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A Life Beyond Reason

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  • A Life Beyond Reason

    This is a really good read:

    A Life Beyond Reason

    My son, August, has a number of quirks that distinguish him from the typically developing 10-year-old. He lives with cerebral palsy, is a spastic quadriplegic, has cortical visual impairment (meaning he is legally blind), is completely nonverbal and cognitively disabled, has a microcephalic head, and must wear a diaper. Moreover, he is immobile—he can't crawl or scoot around or hold himself up or even sit in a chair without being strapped in it. If someone were to put him on the floor and leave him there, he would be in the same location hours later, give or take a foot.

    At home, in the eyes of my wife, Ilene; our 7-year-old daughter, Clio; and me, he seems merely a little eccentric, possessor of a few odd quirks, as I said. We don't think of him as being different; he is August, just another member of an already quirky family. Although he cannot play with his sister, she loves him. Without being prompted, she recently made pipe-cleaner wheelchairs for her dolls and rendered her wooden doll house ADA-compliant by retrofitting it with ramps. Now the dolls wheel freely in and out. For family bike rides, we have a specially built bicycle with a Tumble Forms chair attached to the front for him to ride in. I feed August his meals (he cannot feed himself), change his diapers, place him in the supersize jogger when I go running, and put him to bed. He and I have a good relationship: He laughs at my attempts at humor, which consist of making odd sounds or putting him face-up on the rug, holding his feet and legs up high, and rocking him swiftly back and forth. He seems to enjoy my company, and I most certainly enjoy his.

  • #2
    Amazing read.

    As a Christian I couldn't help but read this in the context of God's love for us. I could see the salvation message entwined throughout the article and how this man's view of his son closely parallels God's view of mankind.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by RoyalShock
      Amazing read.

      As a Christian I couldn't help but read this in the context of God's love for us. I could see the salvation message entwined throughout the article and how this man's view of his son closely parallels God's view of mankind.

      I found the essay very thought provoking too but I had a slightly different take from yours. His was as tortured an intellectual journey as you will read but I think there is still some resistance, on his part, regarding the religious explanations for what he and his son and family have to bear. And personally I am fine with that – because it is also clear his personal experience did lead to an appreciation of religious faith. Which I can write with confidence certainly did not exist prior to the birth of this son.

      But this author didn't need to discover a love of God in order to find his son's life worth living. He merely had to love his own son. It’s important to hear voices from agnostics and atheists that say, "Life, human life, has meaning" without resorting to religious arguments that would fail to persuade their fellow unbelievers. This realization opens the door, for people like him anyway, to many questions – and to his credit he seems intent on exploring those issues.

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      • #4
        I got the first part you mention out of it, too. I'm also not making any insinuations about the man's religious journey, or lack of one.

        What I was seeing was an unintentional parallel. The concept of Christian salvation is that man is helpless to save himself, to gain entry into heaven, everlasting life. It required sacrifice from a loving heavenly Father.

        This story isn't just of a man's intellectual journey, but also of a child who is helpless to do anything himself, but for the sacrifice of a loving father (and family).

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        • #5
          Originally posted by RoyalShock
          I got the first part you mention out of it, too. I'm also not making any insinuations about the man's religious journey, or lack of one.

          What I was seeing was an unintentional parallel. The concept of Christian salvation is that man is helpless to save himself, to gain entry into heaven, everlasting life. It required sacrifice from a loving heavenly Father.

          This story isn't just of a man's intellectual journey, but also of a child who is helpless to do anything himself, but for the sacrifice of a loving father (and family).
          Excellent point.

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