Many of you know Sue Robins as the author behind The invisible mom, one of our most read posts about social isolation among families of children with disabilities. Sue recently took a poetry class and wrote this piece, which she says is fiction, based on her experiences raising her son with Down syndrome, and stories other families like hers have shared with her. Louise
Stares at the mall
By Sue Robins
Always
the caboose
He’s
minding the gap
At
the back of the line.
Invisible
but visible
Is
a puzzling way to be
Stared
at, all but ignored.
How
old is he
The
nurse asks his mom
He’s
standing right there
A
teenager, not a ghost.
I
hate my face
He
announces one hot July day
Sits
on the bench, arms crossed, opting out of the moments.
I
was asked
Many
times by other moms
Do
people stare at you in the mall?
Why
yes, yes they do.
First
they stare at my boy.
Then
they stare at me.
They
finish up by staring at my boy again.
I
see their heads turn
To
and fro
As
if we are a tennis match.
Marked
by pity, not love.
This
is how you stop making eye contact
Begin
walking with your head down
And
don’t leave the house.
We
are not contagious we cry
But
nobody hears us.
Instead
they shush us to be quiet
And
demand that he inspires them.
Our
circle becomes smaller and smaller
Until
we collapse into the tiny dot of our four walls
Passing
the time by gently and together
Placing
a fence of sticks
Against
our respective hearts.

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