Pages

Tuesday, 7 November 2017

What will a new series of The A Word mean to us?


Will the rather iconic imagine of a little lad wandering down a lane in the Lake District to the sound of awesome beats be entering our world again tonight?  The second series of The A Word starts this evening and I'm eager to see what's changed in the world of autistic Joe and his family.  Plenty has changed in our lives in the last 18 months since the first series aired so I'm guessing it'll be the same for them.

As a family with two autistic boys, I can't get enough of autism inspired TV.  There's always plenty of opinion about these programmes - it doesn't show enough about autism, it's the nice side of autism or even it's too difficult to watch.  

As a parent, my heart ached when character Joe couldn't cope with the birthday parties, I relived the nerves I had when our boys first visited the paediatrician as Joe went for his tests, and I put on my armour as Joe's parents talked to the school.  It's not that we don't get on with our kids school, it's the opposite in fact, but it's emotional armour I'm putting on. 

I know some parents with autistic kids couldn't watch the BBC1 dramatisation.  It felt too close to home for them.  But surely, I wonder, isn't that a good thing?

I spend so much of my life trying to help others accept by children.  Most of this is through sharing our experiences, portraying my children as I seem them and letting people know my kids aren't to be feared.  They aren't trying to be annoying kids.  At least in the first series little Joe used headphones - our David has the iPad blasting out tunes at full volume disturbing the entire world.

Joe is, like many of the autistic characters on TV, a half way house between our two boys.   Our son Anthony has less difficulty with communicating than Joe does, but our pre-verbal son David definitely has more.  Anthony will script like Joe, David uses sound to block out the world like Joe, but they are still all different. 

And they develop differently too.  In the last year, we've learned that there are few things as important to David as routine and we've had some worries about Anthony's growing independence. Will these feature in the new series?

The week before series one aired we told Anthony, our eldest son, about his autism.  Many parents worry about when and how to tell their kids about their diagnoses.  I've read that Joe becomes aware of his autism in this series and this will be yet another heart pulling moment for many.  We told Anthony because he had noticed, not only that he was different to others, but he hated himself for it. There was not doubt it was time for him to know. And he took that information and owned it - to my sheer delight.  How will Joe cope I wonder?

The family on The A Word will undoubtedly have similar and different experiences to our own. Joe, their autistic child, may share traits with our boys.  We may laugh at some recognisable situations and cry at others. But ultimately, I hope, the show will do what I try and do.  It will share what it can be like for a family with autistic kids with a huge audience.  An audience that will go through the lives of this family over the next six weeks and hopefully coming out the other side a bit more knowledgeable, a bit more aware and a bit more accepting.





4 comments:

  1. Hope you enjoyed it - I've still got to catch up! I did enjoy the first series though and I also hope it leads to more understanding x Thanks for joining #TheMMLinky x

    ReplyDelete
  2. I really enjoyed it! It made me go through the whole range of emotions and I do find it difficult to watch at times like when the parents were role playing telling Joe about #autism . I also
    Struggle with this. I love how #autism is being brought more and more into the mainstream. My only concern is how quickly things happen but it’s a drama if it went real time people would be bored rigid! Thank you for linking up to #ablogginggoodtime 🎉

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have taped it, going to wait until a few episodes in and see what people think. The first series annoyed me (even though I could relate to a few parts) so I am waiting to hear other people’s views before I start watching.
    #theMMLinky

    ReplyDelete
  4. I quite enjoyed this first episode - it's nice to see Joe's mum has become more accepting and determined. I cried when they were doing the role play bit! Thanks for linking up again this week. #TheMMLinky

    ReplyDelete

I read all your comments and appreciate you sharing your thoughts with me and our readers. I welcome any feedback on my posts and you can always contact me directly. Thank you.

Follow
@rainbowsaretoo facebook.com/rainbowsaretoobeautiful Ann H on Google + rainbowsaretoo pinterest rainbowsaretoobeautiful bloglovin Instagram rainbowsaretoobeautiful