I always felt like being an introvert like I am was such a disappointment to everybody, particularly my mother. She tried so hard to get me to socialize with other kids, and it almost never worked.
We tend not to think of kids with learning disabilities as "disabled", but if you can't speak normally, or read normally, you feel far more different from the people around you than you really are.
I remember when I was five, and my sister was two, my mother took us to the nursery at Galloway, so the rest of the family could attend church in peace. Jim Wilkerson and Jim Moffett were already in there running around like they owned the place, knowing exactly where all the toys were and how they worked. My sister was over with the toddlers, organizing a group of ten, planning a day when they'd all wear the same color pull-ups and the rubber pants with the lace ruffles on the bottom.
I don't remember who the other women were, but my mother was talking to Mrs. Keyes and pushing me out in the play area, pretending I wasn't resisting.
"I k...., I Ka...., I k-k-k a, I can't go over there!" When I'm nervous, my words don't come. They especially didn't when I was little. Normal stuttering, I don't mind. I'm older than Moses now, and I'm used to it. Those times when the words just won't come though, when I can't get past the first two or three syllables without having to start over, even now, that makes me feel inadequate. When I was little, it made me feel like an alien.
I looked up at my mother, doing my best to plead with my eyes without actually crying. Crying would just make it worse. "Please take me home," I thought. "Please, please, please take me home." I tried this playschool thing. I really did. I wanted to be a good boy, but my words broke, and now I'm gonna cry, and if I cry, what's next? Will I wet my pants too? "please take me home. Please, please take me home."
One of the things that started to drive a wedge between my mother and me was that she pushed me to the very limits of my disability. It was absolutely the right thing to do. Without it, I would have remained hidden where it was safe forever and never sought out ways around my disabilities. It separated me from my mother, though. She was no longer the place for safety and comfort. The only place where I found safety and comfort was being alone, and that's where I stayed most of the time for the next fifty-six years.
You really can't question a mother's love. She might have even known that pushing me beyond my boundaries might push me away from her, but it was more important that I go out and stretch my wings than staying cuddled under hers. That's a horrible choice to make, but sometimes life is about horrible choices.
You can't really tell that I stutter now. It seems like an illusion to me like I'm putting on some sort of performance. If I let my guard down, or if I'm caught by surprise, my words still break sometimes though. It's absolutely unnerving, even now. Working through my stutter conceals my shame and provides me with false confidence. When the illusion breaks, I feel dishonest, like a magician might if a curtain falls down unexpectedly and his entire illusion apparatus is exposed.
I'm sixty yeas old, but I still stutter and I'm still dyslexic. It's who I am. I learned ways to disguise it and work around it, and even sometimes make it work for me, and that I owe to my mother, who made me stay in the nursery, even when I was terrified and begged to be brought home.
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