b/c he wasn't around other kids...and as soon as he was (and started reading lips) he started talking...and growing the vocab... But in the end, we know what the deal is now and give him every opportunity to improve on the skills he has and develop new ones... No need to dwell--the energy is better spent helping them grow... Grief Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how did you get through to the other side? Trish Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at HYPERLINK " http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathonhttp://www.firstgiv-ing.com/bo bbym ar-athon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2006 Report Share Posted September 13, 2006 First you deal with things (like I did), but when there's nothing immediate to deal with, you cry - at least I did. Believe it or not, you've already taken the best step I ever took by joining an online discussion group of other parents who understand what you're going through and who can tell you there is life (and a happy child)after diagnosis. Then you read Welcome to Holland! http://www.listen-up.org/edu/holland.htm Hang in there. JD is now 19 years old (egads, he'll be 20 next month!) and I don't know how we ever got through it all, but looking forward for him and his future, the sky's the limit. I've spent my life making sure that doors are left open for him, and now we're at the point where I'm watching him decide which doors he's going to go through, and which ones he's going to close himself. It's been an interesting journey to this point, but I'm sure proud of him and the young man he's become. -Kay Kay kay@... The Listen-Up Web http://www.listen-up.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2006 Report Share Posted September 19, 2006 I don't think you can ever get through to the other side. Things will always come up that make you wish your child could hear...sometimes you do put it in the background, or maybe even the majority of the time, but there are times still even though our daughter turns 8 next week that I still feel like crying. Sometimes it is when she can't keep up with the conversation and instead of taking the time to help her understand I just tell her never mind or it's ok don't worry about it. A few weeks ago it was when she told us that nobody wanted to play with her on the playground. Over the past weekend it was when my wife told me that she kept running down the field with the soccer ball after the referee kept blowing his whistle. I feel like this is my way of sharing her burden since she probably does not even know just how different she is yet. On the other hand she is just about as normal as any other kid in the world...she talks back, argues with her brother (who is only 2 but that does not matter to her), and likes to play video games and watch TV. I have to say one of the biggest things that makes me feel better about her being deaf is that every time I turn on the news or go to a hospital I see handfuls of people who are so much worse off and I thank God that the only burden she has is deafness. Tim > >Reply-To: Listen-Up >To: Listen-Up >Subject: Re: Grief >Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2006 11:28:04 -0700 (PDT) >MIME-Version: 1.0 >X-Originating-IP: 209.191.85.27 >X-Sender: saraandchadd@... >Received: from n23.bullet.scd.yahoo.com ([66.94.237.52]) by >bay0-mc5-f9.bay0.hotmail.com with Microsoft SMTPSVC(6.0.3790.2444); Wed, 13 >Sep 2006 17:24:00 -0700 >Received: from [66.218.69.1] by n23.bullet.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 13 Sep >2006 18:32:05 -0000 >Received: from [66.218.67.98] by t1.bullet.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 13 Sep >2006 18:32:05 -0000 >Received: (qmail 14587 invoked from network); 13 Sep 2006 18:28:08 -0000 >Received: from unknown (66.218.66.217) by m41.grp.scd.yahoo.com with QMQP; >13 Sep 2006 18:28:08 -0000 >Received: from unknown (HELO web36610.mail.mud.yahoo.com) (209.191.85.27) >by mta2.grp.scd.yahoo.com with SMTP; 13 Sep 2006 18:28:05 -0000 >Received: (qmail 84220 invoked by uid 60001); 13 Sep 2006 18:28:04 -0000 >Received: from [72.200.60.78] by web36610.mail.mud.yahoo.com via HTTP; Wed, >13 Sep 2006 11:28:04 PDT >X-Message-Info: LsUYwwHHNt2uYiQRZBY4WCXahYn4XAMM5APl1KRa9bk= >Comment: DomainKeys? See http://antispam.yahoo.com/domainkeys >DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=lima; >d=yahoogroups.com;b=HD5uO2A0MDKzpbBx9I7+zYnoXPkwo+ppq2csiT4Ii8RufzoqvimDoAX2cxC\ s6bPXo8MuNEOIC7kAXn/gWK1MdwE2WIVoGnh9QDvl2ndQSxAoIGgwsWLeSwCqh5AYjJpd; >X-Yahoo-Newman-Property: groups-email >X-Yahoo-Newman-Id: 173326-m43910 >X-Apparently-To: Listen-Up >X-eGroups-Msg-Info: 1:0:0:0 >X-Yahoo-Profile: saraandchadd >Mailing-List: list Listen-Up ; contact >Listen-Up-owner >Delivered-To: mailing list Listen-Up >List-Id: >Precedence: bulk >List-Unsubscribe: Listen-Up-unsubscribe > >Return-Path: >sentto-173326-43910-1158172325-trydees=hotmail.com@... >X-OriginalArrivalTime: 14 Sep 2006 00:24:00.0817 (UTC) >FILETIME=[13747A10:01C6D794] > >Honestly - I don't know what I did. Ask anyone on here - I was a mess in >the begining. It sucked and was frustrating and I just didn't know what to >do with all the information. In fact, I didn't even want all the >information!!! But now - I'm at a better place. How I got here? No idea. >Time maybe? But it does get easier and those feelings of grief do go away. > The hearing loss isn't so much our entire life anymore. It has kind of >fallen to the background. I don't focus on it so much. I know its there >but it just seems natural now. > > Trish Whitehouse chester2001@...> wrote: > Ok, so when it finally hits you that your kid can't hear like the >others, and that it is so much work for him to understand anything you say, >that he hears " music park " instead of " amusement park " , and " honkey bars " >instead of " monkey bars " , that he doesn't know what an orange is or that >all this time you've been talking too fast for him to keep up with the >conversation, when it finally hits big time that this is permanent and >isn't easy, what do you do with the feelings? Sit here and cry? I just >never had time to grieve about his heart; it was either deal with it or >he'd die, and after all that we had gone through with that, we were just so >happy to have him alive. But this is so different. I don't know what else >to say. What do you do with the grief? What did you guys do with it and how >did you get through to the other side? > >Trish > >Visit Trish and Bobby's Marathon website at >http://www.firstgiving.com/bobbymarathon > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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