Md. mom who killed son agonized over school costs
First, I strongly disagree with the decision made by the mother. Her son could tell her how he felt; how he loved her; if he was in pain; if he was happy. I know his pain by his cries. I know his happiness by his smiles and noises. She had more of a DIRECT relationship with her child than I will ever have, yet she felt it was not enough. They referenced debt as a reason she took his life. I would give everything I own for a moment where Riley could speak to me, or even smile (Riley's Smile) and know it was out of true joy and not a chemical response to all his drugs or even a fart that was funny (but that would be funny). So in sum, I disagree with the choice she made.
Still, I know my husband and I have been there. There are moments in time, too many moments
where the decision she made would be the easy one. My husband has prayed for the end of my son's
pain, as have I, more than we care to or even can share.
I think in reading the article there are things that we can
all take away from it, whether you have a disabled child or not...
1.)The first "what to take away from this"...
Don't judge others. If they are carrying
"one pound of weight" or "1000 pounds of weight" everyone
is different and over time, it all feels like 100,000,000 pounds.
2.) I saw she was a single mom. While the article didn't go into her
relationship with her parents, the $10,000 check in the mail was extraordinary. I am blessed to have a mother who, while due
to age cannot hold my child, loves him and supports him in MANY ways. For many, even if support is there, it is
not always enough...The second "what to take away from this"...A
small act can go a long way...If you know of a parent of a special needs child,
whether married or single, you can ask how they (the child or parent are
doing)... This is support. But,
remember, don't judge... by society (and family) there is too much judgment in
special needs kids and families. Just
ask how are you? and listen. Being shunned by part of society, is
isolating. Just listening is often a
moment of respite/help.
3.) I had mentioned earlier about how her son could
communicate and mine cannot. I probably
portrayed this as selfish. It wasn't as
much that as, honestly, jealously.
Regardless, my "thing to take away"... Appreciate what you
have with the one you love, no matter what the occasion.... My husband had a
"lost" father (drugs, jail, confused, alcohol, barely saw him as a
child). His dad too took his life. Still, after all these years my husband will
share many moments he had with his dad.
They were VERY brief moments, during hard times for them both. Still, good moments. My third "what to take away from
this" is hold on to the moments you have with those you love.
To summarize, she could no longer carry the weight of what
she was facing. She had support but was
alone too much, perhaps? Perhaps no one
truly listened. I/we will never
know. She felt she could not give her
son enough.... what parent special needs or
otherwise has not felt that way.
I am looking for an end to this post but cannot find one. I guess my end to this post is that it is not
my last. The Barnhard family found their end. My "end" will come when either
"special needs" ceases to exist or when I can no longer champion the
voices of those with special needs or those who care/love them.
3 comments:
Stacie, this is a wonderful post. Thank you so much for sharing.
I have come to visit you after you left a note for me (from blog hopping) thank you so much for the visit - I am glad that you found me.
She must have truly felt hopeless to have made that choice. Saying that it is sad, makes me feel like I'd be trivializing the situation. I can't imagine watching my child suffer and struggle to the point where death would seem the best alternative and your objective yet compassionate post calls us to reflect on what that must feel like.
I just read that article- I hadn't heard anything about it. How heartbreaking.
I think you're right in that a small gesture can go a long way. I wonder if it would have made a difference if more people had been reaching out to her.
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