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You Are Not Alone: For Parents When They Learn That Their Child Has a Disability (January 2014) (English and Spanish) (Center for Parent Information & Resources, CPIR)

Description:

If you have recently learned that your child has a developmental delay or a disability (which may or may not be completely defined), this message may be for you. It is written from the personal perspective of a parent who has shared this experience and all that goes with it.

When parents learn about any difficulty or problem in their child’s development, this information comes as a tremendous blow. The day my child was diagnosed as having a disability, I was devastated—and so confused that I recall little else about those first days other than the heartbreak. Another parent described this event as a “black sack” being pulled down over her head, blocking her ability to hear, see, and think in normal ways. Another parent described the trauma as “having a knife stuck” in her heart. Perhaps these descriptions seem a bit dramatic, yet it has been my experience that they may not sufficiently describe the many emotions that flood parents’ minds and hearts when they receive any bad news about their child.

Many things can be done to help yourself through this period of trauma. That is what this paper is all about. In order to talk about some of the good things that can happen to alleviate the anxiety, let us first take a look at some of the reactions that occur.

Tag(s):

Autism Spectrum Disorder Collaboration Deaf-Blind Developmental Delay Disability Characteristics Early Childhood Early Intervention Hearing Impairment Intellectual Disability Mild/Moderate Disabilities Multiple Disabilities Orthopedic Impairment Other Health Impairment Preschool Speech/Language Impairment Vision Impairment