Five years ago I was pregnant with my daughter. Like most parents to be, I was both excited and nervous at once. Although as a person with a physical disability, there were added complexities in the mix.
Internally I was battling questions that were fraught with fear. Would I be able to parent with a disability? Would the pregnancy be too hard? Would people judge me? Could I manage? At times, my head was a whirlwind of anxiety.
I have a neurological condition, ‘Charcot Marie Tooth’ disorder, which affects my nervous system. I walk with a different gait, need railing to get up stairs, am in pain, fall over, and have lack of sensation. For a long time I was afraid to say I had a disability. For me, it felt like an identity that I didn’t belong to. To name it, was to accept it, and that scared me. But where does this fear come from? Why was I so afraid of being a parent as a disabled woman?
Vanessa Cranfield shares her experience of parenting a child with a disability:
I remember being given a huge pile of parenting books. In all of them, there were no mums like me. Where were any parents with disabilities? I couldn’t think of any movie or TV show that represented a disabled parent. In Australia, twenty per cent of households have a parent with a disability, so where were we?