Acceptance is a Choice

Acceptance (noun), defined by the English Living Dictionary as; 1. The action of consenting to receive or undertake something offered. 2. The process or fact of being received as adequate, valid, or suitable. 3. Agreement with or believe in an idea or explanation. 4. Willingness to tolerate a difficult situation.

Acceptance is a word that has several meanings, and which can mean different things to different people. Within the context of a blog about children and young people with additional needs these meanings can be complex and very individual, but I found the dictionary definitions shown above strangely familiar; maybe you will too.

“The action of consenting to receive or undertake something offered…”

When someone becomes the parent of a child with additional needs, lots of things change and life will never be the same again. Many dreams and hopes are shattered, lost forever.

When James was a baby, I dreamed of him striding out to open in bat for England in an Ashes test match (in 2002 we were desperate, we still are!), finding the cure for cancer, or being the first human to set foot on Mars. All highly unlikely, but rather than them being slowly eroded, they were all snatched away in an instant, the instant when James was aged 2½ and that someone very carefully, very kindly, but very seriously said “James has Autism, and will have associated learning difficulties”.

Did we love him any the less? No, of course not. Did we reject him? No, he was still our son and now needed us to be there for him all the more. We consented to receive the hard news that James had additional needs, to undertake a lifetime of caring for him, and to dream new dreams about our future together, accepting that things would now be very different, and determined to make the best of it!

“The process or fact of being received as adequate, valid, or suitable…”

One thing that people of any age with a disability or additional needs, or their families, want is to be treated the same, viewed the same, have the same opportunities, as anyone else. For their life to be valid, to have meaning, to be received in the same way as their peers.

The reality can be painfully different, with rejection and exclusion common, misunderstanding rife, and opportunities restricted or non-existent. “Persons with disabilities, on average as a group, are more likely to experience adverse socioeconomic outcomes than persons without disabilities, such as less education, poorer health outcomes, lower levels of employment, and higher poverty rates.”

(Source: World Bank, Sept 2016)

We will always receive James as valid, he is more than adequate to us, he will forever be entirely suitable and accepted as our son, and we will not allow his life choices to be restricted by others. The situation is very different for so many though; if disabled people were a nation, they would be the third most populous in the world (after China and India). Surely they deserve us to keep fighting to change perceptions, change reality, and yes change the world for them!

“Agreement with or belief in an idea or explanation…”

The idea of a world where everyone, regardless of their ability or disability, is considered equal, is accepted as just as valid as anyone else, is viewed in the same way as their peers, having the same opportunities as anyone else, shouldn’t be far-fetched, and I don’t believe that it is.

I believe that things are shifting, that in society at large perceptions are changing. I campaign for that change, working to make a difference for those with additional needs and disabilities, especially children and young people. More and more people, including many of you reading this, are joining with me in agreement with that belief and idea. Accepting the challenge to model and demonstrate acceptance, to spread the message of inclusion and belonging, to be catalysts for change.

“Willingness to tolerate a difficult situation…”

We can choose to accept a situation or choose not to accept it but to change it. I cannot accept a society that doesn’t include disabled children or my disabled friends. I cannot accept a society that thinks traditions, beliefs, or things are more important than people. Where the sound of a child with Autism is drowned out by ‘tuts’, where love is replaced by condemning stares, those attitudes cannot be tolerated.

There are many wonderful people and organisations who won’t accept this either and who individually as well as through partnerships are changing society. There is much to do, but it has a sense of momentum that events like the Paralympic Games give a boost to. But we need to keep that momentum going, to keep pushing together for acceptance for our children. Acceptance, one word with many meanings, but the meaning that I cling to the most is the meaning of love; to love is to choose to fully and unconditionally accept someone, loving them for who they are, with all that that brings.

It seems, after all, that acceptance is a choice.

Mark

About Mark Arnold

Mark heads up Urban Saints pioneering additional needs ministry programme and is co-founder of the ‘Additional Needs Alliance’, a learning and support community. He is a ‘Churches for All’ partner, a member of both the ‘Council for Disabled Children’ and the ‘Living Fully Network’, and serves on the executive for ‘Children Matter!’ Most importantly, he is dad to James, a 17-year-old Autistic boy with Learning Difficulties and Epilepsy.