Do you ever wake up and not want to get up? Do you ever lose your motivation and drive? Stay awake at night too late just vegging or zoning out? Snap at your spouse and everyone around you? We go about our day-to-day lives, caring for our kids, spouses, and selves handling what needs to be handled, doing the tasks that need to be done, mediating the scuffles that arise, and a host of other things. You used to have motivation to do all the things, to tackle the challenges, to meet the needs, to love others well in a peaceful way. Now you feel sad, angry, grumpy, tense, or unmotivated. So, what is going on? What has changed? Why are you struggling?

As a parent of a child with special needs and disabilities, you aren’t alone. The more parents I talk with, the more I see this common, almost universal struggle. It may not be all the time, and it can be more pronounced in certain seasons of life and circumstances. And, I’m seeing it strongly right now in the general population with the Coronavirus stay-at-home orders. Why?

One of the main reasons is grief. Grief is not only experienced when there is death, but with any type of momentous loss. This includes the loss of what was expected or anticipated in the future but will now not happen. This might be the hopes and dreams you had for your child and for how your family would look, activities they would do together, and social interaction with family friends. But the child will never accomplish those things, the family can’t do those activities, and the friends deserted you when you had a child with special needs. It might be a vacation you had planned, or a graduation ceremony and senior year events with friends that won’t take place. It could be a lost job or every bit of “extra” income going to pay for therapies and treatment instead of a night at the movies or a vacation.

Grief has five stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. These stages aren’t linear, so just because you dealt with anger yesterday that doesn’t mean you’re done with it for good. No, you can go through the stages repeatedly and can bounce back and forth between different stages. You may stay in one stage for a while or you may experience all of them in one day. A participant in one of our group’s Hope & Healing Workshops once commented that they felt like they were in the tumble dry cycle of a clothes dryer; that sums it up perfectly.

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Source: Special Needs Parenting- Key Ministry