Author, Caroline McGraw |
Congratulations are due Caroline as her KindleSingle debuted last week at #3 in Special Needs Memoirs and Special Needs EBooks category on Amazon! Her book price is only $1.99 and 5% of proceeds from the first month's sales go to L'Arche Washington DC, a caregiving organization that provides homes for life for adults with special needs. (To purchase the book, please visit here).
Let’s help push Caroline to the #1 spot!
Caroline has shared an excerpt from her book for caregivers, Your Creed of Care: How to Dig for Treasure in People (Without Getting Buried Alive) and Caroline is graciously offering a complimentary copy of the book via email. Please visit Caroline's blog for caregivers, A Wish Come Clear, for your copy.
Caroline’s excerpt will also be included in the next Caregiving.com CareGifters book, Love. (Details on how to submit an essay, poem or artwork to the CareGifters book can be found here).
Your Creed of Care: How to Dig for Treasure in People (Without Getting Buried Alive)
Pitfall #7: Holding On
I’m not a parent, so I can only imagine
how difficult it must be: letting a
babysitter watch your kids, letting them go off to school, to college, to the
wider world. Add to that a child with a physical or intellectual disability,
and the letting-go gets even more difficult. To let go, to trust another person
with your child or sibling? It may seem impossible. Yet, it’s also extremely
valuable, both for you and the person you love and care for.
I remember riding with my parents the
first time we dropped my brother Willie off for a respite weekend. He’d be
spending two days with a group in a local hotel, going to game nights and
swimming in the pool. I knew that Willie would have a great time. Even so, I
felt a rush of protectiveness and near-panic as he exited the car. I kept
feeling a need to check on him, to make sure he was all right. I could tell
that my mom felt this need even more than I did. Though she’d met the staff and
talked to my brother extensively and prepared long lists of Willie’s routines
and double-checked his food, clothes and medication supplies, she still felt
anxious. She’d done all she could, but it all felt so insignificant as he
disappeared from our sight. We all wanted to hold on to him as we drove away.
After that experience, I understand why
one woman I know literally left the country after her brother came to L’Arche
[a faith-based non-profit organization that creates homes where people with and
without intellectual disabilities share life in community, where I served as a
caregiver for five years]. She knew that, if she stayed within driving
distance, she’d be sure to meddle with his care. As my mother did for my
brother, this woman made extensive preparations to ensure that her brother
would be well cared-for. However, when the moment to let go of her brother’s
care came, she felt a strong temptation to hold on.
I’ve met other families who have held
on to their children tightly over the years. They continue to treat their adult
sons and daughters as children. These parents are holding on to their role as
primary caregivers, even as their sons and daughters are trying to make a new
home and new life for themselves. It’s always difficult to watch this dynamic,
and even more challenging to be a care provider in the middle of it. The adult
child in this situation has a choice: they can either rebel against their
parents’ holding on, or comply with it...and feel guilty for feeling stifled.
Most people choose the latter.
To parents, it can seem as though
holding on in this way will keep their child safe. When I watched my brother
walk into the hotel, I wanted nothing more than a promise that he would be all
right. I wanted a guarantee, even though I know better. There are no
guarantees. We can only know that, by holding on too tightly to those we love,
we are not loving them as we should. As Martha Beck writes in Steering By
Starlight: “The goal of real love is always to set the beloved free.”
We cannot wait for a time when we feel
perfectly safe to open our hands.
How can you keep loving someone who
seems to be destroying your family? And how can you separate a beloved person
from their terrible actions? I Was a
Stranger to Beauty invites readers to walk the road of loving people as
they are ... a narrow, challenging road that leads to vistas of unimagined
splendor.
Writer Caroline McGraw shares her
arduous (yet joyous) journey toward acceptance of her only sibling, Willie.
Willie, a young man on the autism spectrum, struggles with self-injurious and
aggressive behavior. Caroline and her parents do their best to offer help and
support, but Willie’s behavioral challenges continue. In the face of this
seemingly-insurmountable difficulty, can they find a way to carry on as a
family?
I
Was a Stranger to Beauty follows Caroline as she makes an unexpected
transition: from angry sibling of a
young man with autism to full-time caregiver for adults with special needs.
After graduating from top-ranked Vassar College, Caroline takes a detour from
her plan to write professionally in order to become a live-in direct care
worker at a L’Arche home. L’Arche, a faith-based non-profit wherein people with
and without intellectual disabilities share life together, is Caroline’s
training ground for forgiveness.
As she forges new relationships at
L’Arche, Caroline finds herself at
the threshold of
a new space
– a space
of simplicity, small
wonders, and overarching peace. In her work as a
caregiver, Caroline falls in love with people with special needs, and begins to
see the kind of things that only they could show her … namely, how to love, and
not fear, her brother.
Beautiful.
Thank you, Caroline.
3 comments:
Congratulations on your Kindle successs! I really enjoyed reading this post...and loved the phrase you used " would-be ‘childhood paleontologist’ who digs for treasure in people" - awesome!
Wishing you the best of continued success!
Thank you so much, Assisted Living Directory! So glad it resonates with you. :)
Assisted Living Directory, I was fortunate to connect with Caroline and am wishing her much success with her book. Thanks for stopping by!
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