dimanche 16 juin 2013

Suzanne Perryman: 6 Secrets of Strong Special Needs Dads

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I recently wrote about the secrets special needs moms won't tell you, but heard from many special needs fathers that they felt left out. My husband, Zoe's Dad was my inspiration to write about what I know about special needs dads.

We are in the kitchen, my husband and I, cleaning up after dinner and talking about our day. I am telling him a sweet story about Zoe, a challenge she encountered. The story ends with success and as I happily share the outcome, I look to his face for the approval and excitement that I know he will offer, his endless encouragement something I rely on. Instead, I see he is still working through my words, that his face is still, caught in the moment when Zoe was vulnerable and unsure of her abilities, and in that few seconds, his face fills with pain and I see the heartache I know he lives with.

1. Special Needs Dads suffer silently with broken hearts. These dads are productive and they find their daily dose of happy, but that doesn't mean they don't carry heartbreak around. They had a dream that turned out differently too. I watch my husband wipe away single stray tears at unexpected moments. I can feel the grief in his quiet breathing at night, when he is awake when he should be sleeping. I feel the heaviness in his heart when we talk about the future and his fear that he won't be here for this child of ours. When other men hear him speak in detail about our amazing child, often, there is awkward silence, or even apology. Most men we know can't talk about disappointments, differences or delayed development as well as the moms do.

There are stories I have had to tell my husband, after-the-fact stories that detail the way our daughter cried, or when her eyes just filled with tears and her lip started to quiver. Stories about the way a needle hurt during a hospital stay, or how someone's words made her sad, or simply the way another child stared -- or even how an adult unknowingly made something difficult for her. In moments like these, my husband goes silent and tense, he controls his outrage, he holds back his anger. His simple response is deeply meaningful: "I wish I could have been there."

2. Special Needs Dads struggle with being the protector. This is something dads cannot successfully do -- protect their families from harm. There are too many physical forces beyond their control. Special Needs Dads also have fate getting in their face, 24/7. Fate that comes to call in the middle of the night, in the form of a physically sick child. Fate on the phone with a new diagnosis. No matter how many precautions they take, how physically present they are, how hard they work to support their family, even how hard they try, Special Needs Dads will see their child and their family experience pain, over and over and over again.

I am in the kitchen, laying out the medicine tray for after dinner, when my husband starts telling me a story about work, something I am interested in and excited about. Zoe interrupts him mid-sentence. At the end of the day her words slur with fatigue, but she wants to tell her Daddy something, so we stop and wait while she tells her story. In the middle of the night Zoe calls for me, sometimes hours after, and I will feel my husband's hand on my shoulder. I have fallen asleep in our daughter's bed, and he has awakened, and is unable to fall back to sleep. He needs me too, and waits without resentment, while I take care of our daughters first, before coming back to him.
3. Special Needs Dads are strong. Our family life can be lonely and although we steal our moments together, much of our marriage is about what is best for the health of our children first. When we consider stealing away on a weekend vacation, our hearts hurt when we think of leaving our kids behind, and what could happen in our absence or if tragedy struck, to them or us, taking us both away from our kids. Special Needs Dads choose to put their family first, and are strong about doing what needs to be done. This is the strength that fuels their dedication. Maybe not all Special Needs Dads started out this way, but there is little room for selfishness with such strength.

There are times when I overflow with worry, trying to plan and prepare for every challenge our daughter might encounter. I see roadblocks where my husband sees opportunities, and at the end of the day, when I am weary and out of words, my husband opens his arms to my daughter, she crawls into his lap and while he holds her, he talks about his own life, how he always tries his best and why she should too.

4. Special Needs Dads learn how to be life-long leaders. Leaders empower. They spearhead change, advocating and working hard to make a difference. They empower their children, encouraging them to do more and believing they can do anything. These leaders continue to learn -- about their child's disability, about their child's needs, about the world around them. Leaders are responsible; they do what is best for their families, they choose the harder path.

"Daddddddddy," Zoe calls from her bedroom. My husband walks down the hallway, answering her demand. "How was your day?" she asks eagerly. She wants details then, so my husband provides them. She asks silly questions, and he patiently answers each one. "I missed you today, Daddy, and I love you" she vows. He easily, sweetly returns her I love you, something he says to her each day. Bending down, he touches his lips to hers as she reaches up for him.

5. Special Needs Dads are vulnerable. They love actively and affectionately. Often, their touch is the sole communication, a love language they share with their children. Loving this way comes from an open heart, a trusting heart that is left open to hurt and pain.

"I miss Daddy" Zoe tells me. It is bedtime and her dad is out of town, something that seldom happens. "It's not the same, when he is gone," she sighs, laying her head on my chest. She is missing his laughter, the way he gathers her in and holds the gift of her close.

6. Special Needs Dads live life with purpose and perspective. My husband has found his work /life balance, choosing to be present for his family yet still feeling the constant pressure to provide. Daily, he embraces the simple gifts in our life: emotions, our family love, even the food we prepare together. He has learned the value of each gift in life and how important a moment in time can be, how moments shouldn't be wasted or life lived with regret.

I hug her tight and try to soothe her to sleep, knowing there is nothing I can do to fill the space her Daddy holds in her heart.

Suzanne Perryman Get Alerts

North Korea Proposes High-Level Talks With U.S.

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North Korea has proposed high-level talks with the US aimed at discussing nuclear weapons programmes and easing of tension on the peninsula, state media said.

"We propose high-level talks between the North and the US to secure peace and stability in the region and ease tension on the Korean peninsula," the North's powerful National Defense Commission said in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency.

The North is willing to have "serious discussions on a wide range of issues, including the US goal to achieve the world free of nuclear arsenal", it said, urging the US to set the time and venue for the talks.

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U.S. Open 2013: Michael Kim, Amateur From Cal, Thrust Into Spotlight At Merion (PHOTOS)

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By Nick Masuda, Golfweek

ARDMORE, Pa. -- LaRue Temple has caddied for the likes Dr. J, Mike Quick, Samuel L. Jackson, Greg Maddux and John Smoltz.

But it took a 19-year-old from California to make him the famous one.

Amateur Michael Kim charged up the leaderboard Saturday at the U.S. Open, at one point climbing to within two shots of the lead after a birdie at No. 15, and rewarded the longtime Merion club caddie with plenty of face time on television and in front of his hometown crowd.

"LaRue! LaRue!" bellowed from the galleries all over the front nine, the crowd giving the north Philadelphia native plenty of love.

"Hey, I am the one playing," Kim remembered thinking with a wide smile on his face.

Kim quickly put the focus back on himself with a birdie on No. 10. And then another on No. 12. And on No. 13. A 10-footer on No. 15 sent him to 3 under on his round and even par for the tournament.

He took a glance at the leaderboard to the right of the green just before that last putt, but not to check his score.

"It was super cool to see my name on the leaderboard next to names like Schwartzel and Mickelson and Donald," said Kim, Golfweek's top-ranked collegiate golfer who will be a junior at Cal in the fall.

But amidst the "Michael! Go Michael!" and the "Go Cal! Go Bears!" after his final birdie, there was yet more "LaRue! LaRue!"

Forget Mickelson and Schwartzel, Kim was already sharing the spotlight with a celebrity, a local one at that.

Both couldn't help but smile as they hustled up to the 16th tee -- the start of Kim's late downfall that saw him slip from T-3 to solo 10th at the end of the day, carding a 1-over 71 to sit five shots off the lead.

But despite the bogey-double bogey-bogey finish, Kim was swarmed by dozens of media members after his round, while Temple was bombarded with a flurry of questions as to how he came to carry Kim's bag.

"I never expected this, I thought it might be cool for my friends to maybe see me in the background on TV," said Temple.

Temple met Kim via phone on Monday night and in person on Tuesday.

Not bad for a guy that had planned on taking the week off.

"(It was) just being in the right place at the right time. Me not wanting to work the Open or work the carts or the bag room or anything kind of led me to the job," said Temple, who has worked at Merion since the summer of 1997 and works six days a week.

"I had tickets for the week. (I told them) 'No, I'm going to watch, I'm going to see Tiger, I'm going to hang out and have fun.' I have a friend of mine, we got tickets last August. But I'll bail (on) him for a bag."

His phone hasn't stopped buzzing since, especially from his mother, who is enjoying seeing her baby boy on TV and in photos. While he is handling his new celebrity with grace, he has one simple mission: Represent Merion well.

"Walking down the first tee, Mike's like, 'Wow, you're getting more cheers than me.' It means a lot. Plus I bartend at a bar and a lot of people that are from the bar are here," said Temple. "I've seen a lot of new faces. A lot of old caddies. It's very sweet. But I want to represent for Merion."

He wasn't the only one representing well, as Kim saw the yellow Cal shirts and hats with the big "C" on them, and those that didn't know he was from Cal got a good lesson in how Golden Bear golf has grown.

"There was a lot of 'Go Bears' out there and it was awesome to hear," said Kim, who won four times individually during the 2012-13 college season, with Cal winning an NCAA-record 11 times. He also won both the Jack Nicklaus Award and Haskins Award in the process.

"I am doing my best, just trying to make Coach Desimone's job a little easier (to recruit)."

He'll play Sunday's final round with another former college golf standout -- Oklahoma State's Rickie Fowler -- at 2:36 p.m. EDT.

Not bad for a 19-year-old with zero expectations, but he will have one task on Sunday -- helping the "LaRue!" chants drown out the shrieks of Fowler's young fan base.

After all, Temple now considers Michael Kim to be the biggest name on that list.

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David Wild: "Daddy's Song": A Father's Day Playlist With Daddy Issues

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Why do I get the feeling Kanye West is going to take his World's Greatest Dad mug way too seriously? My own great dad Stanley Wild's favorite song was not a Kanye classic, but rather "My Way" by Frank Sinatra. Today, if you're lucky enough to have a loving dad who's still around, then I say play your Old Man play whatever the hell he wants. Here's hoping my sons are reading this. But just in case it helps anyone out there, let's gather a playlist for all the dads out there. In that spirit, here are some of my own paternal favorites, and some suggestions from my extended family of followers at @Wildaboutmusic. As always, please add your own Father's Day favorites below.


DADDY'S SONG - Harry Nilsson
YOUR DADDY LOVES YOU - Gil Scott-Heron
INDEPENDENCE DAY - Bruce Springsteen
MY FATHER'S FATHER - The Civil Wars
STILL FIGHTING IT - Ben Folds
DADDY'S COME HOME - Gary U.S. Bonds
BEAUTIFUL BOY - John Lennon
I LOVE YOU DAD - James McCartney
IT'S FOR MY DAD - Nancy Sinatra
DADDY- Beyonce
PAPA WAS A ROLLING STONE - The Temptations
FATHER'S NAME WAS DAD - Fire
DADDY DON'T LIVE IN THAT NEW YORK CITY - Steely Dan
FOOTSTEPS OF OUR FATHERS - Pat Green
SOMETIMES YOU CAN'T MAKE IT ON YOUR OWN - U2 @Rusty_Olson
GONE DADDY GONE - Violent Femmes @taradublinrocks
FATHER & DAUGHTER - Paul Simon @sunnymorton
FATHER & SON - Cat Stevens @bpwesterhoof
I HATE YOU BIG DADDY - Dewey Cox
DADDY COULD SWEAR, I DECLARE - Gladys Knight & The Pips
DADDY'S HOME - The Jackson 5
MY FATHER'S GUN - Elton John
DADDY WHAT IF - Bobby Bare. Jr. with Isabella Bare
THE MAN WHO WAS THE CIRCUS - Shel @JaronLowe
BEING A DAD - Loudon Wainwright III
SATURDAY'S FATHER - Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons
DADDY'S HANDS - Holly Dunn @JoJo219
HE DIDN'T HAVE TO BE - Brad Paisley @LizaJaneToo
PERFECTLY GOOD GUITAR - John Hiatt @lowercasejames
LOVE WITHOUT END, AMEN - George Strait @clauds_garcia
FATHER OF MINE - Everclear @bradshaw1972
ANYTHING LIKE ME - Brad Paisley @2lazylabs
CATS IN THE CRADLE - Harry Chapin @treepaine
LANDSLIDE - Fleetwood Mac @TeacherTracy
SO LONG DAD - Harry Nilsson

Follow David Wild on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Wildaboutmusic

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Arianna Huffington: Sunday Roundup

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This week brought several reminders of the virtues of skepticism. On Thursday, the Obama administration announced it would "dramatically" increase U.S. aid to the Syrian rebels, citing an upgrade from "varying degrees of confidence" in April to "high confidence" this week that the Syrian government had used chemical weapons. So the U.S. inches down the road of mission creep in a civil war featuring one side backed by Hezbollah and the other by "al-Qaeda-linked extremists." With the White House citing "high confidence" about WMD, what could possibly go wrong? Skepticism also greeted NSA head General Keith Alexander, who claimed that the agency's electronic surveillance had helped stop dozens of terror attacks, and that revelations about the program have done "great harm" to our security. Meanwhile, President Obama said he "welcomed" a public debate on the issue (Really? So why'd he keep the program hidden for years?). Once again, Einstein had it right: "Blind belief in authority is the greatest enemy of truth."

Follow Arianna Huffington on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ariannahuff

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Cute Kid Note Of The Day: Three Little Words From A Boy With Autism

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Today's cute kid note is, put simply, everything.

Title: Three Little Words From A Boy With Autism

Author: Redditor EFCFrost's son who is on the spectrum

Timing: Dad saw the note on Saturday, the day before Father's Day

Why It Will Make You Cry: EFCFrost posted his photo of the note, explaining "My son has autism and never calls me dad or acknowledges me in any way. Today he wrote this on his drawing board. Best Fathers day ever!"

via Reddit

Has your child drawn or written something adorable? Send a photo, along with your child's name and age, to kidnotes@huffingtonpost.com or via Facebook or Twitter -- and it may be featured as our Cute Kid Note of the Day.

Next Cute Kid Note of the Day: Happy Father's Day, Indeed

UFC 161 Results: Rashad Evans Outpoints Dan Henderson; Stipe Miocic Tops Roy Nelson (PHOTOS)

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WINNIPEG, Manitoba -- Rashad Evans outpointed Dan Henderson in a split decision Saturday night in a heavyweight bout at UFC 161.

The 42-year-old Henderson connected with the first solid punches late in the first round, attacking so eagerly he could hardly keep his feet against the 33-year-old Evans.

"I said, `What hit me,'" said Evans, who approached Henderson with a lot more caution after that. "Only fools rush in with Dan Henderson."

The second round opened with Evans trying to take down Henderson, but the veteran quickly got to his feet. Henderson was noticeably tired in the third.

"I have nobody to blame but myself," he said. "In the third round I should have got a little more active."

Evans improved to 13-3-1 in UFC and 23-3-1 overall in MMA. Henderson dropped to 6-4 in UFC and 29-10 overall.

Earlier, Steve Miocic unanimously outpointed Roy Nelson and Steve Miocic in another heavyweight bout,

Nelson's looping rights found their mark a few times in the third and Miocic backed off a little to avoid getting caught when he already appeared ahead on the judges' scorecards.

Miocic was asked by UFC President Dana White how he felt after the fight.

"I won right?" he said. "OK, then, I'm happy."

Shawn Jordan stunned Pat Barry with a flurry of punches to end their heavyweight fight after 59 seconds. It started with an uppercut and the referee stopped it as Barry crouched, taking punch after punch.

In a UFC debut for both fighters, women's heavyweight Alexis Davis unanimously outpointed Rosi Sexton in the first women's UFC fight in Canada.

"It's a whole new ballgame," Davis said. "I can't wait to fight again."

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