My blog posts on Noah's blog have
slowed down a bit over the last few months. There are a handful of
reasons for this. I've taken on even more guest blogger commitments,
I've immersed myself in advocacy endeavors, I'm homeschooling, and
sometimes there is so much to say that it's hard to put it all into
proper words so I purposefully avoid doing so altogether. Silence is
sometimes comforting. It offers you no advice, no criticism, no false
expectation of support, no artificial forms of caring, or unfulfilled
promises or gestures.
The holidays - oh gosh the holiday season. It sneaks
up on me every year even though I start preparing in September and am
often in full bloom by the first of October in rescue attempts to aid
other special needs parents during the holiday season through various
personal projects. I still can't catch my breath no matter how hard I
try to prepare for all that it entails. And Noah's birthday - always a
complicated mixture of delight and emotion mixed in. It's hard to
believe we've been celebrating our Miracle eight years this year. So
much has happened in those eight years that I feel like it could have
been spread over ten lifetimes. But for better or for worse it has
brought us to where we are now.
Things continue
to be challenging obtaining Noah's needs. He is met with more denials
than approvals. I have four current pending appeals hearings lined up
in the new year for Noah. One: A VocalID denial because the State
doesn't think it's necessary that Noah have a personalized voice. Two:
Mygo Leckey Tour Base denial because the State thinks it is a caregiver
convenience to convert Noah's feeder chair to a transit ready wheelchair
and they suggest I simply ask them for a much more expensive Hoyer Lift
instead (which mind you had a completely different purpose). Three:
CarpetSaver denial because Noah's Waiver doesn't know the difference
between a floor protective cover product that is machine wash and dry
friendly and real actual carpet that is permanently attached to the
floor. Four: A Wedge Pillow from Bed, Bath & Beyond, because his
Waiver is certain there is an insurance code for it through EPSDT
Medicaid, when no such code exists for a typical item you find a local
retail store and has no Medicaid contract or vendor for. Noah also has
other requests in that have gone for weeks and months with no
determination or decision and the State says they have no deadline that
they can take as much time as they wish. One has to wonder if I'm
supposed to interpret that as years at this rate.
Yet,
families like ours seem to be really at the mercy of a "mother may I
system," that is designed largely to conserve funding or pocket it (who
really knows without true transparency in the form of public audits)
what happens to this money that is supposed to be set aside to help
children with disabilities. It is exhausting however to continually
have to pursue benefits that should be covered for Noah in the form of
continual appeals through an Administrative Law Judge. Thankfully, the
judicial system is one that I made a career out of prior to Noah's birth
and an arena that I'm familiar with. For most parents they feel
defeated and lost before they've even begun. For them fighting it
through an appeal isn't always a realistic option as the process is
intimidating, and in most cases fruitless given the State can reverse
any ruling by an Administrative Judge with a simple filing of an
Exception to Initial Decision which simply renders the appellate process
moot. And if you look back on any December blog post in the last eight
years you'll find this time of year is quite popular for denials and
appeals in Noah's direction. End of year funding conservation perhaps?
One always wonders, but there is a curious pattern to my December
posts.
This is the first year I'm essentially
winging the holiday without a hand up. Meaning there were no
foundations or grants or charities that I haven't trail blazed through
the last eight years to carry us into this year's Christmas season. I
look at Noah's Santa stash and think will it all be okay? Naturally
shopping for Noah is complicated when special needs toys cost just as
much as a medical equipment these days - and you have to tenderly
balance out shopping in newborn to 36 months of age isles at the toy
store. Noah cognitively is eight, even if his body hasn't been
physically able to catch up with his mind - he still craves what a
typical eight year old does. His tastes in movies are age appropriate,
likewise his desires in toys are the also yearning to be age
appropriate. And making the holiday season work for Noah takes a whole
lot of creativity and would require more financial resources than we
happen to have at our finger tips. For most families this can spiral
them into a host of various forms of depression and despair at the
holiday season. And I've always known that so I work towards helping
others in order to escape perhaps that realization for own set of
circumstances. It's always been my philosophy that if you are so
engulfed in helping others that your soul has little time to dwell on
such things.
But as hard as the challenges
continue to be, there are still moments of pure bliss and joy that comes
along with special needs parenting. Those moments are also often hard
to put into words unless you walk a similar journey. The things that
give me great pause and fill my heart are often the little things that
most simply take for granted. And I eat up those blissful moments as
the fuel I need to help Noah in all the ways I can. He's just simply a
magical human being and I continue to feel so blessed to be his mother.
Love,
Noah's Miracle by Stacy Warden is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.