Something’s brewing

With a non-verbal child you become accustomed to watching out for signs. Sé feels pain the same as everybody else, but he doesn’t know how to express it, so we watch him and mind him and do our best.

Right now, he’s got something brewing. How do I know? Because he’s being nice and helpful. Sé is a… How shall I put this? He’s a difficult person. We often hear people use sweeping statements about people with Down Syndrome – “They’re very loveable”, “They’re always smiling”. Well, not only is that a bit insulting and reductive – every person is an individual, including any person with Down Syndrome – its also absolutely not true when it comes to our Sé.

He is difficult. His default word is “No!”. He needs to be cajoled and coerced into doing things, sometimes even things he really wants to do – he just can’t do things without being difficult. But when he’s coming down with something, it’s like he forgets to be difficult. All of a sudden, he’s kind and helpful and will give you a random hug – usually unheard of. He gets out of bed in the morning without a fight, gets dressed by himself and potters down to breakfast.

We’ve had reports from school this week that he has been fantastic. Best behaviour all round. These are all familiar signs that he’s coming down with something. He has missed the Christmas concert in school for the past few years because of illness, but this year is especially important. This year he’s a shepherd in the school concert and he is only delighted with himself. So we’ll keep watching him and minding him and doing our best to get him to his Christmas show, where he’ll be the best shepherd Sé there ever has been.  

Similar Posts

  • Never a Dull Moment

    As my son gets older, he finds ever more ingenious ways to keep us on our toes. Over the years, he has filled the oven with random stuff and turned it on. He has chopped blueberries with a chefs knife. He once painted his entire head black – face, neck, hair, even the insides of his…

  • No Winners Here

    The discourse around the most recent referendum has been yet another exercise in soul baring to beg for access to basic human rights. We did it for marriage equality, we did it for repeal the 8th and now here we are again, telling our stories about the inhumane ways we have been treated and neglected…

  • |

    Big Birthdays

    We had a significant birthday in our house this week. Our son with Down Syndrome turned 12. And what a 12 years it has been.  I cried in the lift heading up to the labour ward – I knew something big was about to happen. A couple heading out with their newborn, thinking I was…

  • |

    Who cares? 

    I do. I care a lot. I care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and I’ve been doing that for the past 12 years. And tomorrow, I am being asked to vote in a constitutional referendum where it would seem our government doesn’t care at all.   As a campaigner for the rights…

  • So Long, M’F*kers

    These teeth. They have been with us for a very long time.    My son didn’t have any teeth at all until he was almost 3 years old. His first tooth was a big, back molar. Then, gradually, teeth started popping up all over the place, some at the back, an odd one near the…