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I Am a Warrior Mom
by Julie Obradovic
There was something very subtle Oprah said at the end of the show on Tuesday
that hasn't left my mind since. It was so subtle in fact, that I actually don't
think I caught it until the second time I watched it.
Looking straight at Jenny and Holly, leaning in closely and appearing teary
eyed, Oprah called them both "Warrior Moms".
"You are Mother Warriors," she said sincerely. "That's what you are."
I stopped in my tracks when I heard it. I think I even gasped out loud, holding
my breath for a second.
"I AM a warrior mom!", I thought. "Damn right, I am! And there's no better term
to describe exactly how I feel!"
I am a warrior mom.
A few months back I wrote a piece called "Welcome to the War on Disease", a
parody of the CDC. In it, I sincerely claim our children are drafted soldiers,
the front line if you will, of the current war on disease (real and imagined).
They are mandated by law to participate, given all the same equipment regardless
of ability to use it, and casually tossed to the side if they can't fulfill
their duties. Only worse than real wars, they aren't revered as heroes, don't
receive any public recognition, don't get help for their wounds, and are rarely
compensated in any capacity for their sacrifice.
I stand by those words, and as sarcastic as it may have come across, I was dead
serious.
I didn't know I was signing my children up for a war when I had them. And I
didn't know they would be given faulty equipment just because it was easier to
do that than distribute new arms. And most devastating of all, I didn't know one
of my children would be a needless casualty.
But given that she was, that makes her a wounded veteran and a hero.
And I am her warrior mom.
When I think of a soldier, I think of someone in a neat uniform, marching in
tune with the others, trained for battle accordingly. But when I think of a
warrior, I think of something altogether different. I think of a dirty, sweaty,
crazy-haired, crazy-eyed, somewhat maniacal machine. I think of a person that is
almost inhuman, on a mission to get something done using their saber or bare
hands to plow down anything in his or her way, never ever giving up or settling
until the mission is accomplished. Warriors intimidate others because they know
what they want, they know how to get it, and they will stop at nothing until
they do. They are powered by the truth, fueled by the knowledge that they are
right. And frankly, they scare the crap out of people because of it.
And I can think of no better description of how I have felt or how I feel as an
Autism mom.
So join me, won't you?
Wear your new name proudly. We are warrior moms, and we are warrior dads. We are
warrior grandparents, warrior doctors, and warrior siblings.
And we are heading towards the final battle, carrying our wounded soldiers on
our shoulders.
We are 1 million strong.
And I am a warrior mom.
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