Thursday 16 August 2012

My life story part two


When I left school at the age of 19, I went to a training course for two years called training for you to study to become a teacher aide because I wanted to become a teacher but I didn’t have the marks to go into teacher’s college.  The reason why I did two years is because when I am learning something new I like to repeat things over and for the second year I had a writer for all of my tests and the second thing happened was I moved into my Mum’s because I didn’t like going backwards and forward to each house.  I saw one of my old tutors about a month ago up at the library and it was awesome to catch up with her and what she had been doing over the last few years.  When I left training for you I started working at my old high school as a teacher aide’s assistant for two years under a programme called mainstream which is a programme for disabled adults it is a supported employment programme where the government pays 100% of your wages for the first year and the second year the government pays 50% of your wages as well as your employer pays the rest and you are meant to get a job at the of the  end of the two years but my funding ran out.  In the September that year I started working for a family friend doing her filing and shredding every second Monday morning until at the end of last year.  Also in that September of that year I started going to Bryan’s work on Friday mornings because every second Monday I went to cooking until I gave it up early on this year.  Also when I was working at my old high school, my wallet got stolen by these two boys as I was walking home from school.  I had taught one of them in the learning centre for English by correspondence.  I like expressing myself through words because my body doesn’t connect very well with my brain and it’s just easier to write because my brain still works it’s just my body that won’t work.  Over the years I have learnt to skip on the trampoline, do a tapestry, learnt how to play knucklebones, shoot hoops on my Mum’s driveway, travelled to Australia twice by myself, learnt how to swim, went to Brownies and then Girl Guides where I became a group leader in my final year at Girl Guides, learnt how to ski but had to give it up when I was 13.  I know all my strengths and weaknesses.  I understand a lot more than what people realise and sometimes when I talk I know what I want to say but can’t get out the words that I want to say.

Tuesday 14 August 2012

My Mum


Every year my Mum goes away to Bali for 3 weeks on holiday and I get to feed her cats but I get paid $10 a day to go and walk up the hill to feed them.  It is a five minute job but it takes me an hour to go and do it which I don’t mind doing.   My Mum has being my biggest support so has my Dad.  When I was little after I got diagnosed having Cri Du Chat and began speech therapy, my therispt at the time wanted me to learn sign language and Mum turned around and said that I would speak in my own time, which I did.  Growing up I was treated normally as possibility and no friends of my parents would turn away just because I had Cri Du Chat.  My Mum is a lawyer so she works really long hours but she is always there for me whenever I need her.  Her work is about five minutes up the road from where I live now which is always handy.   When I finished high school I decided that I wanted to live with my Mum full time because I didn’t want to have to go back and forth from each house and so did I, when I moved out of home early 2009 we decided on a day which we would have lunch and swap magazines so every Wednesday my Mum picks up in her Porsche and takes me out to lunch and in the weekends we go down to the market together on Saturday mornings and then I go up to their house on Sundays for lunch because I  can catch up with my stepdad Rob.  So for the next three weeks I won’t have any lunch dates with my Mum on a Wednesday but that is all right because my Mum deserves a holiday and even though I will miss her.  I have other people to go and talk to or text to like my brother, sister, Dad, my stepmum, my boyfriend, my best friend Blue, Cricket (my boss at Trade Aid), my caregiver.  I don’t think I would be where I am today without my Mum or my Dad.  My parents are wonderful and I don’t say that often to them.  Enjoy your holiday Mum because you truly deserve it.