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May 07, 2008

Couple Quick Blog Items

As a person who has gotten some flack in real life for blogging, by people who think it is dangerous or people who think I'm a geek (hey, no argument there) I'd just like to point out a couple of neat-o things.

1. My bloggy buddy and fellow twin mom, Snickollet (aka Stacey Kim) is featured in CNN today. She talks about blogging as therapy.

2. The infamous Heather Armstrong (aka Dooce) whom I have read since BEFORE the whole dooced thing happened, wrote a really eloquent post about the decision to blog and a response to the critics,  specifically in regards to mom-blogging. She will be on the Today Show today/tomorrow? I'm confused. Soon, okay. Or just yesterday. Just watch online for god's sakes. (Or turn to ABC, I think she is also coming up on Good Morning America). Did you see her?

Great going, ladies! Soon us mombloggers will take over THE WORLD! I say- THE WORLD! Bwah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!!!

You People Are Keeping Me Up At Night

I am going to write a post regarding disabled kids and therapies/interventions. It is a hard topic, but I'll note right off the bat that I never indicated that children with disabilities should NOT receive therapy. But more thoughts on that later.

Okay, so this email I got a week or so ago, and my attempts to ignore it have not worked. Its not that I think the question is so wrong or that it made me angry or anything like that, it is just a touchy subject. But it is keeping me awake tonight so I guess I'll give it a go.

From "thebeck":

...I have spent the past few days going through your archive. Your weblog is sucking me in and I am enthralled with your story. I may be splitting hairs, but there is one thing you said that I just don't understand and can't get my head around. You talked about a horrible day that was something you just needed to get over in your post about the song "Ordinary World" being your theme song. And I assumed you were referring to your rape incident that you wrote about just a few posts before that. And you said that the song's line about "ours is just a little sorrowed talk" was meant to somehow minimize or diminish the crime. And you should just get over it. This is none of my business, but I'm confused about this. I found your site actually searching for "date rape" because my girlfriend was also raped in college. And she would go ballistic on me if I said that she should just get over it or that it was just a little sorrowed talk compared to the problems of the world. I guess I'm asking, how can two people with similar experiences think about it in such completely opposite ways?

...

Okay, first of all, I am very sorry about what happened to your girlfriend and please extend my sympathies.

And now, second of all, whoa, whoa, whoa. Hold on for a second while I pry apart the pretzel that is my brain and go back and find out what in God's name I said. (This actually took awhile.) He (I'm going to assume you are a he) is referring to this silly throw away post that you'se all weren't supposed to read that I am so going to take down now.

I say this:

I will continue to use "Ordinary World," which has become my cheesy summer anthem, as my rubber band around my wrist to snap when I get stuck in a forloop and need reminding to just get on with it.

and this:

"... forgiveness is a verb that you have to actively decide to do, it doesn't just come along and fall into your lap by itself via osmosis. Many years ago on a Thursday no less, we had an awful day, and that is what it was, an awful day. We can still remember S while getting on with it. "Ours is just a little sorrowed talk."


In reference to these lyrics:

Papers in the roadside
Tell of suffering and greed
Here today, forgot tomorrow
Ooh, here besides the news
Of holy war and holy need
Ours is just a little sorrowed talk


in this song:

Ordinary World


Okay, first of all, you are wrong about that being about what you think it is about. "We can still remember S" does not refer at all to the TCGRS (Typical College Girl Rape Scenario) experience that I wrote about. Actually, I can find where I wrote a bit about it after that post, but not previous to it. So either you read my posts backwards or I did write about it before and I can't find it now. Anyway. "S" is something I can't talk about here. Because it involves other people than me, and I was only on the periphery of the "S" situation so it is not my story to tell. But, it does involve a crime and loss and grieving, and that, coupled with my experiences around the TCGRS of my own, leads me to want to tell you these things:

No two people are going to handle being victims of a crime the same way. And there is no wrong way to handle it. If your girlfriend is telling you she can't get over it, she can't forgive, and that it is a big deal...guess what? She's right. You didn't say how long ago her experience occurred. I will tell you that my TCGRS was 19 years ago. My involvement in the "S" situation? Started 29 years ago. That makes a helluva big difference as to where you are in the process of grieving and getting over it. I'm going to guess that her crime took place within the last few years? But even if I'm wrong, who am I to say how anyone else should handle their own situation. Everyone is different.

What I meant by "Ordinary World" being my theme song involves how you can be going along, minding your own business, going down your own life's path with 19 or 29 years distance between you and a traumatic incident. And something can come along and totally blindside you, knocking you off your path and back to where you were  decades ago. It happens  to the best of us. It happened to me, and it happened to my friend, A, last summer. And how you have to drag yourself back to your chosen road, your ordinary world, before it gets all out of hand.  You can call this flashbacks or post traumatic stress or triggering or whatever. But when you have this issue, you have to develop your "drag yourself back to where you want to be" muscle. And this can take years to develop. And you can think you are so far beyond all that crap and guess what? You're not. So, out comes the muscle. Lift a few weights with it and get it back in shape. Have a little rubber-band around your wrist to help you if necessary, a theme song, whatever works, and you will get back there. If your girlfriend has issues like these, she may have not developed this muscle yet. Or she may just handle these things differently than me. Maybe she just is still and lets it all pass through her. Maybe she gets really angry. Maybe she needs to relive it for a while. Whatever. I hope she finds a way to find some kind of effective way to live with it. Whatever way she finds, it is the right one for her.

What I meant by "ours is just a little sorrowed talk" is that we (A and I, not anyone else) are so far removed from it. And we worked hard to get here. So every once in a while, we can have our little sad time flashback thingy, but that's it. We do our thing and then we are done. It is not our lives, it does not define us, it is just something we need to get "tuned-up" every few years or so. We talk to each other, have our little sorrowed talk about it, do a little emotional maintenance, and then we get back to our lives. This is our thing. Doesn't need to be anyone else's. And the whole "holy war and holy need" thing is that our discussions always end up talking about the bigger picture. Why is there so much violence and need in the world? Why is there a need to dominate and hate? Why so much hate against women...the supposed "weaker" sex? What is the definition of evil and is there good in everyone or are some people just evil? And if so, why? How did they get that way? Is it innate or environmental? What can be done to help good win out over evil?

These questions of the ages are where our conversations always seem to end up. And these are issues that are far bigger than what happened to A or what happened to me. We are, unfortunately, just little insignificant dots in the bigger world problem of violence and oppression. Which doesn't mean that our experiences are insignificant, just that unfortunately, we are only two people who have been victimized by crime in a sea of millions and millions throughout history since the dawn of time. For us, and I'm not talking about anyone else here, in a weird way it helps to think that the problem is universal. Not that we, A and myself, were somehow targeted because of something implicit about who we are. That we've done something wrong. It is just saying, look. domination and oppression and violence looms large in our world. This happened to us, but it is so not about us. This is bigger than us and there is nothing we could have done. The only thing we can do now is stay in our chosen "Ordinary World." This is the world of good over evil and kindness over violence. That's all we can do.

Boyfriends of rape victims can either be class A assholes (and if that is your choice, you should probably just gracefully back out) or can be fundamental in recovery. I am EXTREMELY lucky* to have really only ever had experience with the latter type of guy. Even the relationships that didn't work out for whatever reason were actually really cool about this issue. If you want to be one of the good guys and do the right thing; take a step back, learn about rape and its ramifications, get help from a victim's advocate or counselor, do whatever it takes to be supportive. You can click to RAINN (Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network and they can offer information and refer you to confidential hot-lines, counselors and victim's advocates in your area.

*D notes that my extreme luck has more to do with my infamously extreme screening process. I once got picked up for a first date from work. Not five blocks away the guy says that he can't "sleep with a girl without SLEEPING with a girl." I got out of the car at the next intersection, walked back to my office, and announced to my coworker, "date's over!"











May 01, 2008

The Room At the End of the Hall: When Integration = Segregation

Badd02

This is for Blogging Against Disablism Day.

I read a lot of blogs written by women who have adopted children of different races from themselves, and I have learned a lot about some of the issues they face. One thing they all seem to struggle with and are very conscious of is trying to ensure that their transracially adopted children find a community of peers and role models of their own race. That can be a struggle when one lives in a predominately white midwestern town. Or when moving to a new location and trying to pick a neighborhood that has at least some other students of your child's race. There are decisions about Chinese school, finding churches that are predominately black but also are comfortable for the whole family. Seeking out ethnic social clubs, either formal or informal ones. And pushing past ones comfort zone to enter into social situations and relationships where the parent will be the only white person in the room so that the child need not always be the only person of color in the room. I have to commend these parents for all the thought and effort and stepping out and taking risks that they do to give their children a sense of belonging and at least a shot of being in a safe comfort zone.

American Family has a list of links about this issue that I read through (scroll to near the bottom of the post.) I found one particularly interesting. A white mom with a black daughter (This Woman's Work) took her daughter to a very much anticipated ballet class. She was the only black child in the class. On the first day, an incident happened where she had mentioned that she had brown skin, and another well-meaning white mother said, "yes, and it's beautiful." (Read the full story and it will make more sense.) The girl suddenly got uncomfortable and miserable. Later it was decided that she needed to go to a ballet class that had some other kids of color in it. Even though nothing overtly racist happened, she felt self-conscious enough about being the only minority that her family felt the only solution was to find another ballet class.

What does all this have to do with blogging against disablism day? Well, it all made me think about how we talk about (or don't even think to talk about) how disabled kids are integrated in society. If anyone talks about these issues at all, it is in regards to inclusion, the least restrictive environment, getting kids out of the self-contained special schools and into the regular classrooms. Basically, for kids of color, we talk about ensuring that they are integrated with their same race peers. With Kids with disabilities (KWDs), it is all about getting them away from exclusively being with other kids with disabilities and getting them with the "typical" kids. What are the ramifications of this?

When I was in grad school, I worked with kids with significant and multiple disabilities. Inclusion was the gospel. It was all we talked about, all we practiced. Getting these kids, who usually had some combination of cognitive, motor and sensory disabilities, into the regular classroom in their neighborhood school with their same-age peers was all we worked on. It was THE GOAL. The thing that was going to liberate kids from discrimination and segregation. And as much as I didn't want to see KWDs locked away in some hidden warehouse away from society, the whole thing gave me a three-year stomach ache. But I was the best little grad-school advocate for inclusion there was. I played the party line to the hilt. Even though, somewhere down in my gut, I knew that  something was wrong. Something I couldn't articulate then. But I think I may be able to now because of my increased understanding of these transracial adoption issues and how they transfer to disability as being "transcultural".

What is unique about most KWDs is that they are born a minority into their own family. Most minority children are born into a family of minorities, who have many connections with their own ethnic and racial community. So even though they still are a minority in mainstream society, in their own little microcosm-- their homes, their neighborhood, their schools, their family members--they spend a good deal of time living as the majority culture. Like disabled kids, transracially adopted kids sometimes don't have this advantage, and thus all of the problem solving mentioned above. But, the thing that (I would hope) most transracially adopted kids have is that they were knowingly and voluntarily added to the family. One assumes the family who adopted them has at least some level of acceptance and cultural competence and lack of overt racism or they would not be willing to adopt a child of a different race. Many parents who transracially adopt already also have at least some connections to the child's racial heritage, and they made these connections voluntarily as well.

Not so with disabled kids. Most disabled kids are born into a family who would not voluntarily have chosen to have a disabled child. They may have no connections with disability culture and may, in fact, have never even met another person with the child's disability or any disability for that matter. They may harbor deep misconceptions and prejudices about people with disabilities. And they grieve the loss of the nondisabled child they expected. Although many parents do a commendable job getting schooled about disability really quickly and often have wonderous transformations in thought and even in cultural identity because of it, this may take years. And for some families, the fear and hatred of the sick and disabled never truly goes away. They may come to love their child, but never are able to love that part of them which is disabled.

The difference between what parents of transracially adopted kids and parents with disabilities often strive for is quite opposite. Transracial families strive for ways for their child to embrace her heritage, be proud of it, and find comfort and acceptance in the community of their birth. Families with disabled children often try to cure, to correct, to minimize, to go on in spite of, to overcome, to normalize, to integrate into "typical" culture. To do whatever it takes to make the disability part of their child be as insignificant as possible as a means to integration into mainstream culture. Emphasize the normal. De-emphasize the abnormal. It is the child that needs to change, to integrate, to assimilate to the environment as much as possible. Instead of, in the case of many transracial families, finding ways for the environment to change to accept the child's perceived difference. I'm being very cut and dry about this, of course, there is obviously a continuum of attitudes here, but I think you will see the trend as true.

So, lets talk about me now. Allow me to share my experiences as a disabled kid growing up and assimilating into mainstream able-bodied culture. My parents loved me, did what they thought was best for me, did the best they knew at the time. But it was no secret that my disability was a bad thing. A thing I had to get over, hide as much as possible, to overcome it, not make a big deal out of it, minimize it, never draw attention to it, and make it go away as much as possible. I went to a mainstream school all the way through. And didn't even know I was different until one day in the school library when I was squinting a little too hard to read a book. My third grade teacher came over and asked if I was having trouble reading. She did a quick experiment by asking if I could see another larger print sample of text better. (Well, yes. Couldn't you?) Within a couple of weeks, my whole school life changed. I was thrown (with no explanation) into the IEP assessment process. Meetings I was not privy to were held, large-print books were ordered, a special ed teacher was mandated, big tables with special lighting and magnifiers were squeezed into the back corner of the classroom where I would be 'segregated' while I was integrated into the regular classroom.

For most of my public school career, I was a resource room kid. I was the kid who came into the classroom and stayed for the first 15 minutes and then was dismissed to that little room at the end of the hall to get extra help with my work. I had a love/hate relationship with the resource room. I hated the singling out of me, the long walk down the hall. The stigma. The curious questions and the teasing. I hated that things happened in the regular classroom that I missed, both academic and informal. I was never really a full member of the class because of this. I hated that I was put into a club I never voluntarily joined. That I was a special ed kid and was only really permitted to hang out with the special ed kids. I hated that the regular classroom teachers dismissed me and my questions or needs because special ed would deal with me, so why should they take the time. I hated that in the caste system of public school, I was automatically in the bottom wrung.

But secretly, behind the mysterious doors at the end of the hall, the resource room was often my only sanctuary in a day filled with anxiety. Even though the teachers, the school hierarchy, and my own family thought that these kids were losers and were of no consequence; these were my people. My memories of the hours I spent in the resource room are not of me huddled in tutelage with a special ed teacher, there was very, very, very, I can't even make you understand how very, little of that which ever went on. My memories  are of social hour in a safe haven. The resource room was 95% free social club time and maybe 5% school work related. The only times I can really remember doing school work in the resource room was when I had to take a test there. My able-bodied cohorts were working on their math homework back in the classroom. I had my book open, pencil in hand, but I spent my time talking and goofing off and not writing a single problem down. Everybody did this. The resource teachers were part of the club. They never did anything. They would joke with us and tell us about their marital problems or their date or their new car or their gossip about the other teachers. They were the only adults that treated us like people. I had such fun with those people. Even some that I really didn't like were enjoyable to be around in there because they were part of the group. One of my best memories of Junior High was when this wonderful miracle happened and I got excused from PE for the REST OF MY LIFE!!!! due to the danger of a head impact from a ball or whatever might risk my eyesight. And I had to spend my PE time (FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE!!!) in the resource room. That year, I spent an hour each day joking around with this kid, Scott W. We never talked outside of the resource room. Pretended we didn't know each other. But we would spend that whole PE hour goofing off. Good times.

But we pretended we didn't know each other  in the halls because of the social predicament we were in. That all special ed kids are in. You like these other special ed kids. You have fun with them and respect them. It feels like they are your equal peers. But out in the world, you see that they are less than human. They are not respected and they are 'beneath' everyone else. Kids, teachers, whoever. And in your little head, you don't want to be them. You think if you disassociate from them, pretend you are above them then you might actually be perceived as being above them, as not being one of them. The only way to put a bigger target on your back is to run in a pack of others with a big target on their backs. You convince yourself (and are told by your parents) that you are too good for them. But inside, you know, that you are them. And if your parents think they are losers, then they think you are a loser, too. Even if your parents aren't thinking that way directly, they are trying to distance you from that which you are. That awful loser part of you called disability.

When I graduated high school, the very next day I moved into a blind rehabilitation center for the summer. There were about 10 to 14 blind people, of all ages and walks of life there. But in the summer, there were several young people like me who had just graduated high school and were in this summer "transition" program. We instantly separated into two groups. What we then called the Weird Ones and the Cool Ones. I was a Cool One. Along with my friends Kory, Susan and Heide and a few others. Why were we cool? Because we knew how to socialize in the sighted world. The weird ones came out of the School for the Blind. I can't describe exactly what made them weird, but they were weird. They really had very few social skills. This experience, more than anything, made me believe that disabled kids need to be included in regular classrooms. Because who wanted to be that weird. These people--even though they were not dumb--had no skills, no hope of ever having anything more than a dishwashing job. They were never going to be accepted by society. Us, the Cool Ones? We were going to college. We were never going to live off disability. We were always going to work. We were going to pass in the sighted world.

But also what happened there was that I found my brethren. And I found my pride in who I am. Instead of hiding my blindness and acting like I wasn't disabled. Being ashamed of it, I boldly stated that I was blind and proud. This was because I, for once, was among my own people. Peers and role models like myself that were out in the open, doing things in the community. Competent and proud of who they are. Not shamefully hidden in a secret room at the end of the hall, spending our days trying to hide the big scarlet mark of our disability from the outside world. The ironic truth is, that as much as I made fun of the weird ones that came from the institutionalized school, if I wouldn't have experienced this segregated setting for disabled people, I would have never made it through college. I would have never had the skills to succeed, the pride to fight for what I needed, the confidence to get the jobs I've had, the guts to become a parent. I would have ended up a college drop-out, living off SSI or something, just like the weird ones.

As I look back, I can now see that there are many complex reasons why the weird ones were the weird ones. It has more to do with institutionalization in the warehousing sense; institutionalization gone very wrong, rather than the fact that they weren't mainstreamed. These are kids who lived in a boarding/dormitory situation from the time they were 4 or 5. They were surrounded by blind kids, but no blind adults. And often had no family support. In not all, but some cases, boarding these kids at the blind institution was their parents way of having not to deal with the thing they hated, the blindness. Some kids were wards of the state, some only saw their parents on weekends. Parents who sometimes made no effort to learn about their child's disability. Also, the expectations at the school were horribly low, and these kids just didn't learn good skills there. I'm not going to categorically say that all kids who go to schools for the blind are weird or have no skills or disinterested families. Whole subcultures have grown out of schools for the deaf. But I am going to say that just because this kind of institutionalization puts kids at great risk for failure, that doesn't mean that the answer is full-inclusion all the time. There are happy mediums.

One of those happy mediums was at a school I worked at as a student teacher in Nebraska. It was a regular mainstream elementary school, with a population of about 20% deaf and hearing impaired kids (who were obviously bussed in from the surrounding metro area.) There were probably anywhere between 5 and 10 disabled kids in every classroom. There was a full-time interpreter and special ed teacher (sometimes the same person but usually not) in each classroom. Everything was interpreted. The regular teachers took sign classes, and although not necessarily fluent, could communicate with the deaf kids. There were after school ASL classes for the hearing students, so a lot of these kids knew sign and could communicate with the deaf kids. Group time in the classes were divided between the sped and regular teacher and not necessarily all deaf kids went with the sped and all hearing kids with the regular each time. It was mixed up. It was a nice environment. It was really the best of all worlds.

And it isn't there anymore. The school is, but not the deaf program. Parents complained about the long commute by bus and wanted their kids to go to the same school as their neighbors kids. Professors and inclusion advocates shouted full inclusion and least restrictive environment. The deaf kids of deaf adults went to the deaf school and the deaf kids of hearing adults went to their neighborhood school. Where they were the only deaf kid in the whole school. Where they had to fight for interpreter time. Where the traveling teacher for the deaf had to pull them out of their class to fit her schedule. Where the other teachers and students couldn't communicate with them. Are they better off in their neighborhood school? In the least restrictive environment? Being the only deaf kid? The law (and presiding politically correct opinion) say they are.

By the time I got to grad school, there was a war going on in the schools between special and regular education. And I, a working peon grad student for a hot shot university who was on the forefront of full-inclusion for all kids, was right in the eye of the shitstorm. You didn't so much worry about getting your practicum assignments done as you worried about the school district kicking you and your uppity faculty advisor out of your placement before the semester ended.

Simply put, regular ed didn't want these kids. Especially MY kids, the ones with the most significant disabilities. Why would they? Regular ed is an assembly line. A conveyor belt meant to get the greatest amount of kids through to an average, work-ready education as they could. Special Ed was INVENTED so that regular ed could continue their mission. Special ed's primary use was to get the kids who couldn't sail along nicely on the conveyor belt out of the fucking way. They were just cogs in the wheel of efficiency. Now, special ed wants to PUT THEM BACK? And how to do that? By asking the regular ed teacher to stop the conveyor belt. Shut down the assembly line. Treat every kid as an individual with individual needs and basically become a special ed teacher. Don't special ed teachers know that they have jobs because regular ed doesn't WANT TO BE special ed? Regular ed doesn't WANT to individualize education. They want to get as many kids schooled and out the door in the most efficient way possible. Regular Ed wanted special ed to stay in their place, special ed wanted to change the very fabric of the regular ed machine. It was an attempt at a hostile overthrow. And it was very, very hostile.

And mixed in all this shitfest were the kids. I had kids who were developmentally delayed to the point where they could not symbolically communicate, AND were quadriplegic, AND had vision and hearing impairments. And they would sit in the regular classroom all day long...and do nothing. They were not supposed to be doing nothing, mind you. Us in special ed had wonderful plans and programs all written up for them. No they weren't supposed to learn their multiplication facts in math class, but they were supposed to work on making eye contact while (an aid helped them) hand out papers to the other kids who were working on multiplication facts. And they were supposed to play games with at least three students and work on their objective of lifting their eyelids to indicate the affirmative and close their eyes to indicate NO. Oh, we had wonderful, wonderful plans and programs for them! All written out! On paper! With data charts and graphs and everything! And we had training sessions for the aids and teachers to implement the plans, and we would be available any time to call if they had questions (when meanwhile we were off site, busy monitoring our 12 other mainstreamed kids with PLANS!)

But our kids sat all day long. And did nothing. Because our plans were never implemented. No one knew what to do with our kids. Those sympathetic to our cause tried but they just had no time. They had 30 other students who were actually more annoying and noticeable when they tugged on the teacher's shirt or raised their hands with bright faces and questions. Meanwhile, our kids sat. Silently. With no means to communicate their needs or wants to a distracted teacher. Or an aid, who for 7 bucks an hour, just wanted to get through the day, and just wanted to rest between lugging this kid around to bathroom breaks and PT and OT and feeding tube sessions. And the unsympathetic teachers? Just laughed and scoffed in our face.

There were certainly moments of success, but overall, it just didn't work for these kids (in my opinion, others will say it is wonderful to have these kids fully included, even if they sit all day...cause that is all they do anyway.) I remember specifically a girl I really liked who I was taking from class to class in her mainstreamed middle school. She was a personable girl and well-liked by her classmates and teachers. She could raise her hand and answer simple yes/no questions. She could walk with a walker but mostly used a wheelchair, she was visually impaired and had CP. I remember walking her to music class. She really liked it and really could participate and there was a great teacher who was quite innovative in finding ways to include her. But we only got to be there for the first 15 minutes of class, because then she was pulled out for physical therapy. Then, later in the day, we would go to PE class. It was awful. The teacher was a jock asshole who didn't want her there and looked at her with contempt every time she spasmed. He did nothing to try to include her. She hated the noise and was afraid of the balls. He didn't like me either, because I was blind and I couldn't much help with the class due to my own disabilities. I actually would get physically sick to my stomach every time I had to take her there. I would honestly get my own junior high flashbacks to my own PE experiences . And now double the anxiety for my student as well. She was like me in a way. I am actually pretty athletic (or I can be) and I am good at a lot of athletic things. I could swim, skate, dance, do gymnastics, some track and field stuff. But I could never do anything with balls. Not just bad, normal bad. But HORRIBLE, freakishly laughably horrible with ball sports. Cuz, duh. I'm blind. Dana, in her way, was an athlete as well. She loved physical therapy. She loved physical movement and soft ball or balloon games, dancing, walking in her walker, doing OT tasks. She, like me, hated PE. Why couldn't anyone find a way to play up our strengths? Why did being included with our peers where we could never measure up supersede physical activity and health, which is what PE was supposed to be about. I could have done some individual sports and not ball sports and been quite good and had fun. Dana should have been doing PT with other disabled kids like her during PE class, NOT missing music class. And she should never have set foot in that awful shithead's gym at all. But! She must be fully included! Just like the other kids! Defies logic.

So, in the very university program that was supposed to train me to advocate for the full-inclusion bandwagon, it actually made me sort of anti-inclusion. Which is NOT to say that I think we need to go back to the full segregation of self-contained special schools. I think integration is important when it makes the most sense. But what full-inclusion in its extreme incarnation feels like to me IS segregation. Segregation from one's disabled peers. From one's culture.

I think the nondisabled kids get much more benefit from having KWDs in amongst them than the KWDs get from being there themselves sometimes. And while that is great that the nondisabled kids get that exposure, it shouldn't mean that the disabled kid should have to sacrifice all contact with other disabled kids to teach them a nice warm fuzzy lesson. Kids with disabilities, unless they really are segregated in a warehouse institution, are going to have plenty of exposure to able bodied culture. Just like racial minorities, you can't not be exposed to mainstream culture. It is impossible to avoid. What kids (and all people) with disabilities need is access to their disabled peers on a regular basis. And not only other kids, but adult role models.

And I think this has to be more than Very Special Summer Camp or Very Special Olympics or other contrived situations. Summer camps can be okay, but kids need to see other people with disabilities in every day existence. They need to see them doing all kinds of every day things. If possible, they need to learn the history of the disability rights movement, the heroes and leaders, the triumphs and the travesties of justice. And if they can't learn this because of their own cognitive disabilities, then their parents or key people in their lives need to learn. If only to know all  the options and possibilities out there for their kids.

But in some cases, there is such hesitation among parents of KWDs to have anything to do with the disabled community. Some of it is anxiety about working outside your own culture and comfort zone, and that is understandable. But I think it is more than that. I'm not an expert on the history of transracial adoption, but I think this emphasis on ensuring their kids have regular contact with others of their rac e is a fairly new phenomenon. I think the trend perhaps just a decade or so ago was to do the colorblind thing and act like race didn't matter. Like they didn't even notice that their adopted child was black or whatever race. And like the best way to deal with it would be to deny it and integrate the kid into white culture as much as possible. There just wasn't a priority on finding a community of peers and mentors of the child's race. No one thought it would matter. But I think they discovered that it did. The transracially adopted adults struggled and felt lost and felt like they didn't belong, and so slowly, the parents have started to recognize and address that. I think parents of KWDs are where the transracial adoption families were 10 or 20 years ago. It is painful to recognize (especially when you never volunteered for this) that you do not necessarily share a very basic cultural experience as your own child. If you are a member of the majority culture, you are never going to truly know how it feels to be an oppressed minority. And sometimes, the thought that you might have to go outside of your own family, your own culture and your own comfort zone to seek out someone else who can help fulfill a need that you will never be able to fill can be difficult. Especially when so many parents of KWDs are not even ready to admit any of the implications of disability, that it should be talked about openly, or that there is even value in the culture at all (or that it even exists.) In these cases, the parent needs to work on themselves first. But meanwhile, the kid is growing up. In some ways very isolated and alone.

Just as these white parents of kids of color have gone to great lengths to make sure that their kid is integrated into their racial culture, parents of KWDs need to do the same. It may seen counterintuitive when so much fighting has been done to get the kids into the regular schools to begin with. And again, to be clear, I am NOT advocating for anything involving stripping the rights of all kids to go to their neighborhood schools and be in their least restrictive environment. All options should be open, and kids should have access to any opportunity that makes sense for them. This is what I am saying: Full inclusion is not worth being the only disabled kid in the class all the time for 12+ years. As well as the only disabled kid in the home and in the community. It is not worth sacrificing sound educational goals to sit all day in an ineffective setting and waste time doing nothing. Nor is it worth the kid being miserable being forced to participate in a setting where he encounters hostile and hateful people who don't want him there in the first place. And she should not have to be the token gimp whose only purpose is to 'educate others about diversity.'

Kids with disabilities need to be given the opportunity to have access to their own community. The disability community. On a regular basis in natural settings. Even if it makes the parent have to move far out of their comfort zone. Even if the parent has to move across town. It is that important. When I think of my own life overall, the absolute worst years of it, hands down, were the years from about age 11 to age 17 or so. Why? Because when I was finally old enough to realize the implications of my disability, I was effectively trapped in settings full of disdain and discomfort about disability issues. Both at home and at school. I was imprisoned by my isolation. I universally didn't belong anywhere. I didn't know a single soul who was blind or deaf. I didn't see a single good example of someone who was disabled except for my fellow disenfranchised Special Ed peers at the end of the hall. If I wouldn't have gone to that summer rehabilitation program, which basically indoctrinated me into the disability community (and which is the event that my parents would probably tell you that I cracked up into the radical crazed bitch I am today) I think there is a very good chance I would have eventually become suicidal. To lose my hearing and vision without the disabled community? Without the confidence they gave me and the pride they instilled in me? The skills I learned from them and the examples they set? Seeing through them that I will be okay and I can go on no matter what my body does? That I don't have to believe my own press about how pitiful and useless people like D and I are? And the balls to do what I want even though everyone says I can't? Without my connections to disability culture, I don't know how I ever would have survived.

 

April 22, 2008

Disability Awareness

*Scene: Naim and Aaron looking out the front window, waiting for our friend, K, to arrive. Light rail train goes by.

A: The train! The Train! Is she coming, now, mama? Is she coming?

Me: No, she's not coming on the train, she's coming in her car.

N: She drive her car?

Me: Yes, she is driving her car here.

N: K need a car, and Grampa Fred need a car, and J need a car.

A: (solemnly, in serious explanation tone) Yeah. They need a car to move. They have to have a car to move.

N: (Nods empathetically) Yeah. They can't ride the bu-US, or ride the tra-AIN, or walk on the sideWALK like we can.

A: (also empathetic) Yeah. They do it a different way.

N: Yeah. They need to drive their car. Then they can't go to the playground on the way to daddy's house.

*Please excuse my complete inability to accurately recreate toddler talk. Trust me, it was cuter when they said it.

April 21, 2008

In My Dream World...

Before I go off into La La Land on the intended topic, I'll give a quick D update for those of you who ask about it.

D went back into the hospital on Friday for a surgery on the incision site of the old pump. He only went approximately 5-7 days infection free, and then developed another infection mid week last week. There has been something mysterious in the wound that no one has been able to figure out. A hard something. First they thought it was scar tissue, then they found out that it was this meshy substance that they place around the pump and stitch the pump down with to keep it from moving. When they removed the pump, they, ahem, forgot to remove this stuff. So it has been causing problems (and infection! and has not promoted healing! Go figure!) and had to be removed. So the surgery was to clean all that stuff out.

The good news is that they were able to cut out the bad parts of the skin around this incision and just stretch the skin over and close the wound. So, we have hull integrity again. This is a very important step. Pathologies of the meshy intruders came back positive for MRSA and strep. Next is more antibiotics. So Vancomyecin for the next week or two and time for the wound to heal, and then if all goes well, the next step will be to get the pump replaced. (And no, the doctor who made all the mistakes in the first place will not be replacing it. D is done with her and has moved to a new pain management doctor.)

Also, D's dad and I, who have been suffering from minor but annoying illnesses for the past three months in our throats and sinuses are looking into getting on Mupirocim, an antibiotic to treat MRSA colonizations in the nose and throat via (ick!) a nose spray or ointment that you put in your nose. I think his and my respective doctors have been a little bit disinterested in our problems by not even offering a culture when we tell them that we are caregivers for an MRSA patient. All we are doing is passing it around to each other and although not life threatening for us, it certainly doesn't make it any easier for D to heal and it is sometimes life threatening for him. So, I am hoping that while D is on Vanco and with a closed wound, this would be a really great time for us all to get treated at once. I might even see about the kids and the cat...although I don't look forward to being the one who administers nose spray to them. (Ick again).

Oh, and in another good update, Naim has gone for two days with no accidents and has taken to going to the bathroom without being forced asked. Yippee yea! I think something clicked and he's turned a corner! I'll, um, hold off on my Aaron potty training report at this time.

***************
Okay, now for my living in dreamland post.

As you who read this blog regularly know, D and I don't have the best living arrangement. I don't like to complain too much, because compared to a lot of disabled people (and people people) we have nice, safe places to live. My house is not huge, but for our area is a bit upscale. D's apartment is a standard apartment in a nice complex with stupid high rent and a bathroom he can barely use. And then we spend our days running up and down the quarter mile in between us to get things done and see each other.

I won't rehash all of my issues with living in my father's house, which will always be my father's (or after his death, my sister's house) and never mine. For him, it is an investment. It has appreciated nicely. Very nicely. (I should get a finders fee for picking this neighborhood, but I'll never get credit for that.) Anyway, it is disconcerting to me that he often talks about how much he would make if he sold it. I get that it is more hypothetical "wow! look at how much the house has appreciated!" talk, but it is my home, my children's home and I would like it to be a home with 'soul' for lack of a better word, a home that develops roots and a strong foundation of stability for my kids (and me) but it is hard to feel like that when you are living in someone else's real estate investment.

I think that it could be okay and even great to live intergenerationally, but everyone has to be at least somewhat committed to the notion of family and sharing and working cooperatively and respecting each other. Sometimes I think we could do this. I have this plan to come up with ways to get my dad more on board with the fact that when he is here, he is part of the family. This isn't just his summer boarding house where he sleeps and eats and then goes out dancing or to "go have two beers." He impact my life and the life of the kids. He can either decide to be a positive, loving, respectful part of it or not. It is yet to be seen whether we can work that out. Sometimes I remember feeling more connected to my ex-boyfriend's mom's house that I stayed in for a summer or even D's family's house than this one. But sometimes I really want to make it work here.

D and I have considerable challenges when we consider living together or buying our own place again. We have two disabled people who need housing accommodations that don't correlate to low-cost housing. Neither of us can live in the country or in a much smaller town. He needs to be close to comprehensive medical care and I need to be close to public transportation and services I can purchase (grocery delivery) or get to by transit.

In many metropolitan areas that are big enough for us to have our needs met, housing and lot costs are extremely high. So what most families without a lot of means do to find housing is to rent apartments (which semi works for us, but we still have a space and accessibility problem there.) Or people buy row houses or condos. I would be okay in a row house or condo, but D could not live in one. In our area, the lower cost houses are typically three levels that sit on very small lots. Garage and maybe a bonus room or den on the bottom floor, kitchen and living room on the middle floor, and bedrooms on the top floor. There are very few affordable ranch style houses available around here. The lots are too big for people to afford.

Also, and this is hard for people to understand, D needs some amount of square footage. In an average house, the doors are only 28 inches wide, sometimes smaller in the bathroom or closets. D needs at least 32 inches. The threshold of the house really can't be more than a few feet off the ground before you would have to make a ramp so long it would wrap itself into the street. Also, in between things, like kitchen counters and bathroom sinks and such, has to have space to actually get around in. In most bathrooms, if D can get in at all, he cannot reach all the facilities. Same for the kitchen. He might be able to reach the kitchen, but then not the fridge or the sink or what not. And oh! how fun it is (just ask my dad) to cringe as he tries to turn tight corners with his 500 pound wheelchair banging into the woodwork and peeling holes in the drywall. Then there is storage. Everything he needs frequently needs to be placed about 3 to 5 feet high. The above kitchen cabinets are worthless for him, as is the bottom shelf. So space isn't really a luxury, it is a necessity. And that is really hard to find and be affordable. Sometimes even if you find a house with the bare bones of accessibility (like his parent's house for example, a two story but with some bedrooms and bathroom and kitchen and living room on the main level), the amount of remodeling you would have to do to make it really livable for D is quite expensive.

One thing that  is probably affecting D's health more than we know is that he doesn't have a shower he can use in his apartment. He has not taken a shower really in years. People think that apartment landlords have to provide for these things and, um, no. Little stuff they will do (with a fight) but they don't have to install roll-in showers or do big renovations. They only have to allow you to do them at your own expense and you have to change it back once you leave at your expense if they demand it, so most disabled people don't bother with it and just deal.

So D and I are always swishing around silly housing ideas in our head. We know we have it good, compared to those thousands of disabled people in nursing homes or homeless or on 10 year waiting lists for section 8. But we are paying for two households now on not very much money. Paying double rent and utilities is just kind of wasteful.  D's father is doing a lot of attendant work that I could easily do if I lived there, but I can't  leave the kids at night or drag them with me easily. The kids don't know anything other than having two households and going to 'daddy's house' but they do miss him on days we can't get over there and sometimes they don't want to leave when I have to go. D would get more time to spend with them, and I would get more time alone. D could watch them and I could be back up but still do my own thing in the house.

We are really liking our neighborhood (the one that I handpicked!), it is suburban-y, yes, but for convenience purposes, it can't really be beat. D's parents live less than a mile away. We have grocery stores, church, pharmacy, my gym, etc. within walking distance. We have the light rail station within walking distance and also two bus lines. The light rail goes into our little suburban town with the library, bank, parks, little town shops etc. Take the light rail the other direction and you hit the children's museum, zoo, and downtown Portland with all that downtown Portland offers. Museums, orchestra, ballet, theatre, etc. We have the ocean and ski resorts about an hour and a half away. (We don't peruse these much, but the kids might when they get older. The kids and I get to the ocean at least a few times a year.)

The climate here is good for both of us. It does rain, but it rarely snows. It isn't too hot in the summer for D, who doesn't sweat and gets dangerously overheated in hot weather. It is rarely icy so we are not stuck inside. (Wheelchairs and snow don't mix. Neither do white canes and vision impairments. Makes it a f**ing bitch to find the other sidewalk across the street.) It is also a quite liberal city politically, so there is a lot of environmental programs going on (i.e. all of the buses are hybrids), and alternative lifestyles are pretty accepted here.

All this is to say that the location is great for us, just the actual housing situation isn't.

So, we've played around with this idea for 5 years now. An idea that is pretty far out there and I can't even begin to think of how we would make it a reality. But I took the first step today. To what end? Probably none. But whatever, you might as well try rather than throw up your hands and quit before bothering. (And you know who inspired me? Ms. Baggage. A woman who is, in some ways, in similar circumstances to me and just bought her first house today. Go Baggage!)

Okay, so here is the deal: Between my church and the train station, along the train tracks is a strip of land. Big enough to put a house on but probably too small for a big development to come in. And besides, the train...the train that comes every 15 minutes from 5am to 1am every day...is like RIGHT THERE. (Which is why it is so nice sometimes to be hearing impaired.) So we hypothesized that A) the public transit utility probably owns this land; and B) it probably isn't worth a whole lot.

And, then, many years ago, I read an article in the Oregonian about a triangular shaped block located downtown, right by the light rail tracks and owned by public transit was sold to a developer who used it to build a posh high rise for....ready?....$1. Downtown land! That's like, located downtown. In Portland. Downtown Portland. Let me put that into perspective for you. A 500 sq.ft. studio apartment on the bottom floor in this 8 storey building costs a half a mil. On the top floor? A two bedroom 1,900 square footer? 1.3 million dollars.

Now when I told my dad this a long time ago, his immediate response was, "Well, they aren't going to give land to YOU for a dollar!"  And he is probably right. They probably got some kind of deal out of it. Some corporate trade that I don't understand or some kind of tax write-off or something. But, anyway, it gave me a glimmer of an idea at the time that TriMet sometimes has the opportunity to get rid of land for cheap. Who the hell knows, maybe this little annoying strip of land over here is something they don't give a shit about.

So, my first step that I finally did was to find out who the hell owns this land. And as I suspected, TriMet does. And I also found out that it is unincorporated, which I don't know exactly what that means, but I think it means that it isn't zoned as really anything or something. Much, much more research needs to happen in that regard.

So, step one in this far fetched parallel universe is to acquire the land for very, very little money. An amount that we could pay outright. Step two (probably the easier step, because it is more conventional in a way) would be to build a modular home on it. That would be accessible. And we would either mortgage that and/or look into fund raising or foundation grants or special disability programs (or get Ty Pennington to build us a house from scratch while I admire his cute little bod???)

I know, I know. Trailer trash. A modular home. But have you seen them lately? They are kind of like pretty damned nice! (just a "for example") And are spacious! And safe! And look like houses! And they are considerably (or so I am told) cheaper that a real house. And, almost all of them are basically accessible, and some are being made that have universal design features and we could have the roll-in shower and all that put in and not have to retrofit, which costs considerably more money.

And then we would move in, the four of us. Just the four of us. And my dad could come visit if he wants and stay in the guest room of MY HOUSE. And we would live happilyeveraftertheend.

Uh huh.

From our little idea to actual reality has about 463,264 million obstacles and what ifs and who the hell knows if that's even possibles. There is zoning and neighborhood associations and codes and well, a lot of people just laughing us off and saying "Fuck, no" to us and mortgage lending and D's health and my over commitment problems that would make a project like this not really ever happen until my kids are off and having my grandchildren anyway.

But...

What if?

What if I just commit to doing one step? The next step. That is all I commit to. I just make the one phone call. And if it seems worth going on then I make the next phone call, and the next. And if the road blocks get to be too much or if the reality that I'm out of my ever-loving mind comes to fruition then I quit? I won't be any worse off than I am right now. And I will probably have learned something about housing that might help me later on when I have my NEXT BIG IDEA. So it can't hurt, right?

So, I made the first phone call (email actually). And I got an answer that leads me to the next. Which is, what is that land worth, anyway? And that is all I'm going to commit to at this point. I'm going to research what that land is worth.