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A message to all educators and therapists Part II


When you start talking
about my little girl
like she is 
a statistic...
you lose me.

When you start talking 
about working toward
"normalizing"
my little girl...
you lose me.

When you start going
through a checklist
of what she is
"supposed to
be doing at this age"
but she isn't...
you lose me.

When you start
making generalizations
about "Down's kids"
you lose me.
Please remember
to use people
first language.
And please remember
that not all kids
with Down syndrome
are the same. 

I have two little
girls with Down syndrome.
They are so very
different from
one another.
They have such 
different strengths
and challenges.
If I measured them
against a checklist
of things they were
supposed to be doing
at any particular
age, they would
score very differently.

And please...
while you are
talking to me about
checklists and how one of
my girls doesn't measure up
when compared to
the other kids,
please
be careful to have these
conversations with me
away from the 
always listening
ears of my little girl.

Can
you
imagine
if
you 
were
constantly
hearing
about
everything 
you 
couldn't
do?

I am aware that your
performance reviews are
partially based on
the "success" of 
my little girl
and because of
that there is a lot of
focus on developmental
checklists, emerging
skills and goals.

I hope that we can
put the checklists
aside sometimes
and focus on
my little girl
as an
individual.
Not as a comparison
against another child,
test score or 
checklist.

I hope that we
can be a team.

Signed,

A hopeful mama


3 comments:

  1. Just wondering if you actually gave this to the educators and therapists who work with Lila and not just on your blog? This is so well said and each one needs to hear it and from a kind mama like you who is so good at communicating.

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    Replies
    1. And maybe written down so they can reread as needed!

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