Lex Started his New School Today
Steve and I are back from dropping Lex off at his new
school – Excelerate -
and our little love walked in without even turning back – which was a relief -
but it still left Steve and I in tears. It’s emotionally intense stuff this
parenting job, but especially so when you have a little lad with special needs
right now and a traditional education system that doesn’t want to support those
needs. When Lex was kicked out of his school and we started our school hunt, we
were left with two choices – mainstream, where we’d probably face the same
shite again, or pure special needs, something we know would make Lex intensely
unhappy. He’s not a special needs kids, he’s just got some special needs right
now, and those needs are very specific.
We think we’ve found it – the only place in Singapore
run by speech and occupational therapists – designed to help kids like Lex
catch up with their speech, learn how to manage their emotions in an
appropriate way, and at the end of it, he graduates and there’s no more
bollocks going into mainstream. He’ll just be like any other five year old kid
having a bad day sometimes.
The last few months have been intensely challenging,
because we wanted to find a place that was going to work for him but everywhere
we went, we knew it wasn’t right. We needed an option in the middle and somehow
(thanks to Google) we came across Excelerate and knew this was our middle
ground. It’s a system that helps each child individually, with the aim that when
they graduate, they’re ready for mainstream education. We know Lex is going to
thrive – he’s working so bloody hard to speak, and his emotional outbursts are
less and less - so now we just hope he enjoys it enough to want to go every day.
We need this to work. We want to be able to talk to
our darling boy and hear what he has to say. We need to be able to reason with
him and we can’t do that if he doesn’t understand us. We need him to fit into
the normal world as much as he can and not suffer any more bollocks. We need
him to be able to communicate verbally because the world is not designed for
people who communicate in any other way. We need him to be happy and confident
in himself so he can get out there and take on the world. We need him to catch
up now because soon kids his age will start laughing at him, and our sensitive
little man will take that to heart – we need to protect him from that and the
only way we can is to help him to speak. We just need him to be OK and happy
and confident. That’s all we want.
This chapter in Lex’s life has been so bloody hard. He’s
such a sweetheart, and in the long run, we know he’s going to be absolutely
fine, but having faced so many setbacks along the way (Lex and us as a family)we
have everything crossed that this is it. The problem is it’s hard having
confidence in your decisions when it comes to kids like Lex because, 1. so many
of the decisions we’ve made don’t appear to be the “right” ones, and 2. There’s
no one to give you any decent guidance to help you make the right choices. Oh there
are plenty of people who have opinions, but no one who really knows what we’re
dealing with. So today we hope this is
the right decision - the decision that is going to help him move forward and as
a result, give our whole family some peace of mind.
We’ve just got everything crossed that this is it,
because I don’t know how much more disruption and change we can deal with, and
I certainly cannot take another rejection when it comes to Lex. I know he hasn’t
been easy, but all he needs is time and patience now – please let this be the
right decision?
Yours, without the bollocks
Andrea
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