Monday, November 23, 2015

Who you calling stupid?

I've pondered writing a blog on the "R" word ever since I started blogging, but always avoided it figuring it was an easy topic to keep in my back pocket when I ran out of ideas for topics to write about. Well, you know what they say, "you snooze, you lose".  I recently read the piece below on a site I follow called The Mighty and realized that I could not have summed up my feelings any better than its author, Phoebe Holmes did below when explaining the "R" word as it pertains to her daughter Maura. Maura and I seem a lot alike, and you can insert my name for hers below and the story would be exactly the same. So next time you are about to use the word retard instead of stupid, think about how stupid you may sound.


Being Retarded by Phoebe Holmes
All around me, people use the word retarded without a second thought. Sometimes, I’ll say “Um, dude, really?” and they’ll say, “Oops, my bad! But really! I was being so retarded!”
Sometimes, I let it slide. I realize that it’s a word that’s ingrained in our society’s vocabulary, and people use it without a second thought to its meaning.
But what does it mean to be retarded? Well, I know what it doesn’t mean.
It doesn’t mean not being able to choose something for lunch despite 100 choices in front of you.
It doesn’t mean not being able to find your car keys.
It doesn’t mean saying the wrong thing to a person.
It doesn’t mean forgetting your best friend’s birthday.
It’s not something to describe yourself as when you’ve spilled your coffee or tripped on a crack in the sidewalk.
It’s not something to describe your computer, car or phone.
According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the word “retarded” means –
: slow or limited in intellectual or emotional development or academic progress
For me, it’s not just any old word – it’s my daughter. My beautiful, bright, happy, loving, amazing daughter who is slow or limited in intellectual development and academic progress.
In our household, being retarded means something different.
It means not being able to fully care for yourself.
It means not understanding what the doctor is going to do to you.
It means not being able to explain what hurts when something hurts.
It means not being able to ride a two wheeler. Or read. Or ever be able to live on your own.
But ever the optimist, I also know that  in our household retarded means…
…never realizing the negativity behind the word, “retarded”.
…never knowing the insensitivity surrounded the word’s usage.
…never realizing the ignorance of people.
…never knowing how other people view you.
Being retarded also means…
…loving unconditionally.
…finding joy in the smallest of things.
…being self-confident.
…not realizing that there are limitations.
…innocence.
img_0288This is Maura.  Her diagnosis?  Cognitively disabled.  Which means retarded.  When you call yourself retarded, you’re also calling my child stupid.  Because you use the word as just that – another form of stupid.
Let’s get something straight here.
My daughter may have cognitive issues. She may have delays. She may never live on her own. Scratch that. She will never live on her own.
But Maura is not stupid.
In her own way, Maura is very smart.  Maybe smarter than us at times. She has more self-confidence than anyone I know who has called themselves “retarded”.  She is the best judge of a person’s character than anyone else I’ve ever known.
Yes, she is slow to learn things. But she is not stupid.
I know that most people don’t use the word “retarded” maliciously.  Most people I know use it in a self-depreciating way. And when I point it out, they go, “Oh wow!  I’m sorry!” and they truly feel like a heel. But the thing is, you’re still using it in the way that people who do use it maliciously use it as – to describe stupidity.
So why not just use the word “stupid” instead?  Because I know what “retarded” is.  I live with it in the form of my daughter. And in our world “retarded” doesn’t equate to “stupid”.


Read more: http://themighty.com/2014/06/being-retarded/#ixzz3sKWwPga5