Grace.AngelaHelman.PeabodyGraduation.09

It's graduation time. Going back over some older "Journey with Grace" blog posts–mining their contents for my current book project–I found this post I'd never published….I imagine that especially for families who have typically developing siblings in addition to a child with special needs, graduation time can bring some pangs of grief. The grief cycle is like that. (See my post: The Ebb and Flow of Grief.) I've had my own pangs over this issue and here's the conclusion I reached:

Every other month, as I walk families through the journey to wholeness and acceptance post autism diagnosis of their child, I say this very thing. In my own grief process I woke up when Grace was about five–after grieving the realization that she was probably not college bound. I then realized that a college degree is not a stamp of a human's worth. While more and more people with autism are going on to earn college degrees, many, such as my daughter, will not. I chose to grieve that. And then get real about what it means.

Photo: Grace with her teacher, Angela Cernyar, after graduation ceremonies at Peabody College. Taken by Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, this photo originally appeared here in this post, "The Blessings of Compassion."