MamaScarlett- oh, absolutely. I agree fully that the attitudes we convey to our children should not be those of hopelessness and negativity- and that mindset won't only come across in our words but also in how we act.
I also think it's important to note that parents will come to forums like this when they need to express certain feelings about this disease (this is true about any health condition) in order to have an outlet among others who understand, and to help them be able to NOT express it at home around their children.
So MANY times people may see parents appear 'negative' etc, they may only be seeing a small slice of us- not how we present ourselves to our families and everyone we know IRL. I know in my case, these online forums are my main place to talk about CF at all. It's not really a topic of conversation at home at all except when one of the kids bring it up, when fundraisers come up, or in practical terms- appts, whatever. Treatment times are not a discourse about the disease. Emily is not the community poster child for cf, our family lives don't revolve around it, and I strive to give her as much normalcy as her health will allow.
Re harsh realities... My daughter was told she was going to die at the age of 9 by a CLASSMATE. That took a lot of damage control by me and our clinic social worker to repair to any degree. My son read educational materials provided by our accredited CF center at the age of 11 and 12 when emily was diagnosed, and went online and read REPUTABLE information, not crazy out of date stuff and saw the life expectancy, heard the word fatal when he learned about the disease in an up to date genetics unit in science class at the age of 13, has seen the great strides fundraising videos everyone plasters on FB this time of year featuring little children who have died not back in the sixties but NOW. It's the reality of the disease and they weren't given the very harshest of details by me.
I also think it's important to note that parents will come to forums like this when they need to express certain feelings about this disease (this is true about any health condition) in order to have an outlet among others who understand, and to help them be able to NOT express it at home around their children.
So MANY times people may see parents appear 'negative' etc, they may only be seeing a small slice of us- not how we present ourselves to our families and everyone we know IRL. I know in my case, these online forums are my main place to talk about CF at all. It's not really a topic of conversation at home at all except when one of the kids bring it up, when fundraisers come up, or in practical terms- appts, whatever. Treatment times are not a discourse about the disease. Emily is not the community poster child for cf, our family lives don't revolve around it, and I strive to give her as much normalcy as her health will allow.
Re harsh realities... My daughter was told she was going to die at the age of 9 by a CLASSMATE. That took a lot of damage control by me and our clinic social worker to repair to any degree. My son read educational materials provided by our accredited CF center at the age of 11 and 12 when emily was diagnosed, and went online and read REPUTABLE information, not crazy out of date stuff and saw the life expectancy, heard the word fatal when he learned about the disease in an up to date genetics unit in science class at the age of 13, has seen the great strides fundraising videos everyone plasters on FB this time of year featuring little children who have died not back in the sixties but NOW. It's the reality of the disease and they weren't given the very harshest of details by me.