The Hailey Herald

The Hailey Herald

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Hard to Look Away (31 for 21)

This is a post from last year.  Message boards like this are every where and they still break my heart.......



Last week, I stumbled upon a chat on a message board  that I wished I had never seen.  I wish I could erase it from my memory...but we all know it doesn't work that way.  It has weighed heavy on my heart ever since.  It was a support post about women who had found out their unborn babies were less than perfect and they were terminating their pregnancy.  The majority of the "imperfections" were trisomy 21, Down syndrome.  My heart broke.  I should have closed it the moment I realized what it was.  I knew better.  I couldn't.  I read it all.

I have always been against abortion.  It was one of the reasons we chose not to have any testing while we were pregnant with any of our children.  We would have never considered terminating any of our pregnancies.  We never felt it was our place to put value on a life and decide whether a child enters the world.  We felt every pregnancy was a gift and it was our responsibility to preserve that gift.  On the other hand, I'm not judging the women that chose to terminate their pregnancies.  I wasn't placed on earth to be their judge and jury.  Yes, I was heart-broken with the number of women in that conversation that did decide to terminate their pregnancies due to prenatal testing and the news that their child had trisomy 21.  The part that struck me the most was their reasons for terminating.  They weren't crazy thoughts...they might have been a little irrational...they were typical feelings that many parents have had when presented with the news that their child is less than the "perfect" that we dream of.

"I don't want my child to suffer."
"I don't want to burden my other children."
"I am not strong enough."
"What will happen to my child after I pass?"
"I don't know how to handle a child with special needs."
"What if he/she has other medical problems."

Heck, most of these questions/concerns are made by all parents.  No one knows what the future holds.  No one knows what will happen with our children that were born "perfect".

I just can't imagine feeling so strongly about any of these concerns that would make me want to end a pregnancy.  I wonder if any of these women would have felt differently, if they had met some of the fabulous children with Down syndrome and their parents.  Some of the fabulous self advocates with Down syndrome.  The beautiful faces of the Buddy Walk video that airs in Times Square.  The normalcy of our lives.  The typical toddler behaviors that Hailey exhibits every day.  The joy her smile brings to every person she shares it with.  If they saw the love my boys show for their little sister.  If they saw the love that my husband and I have for Hailey.  If they saw the dimpled, mischievous grin that I see every day.  The deep belly laugh I hear when she thinks she is funny.  The love I feel when she wraps those tiny arms around my neck, plants that wet open mouth kiss on my cheek and then says mama. 

The chat that I stumbled upon broke my heart on so many levels.  It made me sad that those little ones were never given the chance at life.  It makes me sad that those mothers felt so strongly about the unknown and the life they "didn't think" they could handle that they chose to terminate.  It disappoints me that because of this type of thinking there might be fewer and fewer people with Down syndrome born.  It upsets me because these actions might one day have my daughter questioning her worth.  Lastly, it makes my heart hurt that those mothers will never feel the joy and love that I receive from my absolutely PERFECT daughter!

What...I'm not supposed to have these?

Hmmm...mom can carry the little one to bed, dad...you're on your own!

Shhhh...don't tell the boys.  I just want to play one round.

What do you mean my hair is a mess & I have food hanging out of my mouth?
My family thinks I am awesome!

Who could resist this face?


That chat I stumbled upon reaffirms why I blog and advocate for my child and all people with Down syndrome.  It is the reason I will never stop.  It is not realistic to think that we can change the opinions of everyone, but we certainly won't give up and we will certainly try!

7 comments:

  1. wonderfully said

    ReplyDelete
  2. Same for me, thanks for the post

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you for this and your awareness raising.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I remember this post. I always said I wanted a *baby,* not a diagnosis. Sad for the people who can't see past their own selfishness.

    ReplyDelete
  5. love your post - I refused testing too and was so taken aback by how my dr tried to convince me that I should have the test ONLY to know that I should abort if I had a T21 child. I never did but it made me look into DS, I needed to understand more. Some of these mothers are taking information from their doctors that is why they make the choices, because doctors tell them how hard life is with a DS child (that is how it was with me), bless your family, your daughter is gorgeous. check out another blog I follow (maybe you know it already) www.nogreaterjoymom.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'll have to check out that blog! I just hate that most of those doctors don't have a person with Ds in their lives. People listen to their doctors and trust their opinions. Doctors need to be more aware of that!

      Delete
  6. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete