An open letter to the kids bullying my son,
I wish you knew the boy I do. The one who wakes up every morning and is genuinely happy. He’s been that way since he came to live with us at one years old. He is a light to those around him. In fact, his name, means “bringer of light”. My son is logical, caring and loving. He isn’t afraid to hug and kiss his mama in front of you, even though is now 13. My son is great with younger kids. They adore him, but he understands his limitations relating to you and being accepted by you. He tries so hard, but my son knows he falls short. He knows you see him as different solely based on the way you treat him.
Truth is…while I see many of you hanging out, spending the night at each other’s houses, going to the movies, I see that my son doesn’t have any friends to do that with. Last year when he was sick and couldn’t attend the sleep over with all the boys from the class, you reminded him for weeks over and over again what a loser he was for missing out. My son still recalls this event and how much he wanted to participate. And my heart breaks all over for him.
I wish you knew the boy that I do. The one that has overcome so much. The young man that spent the first nine years of his life in some kind of therapy to help him. My son has spent hundreds of hours in a combination of physical, occupational and counseling therapies. He has worked hard to accomplish skills that come natural to you. I have heard doctors tell me that my son might not hear, or read, or know how to understand money, or function independently. Yet here he is proving every one of those doctors wrong. My son has undergone several ear surgeries and heart surgery. He has the diagnosis of ADHD, Tourette Syndrome and childhood onset glaucoma. Yet none of these labels stop him from trying to keep up with you, relate to you and be friends with you despite how you have treated him.
Also, in his eagerness to participate in the classroom discussions, when called on, takes double or triple the time to complete a thought. I understand how that might be irritating or frustrating. However, it doesn’t excuse or make it ok to ask my son if he has taken his ADHD medication and then tell him he should take five more pills. It doesn’t make it ok to tease him, or to take the food from his lunch box and eat it in front of him, or call him slow, dumb or stupid. My son is anything but that!
Please don’t ask him to stop his tics (eye winking, twitching, and clearing his throat). My son has no control of his tics, and when you ask him to stop it only makes them worse. He can’t stop. Tourette syndrome is a neurological disorder that eventually one day he might outgrow. You might see my son trip or run into things (including you). He isn’t doing this to be funny or to upset you. His peripheral vision is diminished on both sides (glaucoma) with the left side being worse than the right. He has to take meds for this too. He also needs to face the white board straight on.
I drop him off at school the next day and as my son springs out of the minivan, he is already yelling good morning to whichever classmate is in front of us. You shrug him off, and I want to yell at you! I want to scream, “Don’t treat my son that way! Don’t you see what a gift he is giving you? Yesterday you treated him like garbage and today he has totally forgiven you and is once again trying to befriend you.” And I drive away with tears streaming down my face for the injustice of this world. I say, “it’s not fair” over and over and over again, as if expecting someone to console me. I know the universal truth that life is not fair. And then I pray. Because really that’s all that is left to do...Pray.
It is this mama’s hope and prayer that one of you…one of my son’s peers, sees him for who he is and befriends him. That one of you, somewhere in my son’s life would choose to go against the crowd and see him for the amazing human he is. My son is genuine and loyal. He loves animals, especially dogs, Star Wars and reading. He loves to fish and hunt with his dad and is an excellent marksmen. It is difficult to show you how he excels in those areas within the four walls of a classroom. He really is quite amazing. Maybe if you quit trying to be “cool” you might get to experience the incredible gift of friendship my son has to offer.
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