Five years ago Isabel was getting very excited about life. Her son David was about to bring his three children to live in Australia and her husband Jim was about to retire. The couple had just downsized and moved into a small flat and she was looking forward to a bit of grand-mothering and a lot of travel around the country. At 56 she was ready to go part time at work and live an entirely new life.
Then at four in the morning the police knocked on her door. David had died from a heart attack. His wife had died from epilepsy only nine months before so the children, now orphans, had been alone in the flat with their father for six hours before being discovered.
Shocked and in grief, Isabel and her husband Jim jumped on a plane. They picked up their three grandchildren from foster care and brought them home to Australia. They had met David, Edward and Teagan before and often spoke to them on Skype, but the grandparents had to comfort and care for three traumatised and devastated children that they hadn’t seen for some time.
Soon after the children had been squished into the flat Isabel realised her life was going to be more difficult than she imagined. The children's behaviour was challenging, especially that of the three year old Teagan who hardly spoke and was often hard to calm down. Isabel took her to a doctor who diagnosed Autism. She then had the boys assessed and learnt all three children had undiagnosed Autism Spectrum Disorder, ADHD and a chromosomal disorder. Conditions she hadn't even known existed and conditions that need high care and much attention.