Keeping Hope Alive
by Albert Freedman
I’ll always remember the day our first child was born. “A perfect baby!” we were
told by the nurses in the maternity ward. I called our family and friends from
the hospital to share our good news.
I remember the simple congratulatory message I received from a friend a few days
after Jack’s birth. “You are now a family,” she wrote, quite matter-of-factly.
Yes, indeed we were a family, and I’ll always remember the hope baby Jack
brought to our lives. I remember thinking about birthday parties, ballgames,
bicycle rides, and perhaps a little brother or sister, or even two. For the
first six months of Jack’s life, I pictured myself coaching his Little League
team and taking him to Phillies games. I pictured myself watching Jack perform
in his elementary school play and play in the school jazz band just like Dad.
Those early days of parenthood were full of possibilities. Exciting
possibilities. Endless possibilities.
And then one day, the possibilities began to fall away. First, our pediatrician
told us Jack wasn’t developing normally. Then a pediatric neurologist expressed
serious concern and told us to have further testing.
Four days later, a doctor stuck pins into Jack’s little body and studied the
readings on the dials attached to the pins. Jack cried. At the suggestion of
the doctor, my wife, Anne, sat outside the examining room so she wouldn’t have
to watch her baby being stuck by those pins. I held Jack on my lap, hoping
everything would be all right.
But everything wasn’t all right. A few minutes after conducting that EMG test,
the doctor told us Jack was likely affected by a neuromuscular disease called
spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).
The doctor told us there was no treatment or cure for SMA. Jack would be
severely physically disabled, and then he would die of respiratory
complications. Babies with his type of SMA were lucky to live to age 2, the
doctor reported.
The doctor explained we would have an appointment with another specialist later
in the day to hear more about SMA and how we would care for Jack for the next
few months. He motioned to us to stay put with Jack in the examining room.
“Take all the time you need,” the doctor said. Then he walked out and closed the
door, leaving us with each other, our baby and our thoughts.
But the doctor didn’t leave us with any hope.
Rebuilding Hope
In a matter of minutes, Anne and I were thrust into a parenting world
light-years from where we’d started, an experience few people can even begin to
understand. If you’re reading these words, odds are you’re in this club, too —
a club none of us chose to join.
Sadly, membership in the club often demands that we check all of our hope at the
door when we first arrive. Once through the door, we find ourselves wandering
around, shocked and lost, grasping for direction. But how can we expect to know
which way to turn if we have no hope?
Somehow many of us rediscover our sense of hope, a little at a time. And when we
keep hope alive, we find ourselves feeling more positive and better prepared to
care for our affected family members.
Seven years later, I feel very fortunate to be Jack’s father, despite the
challenges my son faces. Slowly, as these years have passed, hope somehow has
returned to my vocabulary and to my heart.
But how exactly do our families reclaim and rebuild our sense of hope? From whom
do we draw hope?
Drawing Hope From Others
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| The Freedmans: Anne, Cara, Jack and Al |
Shortly after Jack’s diagnosis, still reeling from shock and sadness, I read the
words of the late June Price, who at the time published a newsletter for the
SMA community. In an open letter to parents of children with new diagnoses,
June wrote:
“I was not expected to live, to work, to succeed. I was only expected to die . .
. Today, at 48, I look back and wonder how differently my life may have been
had I been given the gift of hope for a future. Because regardless of what all
the ‘experts’ predicted, I’m still here. Parents and doctors didn’t know any
better back then, but they should now. Giving your child the hopes and dreams
that go with a future costs nothing. Not giving it can waste a lifetime.”
June’s wise words hit me between the eyes. Finding a way to be hopeful would be
doing the right thing for Jack. I will always be grateful for June’s letter and
for her friendship to our family. (June Price died last year at age 54.)
Others, too, helped us reclaim and build our sense of hope one piece at a time.
Through organizations such as MDA, we contacted families with similar
experiences who helped us feel we weren’t alone. Jack’s home care nurses,
therapists and teachers all view him as a person worth getting to know, and
they focus on what Jack can do.
And with our move to a new community, duPont Hospital for Children in
Wilmington, Del., (home to an MDA clinic) became our primary resource for
Jack’s medical care. Even in the middle of the night during the scariest of
medical crises, the professionals at duPont Hospital somehow remain steadfast
in their hopeful approach to caring for children. We continue to be lucky to
have so many caring people in Jack’s corner.
Jack’s Hopes
When we have visitors to our home, it’s very easy for them to get lost in the
trappings of Jack’s disabling medical condition. It’s easy to look at our son
and see only his wheelchair. It’s easy to listen to Jack and hear only his
broken speech patterns and the words that can’t be understood. Entering Jack’s
bedroom, it’s hard to miss the pulse oximeter, the feeding pump and the BiPAP
breathing machine.
These are indeed things Jack needs, but these aren’t the things Jack is focused
on. These aren’t the things Jack hopes for day-to-day.
Like any other 7-year-old, Jack hopes his friends will spend time with him. He
hopes for birthday presents, family outings, holiday celebrations and success
with his schoolwork. Jack hopes for new computer games. He hopes we’ll take him
places with lots of space to zoom around in his power wheelchair. Jack hopes
his little sister will be fair and take turns. He hopes to go swimming at the
pool. And he hopes Dad will come home from work in time to give him a bath.
So it’s Jack himself who now shows us the way, with his own sense of hope as our
inspiration. Despite the many challenges he faces every day, Jack is a happy,
motivated little boy who hopes for many of the same things other kids hope for.
And seven years following his diagnosis, we’re indeed grateful to have Jack
sharing his hopes with us.
As June Price implored us to do, Anne and I approach every day of Jack’s life
with hope for his future. We hope for understanding friends. We hope for
skilled and compassionate medical professionals, for accommodating special
educators and therapists, and for the energy to carry on day after day with our
family’s version of “normal.” We hope for Jack’s continued health and for the
day researchers will discover a treatment or cure for SMA.
But most importantly, we hope for Jack’s happiness. We would like Jack to
continue seeing himself in a positive light.
New Rules
I’ve come to realize that membership in our “club” demands something quite
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| Jack and his dad enjoy a swim. |
different from what I experienced in those first moments — back when I checked
all my hope at the door. Seven years with my son have taught me that it’s my
job to help change those membership rules. I’ve come to believe it’s my job to
follow Jack’s lead and hope for all the good things he hopes for.
Following a remarkable recovery from a harrowing hospitalization, one of Jack’s
critical care doctors told us, “Jack’s a fighter.”
All of us who find ourselves in this club know a fighter. But our loved ones
cannot fight without hope, so it’s up to all of us — family members and
professionals together — to keep hope alive.
| Albert Freedman, Ph.D., is a child and family psychologist in private practice
and at Delaware Valley Friends School in Chester County, Pa. He provides
consultation and training to professionals in health care and educational
settings, and frequently speaks on the topic of caring for children with
special needs. His essay, “The Future Is Now,” is included in the book, You
Will Dream New Dreams: Inspiring Personal Stories by Parents of Children With
Disabilities (Kensington Publishers, 2001). Freedman can be
contacted at freedman@fsma.org. |
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