I have never felt as vulnerable as a disabled parent as I did
recently.
If you follow our adventurous you will know that we visited
the London Transport Museum recently. It was a great and educational day out
for the Boys; I, however, didn’t revel in the enjoyment of it as much as they
did. By the time we got home that night I sat on the sofa and cried. The impact the day had on me left muscles sore, burning hot and in pain.
To accompany the pain I was in I was also nursing my broken
pride whilst also trying to put on a brave face to the world of social media.
How wrong were they to congratulate me on being a great Dad and an inspiration
for all parents? The sheer comparison to them sitting at home doing the “basic
parenting” whilst a disabled Dad was off, by himself, taking his children on an
adventure.
As I sat there I didn’t take pride in what I achieved that
day; I sat and felt like a fool for trying.
When will I learn?
I logically thought and planned the day ahead.
I have visited London by myself hundreds of times and knew
the route and subsequently I knew how to do it. I rationalised that the journey
with the Boys wouldn’t make much difference; what would really be that
different from a train ride, a small walk in the station and in and out of a
taxi?
Obviously I didn’t put any safeguards in place. Hundreds of
things could have gone wrong and it didn’t occur to me until I was caught in
the middle of the day.
Getting to the station and then on to the train was fine.
The boys held hands every step of the way and didn’t blink when the guard placed
the ramp onto the train.
On arrival to Charing Cross the boys, once again, were
brilliant. They held hands and kept a metre in front of me at all times. They
waited at the Taxi rank with me like little prince's; I really couldn’t have
been prouder.
Then everything went wrong.
I didn’t realise that the day we chose to go was the same
day the London taxi drivers were on strike (for a period of time) in protest of
the Uber App. So what should we do?
Well I grabbed my phone, Googled the Museum (which I had
done previously) and saw the route; according to my map it was
only a 10 minute walk!
Not once, not even for a single second did I think that I
have Muscular Dystrophy! We just went off and headed towards the museum.
The problem is that if anyone has ever seen my walking or is
aware of how my walking is deteriorating then they would know that what would
be a 10 minute walk for any able bodied person would, in reality, take me a lot longer. When I say it took me a
lot longer this is me negating from the truth; it took me 45 minutes to walk between
people, to combat pavement that I have never walked before and avoid any obstacles
that were in my way.
The Boys were fantastic, nothing but little diamonds.
William walked hand in hand with me and was constantly reassuring me that I was
okay, that there was an obstacle ahead and that we’ve been walking a while now
so we must be close. James, well James
was good. With the suspected and undiagnosed additional needs he was in his own
little world but sticking to the rules of staying pretty close.
We reached the museum. We sat and had our lunch and then
proceeded to walk around the museum and see its wonders.
This time we have to take into account that I have walked and walked some more. Not only to the museum but then around it with only a few breaks to sit down. Then I had to walk back.
The journey back was tough. Every single step was strained.
I could see the worry on William’s face despite him being my knight in shining
armour but he shouldn’t have been in that situation.
We got to the train station in one peace and made it on the
train heading home.
The journey got me thinking though:
What if I had fallen over? What if my leg gave way? What would
I have done, especially with the Boys with me? Why didn’t I have another adult
with me?
The thoughts just went on and on.
I know I am stubborn and proud and I also know that I am
fighting the idea that I am getting worse and need a wheelchair but this has
definitely been a wakeup call.
This day left me feeling vulnerable as a parent. This day
broke any pride in what I do and has just made me feel broken. I know I will
still do amazing things with the Boys and they won’t notice I just hate that it
had to hit me like this.
Hi Martyn. @rubyjezabelred from IG.
ReplyDeleteI'm so sorry to read about the emotions you're going through but please don't feel alone. I'm a disabled parent with failing mobility to and like you i pour myself into making my boys world magical. I am often housebound with them due to my EDS and i put a huge pressure on myself to go above and beyond, probably to overcomensate that i can't do all the other things lots of able bodied parents take for granted.
I know it's a mixture of emotions when children show compassion towards ill health.Half proud and half sadness.
I also know how it feels tohave a child with their own different abilities as my eldest has seemingly inherited 2 of my gebetic conditions (i have a few syndromes that are all common in EDS) and he's motor skills are effected.
I want you to know that crying is healthy and it's much better to come out. It only makes you human to feel and a brilliant Dad to care. You're doing a smashing job Martyn xx
Such a difficult situation and I totally understand why you felt so vulnerable. But now with hindsight and the benefit of time, perhaps you can look at the day and be proud. Be proud of yourself as a dad who made sure that his children had an amazing day out. Be proud of William for looking after you and be proud of James for understanding that it was a difficult situation and he had to behave. Then dig out the wheelchair and run over some taxi drivers for making things unnecessarily difficult. I'll gladly help!
ReplyDeleteMartyn, I can understand your feelings about what happened that day, the fear, sadness and anger at yourself, but I still think you are being very hard on yourself. You did not suddnely take off on the spare of the moment to take the boys to London. You did your planning. You cant blame yourself for things not going exactly to plan. But because you are a great dad and have bought your boys up to be sensible lads it wasn't a catastrophy.
ReplyDeleteYou will use what you have learnt from that experience to make sure that situation doesnt happen again because thats the type of smart, good dad you are. Your not in anyway a fake or a fraud for accepting our praise for taking the boys out that day. You are a bloody good dad and you will continue to be so in the future. Xx
You did so well! The kids had a great day and everyone made it home...Try not to be too hard on yourself...I can understand why you feel vulnerable it must be so hard at times. Sending big hugs x
ReplyDeleteOh Martyn I'm so sorry that you're going through the this emotional turmoil. But in all honesty, what you did amazes me! I'm not sure I would've tried this on my own even without the added health problems thrown in. You really should take pride in it! And your boys are amazing! :) x
ReplyDeleteOh Martyn you are so hard on yourself. You have lovely boys, they are caring and well behaved. It's exhausting walking around London and museums and you did it.
ReplyDeleteWe all have limitations and find our limits in similar ways. It's what we do next time that matters.
Look back at the great bits of the day and look forward to more days out.
Sally