A Bill of Rights For Parents of Kids With Special Needs

We, the parents, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure tranquility (and sanity) and promote the general welfare of our families, do ordain and establish this Bill of Rights.
* We have the right to expect our kids to be seen for who they are as individuals, not as labels or diagnoses.
* We have a right to trust our instincts about our kids and realize that experts donโt always know best.
* We have a right to ignore the remarks, questions and stares and not give explanations or excuses for why our children are the way they are.
* We have a right to choose alternative therapies for our kids.
* We have a right to roll our eyes straight out of our heads when we encounter certain mothers who brag nonstop that their kids are the smartest students/best athletes ever.
* We have a right to wonder โWhat ifโฆโevery so often.
* We have a right to play aimlessly with our children. Not for therapeutic or educational purposesโjust for fun.
* We have a right to blast Bruce Springsteen/Tom Petty/โAny Rockerโ, down a glass of Pinot Grigio, get a pedicure, go out with the girls, or do all of the aforementioned at once if thatโs what it takes to avoid burnout.
* We have a right to react to peopleโs ignorance in whatever way we feel necessary.
* We have a right to not always have our child be the poster child for his/her disability and some days be just a child.
* We have a right to go through the grieving process and realize we may never quite be โover it.โ
* We have the right to give our kids choresโฆโฆeven better, if they can learn to make breakfast in bed for us.
* We have a right to stretch the truth when we fail to do the exercises the therapist asked us to do this week because we were too darn tired or overwhelmed.
* We have a right to have yet more Pinot Grigio.
* We have a right to fire any doctor or therapist whoโs negative, unsupportive or who generally says โsuck-yโ things.
* We have a right to tell family and friends that everything may not be OKโat least not how they mean it, anyway.
* We have a right to hope for an empty playground so we donโt have to look into another childโs eyes and answer the question: โWhatโs wrong with him?โ
* We have a right to bawl on the way back from the playground, the birthday party, the mall or anyplace where our childrenโs challenges become glaringly obvious in the face of all the other kids doing their โtypical-developmentโ things.
* We have the right to give our children consequences for their behavior. They may be โspecialโ but they can still be a royal pain in the ass.
* We have a right to take a break from โGoogle-ingโ therapies, procedures, medicine and treatments for our kids to research upcoming concerts, exotic teas or anything not related to our childโs disabilities.
* We have a right to talk about how great our kids are when people donโt get it.
* We have the right to not always behave as inspirational icons who never complain or gripe about the sometimes awful realities of raising a child with special needs.
* We have a right to expect quality services for our children; not just when theyโre infants, preschoolers and elementary school age, but, when theyโre in older grades and adults, too.
* We have a right to adequate funding for those services and to not have to kick, scream or endure a wait for them.
* We have a right to get tired of people saying (as they give that sympathy stare), โI donโt know how you do it.โ
* We have a right to wish that sometimes things could be easier.
* We have a right to cheer like crazy anytime our children amaze usโor weep like lunatics.
* We have a right to push, push and push some more to make sure our children are treated fairly by the world.
Compiled in honor of my little boy, Max, and all of our beautiful children on June 17, 2009 on www.lovethatmax.blogspot.com.
For a printable copy or permission to reprint this, e-mail LoveThatMax@gmail.com.
Reprinted with permission from www.lovethatmax.blogspot.com
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