Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

George: I am no Poster Boy

Meet George: I Am No Poster Boy


George's Mum Tatty created a Facebook page
called I Am No Poster Boy

Down's Syndrome Diversity

I have always believed in respecting and celebrating the diversity that exists within the Down's syndrome community and I try to show this through a wide range of personal stories on the Downs Side Up Family Stories page. 

Families differ in the range of approaches to life they have, the early interventions they implement, what and how they advocate for their loved ones and even whether they believe an apostrophe or person first language is important or not. The Down's Syndrome Association supports everyone who has Down's syndrome.

Made Possible: Stories of Success
by People with Learning Disabilities in Their Own Words


But it is even more important to recognise and showcase the kaleidoscope of people with Down's syndrome with their infinite combinations of taste, personality, race, culture, sexuality, strengths and needs. There is no such thing as a cookie cutter template for Trisomy 21, and each and every individual has worth and a contribution to make to their family.

Making Chromosomes Count recently ran an article on this important subject in its magazine. 

And social affairs journalist Saba Salman says in her brilliant book Made Possible: Stories of Success, a collection of tales by people with a learning disability, there are many types of success and they come in many forms.

A Mother's Words

So, when George's Mum Tatty got in touch with me to ask if I could help get her son's story our there, I leapt at the chance. Her words and photos lifted my soul, such was the joy flowing from them. Joy, and its twin; love.


George loving life at the beach

UK Blog Award Nominations: Can You Vote for Downs Side Up?

The UK Blog Awards is an industry level event that recognises companies and individuals for the far-reaching and excellent online content they produce. 



Cast your vote here 


Last year I was not only astonished to be nominated, but astounded to be a finalist alongside many others who are creating real change within the healthcare sector.

As the year hurtled on (here's what we've been up to this Autumn) I received a few emails to say that I had been nominated again this year. I'm not one to chase awards, if your blog changes one person's life it is a success after all, but to know that someone somewhere had thought me worthy of such a nomination and had taken the time to email in means such a great deal to me.


So the voting is now open to the public

Downs Side Up is sitting in the Healthcare section again, I guess because we work with medical professionals training them in sensitive use of language, delivering talks at conferences, helping with dissertations via email, urging more education around ante-natal screening, showcasing the work of LD nurses and teaching the world about Down's syndrome, helping smash the myths that continue as well as supporting new parents. 


Natty delivers a talk to medical professionals at a conference 

If you would like to cast a vote our way (it's all down to numbers in this round) you can do so on the link below, and you can hunt around for your other favourite blogs to vote for too. 

Most of all this is a way to bring more focus onto the issues faced by those with a learning disability, and to create new links with others in the same field. 

Thank you all for your support. 


http://www.blogawardsuk.co.uk/ukba2017/entries/hayley-goleniowska

Our Busiest Month Ever: Downs Side Up in Brief

The last few weeks have been a whirlwind, and Downs Side Up has run from one thing to another with very little time or energy to enable the fingers to touch this keyboard. 


So, in the interests of keeping everyone in the loop (just in case you're interested) here's what we've been up to throughout September and October, from TV to awards to books and beyond. 

Modelling

Natty has featured on the Frugi website as one of their models and part of the #FrugiFamily who road test their clothes! Read all about their inclusive message here


Natty models for Frugi


Natty also had a casting for a Coop TV advertisement, but was rather reluctant to eat the tomatoes that the remit stipulated! She didn't get the gig, but wonderfully another little boy who has Down's syndrome did and you can see the Autumn commercial here. (Although I don't think he liked tomatoes either...)

Features

I am super excited to have been involved in a British Medical Journal first! LD nurse and Downs Heart Group champion Helen Laverty and I worked with Expert by Experience Emily, who has Down's syndrome, to produce the first What Your Patient is Thinking article from the perspective of someone who has Down's syndrome. 

We featured in Patient Magazine: Having Natalia has Made Me a Better Person.

Then blog post Not All Like Her You Know went a teensy bit viral and featured on the front page of the Huffington Post and was the Mumsnet Blog of the Day. It's about the value of all people, whatever their abilities.

Big sister Mia was interviewed by the Virgin Carers Club. You can read Sibling Carers Stories here and hear more about her book for other children I Love You Natty.

Sisters just being sisters on the Virgin Carers Club this week 

A new book The million Dollar Blog was launched by Natasha Courtenay Smith this month and I am so honoured that Downs Side Up features as a world-changing blog (as opposed to one that earns any money). 

Downs Side Up features in The million Dollar Blog by Natasha Courtenay-Smith


Interviews and Appearances

Ahead of the BBC Two Documentary A World Without Down's airing, I flew to Manchester with 2 hours' notice to appear on the BBC Breakfast sofa with Dan and Louise. Apparently the adrenaline produced by a live TV appearance is akin to that produced in a car crash. I can confirm that it was indeed a physically terrifying experience. You can watch the interview here.




We've also done an interview with a woman's magazine that comes out weekly (under wraps for now). The feature should appear around Christmas time.

Natty and I also took part in a new series for Radio Two as part of the Listening Project. We talked about beauty and I got pushed out of the studio while she hogged the microphone...

Natty was interviewed for Radio Two's Listening Project

But the most surreal moment of the week was driving along and switching on the radio to hear my voice coming out of Radio Two's Jeremy Vine show as they discussed the documentary. Very odd indeed.

Awards


I attended a fabulous National Diversity Awards ceremony in Liverpool Cathedral along fellow finalist with Sally Phillips, and other champions Clare Minnet, actor Tommy Jessop, Victoria Woodham and Emma Lambert from Future of Down's, film maker Clare Richards and others. 

Downs Side up was up for Female Role Model and Sally was up for Celeb of the Year. Huge honours.


With Actors Sally phillips and Tommy Jessop at the National Diversity Awards

Positive Role Model 



What an incredible and inspiring evening indeed! And a huge thank you to the lovely people at Great Western Railway for donating part of my train journey to get there.  




Downs Side Up was also shortlisted for Campaign blog of the year in the Mumsnet Blog Awards for the second year running and we're honoured to have been nominated for a UK Blog Award in the Healthcare Section as well. Thank you for thinking of us.

Facebook Live

Chatty Natty reaches increasingly large audiences every day. Join us week nights at 7pm over on Facebook for fun, tips and giggles. I've you haven't caught us live yet, you really must!

Chatty Natty week nights at 7pm of over on Facebook


The Documentary

A World Without Down's Syndrome? 

The documentary finally aired. It created shifts and changes and conversations the like of which I have never seen before. I am still feeling overwhelmed and emotionally drained, but will write more about the impact of the film we played a small part in along with the incredible Sally Phillips who wrote and fronted it. You can watch on iPlayer here. Possibly with cake.



Everyone involved has been inundated with messages of support, of re-thinking and of wanting to work together. Because together we are gently changing perceptions of Down's syndrome. However, we've spent much of the month feeling like this:

The roller coaster of A World Without Down's?

We interviewed film maker Clare who was the woman behind the camera and edit here. 

Clare Richards worked on A World Without Down's?

Other News

Going to School book was launched by our local support group here in Cornwall and was put into every reception child's book start bag! Exciting and inspiring news.

I also became a mobility products company Firefly columnist and affiliate blogger. So proud to be a part of their team. Pop over each month to read our musings on special needs parenting.



I also hope to see you at Mumsnet Blogfest next month for a SEN bloggers round-table that I'm hosting. See the other speakers at this prestigious writing event here. 

Mencap celebrate their 70th anniversary. As a Mumbassador for the charity I was invited to a celebration in the House of Commons, but sadly I am feeling just a little too jaded around the edges to attend... I wonder why.

Watch out for Mencap's latest Here I Am campaign too, kicking off with this powerful ad featuring DJ Casey Rochell


"A Down's is not a person."




And lastly (I think), we are excited to announce that the same charity are selling our book I Love You Natty in their Christmas catalogue this year.












Chatty Natty Goes Live on Facebook

Never a social media platform to sit still, Facebook has launched a new-fangled way of interacting with our communities, and it's one that will benefit us all and bust a few myths about Down's syndrome.


Join us each evening for Facebook Live streaming


I was happily bumbling along my newsfeed the other day and stumbled across two different friends broadcasting via Facebook Live. Honest Mum Vicki Psarias was telling us about her celeb cooking adventures with Jamie Oliver, and Sarah Jackson, the Fermented Foodie was bouncing on her trampoline and chatting to all who were watching about getting healthy.

Why I Wasn't at Britmums Live 2016

Why I wasn't at Britmums Live 2016 and I wish I had been.. 

Britmums Live has been an integral part of my blogging journey.



I walked around heavy of heart this weekend, watching the Twitter feeds and wishing everyone well, smiling from afar, but still regretting that I was not among them.

This would have been my 5th BML and the largest blogging conference in the UK has been a crucial part of Downs Side Up right since the very beginning.

Value Your Worth: Bloggers ARE Writers




As I put the finishing touches to a Telegraph article I've been commissioned to pen, and read through several magazine pieces and a book chapter that I am fortunate enough to have been asked to write, I remembered listening to an esteemed speaker at Blogfest last year (it could have been a newspaper editor or Sandi Toksvig, so many wise and wonderful words spoken there) but whoever's advice it was stuck firmly in my mind.


'Bloggers ARE writers. If you are a blogger, you ARE a writer. Value your worth.'

That was the moment where a switch clicked in my mind. We must stop doubting our words, our abilities to reach out to others and to paint pictures with our stories. 

How Do Passionate Campaigners Change the World?

The beauty of being an intermittent Radio 4 Woman's Hour listener means that you often find the answers to pertinent situations in your life precisely when you aren't looking for them.


How do passionate campaigners change the world?

When pondering the ethical conundrum of new antenatal screening programmes whilst peeling potatoes in the kitchen yesterday, I heard National Poet of Wales, Gillian Clark talk about her poem Letter From a Far Country

She had written it in protest but instead it was lauded as a celebration upon launch. She explained the sudden realisation back then that being positive is what creates real change. 


"Now, if I want to save the planet, I praise the planet," she advised.

Blog Awards and a Year in the Life of Downs Side Up

I'm not sure if it was the shocking pink stilettos, or that my uniform of jeans and converse had been replaced by a shiny cocktail dress, or simply the fact that I was alone, hundreds of miles from home and out of my parent blogger comfort zone. Instead I'd been set adrift on the industrial blog seas. Either way, I felt distinctly conspicuous as I arrived at the UK Blog Awards on Friday evening.


If you haven't noticed, it's blogging awards season* 

(*Heck, that reminds me Frugal Queen, I still have one of yours that I collected on your behalf at the MADs two years ago...!)


Collecting Frugal Queen's MADs Award

These events are a wonderful way to celebrate all that is amazing about blogging, the way it brings people together, breaks down barriers, its cathartic properties, the support it brings and most importantly the way it allows information to be shared, isolation to be banished and important campaigns and charity work to be fulfilled. It is a lifeline for many.

A Different Pair of Eyes by Robert Harris



Today I have the enormous pleasure of sharing an incredible poem sent to me by one very proud Mum. Kate's son Robert has written a poem about his sister Shelley's unique worth, and what she brings to his life. I have a lump in my throat. I think you'll love it too.



Protective Siblings: Robert and Shelley Harris


A Different Pair of Eyes A world of sight and sound to share Combined with love and thought and care A wide kind gentle loving stare Through oh so different eyes.

Vote for Downs Side Up in the UK Blog Awards

Vote for Downs Side up in the Health and Social Care section of the UK Blog Awards 2016



Despite being enormously proud of our little blog and the people it has introduced us to and the changes it has helped bring about together with many others, I get enormously embarrassed about asking for votes when it is considered for an award. 

So much so that often even my Mum isn't aware.

So without shouting about why I think you should vote for us, I will just say simply being in these awards really does help spread our message and reach those that need it. 

If you have enjoyed any of our posts, or been made to think a little deeper about the way you perceive Down's syndrome, you can click the link below. 

Voting ends Monday 25th January 2016

P.s. If you see my mum can you let her know ;)

Sibling's Short Story - A Carers UK Prize Winner

'I agree that having a brother or sister with Down's syndrome makes you feel special. I do anyway.'




Emma Sterland wins prize in Carers UK Creative Writing Competition


"How can you expect to find anything when your room is in such a mess?" I moaned. Tired and at the wrong end of a long day, our eldest was reluctantly looking for her Physics text book so she could begin her homework.


Sticker Fun from Camaloon

Just this week I decided that Downs Side Up needed a treat. I don't mean the metallic grey leather Converse I found at half price in town for myself. No, I mean a treat for the blog and it's readers.


Funky blog badges from Camaloon


A Photo for Sunday

My photo of the week comes from a snap of a monitor during a filming session for the BBC this week. 

Natty's face says it all...


Sunday photo from Natty



A Million Ways to Thank Downs Side Up on its Blogaversary

It was exactly 9 years ago that I had bought and wrapped all the Christmas presents, sent all the cards and was expectantly wrapping a babygrow that said 'I'm the Little Sister' and a T shirt that said 'I'm the Big Sister'. The girls were going to exchange gifts after the baby was born. I had it all planned.... or so I thought.




Happy Blogaversary Downs Side Up

And at the same time of year comes the blogaversary of Downs Side Up which turned 4 this week, started a few weeks after Natty began school. What began as a place to share resources and support groups we had found with other parents, and a place to give hope with photos of Natty's journey, quickly became so very much more.

This week Downs Side Up was treated to it's MILLIONth page view. It's not much to some big professional blogs, but

Adam's Diary: Through the Years with Down's

I few weeks ago I was contacted by a woman who is working with her son Adam on a writing project I'm sure you'll love:

I have a son, Adam, who has Down's syndrome.  He is now 53 years old and has worked at Newbury Post Office for 28 years and has been married to Cathy, who also has Down's, for 20 years. They live independently in a flat.

Adam has always been a joy and he and I are writing his diary, having one entry per year since his birth. The entries bring out his personality, as he is quite a character! I would love to share the first entires with your readers.

All good wishes
Linda Veness




Adam’s Diary


17 August 1962
My name will be Adam. It is four days before my birth. It is Saturday and    

UK's Biggest Selling Glossy Feature Model Natty: Why it Matters

The media communicate to the masses what is acceptable, what is 'the norm'. The fact that the UK's most widely circulated glossy magazine has featured a child with a learning disability as an angel in their Christmas edition is very important news indeed



Natty features in Good Housekeeping Magazine, photos by @Katie Wilson 




All children love a cool outfit and who doesn't love sparkles and glitter, even if they did happen in August for Natty and I. 

It was an amazing day in London, we were spoit rotten, we met incredible women, but most of all, we were helping to bring Learning Disability into everyone's homes, into all areas of life. No longer should anyone be hidden away from view.

Sally Whittle on Respect, Compassion and Disability

When I asked (possibly wine-fuelled) at the recent MAD Blog Awards if Sally Whittle (the founder) could find time to write a little guest post for Downs Side Up, I was flattered and surprised when she said yes. Because this woman really is one very busy person!


Sally Whittle happens to be one of the women I respect the most in this world of blog. She's a brilliant single Mum to an incredible girl called Flea, she writes with integrity at Who's the Mummy and heads Tots100, Trips100, HIBS100 and the Foodies100


The plates she spins are full to the brim, yet she is fun, down to earth and full of integrity. I doubt whether she would stand for much nonsense.

Thank you Sally for finding the time to write this important post on your views of respect, compassion and difference:





Sally Whittle's lesson on respect and compassion

"I can’t remember a time when we didn’t spend time with people who had disabilities, whether learning disabilities or physical disabilities." 

Dear Mum-to-be, Let's Talk About Down's Syndrome

There is a lot of media discussion currently surrounding the new antenatal NIPT test. All we ask for is truly unbiased advice to allow parents to make informed decisions about the test and the results. One journalist asked me what advice I would give a pregnant Mum about screening and Down's syndrome. I pondered for a couple of days, then wrote this letter.


Dear Mum-to-be, Let's Talk about Down's Syndrome






Dear Mum-to-be, let's talk about Down's syndrome 

I once stood in your shoes.

Pregnant with a much-wanted baby, and wanting the very best for him or her.  
"We don't mind what sex we're having, as long as they are healthy," we all say, without too much thought about the foundations that phrase is built on. 
You take your supplements and you stay away from alcohol and cigarette smoke. You rest as much as you can. You mull over every detail of the birth plan. And in your mind's eye your newborn baby is sketched; beautiful and bouncing and perfect in every way. They complete your family unit, they bring everyone together. You know you will laugh and cry, worry and burst with pride. You know you will be exhausted, but that they will make you a better person, and it will all be worth it.

But there is one phrase that makes you uneasy, a phrase that was mentioned when you booked in with your midwife, that is written in every pregnancy book that adorns your shelves, and it's currently splashed across every media outlet in the land - Down's syndrome
You don't know much about Down's syndrome. You may never have met anyone with the condition. But you think you know enough, just as I did. It won't happen to your baby of course, but you'd like 'peace of mind anyway'. And now there's a new test...

When Blogging Comes Full Circle - The greatest Gift

Blogging time has been thin on the ground the last couple of months, so, just to keep you all posted with what's going on here at Downs Side Up Central, I have unusually written a round-up of sorts.


Blogging with balance
It all started with a life-changing aura at the Britmums Live blogging conference this June. 
This was the fourth time I had attended the event and it had a dramatically different feel. Gentler, calmer, quieter, not in that fewer bloggers attended, but gone was the feeling of pressure to be heard. 





Blogging for Support

And in its place was a wonderful feeling of support, of camaraderie and of collaboration. That's always been there but this time it was all around. It was tangible.

20 Questions with Hayley Goleniowska on her Resource for New Parents - Talking About Down's Syndrome

20 questions with Hayley Goleniowska

TodDowns Syndromeay we’re joined by Hayley Goleniowska, Hayley is a mum who is passionate about inclusion and changing the way the world views Down’s syndrome. Her youngest daughter has the condition, but she doesn’t let that define her. 
Hayley is also the author of I Love You, Natty. As a writer and speaker, Hayley works with medical professionals to improve the support that parents receive following a diagnosis, whether it be during pregnancy or after birth. She wishes to buy quality time for other parents on the same journey, by removing the fear that often surrounds the condition.
1. Who would this set of cards be suitable for?
These cards are intended for new parents whose baby has been diagnosed with Down’s syndrome and the professionals working with them. Portage workers, Health Visitors, neo-natal staff and GPs will find them an invaluable tool for understanding how parents feel post-diagnosis and to identify areas where families need more support.
2. Why were you so passionate about collaborating with Fink Cards on this project?
I struggled greatly in the early days following our daughter’s diagnosis. I was in complete shock, due to my own fear and ignorance of Down’s syndrome. There was so much negative language surrounding the condition during pregnancy, and the diagnosis was delivered in a very somber and sorry way. Everyone in our family had their own ideas about what Down’s syndrome meant. A set of cards just like this would have enabled us to talk more freely about our worries, and more importantly to see our precious new baby for the unique individual she is first and foremost, rather than a set of symptoms and predictions for her future.
3. Describe how this set of cards came to be?
Lisa Warner, creator of Fink Cards and I have been Twitter friends for a while. I have been a fan of her fabulous products, but never dreamed of writing a set for her. One day, while she was holidaying in Cornwall where we live, she asked if we could meet for coffee to discuss a possible project. I was so excited about the power of the cards to make a difference to new parents, to buy the time with their newborns, that I came home and wrote the questions, straight from the heart, in an evening. Lisa pulled out all the stops to create the cards in a few short weeks, in time for launch on World Down Syndrome Day #WDSD15.
4. How do you think a set of cards like these might have helped your own family?
We knew so very little about Down’s syndrome when our youngest daughter was born. Most of what we thought we knew was outdated and based in stereotype. We spent many hours researching the condition, often stumbling on outdated information that was depressing. The cards would have helped us sort fact from myth easily. Quite simply they would have helped us see our daughter for who she is and saved us a lot of anguish and heart ache. They are bright, cheery and user-friendly, as well as being portable.
5. How did you feel when your youngest daughter was born with Down’s syndrome?
We were fearful and ignorant about Down’s syndrome. We were given a diagnosis while our baby lay in an incubator on another hospital ward, and it that moment she became ‘Down’s syndrome personified’ a sum of all the glimpses into others’ lives that we had seem over the years. We were also terrified. Terrified of what the future held for us all, terrified of losing her and terrified of loving her in case that happened.
6. What do you hope to achieve with these cards?
We hope that by using the cards as conversation starters, parents will be able to talk more freely to other family members, siblings and medical professionals about their concerns, knowing that they are not alone in feeling a certain way.
They will be able to cut through the myths that surround Down’s syndrome more quickly and spend precious time getting to know their newborns. The questions are also intended to encourage parents to think about topics that might not initially occur to them, such as making time to look after themselves as well as those around them.
7. What were your motivations behind starting your blog Downs Side Up?
When out youngest daughter was born I was hungry for information. Charities are a font of factual information, but are often neutral in tone. I wanted to see what real family life was going to like for us, and so I began a simply blog with our stories, tips and information as well as masses of inspiring photographs to show the world that our daughter is more alike any other child than different.
Over the years the blog has changed, grown and evolved and is now a hub of support, a mouthpiece for those with Down’s syndrome, a voice of advocacy and a campaign tool for inclusion and better support.
8. Is having a child with Down’s syndrome what you thought it was going to be like?
I can honestly say that I was wrong on every single count. Every child is different of course, but every parent of a child with Down’s syndrome feels that they bring an extra dimension to their lives. Natty has enriched and enhanced our family and we wouldn’t change her for the world. There have been challenges along the way, worries about school, heart surgery and illness, but Natty lives life to the full, is bright and beautiful, incredibly funny and an absolute joy to be with.
9. What kind of support was available for your family?
There are many charities, most notably the Down’s Syndrome Association who provided informative leaflets and online support. There is a local support group too but as quite a private family I was always reluctant to go along to those meetings. Natty has always been one of the gang, just part of our community. Invaluable support came for me personally in the form of a wise Midwife, experienced Health Visitor and later the Portage Service.
10. If you could turn back time, what would you change about the day your youngest daughter was born?
I would like to relive that day with the knowledge I now have about Down’s syndrome. I would love to have know a child like Natty who would have removed the fear from those words that came from the consultants lips.
I would have felt differently I’m sure if the diagnosis had been given by the community midwife who delivered her at home, and having her in our arms, or at least touching her in her incubator, instead of on another ward would have made her feel more like our own daughter at that difficult time.
11. What extra dimension has parenting a child with additional needs brought to your family?
Natty has taught us to see the world differently, she has taught us to slow down and appreciate the small things in life. She has shown us that we cannot plan for everything in life, we cannot map out our course, but that we are the strong ones if we learn to bend like reeds in the winds of change. She has also opened up a world of friends for us as a family, for we connect with others in the same situation everywhere we go.
12. How do you think a diagnosis of Down’s syndrome should be delivered to parents?
It is vital that the baby should be present when a diagnosis is given, and parents should be together if possible. They don’t want too much information, instead it is vital to allow them time and space to process but also to give them open access to return with questions at any time.
Later leaflets and books can be given to parents, and they might sppreciate being able to talk to other parents in the same situations, but every family will feel different and this should not be pushed.
13. Do you think having a sister with Down’s syndrome has had an impact on your eldest daughter Mia?
In the early days I worried that Mia would suffer. I couldn’t have been more wrong as she has turned out to be a very thoughtful and caring young woman with an acute sense of right and wrong. That’s not to say that having a sibling with additional needs doesn’t sometimes take some of the attention away from her, so we try to make time to spend time alone with her and to do more grown up activities that she enjoys.
14. Tell us about Mia’s book I Love You Natty: A Sibling’s Introduction to Down’s Syndrome?
When Natty was born I looked for a book to read with Mia to explain why her sister would need a little extra support throughout her life. Most of the books on the market were in American English or rather outdated.
One day, several years later, we found a poem from Mia to her little sister, saying how much she loved her and that her world wouldn’t be the same without her in it. I knew instantly this would be the basis for the book we had ourselves sought.
The book explains Down’s syndrome simply and is accompanied by Mia’s own drawings and our family photos. It is a visual feast and is adored by adults and children alike.
15. You describe your family as ‘just like any other’. In what way?
Our children enjoy horse-riding and swimming, making pancakes and going to the beach. They love each other and they squabble about who is going to hold the popcorn on movie night. We have the same goals for our girls and enjoy the same activities as everyone else.
16. Natty is one of the UK’s first models with a disability. Why do you think this is so important?
We all need to see ourselves represented in the media and in advertising. Moreoever, it’s vital for the world to see beauty in all its forms and to realise that children with Down’s syndrome love dressing up in funky clothes just as much as the next child.
The modeling might seem like a superficial activity, but many new parents write to say just how much comfort they got from seeing Natty in adverts, because it gave them a sense of just what is possible for their child.
17. What have been Natty’s most exciting modelling jobs to date?
Natty has featured in a tourist attraction video, a holiday company website, the Jojo Maman Bebe and Frugi clothing catalogues and most excitingly she was the first child with a disability to appear in a supermarket Back to School campaign with Sainsbury’s. She loves showing off, and for her the castings and photoshoots are like glorified play dates.
18. You work with medical professionals within the NHS. What are your goals?
To change how disgnosis is delivered and to remove the pressure on parents to terminate babies with Down’s syndrome. The rate currently stands at 92% of all babies who are diagnosed antenatally. This reflects a lack of unbiased support at point of diagnosis.
We also want equal healthcare for individuals with Down’s syndrome throughout their lives, so work on medical passports and one page profiles is essential. It’s really about changing the way society views learning disability, and shouting out that having an LD does not make someone worth a little less than everyone else.
19. Do you think we have far to go before society becomes truly inclusive?
Sadly yes. Attitudes are entrenched that difference is to be feared and segregated. We are getting there slowly in many ways, but until we lose the fear of disability and difference we will never get rid of the idea that ‘eradicating’ disability is the gold standard light at the end of the tunnel.

Thank you so much Hayley! You can find more from Hayley on her website and Hayley’s Talking about Down’s Syndrome – Conversations for New Parents cards can be found in our shop here.