Every baby is a gift, even if the wrapping is a little different.



Tuesday, May 17, 2011

How Dare She

My kids have been sick so I was holding my youngest son and watching TV. I happened upon a Dr. Phil show. I never watch Dr. Phil but thought I'd give it a try since it was about a bully and I was bullied a lot in elementary school.

The guest was a semi-attractive woman who openly admitted bullying people. At the grocery store, on different occasions, she'd reached into people's carts and pulled out foods she thought they shouldn't eat because they were fat and she told them so. She'd told a woman in a nightclub that no matter how long she looked in the mirror she'd never be attractive and she'd do the club a favor if she went home because her ugliness was detracting from the club.  She was rude to anyone and everyone who she came in contact with.

While the above was appalling, I was floored when she admitted to hating people with disabilities. She said they should all be put in institutions so she wouldn't have to look at them. And the worst was yet to come--she said she had a cousin with Down syndrome that she thought was disgusting. She'd given money to her grandparents so they could take the child and place it in a home so she wouldn't have to deal with this cousin. At one family party she was embarrassed by her cousin's attempt at dancing so she kicked her and knocked her to the ground. She said handicapped people make her sick and she doesn't want to see them anywhere. How dare she say such things and treat people this way.

I couldn't believe this woman and her attitude toward people, especially those with challenges. To think that my son may meet someone like her made me teary. Was this woman for real? Can someone actually be this heartless toward another human being, let alone someone who has a disability? Really?

On the heels of a comment made by a kid in my ward about my own son being retarded, this show made me want to take my sweet little boy and keep him from the world and protect him from such mean people. It has never bothered me that he has Down syndrome, but what bothers me is how people treat him, or may treat him in the future, because of it. It will be my trial to control my mouth when someone is mean to my son because of his chromosome count.

Having him sometimes gives me a small glimpse into what Heavenly Father must have felt when people treated His son with such disrespect and cruelty. The Savior deserved none of the cruel treatment he received. I can only hope that somehow I will be more like Heavenly Father when I see the same thing happen to my son.

5 comments:

  1. That's sad. Makes me wish she'd take herself to a desert island so she wouldn't have to interact with anyone. :(

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  2. It's unbelievable that people think so much of themselves. Your sweet little boy is lucky to have a mom such as you who will love and comfort him when he needs it.

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  3. If I can type through my tears, I'll get this comment posted. I have felt this pain all too many times in my daughters short five years of life. And I know it will be in part my cross to bear in this life. My daughter has a seizure disorder and fairly severe autism. What I dislike most about insensitive people is how they make my other children feel. Once a "friend" of my oldest daughter told her, "Your sister's a freak. Make her stop looking at me." Needless to say, they are no longer friends and that is too bad.

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  4. Holy cow! I can't believe anyone would be so awful. I hope Dr. Phil roasted her. There is always room for more kindness in the world. Your son is lucky to have a mother like you.

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  5. It has been my experience that meanness is its own disability. Mean people are often hiding behind a mask. The mask of meanness hides their own insecurities and pain. It's likely that they mirror the world as they see it, or in other words that they treat others as they have been treated. I see that as a double tragedy. LG

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