Welcome to my Warrior Mums, a collection of family journeys from parents of children/adults with special needs.
Some of our mums are advocates or established campaigners, one is a midwife, then we have two nurses, three teachers, two solicitors and a GP....
Their stories have been a learning curve for parents and professionals alike.

We've had to adapt to so many government cuts and policies in the last few years and it's taken its toll on families. This blog has given parents the opportunity to share their individual experience of their unplanned life with a vulnerable adult/child.

Some parents have had great support with wonderful professional guidance, whilst others, sadly, have been lied about and deceived, blamed for their child's 'problems' by some who have no understanding of their disability. Facts about their family life have been distorted and manipulated into many untruths, making parents aware their reputation precedes them in every meeting they attend. They feel judged, disrespected and ganged up on. Telling their story in Warrior Mums puts their truth 'out there' for all to see.

A major concern is that when a young person reaches the age of 18, regardless of whether they have autism or a severe learning disability, legally, they are classed as an adult. As a parent you can no longer make decisions on their behalf. If your loved one is in the care of the state and you upset the care staff or social workers then the chances are they will stop you from visiting or from having any contact. Information regarding medication or any other health issues about your loved one's welfare is withheld, all under the guise of your loved one's 'best interest', pulling out the Court of Protection/Mental Capacity Act gagging cards. The cruel message to parents is clear - - toe the line, stop asking questions and taking too much interest or lose contact with your child.

It's hard to believe this government are locking up people with special needs, people who would have had more freedom in the 70s living in big 'institutions' than they do in 'independent living' today...

We have to do something to stop this abuse of power. We have to do something today...

Michelle Daly


28 December 2014

Warrior Mum - Yvonne Newbold

Cancer, Autism, Special needs.


Merry Christmas to all our friends out there and thank you so much for your year-round support.


I’m honoured to feature Yvonne Newbold as our special Christmas Mum - and when you read her amazing story you will understand why.



25th December

"It's a very lonely place being Toby's mother, and now he is an adult, advocating effectively on his behalf gets harder. Adult Services teams work with a very different set of goalposts. Many share a dogmatic ideological belief that Learning Disabled adults are being “held back” by their parents. Many of these professionals see it as their role to rescue the young adult from the clutches of over-protective parents. Once your child reaches 18 technically they are a “vulnerable adult” and therefore the responsibility of the state rather than the parents."


Toby and Francesca - round and round the garden.

M. Hi Yvonne, welcome to warrior mums.  
Would you like to tell us where you were born and if you had any brothers and sisters?    
I had a lovely childhood. I was born and brought up in the Wimbledon area of South West London, the middle child of three. My brother is three years older than me, my sister is seven years younger.   


Age1
 
3rd birthday party












6
 
I loved school. I adored being around other children all day long. 
Of course I didn't like all of it, notably I loathed PE, and I still did everything I could some mornings to unsuccessfully persuade my mum that I was probably far too ill to go in. However looking back, I now realise how extraordinarily lucky I was to have had such a positive time throughout. 

M. You started work at a very young age and what an interesting job it was!
My first job is a bit complicated, because I had three amazing “first” jobs, depending on which way you look at things!
14
My very first job was when I was thirteen years old. My mum had heard on the grapevine that Wimbledon Theatre employed loads of school-girls to be usherettes during their the Christmas school holidays, when they had a matinee performance every single day apart from Sundays. My mum felt that working would be a great experience, and even though the idea absolutely terrified me at the time, I didn't get a lot of say in the matter. One evening in late October she drove me to the front of the theatre as the audience were milling through the doors, and told me to go and ask for the manager and tell him that I wanted a job.
I was petrified, and I had to figure out a way to talk my way past the people tearing the theatre-goer's tickets when I didn't have one myself, to get into the main part of the theatre and then to work out where on earth the manager might be. The only thing that seemed more terrifying would have been to go back to the car and admit to my mum that I hadn't done it!
I never found the manager, but I did find the Front-of-House Supervisor working behind the bar, and she was utterly lovely to me standing there, looking scared-stiff and completely lost, and before I'd even got the words out, she offered me a Christmas job, starting on Christmas Eve.
The job was supposed to only last for the Christmas holidays, but on my last day, this lovely lady called me into her office and asked if I'd like to work on Saturday afternoons for the next few weeks until the end of the pantomime season. Of course I said yes. I'd had the best fun ever, and it was great to have some real money of my own – I was earning a whole £1.15 every performance! When the end of the pantomime season arrived, I was called in again to see her, and asked if I'd like to work every Saturday, for ever!
Upper sixth form
Wow, yes please! The next 4 years I saw every virtually every show that was either on it's way in, or on its way out of the West End, and for free. I was the only girl in my class that always had more than a pound a week to spend, so I felt wealthy beyond measure. I ate unlimited quantities of ice-cream – any slight damage to the ice-cream tubs meant that they couldn't go on sale so it would have been rude not to eat them, and my autograph book was bursting at the seams because I got to meet so many really famous people.
Another lesson I learnt from all of this was that my mum had been right all along. She knew how much I'd love that job, and she also knew that, even though I was only a 13 year old kid, if I was to get it I had to do it on my own. So those few minutes of terror when she dropped me off in the dark outside the theatre that night had been absolutely worth it, and I think I must have had the coolest Saturday job ever.
My second “first” job was every bit as interesting and unusual. My Dad took a job in Italy when I was 16, and I fell in love with Turin, the town we moved to, and most of the young men who lived there too. I commuted back and forth to begin with, staying on at school to do A Levels, but I ended up moving there and studying via a correspondence college. 

Teaching in Italy and looking like one of the children!

At the ripe old age of only 18, I was offered a job as a full time school teacher in a private primary school, in sole charge of a class full of Italian 6 year olds in the morning, and teaching English to groups of older children in the afternoon. I had no training whatsoever, my Italian by then was pretty good but certainly nowhere near competent enough to teach reading and writing in it to tiny children, and I had no clue about behaviour management. The great thing about being 18 is that you don't really understand what you don't know, and you just throw yourself into things without stopping to let your confidence wobble.
It was fabulous fun, and some of the older students in the afternoons were my age or even a few months older. I hate to say it, but their grasp of English grammar was far better than mine would ever be, but I managed to bluff my way through things and pull off a knowledge I didn't really have.
I'd probably still be there now except that tragedy hit my family. My mother became very ill with a mystery condition, and she returned to England where she had much more trust in the medical profession. Before we were born, mum had been a nurse, and when we were growing up she had worked in our GP Practice on a part-time basis.
Within a few weeks, things were looking very bleak. My sister and I returned immediately, with my father staying on to pack up the house and sort a work transfer out back to London. Less than 6 months later, mum had died. I was 19 and devastated.
In the early stages of her illness, mum, intrepid as ever, saw an advert in the Evening Standard that caught her eye. The BBC were recruiting for young people to join them on their in-house secretarial training course. It was a 3 month intensive secretarial skills course coupled with a introduction to virtually every aspect of broadcasting, and it sounded amazing. They had over a thousand applications for about 20 places, and I was so lucky to get one of them.
I loved the course, I loved the buzz of working at The BBC and being able to pop into Television Centre whenever I wanted to watch TV shows being made, but I don't think I was ever cut out to be a secretary. I lasted less than two years, before escaping and getting work in West End Theatres, my first love. Nothing fancy, very low level stuff, but I was happy. More than happy, I loved everything about it – the unsocial hours, the excitement, the friendships and the social life.
However, it wasn't very well paid, and it's quite a transient existence – people come and go, and move on and do other projects. It was great while it lasted, and probably the very best way to spend one's early 20's, but it was never going to be a life-long career. So I stopped, took stock, and used my secretarial skills to get into Advertising, and then Marketing, Sales and Recruitment.
I was 26 when I met Chris. By then I was doing very well and earning more than I'd ever imagined. It was the 1980's and anything seemed possible. Chris was in his early 30's and had not yet found his career niche. It didn't matter, I was earning enough for two of us, and I thought I was head-over-heels in love. However, I didn't look ahead, and I had no way of knowing how difficult working would be when I had three children, all of whom would be disabled. The writing was probably already on the walls. Yet we steamed ahead and bought a flat, we got married, we bought a house, and through this I'd had my first four miscarriages. Children were looking less and less likely, and I was by now already in my 30's, but I was longing to be a mother. Eventually we had children, we bought another house, and all the time we both knew that the relationship had gone well beyond it's sell-by date. The early years of childhood were so stressful with Toby being so ill, but we plodded along, making each other progressively more unhappy, until we finally split up in 2007. By then the children were 14, 12 and 10. I think we both wish we'd split up about a decade earlier.

http://yvonnenewbold.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/IMG_00011-300x244.jpg
Adam, Francesca and Toby

M. Tell us about your children.


Xmas 2014 toast
Francesca – is now 22, and beautiful, searingly intelligent, and one of the nicest, kindest, most caring young people I know. She has also fallen in love with Italy, and she spent several months on and off last year working there and learning the language. She is now back home, studying for an Open University degree, working with a Semi-professional theatre group, and is hoping to launch a business in the next few months. Francesca also has some diagnosed disabilities of a neurological nature.

Toby – arrived 18 months after Francesca, in April 1994, so he is now 20. However, Toby is profoundly disabled and with complex medical conditions. His overall condition is still undiagnosed making him the only person in the world with the pattern of symptoms that he has. Altogether, his list of symptoms will fill a whole page, as will his medication list. He is severely learning disabled, with the intellect of a neuro-typical 2 year old, and he is mostly non-verbal, with only a handful of single words, incoherent to anyone who doesn't know him very well. In many respects, Toby has a lot of limitations, but he more than makes up for many of them in other ways. He has a huge, engaging, gregarious personality with a very well-developed sense of fun. He would win awards for his hugs and blowing-kisses skills and he has the gorgeous good looks of matinee idol with the winning smile to match. 

Adam – is 17, born in August 1997, and he, like Francesca, is frighteningly intelligent, however, because of his long list of neurological disabilities, he found school incredibly difficult, and has been very badly let down by the educational establishment. After a lot of discussion, he took the decision to leave college this summer without completing his sixth form course. Instead, he is working with me on all the post-book publication internet marketing, with a view to gaining enough skills to start working in this field. Adam is the one who has inherited my chatterbox gene, and he also is hilariously funny and a natural performer. Like his sister, he too is very involved in our local theatre company, and his has also started to volunteer alongside Francesca helping with the Adult Learning Disability theatre group.

M. How have you enjoyed motherhood?
When Toby was born everything should have been perfect – a young couple with a little girl and a baby boy 18 months apart in age, what more could anyone wish for? We basked in that dream for a few days, until Toby went blue and stopped breathing several times in his first 3 weeks. It was going to be several months before they found part of the reason why. He had been born with Pseudo-Bulbar Palsy, an inability to control his swallowing mechanism, and his milk was flowing into his lungs as well as his stomach. In effect, my breast milk was drowning him and nearly killed him on several occasions.
By the time they discovered what had been happening his lungs were irreversibly damaged. Over the next six years Toby was admitted to hospital 38 times each time for several weeks or months and during every hospital stay he hovered in that no-man's-land on the brink of life or death. It was made very clear that he was unlikely to survive for long, and during every admission a whole new battery of tests would lead to yet more devastating news about his medical condition. The realisation that he was also profoundly disabled crept up on us over several years – of course a child who had faced so much critical illness was not expected to meet his developmental milestones on time.
Toby
Those first six years passed in a blur. I never left his bedside when he was in hospital, staying round the clock, twenty-four hours, sleeping on a camp bed next to his cot. Altogether, he and I spent two-thirds of our life in hospital, and on those precious but rare few days in between emergency hospital admissions his round-the-clock relentless medical care meant that I barely slept, ate or drew breath. One night a week we had a nurse come to look after him at home so I could catch up on sleep, but the rest of the time I was on my own, on full alert, coping with tube feeds, nebulisers, chest physio, oxygen, drugs and never being able to take my eyes off him in case he forgot that whole breathing malarkey again.
Toby's condition still has no name because his pattern of symptoms and disabilities is totally unique to him. Geneticists have discussed his case with teams of specialists on every continent and no other child exists with the same condition. On one hand that makes him very special, but on the other it makes life very difficult indeed. There are no support networks, no experienced Paediatric Consultants who specialise in his condition, we have no idea how his condition may progress or how it is likely to affect him as he gets older.
Toby, poorly in 2013
His medical notes span 7 hospitals. Our local hospital alone has 8 bulging folders of notes and a trolley of their own to transport them from clinic appointment to out-patient's consultations. At one point he had 14 Paediatric Consultants each looking after a different part of his disorder. Not one of these specialists could possibly be expected to read up on his entire medical history, so by default I'm the only one who knows most of it. Over the years Toby and I have become so close that I have a highly developed instinct about how well or otherwise he is at any particular moment. However, conveying that “sixth-sense” attunement to a doctor in A & E when he's deteriorating fast isn't always easy. The very best doctors ask me what I think they ought to do next, but we've had some who disregard everything I say and plough on in the wrong direction with an unshakeable conviction that they know best. They are the really scary doctors, the ones who can't accept that Toby has a one-off condition that they know nothing about.
It's a very lonely place being Toby's mother, and now he is an adult, advocating effectively on his behalf gets harder. Adult Services teams work with a very different set of goalposts. Many share a dogmatic ideological belief that Learning Disabled adults are being “held back” by their parents. Many of these professionals see it as their role to rescue the young adult from the clutches of over-protective parents. Once your child reaches 18 technically they are a “vulnerable adult” and therefore the responsibility of the state rather than the parents. Trying to explain the idiosyncrasies of Toby's very complex medical condition is often met with disbelief and patronising impatience.
Later in Toby's childhood, both Francesca and Adam were diagnosed with long lists of impressively named disabilities too. That was a body-blow to say the very least. They were both very intelligent, and intellectually mainstream school was the only option for both of them, but mainstream schools have a long way to go to be able to cater for children who don't quite fit neatly into the boxes marked “conventional”.
To cut a very long story short, Francesca and Adam both struggled horrifically at school, and were unable to continue in full time education throughout their teenage years. Education is immensely important, but so is a child's sense of self and identity.
Yvonne, Malcolm and Francesca
Francesca came out of school at the start of Year 9, but she still managed 11 GCSE's and now, in her early twenties, is doing a degree through The Open University. 

The first I knew of Adam's problems were one morning when I discovered him after his first of many very determined suicide attempts. He spent three years in a very frightening mental health wilderness, three years where he was unable to engage and he became virtually unreachable. Over the last year or so he has made a remarkable recovery and I'm getting to know all over again the happy, engaging, hilarious, cheerful, caring, sensitive, energetic, fabulous Adam that I remember so well from when he was seven or eight, the Adam I once thought we'd lost forever.
Brotherly love
Over the years Toby's health improved, but his behaviour became increasingly challenging. On top of everything else, a few months before his eighteenth birthday, he was also diagnosed with severe autism.


M. And then you were forced to think about your own health. Would you like to share that with us?
It was in May 2012, a few weeks after Toby turned 18, that we had to cope with some more difficult news. I had breast cancer. Not just any old breast cancer – I'd gone and done it really well. I'd somehow managed to develop cancer in both breasts, two completely different types of cancer, and entirely unrelated. One side was worse than the other – they discovered a tumour measuring 14.4cms when they did a mastectomy, and the cancer had spread to 10 lymph nodes.
The next year wasn't easy, but they threw every possible cancer treatment at me to try and make it go away. In March 2013 I went to see the Consultant Oncologist expecting to be given the all-clear, but instead they told me that the cancer had spread to my spine. It was incurable. I would have to have cancer treatment for the rest of my life, which would be considerably shorter than I had envisaged. The average life expectancy on being given news like this was 26 months.
Tough but I'd rather know the bottom line than not know. It was also a wake-up call. I knew it was time to stop talking about my dreams and actually start to live them. The first one? Writing a book.
I looked back and realised how much I had learnt since Toby was a baby and I had been a very frightened, isolated and overwhelmed young mother. Back then, I had never thought I'd be able to keep Toby alive for very long, never mind ferry three very vulnerable children successfully all the way through childhood. In those early days I had no idea of how hard I would have to fight to get the best for the children, and how to cope with the endless meetings with medical, educational and social care professionals to get the right decisions made on their behalf.

M. Several of our warrior mums have written books that turned out to be very therapeutic and you are no exception. Tell us about yours?


The book is called “The Special Parent's Handbook”, and it was published in June 2014. Parents and professionals are reading it in equal measure, and the positive feedback from both has been beyond what I could ever have imagined. My feet have barely touched the ground since it came out.  I've been invited to speak at conferences and seminars. I'm facilitating workshops in schools and in hospitals for both staff and parents. I've written articles about various aspects of parenting disabled children which have been published in a wide selection of prestigious journals and websites. I've even been invited to work with both NHS England and Great Ormond Street Hospital.

The most rewarding part of writing the book is that it has brought me into direct contact with countless parents of disabled children. It is heart-breaking to hear some of their stories and their struggles and battles with those in authority. It has made me determined to do what I can to help things change, to make things much better for the next generation of families.

Writing the book helped me to see what would really help families like ours. They are mostly simple things that cost next to nothing. Kindness and compassion would be a great start, as would being actively listened to, so that the professionals we deal with always hear our real concerns and understand them properly, rather than being listened to for just long enough to enable them to reply.

I would also love to see a future where parents are able to work in true partnership with the professionals. Parents have a unique and holistic understanding and insight into not only how their child's condition impacts on their lives, but also into the essence of who their child is and what they would like to achieve themselves. The other big change I would like to see is a huge reduction in the bureaucracy, the pointless administration, and the way that too often the professionals have their hands tied up in policy, procedure and protocols at the expense of common-sense and hands-on practical help. Wouldn't it be great if we could just make everything simple?

Ever since I was diagnosed with cancer I wrote a blog, "Coke Floats and Chemo. Initially it was mainly about the cancer itself and how I was coping with it all. Over time though, it became more and more about the children. When the book was published, I started a new blog on the website I created as part of the book promotion, http://yvonnenewbold.com/. For the past six months or so, life has been too chaotic to keep two blogs going, so Coke Floats and Chemo has taken a back seat for the time being. However the two blogs have a very different feel about them – Coke Floats is more about the daft things that happen in life, whereas the website blog posts tend to be more serious, sharing experiences and information on various aspects of parenting disabled children to support parents.

This year has been incredible, both in great ways and in very difficult ways. The book has been a hugely positive experience and has opened doors to all sorts of new opportunities, things that I never expected to happen, particularly during circumstances where I am supposed to be winding down and facing the final chapter of my life. To be honest, most of the time I'm too busy to even acknowledge the cancer is there, but sometimes I overdo things with such gusto that it occasionally sticks its head up over the parapet for long enough to bring me down low for a few days. My oncology team are very encouraging though – they confirm that I'm doing very well indeed and quite astonishingly, so far the cancer doesn't seem to have progressed any further since it was first discovered that it had started to spread.

Almost exactly a year ago I wrote this blog post, a few days after last Christmas. I think it gives a very honest glimpse into how things really are for my family.
2013
"Christmas this year has been overwhelmingly difficult in many different ways, and yet also completely lovely shortly after the dinner was on the table. That wretched dinner! More about that one later.


Years ago, when my kids were tiny, and Toby was oh so ill and fragile, going out was nigh on impossible, so instead I promised myself that what my kids lacked in terms of days out I would make up for with fabulously fun and over-the-top birthdays and Christmases. However, I never bargained on getting cancer.


This Christmas has really given that old cancer of mine a chance to showcase its talents which are total and utter exhaustion, zilch energy, distracted concentration levels, crippling joint pain and a fairly generous helping of depressive lowness too. Absolutely everything took longer, didn't go quite to plan or even deteriorated into total disaster, or so it seemed. I just seemed to spend the previous three weeks working harder for longer hours than I've ever had to before, and just not achieving anything at all worth noticing. The house was a tip, and the harder I tidied the more tippish it seemed. The more planning I did the more catastrophically pear-shaped things went. Quite frankly, I've always been like Mrs Christmas, loving every minute of pulling everything out of the bag and making it all happen, but this year I was Mrs Christmas Misery personified.

Christmas dinner was a nightmare. I could not get my head around timings or cooking methods or gravy, bread sauce and sprouts whatsoever. How have I got everything in the oven and out simultaneously and on time in previous years? I haven't got a clue. All I know is that all I wanted to do by ten o'clock on Christmas morning was to sit on the floor, burst into tears, throw the sodding lot in the bin and get someone else to produce cheese on toast for all and sundry instead.

Somehow it all worked, but I've learned some valuable lessons in the process. At 2.30pm baked salmon fillet with a herb and lemon sauce on brown bread and butter was served, and swiftly followed by Turkey, Ham, Stuffing, Pigs in Blankets, Roast Potatoes, Bread Sauce, Sprouts, Parsnip, Broccoli, Peas and Gravy at 3 O'clock on the dot. All by myself, and the clearing up too.

So what were those lessons? Quite simply, never again. I've had to face up to the fact that I'm just not well enough anymore. The stress and the panic and the worry and the going to bed at 3am for a week or so beforehand just to try and get everything done is crazy. If I'm lucky enough to still be alive next Christmas and I do this all over again, then I would really be pushing my luck for the Christmas after that.

However, next Christmas will not be the same, nor any Christmas beyond that one ever again, and not because of my cancer, though goodness knows that may impact on future Christmases a fair bit too.

The main thing I've had to cope with is the sadness that this year was an end-of-an-era Christmas, with all sorts of things beyond my control about to change for our family.

The first change is heartbreakingly difficult to even write about, and it has taken months of very difficult emotions to cope with to accept this change as an inevitability.  Toby is leaving home. I know that this is age-appropriate, and at 19, a vast swathe of his age-group are away at uni or off doing their own thing, but with Toby it is so different. He still has the mental age of a 2 year old, and the mindset of a toddler. He is very Mummy-clingy, and has no clue of what we are planning for him and why.

The very sad reality is that I am no longer well enough or strong enough to care for him 24/7. I tuned that one out and lived in denial very successfully for a very long time, but then a tragic event brought it to a head. I know of another breast cancer patient whose disease was following a near identical pattern to mine. She, too, was doing comparatively well until her disease started progressing very suddenly, and in the space of 6 weeks she had died. It was a huge shock to her family, and has given me a bit of a wake-up call to ensure Toby is properly cared for if the same thing were to happen to me.

If I was to deteriorate suddenly, what would happen to him? Social Services would have to act very quickly, and may have no choice but to shoehorn him into a situation which may not be suitable or where he may not be happy, and he wouldn't have me fit and well enough to be banging or doors if things are going pear-shaped, or to visit him several times a week to help him settle in.

One day, I will die, hopefully not for a very long time yet, but when that day comes, I want it to be a sadness for Toby, rather than a tragedy. The idea of him losing his mummy and his home in one fell swoop is just too much for me to comprehend. I owe it to him to ensure he is happy and settled elsewhere before I toddle off the edge of this planet.

Making such a major decision has been probably the hardest thing I have ever had to do, The idea of Toby, as vulnerable and dependent on others as he is, being cared for in some sort of residential setting is just the stuff of my nightmares, and has been for several years. When he was very little, he was not expected to survive, which was incredibly hard to accept and live with on a daily basis. At the time, I thought that was the worst thing that could possibly happen to a mother, knowing with virtual certainty that her offspring will die in childhood.

Now I wonder if that really is the saddest possible outcome. At least he would only have known the type of love that a warm, close-knit family can offer. For years I have woken in the night tortured by the image of a Toby in his fifties, living somewhere else, unhappy, unloved and unable to make his needs and wants understood clearly. All learning disabled adults are vulnerable to abuse of all kinds, but when they are also largely non-verbal, these fears for your child's future are magnified beyond all proportion.

My job is to make sure that we springboard him into his new setting as positively as possible, and that I am still well enough to advocate for him for long enough until Francesca and Adam are sufficiently confident to take over. He will always be a huge part of this family wherever he is living, and I am trying to console myself with the fact that, if this goes well, our relationship could develop so that I am "just his mummy" for the first time in our lives. Of course he will still come home often, and we will visit him frequently too. Yet other people will be there to do his physical care and cajoling and giving him his medicines; all that stuff will be out of the way so that he and I can just have fun in the very silly ways we both enjoy together.

In the next few days, I'm hoping to write another post about the whole topic of care, and the decisions I have had to make and why, but right now there's another change to tell you about too.

I'm going to be a grandmother to a little baby boy in April, courtesy of my youngest son, Adam and his lovely girlfriend, Alex. They told both Grandmothers-to-be together in the same week their GCSE results came out, so they are far too young in most people's eyes. It's not easy to become a parent when you haven't even finished your own childhood yet, but I am so proud of both of them in the way they have taken it on board. They are acting responsibly, saving for the baby, working hard and pulling together - they may be young but they are growing up incredibly fast and showing a level of maturity that I've seen lacking in new parents double their age.

There are huge social stigmas attached to teenage pregnancy, and I've done more reading up on the subject than I ever thought possible. Yet how can the birth of a brand new baby ever be anything other than joyful? In many ways this little boy is already blessed. He is being born into two incredibly strong, resilient and loving families who are both pulling together already to support this new little family unit in every way we know how to.

If you have been reading this blog for a few months you may remember that the one thing I was very sad about when I was diagnosed with Stage iv cancer was that I was unlikely to meet my grandchildren. If Adam and Alex had waited a more conventional extra 10 years before starting a family, that may well have been the case, but now I can look forward to being a fully-fledged Grandma with babysitting duties and everything else Grandmas are good at doing.

In our situation, though, I feel very strongly that my role is to support them all through thick and thin, come what may. When they leave the house with the baby they are going to have to learn how to grow a thicker skin to deal with hostile stares, remarks, judgements and ignorant assumptions from strangers who won't understand that young parents need more support, not less.

Teenage parenthood does not have to be a disaster, in fact, I'm hopeful that this baby could actually be the making of both of them. As long as we all support them so they can finish their education so that they have a reasonable earning capacity, they don't have to be a poverty breadline statistic either. If I'm still around I will be highly amused at watching Adam deal with parenting a teenager when he is still in his twenties, but having seen both of them becoming focussed and forward-thinking by the day, I'm sure they'll both deal with whatever challenges parenthood brings them admirably.

Even Francesca is off, out and about, doing her own thing. She has made me brim with pride and quake with fear in equal measures this year, as she has discovered a travel bug and fallen in love with Italy. She spent several weeks in the summer as an Au Pair on a Sicilian beach for an extended Milanese family supervising 5 small children. Then she enrolled on an intensive language course in Rome, absolutely falling for the place. This weekend she did both Rome and Bologna, managing to make it home in time for Christmas but arriving at Heathrow in the height of the worst storm we've had for years. I have a feeling she'll be spending a lot of 2014 in pastures new, and I'm thrilled to see her making the most of her youth.

It was only May 2012 that I was diagnosed with cancer, and my biggest fear then was leaving the three children motherless, well before they are ready. They are still nowhere near ready for me to pop my clogs, but just look at how far all three have come in the space of less than 2 years.

Back to Christmas. Dinner was on the table but it took me an hour or so to get my own Christmas spirit flowing nicely again, possibly helped in the end by a couple of glasses of good red wine. By the evening, things were great, the kids were happy, the whole family was there and we laughed like drains til the small hours of the morning. In the end, it was probably one of the nicest and happiest Christmases ever.

Who knows what next Christmas will look like. The dynamic will definitely have changed, but Toby, our very own family Christmas King, will definitely be at home for the whole of Christmas. Who knows about the others? Francesca, Adam, Alex and Baby will know how welcome they will be, as will everyone else in our extended family, but it's now up to my kids to decide for themselves to do what feels right for them at Christmas. One small change I may make though, next year it could well be cheese on toast for Christmas Dinner."




Toby
Since I wrote this, Toby moved into a residential care home in February. I managed to get funding for a place in what we all hoped would be the next best thing to living at home. He moved into the care home directly opposite our house, so that he's been able to remain an integral part of our family with us being able to see him almost every day and Toby being able to pop over to our house for very frequent visits.
However it hasn't been plain sailing, and we've had concerns from the outset which culminated in him breaking his leg in the summer. We are still waiting for the safeguarding report to be completed, but it is likely to confirm that it shouldn't have happened, and that it was caused by negligence. It's a difficult situation, but there were still many positives about the care home and the staff who work there, so with some major reservations I've done all I can to help the situation improve.  A few days ago it became apparent that it's not going to happen, and the placement is on the verge of breaking down. We've had the difficult meeting with his team and everyone agrees now that he must move somewhere else as soon as possible. So we're back to the drawing board with me urgently trying to find somewhere really lovely for Toby where he can settle and be very happy for a very long time.
My grandson was born in April. Unbeknown to us until a few days later, the other half of his family had decided that they didn't want our family to have any involvement with the baby. They told social workers that Adam was “abusive and aggressive” which is completely untrue. The young mother who last year had pleaded with me to let her move into our house because she loved being here so much decided to tell the social workers that I have always made her feel uncomfortable. These accusations worked – social services stepped in immediately and prevented all contact from our side of the family. 
I've met the baby twice, both before he was a week old, and both times for less than 15 minutes, but I haven't been allowed to see him for eight months. The other family wouldn't name Adam on the birth certificate, and he was not allowed any say in the baby's name. It's so sad, so unnecessary, and so difficult, but Adam has handled the whole situation with maturity, patience and commitment. He has walked into umpteen very hostile meetings alone, and he has held his own with calm and measured politeness. Slowly he is impressing the professionals, and he is now allowed to see his son for one hour every week, with both the child's mother and a social worker present.
This wasn't how we wanted it to be. We wanted this child to be at the centre of both sides of his family, basking in the love and security that is every child's birthright. It's early days, the baby is only 8 months old, and we are doing everything we can to support Adam in becoming the best father he can be, and we can only hope that, over time, he will be able to become the hands-on involved and loving daddy that he so wants to be. Things take time, trust has to be rebuilt and bridges crossed, but whatever happens and however long it takes, this half of my grandson's family will always be here for him and for his mother should they ever need us.
Life happens. People behave in ways that can baffled us, both other families and professionals alike, and so often they don't do these things to be unkind but to protect themselves. We all have insecurities, we all get hurt, and we all get frightened. Kindness, listening, working together and keeping things simple should apply to every situation, not just in circumstances concerning childhood disability. 

Who knows what the next 12 months will bring for our family. Hopefully my cancer will continue to know its place as an irksome but insignificant shadow in the corner of my life.  It would be lovely if we can resolve the difficulties with the other half of the baby's family. I want Toby to be living somewhere where he feels safe, secure and very happy, and I'm hopeful that there will be at least one more book written and published. Oh and I'm having Christmas Dinner cooked for me this year – by Malcolm, the wonderful man who came into our lives 5 years ago, loves my children nearly as much as I do, and makes every part of our lives nicer, funnier and easier than I ever thought possible.
Things change and life moves on. My three beautiful children now stand on the brink of adulthood with their whole lives ahead of them, happy times ahead as well as unknown challenges. I don't think a mother ever stops worrying about everything, and when their children are also coping with disabilities and medical conditions it makes looking too far ahead very scary indeed. I worry about everything,  their happiness, their well-being, their security and the choices they make. Sadly, Toby hasn't got the capacity to make all of his choices for himself, nor has he the ability to keep himself safe. I live with the ever-present fear of his future happiness, the fear that some carer in the future may want to hurt him and that he won't have people in his life who love him and value him for who he is. There are no answers, no reassurance, no guarantees. I have put in place as many protective mechanisms as I possibly can for his future, but I know I won't be here forever to look out for him.
The only consolation I have is that, although I have never asked or expected them to, I know that Francesca and Adam will take over when I'm gone. They both adore Toby, and it swells my heart to see how protective they both are, and I just know that they will always be there for him, watching his back and making bad things good again. As a mother, I don't think I could ask for any more. 

M. Yvonne, thank you so much for sharing your story. I know I speak for many when I wish you well in the future with both your health and Toby's placement. 



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10 comments:

  1. Oh my goodness! I'm not sure I have the words!

    What an incredibly sad story, I had to stop reading (more than once) to dry my eyes.

    I truly hope that the Cancer continues to 'know it's place' for a long time yet..It warms my heart to read that your other children will continue to love and protect Toby after you're gone - i pray that you find a suitable, kindly ran long term home for Toby, and that your own health holds out until that is the case.

    God bless, Kimmie x

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    1. Thank you for your very kind words, Kimmie, and I'm sorry our story made you cry. The big priority at the moment is to find somewhere fabulous for Toby to move to - it's a huge responsibility and very time-consuming, but hopefully it will be worth it when we find the right place for him. Thank you for reading about us, and for being so concerned and caring towards us. Bless you. Take care, Yvonne xx

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  2. Dear Yvonne you are such an inspiring mum and a special lady as are your beautiful children. So sad to read but also so lovely to see the love you all have for each other. It is a shame that we as parents are not treated with the respect that we so deserve, our children are not our job, they are our children we have to support love and get them the very best, no one else will, like we do they are OUR children and we do know what helps them, regardless of what so called professionals may think or say. We have no hidden agenda they are our children and deserve the best to help them succeed in whatever way they can. You have and are helping your children unconditionally love and support :). I hope that all will work out for Toby and Adam and lovely to know that Toby will be looked after by his siblings. You have made your children who they are today no wonder you are so proud of them all, all special. Love to you all Sophie xxxx

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    1. Thank you Sophie, your supportive words mean so much, particularly since I know that you and I have shared many of the same obstacles along this difficult path. So often it's not the children themselves that make the path so difficult, but the professionals who complicate things and who don't always listen or who act with an agenda all of their own. Thank you too for all your kind wishes regarding both of the boys. Take care, love Yvonne xx

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  3. Anonymous21:19

    Hi Yvonne, I spent ages typing out a response yesterday and it wouldn't post, so I`ll make this a short one just in case :-) I think you are an amazing Mum, with a beautiful family. I really hope you find a wonderful place for Toby :-) Speak soon, Jane xxx

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    1. Thank you Jane, I've had similar problems trying to reply to your lovely message here - but entirely of my own making! I've been spending the last few days trying to make sense of the never-ending piles of paperwork, and in the process I have managed to bury somewhere the record I keep of all my various online passwords, so without the right one, I wasn't able to reply. Thank you so much for all the lovely things you've said, one of the best parts of being a "Warrior Mum" is meeting so many new good friends online, and I hope you know how much I treasure our friendship. Take care, speak soon, and lots of love Yvonne xxx

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  4. Yvonne ive known you and your wonderful family since our youngest boys use to play together as infants and junior boys. Your house was always full of fun, laughter and more so, full of love. There are many things I have learned about you from reading your story and although I knew lots of the sad bits it still made me cry in places. Probably due to the frustration of other people not doing what they were suppose to do. But through all that crap that your beautiful family have been through and in some ways are still going through, you are just SO BLOODY POSITIVE and you put other people to shame. You are my wonder woman and my inspiration . I love you to bits . ( one of my bridesmaids to be too ;) ) Debbie x x x

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    1. Bless you Debbie. I hope you know how much you and your family mean to me too. Sorry I made you cry! That's a huge hug I owe you next time I see you, and it's already been far too long....! Thank you for all the lovely kind things you say - and you've made me blush all the way down to my toes. Can't wait for the wedding - any date yet?! Love you lots too Yvonne xxxxx

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  5. Yvonne you have been through so much and yet you still manage to sound upbeat and positive. You are truly inspirational. I hope you find the right placement for Toby soon x

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    1. Thank you Steph, that's a very kind thing to say. I think that when you're a special parent like you and I are, we can't afford not to be upbeat and positive. I always feel that if I stopped and thought too much it would be so easy to be pulled into a vortex of depression that would incredibly difficult to climb out again, so I try really hard never to go there! I think it's the same with a lot of us. Unfortunately, we're still on the hunt for Toby's new home, it's very frustrating how long the whole thing is taking. We were nearly there, but poor Toby broke his toe on Saturday, and since the place we want for him has an upstairs bedroom everything has to go on hold until he can walk properly again. I hope things are going well for you and your family xxx

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