Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts

Sunday, May 1, 2011

A Child From Holland Part 3: Border Strip Search

First, a note on this series. When FosterAbba encouraged me to turn A Child From Holland into a blog series I had no idea where I would continue to find material. As it turns out, everywhere.

I also want to acknowledge that this series does have a particular slant, focusing as it does on the differences in citizenship between Holland and Italy. This is only one piece of my own story, let alone the stories of other children from my country. It`s just this is what is coming to the forefront to be blogged about.


Border Strip Search


Occasionally I browse Hopeful Parents, searching for further answers to my continuing citizenship dilemma. My own mother has never talked about her feelings about my experience, so the parents who blog there amaze me with their words...actually, now that I think about it, my mother`s difficulty with expressing how it was to raise a child from Holland may have had something to do with why I found many of my beloved "Blogger Folks." But that's another post entirely.

Julia Roberts's Bodies of their Own was the inspiration behind this installment of "A Child From Holland." I, too, was a child who was often required to disrobe for medical professionals. My earliest physiotherapy sessions were conducted in a diaper only, doctors examinations were semi-annual at least, and these were doctors who, unlike my family doctor who would only look at the throat that hurt or the ear that ached, wanted to see all of me.

I don't remember having a problem with it, or with having an army of people change my clothes. My mother changed me, my grandmother changed me, occasionally even my grandfather changed me before I went to school. He even usually did so with a cheerful exclamation of "Let's skin the bunny!" (Perhaps that's a Newfoundlandism.) When I *did* go to school there were paraprofessionals who took over the job of putting on my coat, taking off my winter boots, changing them for my braces and shoes, even changing me when I had accidents. It was a set of the same four parapros, usually, but there were occasionally substitutes, and I don't recall refusing to change- or even thinking of refusing to change- for any of them.

I had been taught, of course, that my "bathing suit area" was private, and that any touch that made me feel uncomfortable was a bad touch. I had been read all the right books, like The Secret of the Silver Horse and Tom Doesn't Visit Us Anymore. But somehow I knew that medical things were different, that medical touches were to be borne even if they were uncomfortable, that the stitches had to come out or the catheter had to go in, or the stretch had to be held until the count of ten, and I could scream and make it difficult or I could giggle helplessly and it would be over faster.

I didn't realize that some people- people with that magical Italian citizenship- could say no to their doctors- until one day I saw my specialist on the other side of the border.

It was the summer I was eleven, and I had had major surgery on my femurs and hamstrings and hip flexors. I was being very closely followed, every week or so, I think, and I was in a day treatment program. One particular week there wasn't space for me to be seen in Cerebral Palsy clinic, so I was seen in a general Orthopedic Clinic alongside Italian children who had had the bad luck to break bones in the summertime. I was alone, under direction to return to the Recreation Therapy room when I was finished, but the girl on the other side of the curtain was Italian, so she had her mother with her. I still remember that she had surgery for her knee, and she was refusing to take off her jeans so Dr. James could look at where the healing surgical sites were.

I remember thinking that jeans were never supposed to be worn to an orthopedic appointment and feeling a bit superior in that knowledge.

Her mother asked her a second time to take her jeans off, and the girl on the other side of the curtain still refused, Dr. James asked very nicely and explained that he needed to make sure everything looked okay and she still refused. Surely now, thought my little, medically-conditioned brain, someone would *make* her take the pants off, say that they were very sorry but  some things had to be done, but it didn't happen. The next thing I knew, Dr. James was outside the curtain, in the little tunnel between her curtain and mine, taking notes on his little handheld tape recorder,

"Patient ambulating well, but due to intense modesty I was unable to fully examine her."

I know now that that girl's medical appointment was private, but at the time I didn't know much about medical confidentiality. We all had our therapy in a big gym and it was common for older kids to encourage younger kids or for peers to cheer each other on or pressure each other into compliance, so when Dr. James came around my curtain, I demanded,

"How come she didn't have to take her pants off! If I wouldn't take my pants off you'd laugh at me and get someone in here to do it!"

Bless Dr. James, he sat down on the examining table with me and admitted that he probably would laugh if I refused to take my pants off and that he probably would call someone in to do it, but he knew I wouldn't refuse to take my pants off because I was working so hard to get better. Eleven year old Rolladyke was satisfied with this answer.

Now, at twenty five, I still don't know what the real answer is for parents on either side of the border, let alone children. We need to teach children, regardless of nationality, to respect and own their bodies, but we also need to instill that it's important to be honest and open with the professionals that help them, and that part of that honesty means taking off clothes when appropriate and showing the right body parts, like teeth to the dentist and eyes to the eye doctor.  But what I will probably never forget is the difference between that girl from Italy and me.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

On Being From Holland

This post is meant to be sort of an expanded version of the comment I left over here at the Final Maze. I am a kid from Holland. I know that my Mom was very young when I was born, and I know that she wanted me very much, but I also know she expected me to be Italian, and there's been a grieving process around that.



See, babies, even brain damaged babies, are little bundles of potential, and the pediatrician who diagnosed me was floored by the fact that at 14 months old I was speaking and interacting, so when Mom asked for pamphlets or books on kids with CP she was told she couldn't have any- "because all of those are going to be about kids way worse than she will be." So Mom was kind of led to believe that though I was born in Holland I'd soon have a passport to Italy. And therapy, at least at first, looked like it was going to be that passport. Early physical and occupational therapy happens 3 times a week, and I had therapists who were well used to sobbing babies and didn't let that stop them from pushing me to do what they wanted me to do.


At three years old I had my first surgery, a muscle release to unbend my knobby knees and loosen my heelcords to stop my toe walking, and voila! All of a sudden my ticket to Italy seemed to be within reach: All I had to do was learn to walk! (One of the joys of being from Holland is being old enough to remember your mother's jubilant sobbing as you take your first steps)
But...maybe it was the wooden shoes... I still swayed like a ship in a gale and still fell. Often. It seemed to be enough for the people around me, though, and if I had never gone to school I might have lived my whole life in happy, funny-walking Holland.

I did turn five, though, and I did go to school, and I realised for the first time that most other people were from Italy. They didn’t know the words that were so commonplace in my world like “physio” and “walker” and “gait training” and what was more, they had *done* things that we did not do in Holland like cross the street alone and climb snowbanks and make it to the bathroom on time *all* the time. Italy started to look like a *very* cool place. Still, I comforted myself that there were cool things about Holland too, horseback riding lessons and games of Critter in the Candy among them, and...I hadn’t seen any *adults* in Holland, so surely we all must move to Italy at some magical age. I remember thinking that that age was eleven the summer I couldn’t get enough of the Full House tie in books. Stephanie Tanner could take a shower and mow the lawn. I didn’t have a lawn to mow, and didn’t care to, but a shower...

I turned eleven, and twelve, and sixteen, and still walked in a wild, crazy swaying pattern and crashed to the floor on a regular basis, and more and more I looked over the border into Italy and saw the kids I went to school with doing all their Italian things. It was hard to stare for too long, though, so I’d look around Holland... but most people I knew there didn’t venture to the border. I felt like I was in exile, not a citizen of either Italy or Holland.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Things I Never Thought I'd Say

....while browsing a cousin's FB pics.

"There's my [bio] Father, traumatizing some random baby [on Facebook]. No, I don't know whose."

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Blogging about Blogging

First of all- I'm creeping up there on 100 posts! I'll have to think about something fun to do for post 100. (This is post 98)

Second of all, I set some gears in motion yesterday for surgery on my foot, mentioned here, here, here, and here in chronological order. Looks like it will be soon, but not a lot has panned out on the job front right now, and my surgeon is great, so I have to believe that this is the right time.

*Given* that surgery will be soon (this is my 7th or 8th, so there's not so much a fear of the unknown as the fear of the "Oh, not this again...") and given that my last serious surgery was in 2000 (last surgery of any sort was in 2006) I have a tool at my disposal this time that I didn't before: Blogging!!

Is anyone interested in me blogging through this? Is anyone *opposed* to me blogging through this? No gory pictures, I promise. In fact, no pictures at all of me in hospital, I don't want them, and neither do you.

I never intended to become a "medblogger" per se, but writing is amazing therapy... It's not worth losing my readers, though!

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

On Children's Programming

Disclaimer: I am not a Mom. Unless we count Mackers.

But honestly, the downturn in children's TV since *I* was small kind of freaks me out. When I was a kid, you could pretty well turn on Family Channel with no worries about what you might see. You might see

Katie and Orbie

Maya the Bee


or Madeline, or an assortment of classic Disney.

On Friday nights there was the incredible lineup of TGIF, which when I was a kid, consisted of Boy Meets World, Family Matters, Full House, Step By Step, and Sabrina the Teenage Witch.

I remember these shows tackling some tough issues: Fitting in, dating, step-families, even child abuse and eating disorders (Thanks, Full House!)

I do not remember any of these characters saying *anything* of the likes of the snarky, irritable, constantly hormonal "tweens" such as Hannah Bratana (I think Corey used that term first?) or Zach and Cody or the blended famly on Life With Derek....

I couldn't sleep last night, so Lady and I were flicking through channels. Family's broadcast day currently opens with my classic favourite, Katie and Orbie. Before it, there was one of the "tween" shows listed above. As we listened to the dialogue, I turned to Lady and said,

"This is why all the kids sound like this!!"

Now, I know that's not the *only* reason, but it made me think.