My name is Sarah Sanchez and I’m the Family Contact for Rio
Rancho. Intentional parenting in general is a lot of work; parenting kids with attachment
issues or troubled pasts requires you to function at a level most parents can’t
comprehend. When my husband and I decided to add adoption into our house we
were ready- physically, emotionally, and financially. We had three biological
kids and knew we had more resources to share. During our two-year adoption
period, I was involved in an auto accident that I was struggling to get over.
We brought home two toddlers from Ethiopia and were thrilled to have them in
our family. Two months after they came home, I was rear ended once again, but
this time I wouldn’t recover. Here I was with five young kids, two with
attachment issues, one with severe dyslexia, and one with gluten intolerance.
And I was ill, not often, ALWAYS. Not only were we doing attachment therapy,
speech, and OT but I had to be at the doctor or chiropractor a couple of times
a week for my issues. It destroyed our plans to keep the kids in the house as
much as possible because I had to take them to these appointments, which caused
chaos when we returned home. This year I was fortunate enough to get a
diagnosis of Lyme’s Disease and undergo treatment. It had been masked by the
accidents, but it had been there for years, causing chronic pain, and fatigue-
morning, noon and night.
I continue to meet parents who are in a similar situation as
I am. They are struggling to meet the needs of their “hurt” kids, but with the
added intensity of their own chronic illnesses. This lays the foundation for a
potential disaster. For myself and
so many others with chronic illnesses, we have spent a fortune on medical care.
Many families find themselves unable to hire help for cleaning, sitters, and
tutors because so much of the available resources each month are going into dr
appointments, therapy, etc. The
following points are the things that I’ve found essential to parent hurt kids
while living in physical pain:
1. Ask for help. I struggled to ask for help early
on because I felt like this was something “we” got ourselves into, and “we”
needed to handle it. I eventually realized that I needed help from healthy
people in our lives to get through this time. Another strategy was doing
bedtime dates- put kids down early, and try to stay up and enjoy the quiet.
Again, for sick people this is tough.
- Self Care- Do it. Taking care of yourself and your relationships is
difficult when you have lots of kids, because their needs are endless.
I’m now better at giving
myself permission to shut the door, go to bed early, or rest. My
limitations as a sick-parent are real and hard to swallow some days. But
here is the thing- even healthy parents have limitations, ours are just
greater. Grieve the loss and then form a plan- what is realistic for you
to accomplish today, this week, this month, etc. Consider having an understanding
friend help you sort out a plan. Consider joining the child-care swap
available through FIESTA. That way if you are having a bad week, you have
another pool of folks to help.
- Grieving. Parents living with chronic issues face a lot of losses. It is hard to acknowledge the “huge loss” of “this is not the life I planned for my kids”. Because you face losses everyday with your kids- I can’t take you to the park today, I don’t have the strength, or you have to go with me to this appointment because I can’t afford a sitter, I can’t do laundry and dishes today. I felt like I was failing on so many levels. But I needed to form new expectations as a sick/disabled Mom, and ditch the “high” expectations I had for myself. That process is grievous, I felt like I was always “compromising” which also felt like a loss. I learned that there are therapists who specialize in working with families who live with chronic illness.
- The NEW Normal??? Whatever that means. For
years I had Doctors tell me to focus on a “new normal.” For us, this meant
our kids couldn’t (currently) be involved in extra curricular activities.
This breaks my Mama heart regularly, but it is necessary. We have learned
to play more games at home, host more movie nights and do home-based
activities. They do have a mom who, even if I’m on the couch, can provide
emotional love and support. It also means my home and my car almost never
look the way I want, because
I can’t keep up. I can be upset about it and disrupt the emotional
atmosphere of the house (we all know how well our hurt kids respond to
that), or use the opportunity to teach my kids many, many lessons. For
example:
*We
care about people more than possessions. If someone among us is weak or sick,
we must care for them-it is easy to do this FOR our kids but much harder to let
it be us that needs the care.
*We
try to focus on the many things we have, and not dwell on the things we want.
*Growing
up in a household with special needs teaches kids to be empathetic and caring.
It has taught all of us to be generous with our time and resources for people
in need, and they would all agreeJ
In closing, if you too are living
with a chronic illness and trying to be an intentional parent in spite of
things, you have my sympathies. It is beyond difficult and often lonely. Many
people will not understand, and you have to be ok with it. Let me leave you
with a quote that I think of almost daily.
ATTITUDE by Charles Swindoll
“The longer I live, the more I realize the
impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It
is more important than the past, than education, than money, than
circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or
say or do. It is more important than appearance, giftedness or skill. It will
make or break a company... a church... a home.
The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past... we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude... I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it.”
Sarah Sanchez
The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past... we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude... I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it.”
Sarah Sanchez
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