hello!
How is your son presenting? Is he hitting any milestones?
My daughter had a terrible birth and we were told she would have cerebral palsy at 5 days old, so I think it was a little easier for me as any milestone she hit was a gain and not a loss iyswim. We were told she would never walk or talk. Her brain damage wasn't as severe as feared and she eventually met all her milestones - she used makaton at 18 months, spoke (badly) from 3, more clear by 5 and fluent by 6/7
She walked her first steps at 3, she went to mainstream school and coped, she was never destined for high grades but she got some GCSE's, a B-tec and then finally a performing arts degree at 23
She is in her 20's now - she walks and talks like she is drunk - wobbly and slurs a bit, her biggest problem are hand/arm intention tremors - a bit like parkinsons so daily stuff is tricky for her. She struggles a bit with retaining information but she lives a good life. She does get pain in her joints and back and she needs lots of rest but she manages it well. She's still at home but I don't think she will always need to be here and she will live independently, probably with visiting carers to help her keep on top of admin, cooking etc
Those early days are scary and it took me a long time to lose the constant 'what if' thoughts. I get them occasionally but I now have the adult I was always looking for so I've come to the end - not sure that makes sense, I think when she was little, I just wanted to see her future and now we are there, I'm happy with how everything turned out.
I will say though, she changed my life - for the better. Her siblings are amazing and have a kindness you don't see everyday. I sought out other families who had children with disabilities and those people became my friends and support. I used the internet for research and support groups.
You will have to battle for support and you will have to fight to get him what he needs and you need to look after you!
Just try and keep in you head, he is just a little boy, your little boy. Love him, get joy where you can get it, appreciate what you have and mourn what you have lost, celebrate any progress - a friend once said 'we have inchstones, not milestones' and every tiny inch is worth so much more to us as everyone has worked so hard to make them
It's hard I know 