Friday, October 3, 2008

Dare to Live a Life of Adventure



I can remember biting my nails down to the stubs when my 15-year-old daughter went on a mountain climbing expedition in British Columbia, scaling frighteningly high peaks with other equally hardy members of Outward Bound. My nails got a little bit shorter when she later battled the Dumoine River on a whitewater canoe trip. And then again when she eschewed skiing in favour of snowboarding. On moguls. At night. I guess I should be grateful bungee jumping "from the skid of a helicopter into the gaping maw of a bubbling active volcano" isn't on her 'Top 30 Things to Do Before You Hit the Big 3-0' list.

Of course, I want my grown children to know one thing: life is meant to be an adventure, not an endurance test, or a game of mere survival. So one part of me is thrilled when they dare to seize the moment, inviting risk, change, and possible failure into their lives. This is every mother's nightmare, and yet every mother's dream for her children.

Over the years, I tried not to discourage my kids' desire to push the envelope, even when my motherly instincts were on high alert, and all I wanted to do was go back in time, back to a time when they were never out of my sight. But children who choose to colour outside the lines often show a greater than average amount of creativity, imagination, and courage. So, more often than not, I lifted my chin, threw back my shoulders, and learned to applaud their walks on the wild side. Besides, ever-so slightly dangerous sports were a perfect outlet for the adventure-seeking streak in them.

There is now an unprecedented array of activities for thrill seekers - and for people with disabilities, there are plenty of opportunities for experiencing high-challenge sports. According to AccesSport America, whether it's soccer, or skiing, water sports, such as "windsurfing, kayaking, rowing/sculling, outrigger canoeing, surfing, water-skiing, or kite sailing, or rock/wall climbing, tennis, and cycling, the aim is to create higher function and fitness for children and adults of all disabilities through high-challenge sports. Programs are designed to promote each person's highest physical and athletic potential while cultivating social and emotional well-being. They seek to create a community where differences are diminished, blurred and often erased."

As I watched a news report about a ski program for children with Down syndrome, autism, etc., and read about a man with Asperger's who swam across Lake Ontario, and the three men with autism that scaled Wales' highest mountain, it got me thinking about what it takes to climb a mountain, battle raging rapids, or windsurf across the water at full speed.

Aside from the joy and sense of accomplishment they derive from mastering a new skill, adventure seekers of all abilities experience the high of constantly pushing beyond one's supposed limitations. They are living their lives with gusto, and doing it from the heart. Sure, it's a cliche that life is not a dress rehearsal. This is the main event, etc. But people of all abilities just want to be included in this joyride called life. Life is short. So, as for me, I'm kicking up my heels, strapping on my skiis, and paddling through thrilling rapids. Yeee-ha!



8 comments:

Anonymous said...

I believe that a parent’s job is NOT to keep their child from making ANY mistakes … only catastrophic mistakes.

Via this ideal-way blog, maureen lee, you personalize the fact that each new day should be viewed as a new opportunity… which new opportunity we can, and should, extend to those persons with disabilities.

Wm. Shakespeare got it right when he penned:

"There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries."

Carpe diem.

Anonymous said...

if we don’t watch out, our mothering can become smothering.

every parent should strive to bring up each child to be the best Jane/John that GOD made them to be, and NOT the best Jane/John that YOU think they should be.

congrats on subordinating your mothering instinct to allow your grown child to live his/her own life, to his/her full potential.

Maureen Lee said...

Thank you, Gordo & Yvonne, for your insightful comments. I agree, Gordo, that as parents, it is our job to encourage our children to seize the day (without making catastrophic mistakes!). And we can, and should, extend the same opportunities for growth, freedom, and joy, to those with disabilities.

As AccesSport America said, there are no boundaries to what our children can do, so Yvonne, although it's sometimes not easy, we must set aside our own agendas and allow them to live their own lives, to their full potential!

Anonymous said...

Indeed, maureen lee, life IS meant to be an Adventure.

And, there is NO substitute for Experience . . . the Teacher that Gives You the Test First and the Lesson Afterward.

Maureen Lee said...

Thanks, Pierre, for your wonderful definition of 'experience'! ("the Teacher that Gives You the Test First and the Lesson Afterward.")

Fay said...

Hello Maureen, I commend you on the wonderful and nobel job you have done with this blog and Ideal-Way.ca!

I have finished my review of "Just Show Up" and I'm very happy to inform you that you have been added to Blogging Women.

I want to thank you for sharing your blog with me and now with the many readers of our directory.

It's my honor to add another quality women's blog to the directory.

A big pat on the back for you!

Maureen Lee said...

Thank you, Fay, for your kind words - and for adding Just Show Up to your blog directory.

'Blogging Women' is a wonderful opportunity for women to connect with one another and share information and much-needed support!

Anonymous said...

How appropriately wonderful that Jenn Lee and Pau Abad have accepted “handing over the reins of Just Show Up” from Maureen Lee!

Each of these dedicated Ideal-Way volunteers meets the qualifying criteria: “exceptionally talented”. The synergy from their individually different backgrounds and perspectives will surely deserve continuing widespread interest in this great blog. I can hardly wait.

Thank you, kind ladies, for bringing an inspiring Christmas gift to Ideal-Way, its clients, and to loyal followers of “Just Show Up”. Carpe diem.

Don Yeo, CEO
Ideal-Way.ca

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