Every Father's journey will be different as every child and personal situation is completely different. In my case there has been very few positives as Lewis is so severely disabled, but this won't be the case for everyone. I just want to make other Fathers aware what it might be like, and what challenges they may experience during their journey. I never had another Father make me aware of what the future might entail when Lewis was disagosed, and I have had to find it all out myself as I have gone along. I would have really benefited from another Father speaking to me and giving me their experiences of what challenges there may be ahead.
I just want to make it crystal clear to any Father who is reading this that this is totally my experience of what it's been like for me, it doesn't mean that it will be the same for you, and please don't read this website and think there is no hope, there is always hope. If any part of this website can prepare another father for the challenges they may face in the future then it would have served it's purpose.
As a rule Men don’t normally or freely speak about their feelings and emotions (They feel it's a weakness, where it is quite the opposite!). It’s just the way it has always been (it is slowly getting better though with more awareness surrounding mental health). Men are often told to “man up” or just decide to put on a “stiff upper lip” and pretend that everything is alright for the fear of what their family, friends and others may think of them. This for me is a stone age way of thinking and it has to change. Men have feelings and emotions as well and they can really suffer badly with their mental health for long periods of time, and in lots of cases forever. They say “It’s ok not be ok” and this is very true, there is only so much a human being can endure until they break!.
I feel I have gained a great deal of knowledge about the extreme and ongoing challenges it takes to bring up a severely disabled child, and about all the countless obstacles which parents face. No one can prepare you for the journey you are going to take or continue to take, but if I can help or support just one father who has gone through or is going through what I have then it will be worthwhile spilling my guts!.
I’m going to be brutally honest and list absolutely everything I have been through and continue to go through as a father of a disabled child. There is no point in pretending it is easy, it isn't!. It's the hardest thing a father will have to go through in their life. Those who say it gets easier with time are completely wrong, it doesn’t!, it gets harder and more challenging and upsetting as the years roll by.
If one other father reads this website and realises that it’s ok to have the same or similar feelings and emotions to me then it would have served it's purpose.
When we were discharged from hospital in Feb 2003 we had no professional support in regards advice, counselling, or what to expect. We had no warning of the massive life long impact his condition was going to have on Lewis, and how it was going to change our lives forever in so many different ways. Our world was literally turned upside down from that day onwards and our lives will never be the same again.