Showing posts with label siblings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label siblings. Show all posts

British Citizen Youth Awards for Mia and Natty

Down's syndrome ambassadors Mia and Natty are to receive a BCyA

We are enormously proud, excited and honoured to announce that our girls Mia and Natty have been selected to receive a British Citizen Youth Award



We heard a couple of weeks ago (there were many tears and squeals) but the news has been under embargo until now. I think Grandma almost burst trying to keep it to herself, but well done for managing it Pearl! 


The girls were nominated by Learning Disability Nurse Helen Laverty and myself because it means so very much to us to be able to show the girls how proud we are of all the work they do. 



My Brother Geoff: Born with Down's Syndrome in 1961

Victoria Lewin author of books for young carers such as her daughter, and project lead of charity Caitlin's Wish contacted me recently about some training work she is doing. 

As we got chatting the rather heart-breaking story of Victoria's uncle Geoff, who has Down's syndrome emerged. His story is somewhat typical and although it has a happy ending, the realisation that attitudes, support and early intervention have changed greatly since the 60s is emotional to read.





My Brother Geoff 

I was 11 when my little brother was born in 1961.  My mum was 41 and he was her third child (both now known risk factors but we didn’t know that then).  His father was diagnosed with leukaemia shortly before he was born and died when he was a few months old.  So it was just me, Mum and Geoff (my older brother had left home). 

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.

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.


Explaining the Radio Silence: What Have We Been Up To?

Sometimes life rattles by at such a pace doesn't it. I mean really, where does the time go?
There are so very many things in the air at the moment but I just don't seem to be able to find the time to sit here and share them with you over a cup of tea. 
My friend Emma says that she enjoys a little catch up newslettery kind of a post once in a while, so here goes... 




Something for the Weekend 


Read all about it              
We've been busy on the media front. A couple of months ago we were interviewed by The Guardian Weekend Magazine for a big spread about Down's syndrome. The piece has been on hold for a while and I had to promise not to talk to any other publications, (it's hard for me to keep quiet but I did!) but the time has finally come and it should be in this Saturday 17th supplement. 

I'm nervous, I always feel very vulnerable when we go public as a family, but I trust the journalist implicitly. And to be in a paper I often actually buy is quite a novelty. I still won't be reading the comments though.



Changing Perceptions in Sequins and Glitter 


Natty being preened for a glossy photoshoot
Then back in August Natty and I went up to London for a photo shoot for the UK's largest selling glossy magazine. It's for the Christmas edition which comes out next month, so more about that nearer the time...but needless to say I am bursting with pride that they wanted a little model with Down's syndrome within their posh pages.  Natty certainly is changing the face of beauty one smile at a time.

Did I tell you she called a fellow passenger a 'big fat pig' on the train on the way there though? She did. She actually did. She wasn't, she was lovely and brushed it off with a laugh. Lucky.  *Sigh*




Charity Christmas Catalogue 



Mencap have taken two large boxes of our little book for children I Love You Natty to sell in their Christmas Catalogue this year. We are so very excited to be able to reach more young families, support groups and school this way. 

*shameless plug* 
And with profits going to the learning disability charity, what better reason that to buy a copy for someone's stocking this season. 



Training Professionals 


Remember we popped up to Edinburgh in August to make a podcast film with Hazel Powell and the NHS Education for Scotland (NES), and meet nurse and midwife trainers and well as the lead nurse for Scotland? Well, the film is finished and nearly ready to share with the world. We've watched it and hope that it will provide a springboard for discussion in medical professionals' training, particularly in the arena of delivering a diagnoses and supporting new parents. I am quite certain that it's a powerful watch.


Paul and Emma give an inspiring speech

Last week, I headed over to Northampton (which turns out to be incredibly tricky to reach from Cornwall!) for the National Portage Service Annual Conference. I was lucky enough to be able to share our journey and experiences of Portage with other families and professionals, as well as learning so much from the other speakers, including Paul and Emma who share a house together and live independently with support. 


Writing for Change


I've had a couple of very exciting writing projects to get my teeth into as well of late. I was asked to produce a chapter for a book on improving the healthcare of people with a learning disability which is just about finished. Well, it's been submitted but I keep tweaking it and writing to the author with an updated file. 
Must. Leave. Alone. 
Sorry Steve.

The British Medical Journal also asked for an article for doctors working with adults with Down's syndrome. With a massive amount of input from actress Sarah Gordy from Wood for the Trees, and speaker James Hamilton, who both have Down's syndrome, as well as the General Medical Council, the piece is nearly finished. I've really enjoyed working on it and have learnt a great deal in the process.

Oh, and The Department of Health published a little piece about Natty starting primary school as part of their #BestStart0to19 campaign last week. You can read Transition into School: Small Steps for Little Ones with SEN on Viv Bennet's site at here.



Awards 


MAD Blog Awards
I was an emotional wreck after being announced the winner of the MADs Blog Award for Outstanding Contribution. To say I felt over-whelmed was an understatement. My face mostly looked like this all evening: 


Proud, humbled and emotional at the MAD Blog Awards @TomArber

I bumbled through an ad hoc acceptance speech. And cried. A lot. Thank you to everyone who put my name forward. It really means such a lot.

Mumsnet Blogging Awards
Then more excitement. Mumsnet is also a large network of very serious writers and I could never have imagined that Downs Side Up would be chosen from hundreds of entrants as a finalist in the Campaigner category of their blog awards, alongside the simply incredible bloggers Comeback Mum and Complicated Gorgeousness, all winners. 

I actually had a bit of a funny turn when I saw this news but am now looking forward to a group hug with the others at Blogfest, coming up in November. 

Learning Disability Champions
I also found my name listed as a Learning Disability Today Champions finalist. I find this very embarrassing. I have sat on this news for weeks because I can't bear to keep bleating on about awards... new parents landing there don't want to read that. But by the same token I am hugely proud to have been considered by medical professionals and the editors of Magazine Learning Disability Today as a leading parent advocate in the world of LD.

So many of my inspirations and gurus are also listed, from teaching staff, to nurses and self-advocates, as well as fellow bloggers. We are all working together for better understanding and equality for those with a learning disability. So pop over and have your say here


********

I think that's it for now. We are off for a family break together shortly and that is the best news of all. Uninterrupted time with our girls. Because at the end of the day, we are just an ordinary family, doing what ordinary families do.


Big Sister Mia Describes What a Learning Disability Is for #LDWeek15


My name is Mia, I’m 11 years old and I have a younger sister called Natty who is 8. Natty and I both love netball and horse riding and singing and baking cakes and watching films. We both have Blue Peter badges. 



Mia from Downs Side Up writes about Learning Disability for #LDWeek15

Natty also has Down’s syndrome, which means she has an extra chromosome in every building brick of her body. I think they look like wonkey Twiglets.


Fabulous Book Feedback from our Youngest Customers


Fabulous feedback from the readers of our little book is what motivates us most.


Fabulous book feedback from Downs Side Up's youngest customers is what motivates us. Thanks to Brídín Nic Dhonncha for permission to use this photo of his sons.


Publishing your first book is a daunting process 

Really it is. It feels like sending a much-loved child out on their own into the big wide world. There's a little bit of your soul within those pages and you don't know where they will end up.

One Sister's Gift of Words: Scope Review I Love You Natty

Thank you to SCOPE for their support in producing our book I Love You Natty and for this article today. 

The original can be found on their site and I have to admit I had a few tears reading it back in the kitchen this morning. 




Pudsey cakes for Children in Need and some Quality Sibling Time

Do you sometimes feel that your child with a learning disability takes more of your attention?
Do you try to factor in activities exclusively for their siblings?
Does this leave you feeling guilty at times?

Research shows that even half an hour spent together where they are the sole focus of your attention reaps enormous benefits for siblings of children with a disability.

Last night while Natty was having a story read to her by Daddy Downs Side Up, Mia and I baked up a batch of Children in Need cakes for a charity cake sale at school today. We had fun looking on Pinterest for ideas and creating little paw prints, spotty dotties and Pudsey bear faces with butter cream, icing and food colouring.

The stains might take all week to scrub off our fingers, but we had a giggle together. We chatted uninterrupted while we worked. And the results weren't too bad either!

Pudsey Children in Need cakes by Mia and Mummy



Chatty Natty on ITV Lorraine Show: The Face of Representation

Did you ever have a moment in your life that was so exciting, so surreal that you weren't sure if you dreamt it up? 

The kind of moment where you are plucked from your ordinary life and sucked into a parallel universe for the briefest of whiles, before being plopped back safe and sound, albeit exhausted and clutching a few souvenirs?

Well, if it weren't for two pink Lorraine clocks in the girls' bedrooms, I would indeed be wondering if I had dreamt up our trip to London to feature live on the ITV Lorraine Show.

A Frugi twit twoo treat for Mia


'I hope we get some snow 
to try it out in this Winter."
Mia G

Our dear friends at Frugi, wonderful ethical organic clothiers, who Natty first modelled for, have sent this glorious coat as a gift for our big girl Mia. She really deserves a treat after publishing her first book this Summer and for being an amazing big sister.

Mia models her new Frugi AW14 coat

99 Star Review by DSA Editor

Kate Powell is the editor of the Down 2 Earth Magazine at the Down's Syndrome Association. Kate also has Down's syndrome herself. We were honoured when she agreed to review Mia's book I Love You Natty

Her kind words of encouragement mean so much. High praise indeed. 

I   really like this book   because. I am impressed it’s great
This book is about a Sister(Mia) writing about her Sister(Natty) with Downs syndrome and they like Spending time together
This   Book is worth reading   because it’s Educational   for lots
Of   Children of all ages   this book can help a lot People s Views towards People with  Downs Syndrome. 
This book Can be the start of friendship between Siblings

I  will  give  this Special Book  99  stars  it’s  very new
Please read this book  don’t  look away

Signed  Kate Powell


I love You Natty can be ordered through your local Waterstones 
or purchased direct here from Amazon.



Win a copy of Mia's book!


The last week saw a heady mix of emotions as we launched our first self-published book: I Love You Natty: A sibling's introduction to Down's syndromeWe are giving two copies away on the blog this week (scroll down for details).


I Love You Natty: A Sibling's Uplifting Introduction to Down's Syndrome

Young girl from Cornwall publishes a heartfelt book to help other children welcome a new sibling with Down's syndrome



Seven and a half years ago I sat at my computer and typed 'Down's Syndrome' into the Amazon book search facility.


One little girl, aged two, lay in bed asleep upstairs. Another, aged a few days lay in an incubator in neonatal intensive care.


I wanted a positive, realistic book that would explain to our eldest why her baby sister could not come straight home, why Mummy and Daddy were shedding tears, why she had been christened wearing nothing but a nappy right there in the hospital the week before, why she would need heart surgery one day and how, hopefully (Hope is her middle name as it happens) they would have just as much fun and do all the same things together as any other sisters would with time and support. 

I wanted a book to carry the other adults in the family forward too, lift us from our place of desperation and worry, something that would tell us it was all going to be OK.


I found plenty of useful factual books, a smattering of outdated offerings, inspiring novels and biographies for adults and a lovely tale for kids with illustrations that we still reach for now, but the bright cheery snapshot of the life of a modern family that I needed to see as much as Mia, stuck in my mind and I guess it later became to basis for my blog Downs Side Up.


Then a couple of years ago I began finding little notes and poems, drawings and declarations of love lying around the house. This is Mia's way of letting us know what she is thinking, and we often leave similar treasures for her to find too. Some that she wrote for Natty were so precious that I kept them, and there in an instant one evening, I realised they formed the basis of a book.


She wrote, " I Love you Natty, you are the best sister in the world and so precious to me. You are so important to me and if you weren't in this world my life just wouldn't be the same."


We asked Mia questions to fill in the gaps, added our family snapshots alongside Mia's drawings and the book began to take shape. 


A dear former colleague who creates college brochures offered to create a document that we could use as a template to print on demand via Amazon. Nearly a year later, a lots of hard work and creativity, she showed me what she had produced. Our tears were a sure sign that the book had exceeded our wildest dreams and was sure to touch the hearts of others.



Mia checks the book proofs
A title tweak and some online bullying caused more stress than could be imagined, and then the realisation that the book was too elaborate to fit the standard print on demand template and to create each one as they were ordered was looking like it would cost over £12 each. 

Options? Options? 
It was a little late to find a publisher, we were ready to go and I was adamant that the book should cost no more than £5.99 to make it affordable to as many families as possible. The only obvious solution was to bite the bullet and print them in bulk ourselves, house them at home and ship by hand.

So now we are proud to announce the launch of Mia's ground-breaking and beautiful sibling support book I Love You Natty: A Sibling's Uplifting Introduction to Down's Syndrome

It's been endorsed by eight leading UK charities, including Mencap, Makaton, Portage and the Down's Syndrome Association, who have tipped it as the perfect introduction to Trisomy 21 as the condition is also known.

The book is available on Amazon, priced £5.99 + P&P  or can be ordered in to any branch of Waterstones with their Click and Collect service.   

ISBN 978-0-9929251-0-9

For bulk orders, or to speak to the authors, contact downssideup@gmail.com 


Since its launch we have been rushed off our feet, they are literally selling like hotcakes, so much so that I've only just found the time to blog about it! Our hope is to be able to cover costs and then give some away to charities and Health Visitors and so on.



The art of photobombing the 'books ready to post' shot

Already they have found their way into neo-natal units, libraries and schools and the home of at least one adoptive family and have been shipped to America and Australia and everywhere in between. That makes all the hard work worthwhile.


We hope you like our little book of love too...



I Love You Natty: A Sibling's Introduction to Down's Syndrome





Downs Side Up produces its first support book



Mia and Pippin dream up a new title for her first book

Just over 7 years ago I sat in front my computer screen in the late evening whist expressing milk with an industrial pump that would service a herd of cows, and I Googled 'Down's syndrome' for the very first time. 


Video clip: Natty wants it to be her birthday too...


This weekend sees big sister Mia's 

10th birthday 


and last night we planned a surprise party with a few of Mia's school friends.

A brief burst of filming before we left revealed a rare gem of a  comic moment from Natty that I simply had to share.

Of course she knows it isn't her birthday, she's teasing me, pulling my leg, her eyes twinkling with mischief. But she wants it to be her birthday all the same. 

But then I guess we could all do with at least 2 birthdays a year couldn't we ;)




             


Welcome to the World Precious Baby Porter


I came across the wonderful Porter family on Twitter a couple of weeks before their second daughter Kara was born. Kara has Down syndrome and her parents were prepared for this before she arrived in their world. I was immediately struck by the calm excitement, love and pride that already emanated from her parents before her arrival. I thought back to our shaky beginnings with Natty in our lives, a sharp contrast to their experience and I felt nothing but admiration and respect for these wonderful new parents. They had felt and overcome their shock and grief antenatally and were ready to welcome this beautiful daughter with open arms, one of the 6% of babies with Down syndrome who are not terminated or miscarried during pregnancy. 

I waited anxiously for new tweets after the news that labour had begun, I held them in my thoughts, conscious of the flagged heart and digestive problems. I was overjoyed to see the first new pictures of the beautiful and perfect little bundle when she made her debut appearance. Many of you joined in sending your congratulations. Kara is doing brilliantly, feeding and home safe and sound where she is getting to know her older sister Eloise. I am delighted that Craig and Sara have kindly agreed to write and share their story with Downs Side Up readers, despite that early baby haze of exhaustion that we all find ourselves in.

H x







Wow no wires!

"I am currently covered in bits of food, trying to organise my living room despite toys, books and a changing mat. I am tired after broken sleep and cluster feeding a new born baby. This is the typical scene any parent can recognise - those first few weeks always seem to last forever. Kara is sleeping in her moses basket and Eloise my eldest is settling down to bed. We should not be here - it should not be like this.

Kara is a baby with Downs  - one of the 750 children born each year and one of the very few that are not terminated from the result from the Nuchal scan at thirteen weeks. We also had an amniocentesis. 

There is a passage in Wolf Hall from which describes how Cromwell feels when the ceiling crashes in - that is the nearest reaction I can give when you hear the results. I remember the shock, the question - Why? I was 37 but not that old, I did not smoke and was fairly healthy. What did this mean ? How could I have a disabled child ? What about my eldest child ? What about my life? The fetal medicine team were amazing - they explained all my options. I could not think - it was like a cloud of grief. We elected to have scans - and to research this to the nth degree. 

I called people who had children who had T21 , scoured the internet trying to assess what this  meant. I asked advice of friends, relatives, experts. The Downs Syndrome Association hand out huge packs of information at the hospital. I read, examined and weighed up all the options. A couple of things made me think - my Granny just turned round and said " The child will never lack friends" and a very close friend stated it very clearly "Its going to look a bit different and it will learn at a slower pace".  I just felt that this child had a right to life and from the scans it looked like a baby.


Its not been plain sailing - heart defects were detected and so were digestive issues. We were prepared to have child in neonatal with tubes sticking out at all angles. But it was not like that. The birth was quick and normal - (it hurts). Straight away Kara breast fed. She sleeps well and hates to be cold. She cries less than other babies so you have to read her but she is feeding so well. Her heart defects had healed, there was no digestive problems and she is hearing like any normal baby. So as I explained at the beginning we really should not be here and I am going to grab five minutes to have a lovely long bath."

Sara Porter