A Quarantine Miracle

Today’s blog post is just an exciting life update from this month: I got a new cousin!

Due to quarantine, our family would have to get creative in the way that we could celebrate this newest addition. At the very start of the pandemic, back in April, we held a unique gender reveal. Through a socially distanced family Zoom call, we all gathered to find out the gender. The reveal involved cupcakes that would either have blue or pink icing inside.

Contrary to my prediction, the cupcakes indicated that the baby would be a girl!

A few months later we gathered as a family for a beautiful baby shower.

Finally on September 12th, four days shy of her due date, my new baby cousin made her arrival into the world! Because of the Coronavirus, we were not able to meet her at the hospital. Instead, we met her a few days later once she came home.

Fellow readers, meet Emily!

She’s so tiny!
Holding Baby Emily for the first time!

LOOK…

Heading home!

HOW…

Just relaxin’!

CUTE!

All clean!

…Okay, one more!

She’s growing and getting cuter every day!

Though this year has had many gloomy days, anticipating the arrival of a new baby cousin and finally getting to meet her added joy to these past months. I look forward to watching her grow up and someday telling her all about the crazy year she was born in. She certainly is a quarantine miracle.


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Congratulations Aunt Melanie & Frank!

Embracing My Differences

Growing up I never saw myself as any different from everyone else. It was never a big deal to me that I simply sat and rolled while others stood and walked. I felt annoyed by, but quickly got used to children in public pointing at me and asking their parent what happened to me. It took me years to even realize that I am different. 

I’ve never seen the need to call attention to my differences. I am disabled yes, but I’m also just your average young adult with my own hobbies and aspirations, much like you may have. I have never attempted to consider myself as part of a “community” or felt the need to be celebrated for being “so strong” for the way that I live. 

When I randomly discovered that July was Disability Pride Month, I first felt silly that there even was a holiday celebrating people like me. But then, the story-lover in me did some research. Why is July “Disability Pride Month”? That’s because July marks the anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990. I then recalled that I had once written on my blog about this very date.

Taking a second look at that date, astonishment set in me. It seemed so unbelievable to me that only 30 years ago, people like me were just granted rights that I have today. Today I can look around and see ramps at the end of many sidewalks. Because of what people of all different disabilities fought for, I was welcomed into public schooling because they are required to have wheelchair ramp access and elevators. What I had thought of as nothing more than a social media trend, now started to make sense. 

I now claim newfound pride to be a disabled person. I came to the realization that it’s okay to celebrate me and what I symbolize. This month gave me an opportunity to recognize how fortunate I am due to the plight of those who came before me. Although I refuse to let my disability entirely define me as a person, I took this month to recognize myself and embrace my position in a community of others like me.

I can do without the cliché, restrictive saying that I am “differently abled”. I know what I am capable of. My disability adds many challenges to my everyday life, but I’ve lived this way my whole life, and it is my normal. I’ve lived everyday simply accepting who I am, but now I vow to appreciate the things that make me, me. I have brown hair, brown eyes, and I have a disability in which I use a wheelchair to get around. From this month forward, I am embracing my differences.