Showing posts with label Paralympics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paralympics. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 September 2012

Glow

We did it.

My daughter and I spent a wide-eyed day of wonder at the Olympic Park, watching Paralympic athletes competing in the Olympic Stadium.

My girl, with her poor muscle tone and her tendency to tire easily, climbed three flights of stairs to get to her seat, high up in the gods. And watched four hours of competition.  

Her obsessive worries about things being “too noisy” and music being “too loud” were forgotten. She didn't mind the PA system broadcasting snippets of tunes from such varied sorts as Tom Jones, Elastica, and rather surprisingly Joy Division. "It's fine. It's not hurting my ears," she assured me, as we took part in a Mexican soundwave of a cheer rolling round the stadium as it followed the athletes racing around the track. She peppered me with questions, taking it all in, shyly copying the cheers of those around her, her volume rising from an initial whisper to a loud shout.

There were thrills, and literal spills: a Ukranian wheelchair racer tipped over as he crossed the finishing line, then decided to do a one-armed bench press with his chair a few times from his prone position on the track, seemingly just for the hell of it.

There were medal ceremonies for shot putters and javelin throwers, with the entire crowd cheering stirring anthems from countries all over the world.

Thousands upon thousands of noisy and excited spectators remained impeccably silent (as instructed by the commentator) for the visually impaired long-jumpers, who needed to hear their coach’s voice to determine the direction and duration of their run-up before they hit the board and flew through the air. We did give an appropriately huge roar of approval once they hit the sand, of course, although perhaps the biggest hurrah was aimed at the Chinese long-jumper, who whipped his bright yellow (velcroed?) tracksuit bottoms off with a deliberately theatrical flourish not seen since Bucks Fizz did Making Your Mind Up in the Eurovision Song Contest.

My girl loved it all. Especially the moment a blind runner had an angry stomp around after being disqualified for a false start. “He went before the gun,” I explained, “So he’s not allowed to race now.” She watched as his guide runner tried to calm him down, and get him off the track. “He’s not happy, Mum, is he?” she said, looking solemn, but thrilled by the drama, then adding: “He’s having a proper tantrum!!”

The shimmering Olympic flame, housed in that elegant cauldron, was right below us, some distance down, in a lower tier. My girl’s face seemed to me to be giving off a similarly golden glow.

Tactical snacks kept her happy until lunchtime, when, unbelievably, she voted for us to stay and watch the last hour rather than nip out for dinner and come back.

“I’m hungry, but I want to see it all.” That right, there, is the supreme ringing endorsement for an event from a child with Prader-Willi Syndrome and an insatiable appetite - an event so good you’ll put your dinner on hold for it.

Of course, we hit McDonald's (as she'd made me promise) as soon as the session finished. The dreaded Maccy D's is a special treat, but not as calorific as it sounds, as she has chicken nuggets and a fruit bag instead of chips.  We sat on a park bench in the blazing sunshine chatting to yet another friendly family - one of scores of similar sociable encounters with strangers throughout the day.

We walked a lot. We talked a lot. She clutched her programme to her chest and had a nap on the final train leg of our journey home.

That evening, she hit her pillow with a thump, worn out but happy. I shut my daughter’s bedroom door, and as I turned and walked down the stairs, I heard her call out.

“Mum?”
“Yes, sweetheart?”
“I am EXHAUSTED.”

I smiled to myself, and called back that she had better get some sleep then. I received a muffled giggle in reply.

A day that ends on a giggle is a good ’un. This was more than good. It was spectacular, and I don't think we'll ever forget it.


Video is Elastica - Connection.

A huge thank you to Martin Simmonds (@martsimmonds) and his lovely family for kindly putting us up the night before and saving us having to catch an unfeasibly early train. 

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Thursday, 30 August 2012

Spasticus

Orbital and the Graeae Theatre Company (made up of actors and musicians with various disabilities) performed a version of Ian Dury’s Spasticus Autisticus at the Paralympic Opening Ceremony last night. It featured excerpts of a Brief History Of Time read by Professor Stephen Hawking's voice (who was there in person and donned a pair of Orbital ‘torch’ glasses).
It was amazing, especially when you think how controversial the song, originally written in 1981 for the International Year Of The Disabled, has been: deemed by many to be “too offensive”* (*translation: too in-your-face, defiant, and uncomfortable).
Also in the stadium was a giant Mark Quinn statue of the disabled artist Alison Lapper.
Earlier, the GB team had tucked their ATOS sponsored lanyards into their tracksuits as a pointed protest at the company which is currently carrying out the Government’s widely-lambasted disability assessments that have caused misery and pain to so many disabled families.
Britain’s first Paralympic gold medal winner, 84-year-old Margaret Maughan, lit the petals of Thomas Heatherwick's stunning Olympic cauldron from her wheelchair.
At its peak, Channel 4's coverage of the ceremony attracted 10.9 million viewers.
My daughter, who has a rare chromosome disorder called Prader-Willi Syndrome, was just too tired to stay up, but the whole shebang is recorded, and today we’re going to watch it together.
Then next week, thanks to us lucking out in the prize draw at her special school sports day, we're going to the Olympic Stadium to watch the athletics.
Tonight's ceremony made me more proud than ever to be the mum of a disabled child. It made me proud to stick two fingers up to any idiot who thinks she’s somehow ‘less’ than anyone else.
As Stephen Hawking said tonight: "There is no such thing as a standard or run-of-the-mill human."
“Hello to you out there in Normal Land
You may not comprehend my tale or understand
As I crawl past your window give me lucky looks
You can read my body but you'll never read my books
I'm spasticus, I'm spasticus
I'm spasticus autisticus"


EDIT: Video of the track that stopped me in my tracks (now up on You Tube). If you want to check out the Ian Dury & The Blockheads' original, click on my previous blog post Ripples.

Friday, 29 June 2012

Winners

I don’t normally win things.


I do know three people who independently won around £100,000 each from the National Lottery, the bastards. But me? I don’t normally get a sniff of as much as a box of choccies in a raffle.

Yesterday, this fact changed. I did win something. Something quite special.

A week or two ago, I filled in a letter that my daughter brought home in her school book bag, then promptly forgot about it. 

Yesterday, someone from the school rang me, with that obligatory opening sentence: “It’s nothing to worry about...”, always uttered early on in the conversation so you don’t think your child is a) mortally wounded or b) has burnt the school down.

It turned out that the slip I’d returned, entering a prize draw, had won me and my daughter a day out that I have a feeling we’ll never forget. Two tickets to watch the athletics at the London 2012 Paralympic Games in September. Oh, and two travelcards, too. Apparently, special schools across the country have been allocated lucky draw tickets to the Paralympics, and we had the luck of this particular draw. 

It was only a few days ago that I was writing about my girl’s Olympian efforts at her special school’s sports day. Now she’s going to get to see some Olympic athletes in action. And she’ll know that all of them have some form of disability. A bit like her. This makes me want to hug Sebastian Coe, and believe me, that’s a sentence I never thought I’d utter.

Of course, my name-drawn-out-of-a-hat triumph deserves an apposite song. I've picked Muse’s offical London 2012 song - Survival. We are all going to be sick of this, I know. But for now, it fits my surreal and overblown joy. And, when it gets going, it's properly bonkers.

Video is Muse - Survival