Tag: personal growth

  • Just Me and Him

    Just Me and Him

    ”Me and Matthias, between storms. On days like this, you’d never know what we’ve been through. But I do. And I hold it — just like I hold him.”

    Every parent has moments they never forget. For me, it was the day my son, who has nonverbal autism and epilepsy, had seizures that shook our world. One ended with a frantic call to emergency services. The other with a medically induced coma. This is the story of both — and how they changed me.

    It always starts quietly.

    Matthias becomes still – unnaturally quiet. I’ve learned to recognize that silence now. It’s the kind that holds its breath before the storm.

    Then, the vomiting starts. His body rejects everything. He grows limp, like a doll – soft, heavy, unresponsive.

    And I already know:

    An episode is coming.

    The first time… I was alone.

    I called everywhere. I rang every name I could think of. No one answered. Maybe they were busy. Maybe they did not hear the phone. But at that moment – in the middle of my child slipping away from me – I realized something terrifying:

    I was alone in this.

    That’s when I called 112. I didn’t even know what to say. I just cried into the line, ‘’My son… he’s not responding.’’

    The ambulance came quickly. They moved fast – pulse check, heart monitor, epilepsy drops, temperature probes. Tubes. Wires. Words I did not understand.

    And still.. his eyes kept on rolling. No focus. No response.

    I sat there, watching him be helped and not knowing what would come next.

    That was the moment – the real one – when the weight of it all settled into my chest.

    This is our life now.

    And even though I have love, even though I have help sometimes, when these moments come.. it’s me and him.

    Me holding him.

    Me holding it together.

    Of course, they came.

    The people I tried to reach – they called back. They showed up. But those 15 minutes in between…

    That silence – of unanswered calls, of Matthias slipping away, of waiting for the ambulance to arrive – it  changed something in me.

    I was deadly scared.

    I did not know what to do – only  that I had to keep holding him, keep watching his face, keep whispering ‘’Mama’s here’’ even though I was not sure he could hear me.

    Time did not pass like normal time. It stretched out, slow and cruel.

    And in the space – in that gap between dialing and arrival – I understood something I hadn’t wanted to admit before:

    When it’s most urgent, it’s just me and him.

    Not because people don’t care.

    Not because I don’t have support.

    But because life with a child like Matthias moves faster than most people know.

    Epilepsy does not wait.

    Vomiting, unconsciousness, seizures – they don’t come on a schedule.

    And when they do.. I don’t get to panic. I don’t get to fall apart.

    I become everything.

    The voice, the nurse, the calm, the hands, the anchor.

    Later, when we thought the worst had passed, it got worse.

    The seizures didn’t stop. His body would not rest. His brain would not slow down.

    That’s when they decided to put him to sleep.

    Matthias, resting in the quiet after the storm. A moment that broke me — and shaped me.

    Medically induced coma.

    Twenty-four hours. Tubes down his throat. Numbers blinking.

    I watched as they silenced his body to protect his brain – and it felt like watching a light inside him flicker into stillness.

    That was even worse.

    Worse than the ambulance. Worse than the vomiting. Worse than the unanswered calls.

    Because this time, they took over.

    And I had to sit by, powerless, while machines did the work of keeping my boy alive.

    I watched his chest rise and fall under layers of plastic and wires, wondering if he could still feel my hand.

    I whispered prayers into his skin.

    I counted the hours until I could hear his voice again – even just a sigh, even just his eyes opening.

    I knew he was strong. But even the strongest needs rest.

    And that day, I broke – quietly, completely.

    I did not cry loudly.

    I did not scream.

    I just sat next to his bed and said his name until my voice trembled.

    Because if he was fighting silently, I needed to stay steady on the outside – for him.

  • Starting Over: Why I Created a Blog About Strength and Parenting

    There are moments in life when everything changes—and not in the way you planned.
    For me, starting over wasn’t a choice I expected to make. But life has a way of gently (or not so gently) leading us back to ourselves.
    This blog was born from one of those moments.

    Life Before

    Before Everyday with Special Strength, my days were filled with roles I had become used to: mother, partner, employee, caretaker, always holding things together. I was moving through life, doing what needed to be done—but somewhere in the routine, I had started to disappear from myself.

    The Shift

    Then came a pause.
    Maybe it was emotional, maybe it was circumstantial, maybe it was just my soul whispering, “slow down.”

    During this time, I found myself reflecting more deeply—about my son, Matthias, who has taught me so much without ever speaking a word. About what I wanted from life. About who I wanted to be—not just for others, but for myself.

    Why I Created the Blog

    Everyday with Special Strength isn’t just a blog.
    It’s a place where I can breathe.

    It’s where I can write the words I never say out loud. It’s where I honor the hard moments, the breakthroughs, the laughter, the silence.

    It’s for parents who feel alone. For mothers rediscovering their voices. For anyone navigating life when the path no longer looks like it used to.

    What You’ll Find Here

    You’ll find reflections on parenting a child with special needs.
    You’ll find real stories about starting over, letting go, and finding strength in unexpected places.
    You’ll find honesty, heart, and maybe, a sense that you’re not alone after all.

    Closing

    Starting over is hard.
    But it’s also sacred.

    And sometimes, the softest beginnings lead to the strongest chapters.

    Thank you for being here. I hope this space gives you something real to hold onto—because it’s already doing that for me.

    With strength and warmth,
    Chrisma

  • The Strength I Found Through My Son’s Eyes

    The Strength I Found Through My Son’s Eyes

    There are stories we expect to write as mothers — and then there are the ones that write us.

    This is mine.

    This is ours.


    Before I became a mom, I thought I had a pretty good idea of what strength looked like.

    I thought it meant pushing through. Holding things together. Doing it all. And doing it well.

    But then came Matthias.

    From the beginning, he challenged everything I thought I knew — not just about motherhood, but about myself. He didn’t follow the “expected” timelines. He asked for more of me than I thought I had to give — emotionally, mentally, sometimes physically. And yet, day by day, I grew.

    I grew in patience, even on days when I had none.
    I grew in advocacy, when I had to speak up even though my voice was shaking.
    I grew in presence, when I learned that the best way to love him was simply to be with him, just as he is.

    Matthias doesn’t need me to be perfect. He needs me to show up. And in showing up for him — day after day — I discovered a new kind of strength. One that isn’t loud or showy. One that doesn’t look like “having it all together.” One that bends without breaking.

    I used to think strength was about never falling apart.
    Now I know — strength is choosing to get back up, even when you’re tired, even when no one’s watching.

    And the truth is, Matthias has taught me far more than I’ve taught him.
    His way of seeing the world reminds me to slow down. To find beauty in small things. To celebrate tiny victories. To keep believing.

    He is my reminder that strength comes in many forms.
    Strength is not always about standing tall. Sometimes, it’s about kneeling down, holding on, and seeing the world through the eyes of someone you love.

    Matthias has been my greatest teacher. Through his eyes, I found not only strength, but a deeper joy — one I would have missed if I hadn’t learned to see differently”.

    And maybe, if we are willing to look closely enough, we’ll find that the greatest strength of all comes not from what we do — but from how we love, and how we see.