
Rory’s mama is a vlogger, if you are unfamiliar with the term, she is a lifestyle blogger in video form. The cool thing is that you get to see her expressions, hear her voice and feel as though you really get to know her and her beautiful son, Rory through her posts on her youtube channel. Leigh was surprised with a birth diagnosis of Down Syndrome and the family resides in Scotland.
When I asked for birth stories to be shared, Leigh messaged me a touching video she had posted for her followers on youtube. I had a few more questions for her and she was gracious enough to answer those as well.





She looked…different. Swollen or something. Especially her eyes. Every time they have handed me one of my babies for the first time I have had different thoughts and impressions about them, and the moment they handed Harper to me I thought “Down syndrome”. I hope with all my heart that doesn’t sound dramatic, but I knew that very moment that she had Down syndrome. I glanced at my husband and that is one of the moments that will stand out to me forever where I understood what it really means to be one with your spouse. Where you can say and understand so much without speaking a word. He knew. We knew. And yet – no one else in the room seemed to know. It was business as usual, guessing the weight, excitement over a girl, then handing her to the nurse to get her cleaned up. Looking back now, it’s almost as though I can feel myself in 2 different realms. The one where I knew and the one where I had hoped I wasn’t right.
Just a short time later they came back into my room followed by an oxygen tank. I was so sad. My last baby was a NICU baby for a few days and I did not want to do that again. They assured me that she was okay, they just wanted to monitor her oxygen levels and were taking her to the special care nursey. I felt at peace about it and drifted back to sleep.
Holding Harper definitely calmed me. For the next few hours I just sat and held her. I looked her over, and I smelled that sweet baby smell, I kissed her beautiful face and told her I loved her no matter what. All the cords and the oxygen were so frustrating to me. It felt like she wasn’t really mine with all of those things hanging off of her. Something would beep and people would be in to fix her or adjust something. All I wanted to do was care for her and I couldn’t even do that. Helpless was the best way to describe how I felt. Suddenly I was hearing things about positional airways and heart defects and I kept wondering why they hadn’t seen anything wrong with her heart on the ultrasounds.
Bio: Janelle is mom to 3 handsome boys and a beautiful little girl rockin’ an extra 21st chromosome. She’s been married for close to 15 years to the love of her life. She loves reading, binging crime dramas on Netflix, drinking copious amounts of Diet Coke, and the occasional hike, because Utah is amazing! She is a firm believer that joy can be found at all times, but that it’s okay to be real while you’re waiting to find it. Follow along with Janelle on Instagram: 

When we were given the news of Oriana’s diagnosis the consultant advised us to try and refrain from Googling information. He said this was because a diagnosis of Down Syndrome now is totally different to a diagnosis ten or twenty years ago – he was worried we would read outdated information. As a child I had grown up closely with another family whose eldest son had Down Syndrome. I remember learning to sign nursery rhymes, playing with him, and going on holidays with the family – but he is now in his twenties. I still see him around the village where he catches the bus independently. I have had conversations with him about the college course he was enrolled on and his interests in catering. I remember always thinking that his parents did an amazing job of raising him in much the same way I saw them parent his younger siblings; he was always encouraged, included, and supported. Despite the twenty year age gap, I know my parents have discussed Oriana’s diagnosis with them and heard about his experience with having holes in the heart too. In fact, I think my mother spoke to his parents on the evening Oriana was provisionally diagnosed – it just seemed like the natural thing to do; to reach out to someone else who was already in ‘the lucky few’ club.
these feelings more quickly than I did and was a lot less scared about the future. I think this is due to him being someone who lives in the present much more than I do (I am working on this!) and so was able to enjoy what a perfect baby she was on a day-to-day basis without worrying ahead about what type of school she would attend and whether other children would invite her to their parties! From the moment she was born you could tell he absolutely doted on our little girl, and still now is obsessed by her and how perfect he finds her. This never changed when we were given the diagnosis. He found it easy to shower her with love. He wouldn’t stop taking photos of her and didn’t want to put her down!
It has been a process in terms of looking at Oriana and not seeing Down Syndrome. I remember being in hospital when she was about a day old. We took our baby to have her first wash and a nurse held her, showing us the best way to do it. Seeing Oriana objectively in someone else’s arms with her hair wet and slicked to her head, I suddenly saw the typical features of Down Syndrome that the consultant had seen, and I remember crying in the bathroom as I could only see her diagnosis. The more time that passes though, the more I know of ‘her’ instead of the labels given to her. The more of ‘her’ I got to know aside from the list of symptoms and ‘typical features’, the more I was able to enjoy her and move on from the fears I had. I was able to embrace the diagnosis as part of the thing that made my daughter so easy for me to love, and so amazing. Most days now I totally forget her diagnosis as her personality, perfect features, and expressions, override a list of symptoms that initially described my daughter.

