Meet Louise, My 4-Month-Old Daughter With Two Arms, Two Legs and One Extra Chromosome

She is my daughter. Louise. She is four months old, has two arms, two legs, two great chubby cheeks, and one extra chromosome.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

I wrote this short piece as a rant/sob-fest, after a few comments that are all too familiar to me were made this morning during a routine medical exam for my daughter Louise. Over time, you get used to it -- you tell yourself that these are simple mistakes, that you need to harden yourself -- but, sometimes, enough is enough. I have asked myself what I could do to make myself feel better and maybe to stop the same thing from happening to others or to stop it from happening to me as often. I wrote this post and made it open to all of Facebook.

I would like to believe that this will put an end to the topic of my daughter's difference, and that I will no longer have to explain it. I know too well that this isn't the case. But if it could change just a few opinions...

This is my daughter. Louise. She is 4 months old, and has two arms, two legs, two great chubby cheeks, and one extra chromosome.

2015-06-09-1433871039-7471465-louiseoriginalparentsphoto.jpg

Please, when you meet someone like Louise, do not ask her mother, "Was it not detected during pregnancy?" Either it was, and we can assume she made the decision to keep the baby, or it wasn't and the surprise was great enough that there's no need to revisit it. And what's more, every mother has an annoying tendency to feel guilty about everything and anything, so an extra chromosome that went undetected... I don't need to tell you.

Don't tell her mother, "It's your baby, despite everything." No. It's my baby, period. And "Despiteeverything," that's an ugly first name. I prefer Louise by far.

Don't tell her mother, "What a little Down syndrome child... etc." No. She's a 4-month-old child who is suffering from Down syndrome, or who has Down syndrome, if you wish. This 47th chromosome isn't what she IS; it's what she HAS. You wouldn't say, "Oh what a little cancer sufferer... etc."

Don't say, "They are like this, they are like that." "They" have their own personality, their own body, their own taste, their own journey. They are as different among themselves as you are from your neighbor.

I know that when we don't see it, we don't think about it, but words matter. They can comfort or hurt. So, think about it first for just a second, especially if you are a member of the medical community and wear a white, pink or green shirt.

I do not usually make my status open to everyone, but for this post, that will be the case. You can keep it going and share it if you wish. Because there are 500 new "Louise's moms" every year whose days are ruined by unkind words. I know that they aren't meant to hurt. Knowing that is enough.

This article was originally published on HuffPost France and was translated into English.

Also on HuffPost:

Quotes About Motherhood

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE