parenting

A Case For Babies Before Puppies

Parents Talk Back by by Aisha Sultan
by Aisha Sultan
Parents Talk Back | April 8th, 2019

When my daughter was in third grade, she Googled “hypoallergenic dog” after years of hearing me tell her that our severe allergies prevented us from fulfilling her wish for a puppy.

She created a presentation on a rare breed, the Coton de Tulear, highlighting a list of reasons why this no-shed pup was the perfect dog for our family. I found images of this small, fluffy white dog with dark expressive eyes whenever I opened my computer.

At the time, I used the classic parenting delay tactic -- “we’ll see” -- instead of an outright rejection. I knew that with two young children and a career, I did not want to take on the responsibility of another living being. My husband had zero interest in acquiring a pet. Neither of us grew up with dogs. We both come from traditional Muslim families who believed dogs should be kept outside the home for reasons related to ritual purity when praying.

Fast-forward seven years: The kids are both teenagers. My daughter’s desire for a dog hasn’t abated. And now, I’m starting to feel a little anxious about how quickly the years of child-rearing are passing. I’m more susceptible to an adorable creature that needs nurturing. I struck a deal with my spouse that the dog would stay out of certain areas of the house, and we got on a waiting list with a reputable breeder.

When we picked up our 10-week-old puppy, we settled on the name Frankie (short for Franklin D. Woofevelt). My maternal instinct kicked into overdrive.

I moved an air mattress into the kitchen near Frankie’s crate and slept in front of him, so he wouldn’t cry at night. After being shamed by more experienced dog owners for going overboard, and worrying that I was ruining our puppy, I let him spend one night alone. He cried all night, and I didn’t sleep for a second. But it only took about a week for him to adjust to sleeping soundly in his crate without a human nearby.

I reverted to familiar concerns I had when our kids were babies. I worried he wasn’t eating enough, though the vet assured me he was growing just fine. I wondered if he would ever get potty-trained. I wasn’t sure how long his separation anxiety phase would last, or when he would outgrow his teenage rebellion. Some of the things he still does remind me of the kids’ toddler antics. When I use the restroom, he sits right outside the door anxiously awaiting my return. I entice him to eat his grain-free kibble by adding little chopped-up bits of apples, carrots or green beans to it. The first time I left him with a pet sitter overnight, I typed up a page of instructions for them.

I could tell I was becoming one of “those” dog people. I was reminded of an essay a reader sent me in 2017, in which the writer warned apocalyptically that pets were replacing children in America. Several such screeds point to the rising rate of dog ownership among millennials, the increasing amount pet owners spend on their animals and the delayed birth rate among this cohort. The reader who sent me the link seemed angry -- at her kids and the culture that has encouraged pet worship -- but she also seemed sad. Would she have to settle for grandpups instead of grandbabies?

Once I scoffed at people who described their pets as “furbabies,” and now I monitor the livestream feed of Frankie’s doggy daycare on my phone. I had to stop myself from calling the center when I witnessed a large goldendoodle bullying my baby, er, dog.

It’s easy to mock the more ridiculous aspects of pet culture, such as cosmetic procedures to fix a dog’s naturally floppy ears or doggy slings to carry a pup perfectly capable of walking. But had I known the unconditional, enthusiastic love a dog offers, I would never have waited this long to get our first pup.

Although, I think when kids enter the teenage years, that’s an ideal time to think about a puppy. Frankie is way more excited to see me than my kids have outwardly expressed in years. And while raising a dog is surprisingly expensive nowadays, they never go to college.

I was surprised by the intensity of my bond with this furry creature. I’m trying to be as objective as possible here: He legitimately looks like the cutest, sweetest, most lovable dog I’ve ever seen. No offense to other dog owners.

Even my daughter, who said getting him is one of the best things we’ve ever done, said recently that she hadn’t expected me to fall so hard for Frankie. If I had gotten a puppy 20 years ago, I can easily see how I might have put off having babies for a while.

I guess we found each other at the perfect time.

Frankie turns 1 this weekend.

You’ll have to excuse me, I have a cake to order.

TeensFamily & Parenting
parenting

Free Fried Chicken for a Kidney

Parents Talk Back by by Aisha Sultan
by Aisha Sultan
Parents Talk Back | April 1st, 2019

At a family gathering decades ago, Sue Bierbaum’s husband’s uncle, a doctor, offered to check everyone’s blood pressure. It had started because grandma was struggling with some health issues.

When it was Bierbaum’s turn, the doctor wrapped the cuff around her arm and dismissed the first reading. He rechecked it several times.

“You really need to go to the hospital right now,” he told Bierbaum, then 26 and a first-grade teacher. “I’m not kidding.”

She said she felt perfectly fine. She laughed, “Uncle Val, you’re teasing me.”

“No, this is really serious,” he said. Her systolic blood pressure number was over 200. Anything over 140 is considered high.

She made an appointment a few weeks later and found out her kidneys were failing due to a filtering disease the doctors discovered. The worst part was that she and her husband at the time had just decided to try to start a family. Doctors told her it could be fatal for her or the baby if she got pregnant. A few months later, she found herself staring at a paper authorizing an operation that would sterilize her.

“I didn’t want to do it,” she said. “It was the hardest day of my life.”

More than anything, she had wanted to become a mother. She and her husband applied to adopt through Catholic Charities. She says they rejected her with a letter explaining that they had many parents who wanted to adopt who were healthy candidates. The couple appealed and sent letters from Bierbaum’s doctor, to no avail.

“That was another door closed,” she said. A lifelong Catholic, she still won’t donate there.

During a visit to her husband’s cousin in Texas, she learned about private adoptions. Their relatives offered to help with the legal process and their personal connections. In the spring of 1985, the lawyers started looking for a pregnant woman interested in having her baby adopted. Months of waiting and praying and hoping began.

On Nov. 13, a relative from Texas called Bierbaum’s elementary school. A woman working with her lawyers had delivered her baby. It was a boy, and they could come take him home. A school official announced it over the PA, and Bierbaum ran down the halls screaming with excitement. She and her husband flew down to Houston and picked up 2-day-old Ben. It was the happiest day of her life.

However, by then, she was 30 and her kidneys were nearing shutdown. In need of a transplant, her sister turned out to be a perfect match, and the operation was successful.

A few years later, when Ben was 3, Bierbaum and her husband separated; she raised him as a single parent until she remarried when he was 14. Now, after 28 years of teaching first-graders and then seven years of teaching future educators at St. Louis Community College in Wildwood, Missouri, she’s finally retired. But her kidney won’t last much longer.

A kidney from a live donor typically lasts between 10 to 15 years. Bierbaum is celebrating 32 years with her sister’s. “I’ve officially had it longer than her,” she jokes.

She’s facing dialysis and possibly years on a transplant list unless she can find another donor.

Her son, Ben Strake, now 33, had an idea. An investor in two Byrd & Barrel restaurant locations in the St. Louis area, he decided to launch an organ donation campaign. He’s created an online platform, match.mom, where potential donors can find out more information about organ donation and his mother’s story. Anyone who gets tested as a possible match in the month of April will be entered to win free fried chicken at Byrd & Barrel for life. He’s partnered with the St. Louis Blues, who play in the Enterprise Center, which has a Byrd & Barrel food spot. The Blues will announce the campaign during Monday night’s game.

He’s also getting tested himself and is willing to join a donor chain to increase his mom’s odds of finding a match. In that scenario, he would donate his kidney to a stranger in order for his mom to receive a kidney from a bigger pool of potential donors.

A few years ago, Strake connected with his birth mother and family. While they were warm and welcoming, he said the experience made him realize more than ever the opportunities and life his mom had given him when he was adopted.

“I feel like this person has given me everything,” he said, gesturing toward his mom, sitting next to him. “I need to do everything I can to try to extend that.”

He teared up, and his mom put her arm around him and kissed him.

“How am I ever going to repay you?” she has asked him.

“Live another 25 years, and we’ll call it square,” he said.

Health & SafetyFamily & Parenting
parenting

Blind, Autistic Student Shines as Musical Savant

Parents Talk Back by by Aisha Sultan
by Aisha Sultan
Parents Talk Back | March 25th, 2019

Holly Connor sang her big solo in her middle school’s production of “Newsies” this month. She played a big-voiced saloon singer, Medda Larkin, and when she bellowed the chorus to “That’s Rich,” the audience at Wydown Middle School in Clayton, Missouri noticed.

Her 14-year-old voice sounds like that of someone much older. She’s got range. There’s a polished timbre and control to it.

“Everyone was blown away by my voice,” Holly said to me, matter-of-factly. She isn’t being cocky. “I can hear everything because I can’t see everything,” she explains. Holly was born blind because her optic nerve never fully developed. Although she can make out some movement and contrast several feet ahead of her, she relies on Braille to read and write.

She’s also autistic, which can make performing onstage a lot trickier. It has taken time for her to adjust to the chaos and sensory overload that can be part of a stage production. But these challenges haven’t stopped her from participating in 12 shows last year. She’s performed in 21 different productions with various theater companies around St. Louis over the past three years. That’s on top of a full school day, playing piano in the school’s jazz band, and taking private acting, dancing and singing lessons. Her days start early and are jam-packed with rehearsals, auditions and lessons until evening.

It’s quite a departure from a baby who cried constantly and a toddler who couldn’t leave her house until she was 3 years old. Her parents didn't take her to public places until she was 7 because she would get overwhelmed.

Holly has a rare triad of blindness, autism and musical genius. The phenomenon has been written about in medical and anecdotal accounts. Her parents and voice coach describe her as a savant, who can play and sing songs by ear that she’s heard once and has an instant memory for music. She picks up new instruments and languages easily. She has also started composing her own music.

Her mother, Katie Sears, gave up her career running clinical trials for cancer research two years ago to manage her daughter’s activities and needs. She has spent hours converting scripts into Braille for her daughter, which sit in fat, bound copies on her bedroom bookshelf. She keeps an airtight schedule and packed calendar.

“Her goal is to be on Broadway,” Katie said. Just as important, music and performance have opened up a world of friendships to Holly that she had never experienced before. Her mother started an Instagram account a year ago and posted daily videos in which she documented Holly’s days. It gave students at school a way to get to know her and feel comfortable talking to her.

Her stepfather, Titus Sears, relocated their family from Seattle for a job with Enterprise. The St. Louis region has embraced Holly with her special needs and gifts in a way the family never experienced before, her parents said.

“We are making as many open doors as possible for her,” he said.

When Holly was 4 years old, her parents took her to China for a seven-week experimental stem cell treatment that cost $75,000. Since then, Holly has gone to Panama for a similar stem cell therapy and will be returning again next year for a week. Her mother says she has seen a significant reduction in her daughter’s autism symptoms and improvement in her sight, although the treatment has not been scientifically proven to work.

Her mother stays backstage with her for every production. There have been times when she has had to calm Holly down 30 seconds before she has to go on stage. Once she even fell off the stage because she didn't have a buddy to guide her. To watch from the audience, though, it’s hard to tell that this young performer is any different from her peers.

That is, until you hear that exceptional voice.

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