My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Here are some suggested organisations that offer expert advice on special needs.

SN children

Much better than 'Holland'!

13 replies

springgreens · 21/08/2006 10:20

Georgia Parent Mentors






. . . working together to make it work for our kids.






hello all, found this through another site, so thought I'd share

Holland Schmolland
by Laura Kreuger Crawford

If you have a special needs child, which I do, and if you troll the Internet for information, which I have done, you will come across a certain inspirational analogy. It goes like this:

Imagine that you are planning a trip to Italy. You read all the latest travel books, you consult with friends about what to pack, and you develop an elaborate itinerary for your glorious trip. The day arrives.

You board the plane and settle in with your in-flight magazine, dreaming of trattorias, gondola rides, and gelato. However when the plane lands you discover, much to your surprise, you are not in Italy -- you are in Holland. You are greatly dismayed at this abrupt and unexpected change in plans.

You rant and rave to the travel agency, but it does no good. You are stuck. After awhile, you tire of fighting and begin to look at what Holland has to offer. You notice the beautiful tulips, the kindly people in the wooden shoes, the french fries with mayonnaise, and you think, "This isn't exactly what I had planned, but it's not so bad. It's just different."

Having a child with special needs is supposed to be like this not any worse than having a typical child just different.

When I read this my son was almost 3, completely non-verbal and was hitting me over 100 times a day. While I appreciated the intention of the story, I couldn't help but think, "Are they kidding? We're not in some peaceful country dotted with windmills. We are in a country under siege dodging bombs, boarding overloaded helicopters, bribing officials all the while thinking, "What happened to our beautiful life?"

That was five years ago.

My son is now 8 and though we have come to accept that he will always have autism, we no longer feel like citizens of a battle-torn nation. With the help of countless dedicated therapists and teachers, biological interventions, and an enormously supportive family, my son has become a fun-loving, affectionate boy with many endearing qualities and skills. In the process we've created . . . well . . . our own country, with its own unique traditions and customs.

It's not a war zone, but it's still not Holland. Let's call it Schmolland. In Schmolland, it's perfectly customary to lick walls, rub cold pieces of metal across your mouth and line up all your toys end-to-end. You can show affection by giving a "pointy chin." A "pointy chin" is when you act like you are going to hug someone and just when you are really close, you jam your chin into the other person's shoulder. For the person giving the "pointy chin" this feels really good, for the receiver, not so much -- but you get used to it.

For citizens of Schmolland, it is quite normal to repeat lines from videos to express emotion. If you are sad, you can look downcast and say, "Oh, Pongo." When mad or anxious, you might shout, "Snow can't stop me!" or "Duchess, kittens, come on!" Sometimes, "And now our feature presentation" says it all.

In Schmolland, there's not a lot to do, so our citizens find amusement wherever they can. Bouncing on the couch for hours, methodically pulling feathers out of down pillows, and laughing hysterically in bed at 4:00 a.m. are all traditional Schmutch pastimes.

The hard part of living in our country is dealing with people from other countries. We try to assimilate ourselves and mimic their customs, but we aren't always successful. It's perfectly understandable that an 8 year-old from Schmolland would steal a train from a toddler at the Thomas the Tank Engine Train Table at Barnes and Noble. But this is clearly not understandable or acceptable in other countries, and so we must drag our 8 year-old out of the store kicking and screaming, all the customers looking on with stark, pitying stares. But we ignore these looks and focus on the exit sign because we are a proud people.

Where we live it is not surprising when an 8 year-old boy reaches for the fleshy part of a woman's upper torso and says, "Do we touch boodoo?" We simply say, "No, we do not touch boodoo," and go on about our business. It's a bit more startling in other countries, however, and can cause all sorts of cross-cultural misunderstandings.

And, though most foreigners can get a drop of water on their pants and still carry on, this is intolerable to certain citizens in Schmolland, who insist that the pants must come off no matter where they are and regardless of whether another pair of pants is present.

Other families who have special needs children are familiar and comforting to us, yet are still separate entities. Together we make up a federation of countries, kind of like Scandinavia. Like a person from Denmark talking to a person from Norway (or in our case, someone from Schmenmark talking to someone from Schmorway.), we share enough similarities in our language and customs to understand each other, but conversations inevitably highlight the diversity of our traditions. "My child eats paper. Yesterday he ate a whole video box." "My daughter only eats four foods, all of them white." "We finally had to lock up the VCR because my child was obsessed with the rewind button." "My son wants to blow on everyone."

There is one thing we all agree on. We are a growing population. Ten years ago, 1 in 10,000 children had autism. Today the rate is approximately 1 in 250. Something is dreadfully wrong. Though the causes of the increase are still being hotly debated, a number of parents and professionals believe genetic predisposition has collided with too many environmental insults toxins, chemicals, antibiotics, vaccines to create immunological chaos in the nervous system of developing children. One medical journalist speculated these children are the proverbial "canary in the coal mine", here to alert us to the growing dangers in our environment.

While this is certainly not a view shared by all in the autism community, it feels true to me.

I hope that researchers discover the magic bullet we all so desperately crave. And I will never stop investigating new treatments and therapies that might help my son. But more and more my priorities are shifting from what "could be" to "what is." I look around this country my family has created, with all its unique customs, and it feels like home. For us, any time spent "nation building" is time well spent.

The End

OP posts:
Report
Cappuccino · 21/08/2006 10:24

the one thing that has consistently pissed me off since dd's diagnosis is that bloody Holland thing

we're not in pissing Holland, I thought. We're in Italy, but we're speaking in Dutch and wearing clogs, and everyone is looking at us and zipping past on their bloody silly motorscooters

Report
Jimjams2 · 21/08/2006 10:25

oh this is fabulous! Wonderful and much better Thank you!

I laughed at the pointy chin- ds1 has started doing that but into my jaw, he loves it but it bloody hurts!

Report
Jimjams2 · 21/08/2006 10:26

Welcome to Beiruit is good as well, although i prfer schmolland.

Report
Davros · 21/08/2006 12:06

That is wonderful Springgreens! I hate Holland but I also find Beirut a bit cumbersome with no humour!
Cappucino, your analogy of speaking Dutch and wearing clogs in Italy made me laugh out loud, how true!

Report
anniebear · 21/08/2006 12:32

Briliant

Report
sphil · 21/08/2006 16:28

After a boring and fruitless day spent trying to teach DS2 to use the potty that made me laugh out loud. Thanks!

'Pointy chin' is obviously a common custom amongst the Smutch - DS2 does it too, but has to rub it up and down my neck.

Report
maddiemostmerry · 21/08/2006 17:00

That is a good one springgreens

He sounds similar to my son.
My son also had a pointy chin phase which luckily ended at around four or five. He also went through a phase of sinking his teeth into my back as part of a hug, he seemed to think it was a good way to show affection.
He loves boobs too, although so far has only gone for mine. I have noticed quite a few asd children do this.
My friends six year old calls them cakies and he likes to touch anyones.

Report
Jimjams2 · 21/08/2006 19:58

oh thank god the stripping because of the teeniest tiniest bit of water has stopped

I really like schmolland- will pass it around- thanks again springgreens

Report
Jimjams2 · 21/08/2006 19:58

oh thank god the stripping because of the teeniest tiniest bit of water has stopped

I really like schmolland- will pass it around- thanks again springgreens

Report
time4me · 02/09/2006 22:21

Thanks that was great,my son is 18 and we too live in scholland,or it feels like a war zone.The latest trick of our son was to lie down in a posh busy street and shout eff off to all who looked at him.Ow the stress,but he is different and adorable

Report
SueW · 02/09/2006 22:58

Welcome to Holland was written by the mother of a child who has Downs Syndrome and isn't necessarily supposed to refer to or prob even help anyone cope with having an autistic child.

I really feel for Emily Perl Kingsley who wrote the original piece and seems to get so much stick because some people are designating her writing to any situation regarding any special needs child. In fact she says right at the beginning of that piece, if you read it in its original context and not in some mangled internet version:

"I am often asked to describe the experience of raising a child with a disability - to try to help people who have not shared that unique experience to understand it, to imagine how it would feel. It's like this......"

And she goes on to describe her feelings.

I suppose it's because I've had peronsal correspondence with her and because I hate people misquoting others and partic the way stuff gets mangled on the internet that I feel so strongly about this. But I do feel strongly.

Flame away.

Report
JanH · 02/09/2006 23:02

Thank you, Sue - I wanted to say something like that but didn't know enough detail.

Schmolland does sound exactly right for those with kids with ASD, but the original Italy/Holland thing must help for those with an unforeseen DS child, mustn't it?

Report
Chocol8 · 02/09/2006 23:52

Wow Springgreens - that was fantastic! I too live in Schmolland, and more lately am finding it more and more difficult to be a resident.

I want to move away to the Schottish wilderness so it's just me and my ds, on our own, understanding each others little quirks, not having to deal with anyone else from the surrounding countries....

Thank you for Schmolland (pointy chins and all!)

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.