How About The Special-Needs-Child Borrowers?

Do we need some sort of special-needs version of The Baby Borrowers?
That NBC "reality" show (based on one from the BBC) apparently gives teens a taste of parenting to discourage them from getting pregnant before they're fit for the job. I'm more worried about the fitness of the parents who are loaning their kids out, but I guess you take free babysitting services where you can get them.
The concept, though, makes me think of all those folks who've recently criticized the way parents of children with special needs take care of their young-uns, kicking them out of restaurants, planes and churches and ripping them on the radio for exerting insufficient behavioral control.
Perhaps some of these skeptics would benefit from spending some actual time in charge a child with special needs. Maybe they'd see that it's not really as easy as applying boot to backside. Maybe they'd develop some compassion for our children, and for those of us who devote our lives to them.
Actually, you probably have better odds of getting teenagers to stop having sex than for that to happen. But one can hope.
You'd have to make sure that the daily schedule was set up for maximum disruptiveness. A church service, followed by lunch at a place with slow waitresses, some travel with lots of suitcases and no help, then a long wait at a doctor's office. It can be like an obstacle course. It would make Survivor look like a day at the beach.
No need to restrict it to developmental disabilities, either. There are people who don't believe that things like ADHD or food allergies or Bipolar disorder exist. Perhaps some direct experience with hyperactivity or anaphylactic shock or cycling would be informative, for them and for the television audience.
There are problems with the idea, though. We all know how perverse our kids can be, behaving perfectly just when we most wanted to show somebody how they misbehave. Disrupted routine, inexperienced handlers, and all the lights camera action! should be enough to precipitate problems, but just our luck they'd save up all the bad stuff 'til they were back home.
Then, too, if we're looking for compassion and acceptance, showing our children at their absolute parent-bewildering worst isn't going to help much, either -- just make folks afraid to include them and angry about supporting them and determined to find genetic tricks to make sure they're never born. You can't make much of a case for proper handling and accommodations when you have reality-TV-volunteer bozos doing the handling and accommodating.
And that's the thing that dooms the idea the most, of course -- who among us would dare entrust our children to the inexperienced and the prejudiced? As much as that's a questionable idea for a newborn, it could be a disaster for a child with special needs. If you rarely go out because you can't trust anyone to babysit, you know what I mean.
Maybe there are folks who are desperate enough for respite that they'd consider it, though. And surely there should be no shortage of know-it-alls who are sure they could do better. Why, the producers probably wouldn't have to go far beyond our own extended families to find willing volunteers.
If not, that Michael Savage seems like the kinda guy who'd do anything for publicity.
Read more: Special Needs News | Five Ways to Use TV for Good | Dealing With Toxic People
Photo by Terri Mauro


I have commented facetiously that I would like to leave my kids with their grandparents for a weekend, just to try to stop some of the ‘you should just xxx’ comments. Not something we would ever do – therapy bills are high enough already! And my two aren’t (generally) that difficult – as long as you remember a two minute attention span, constant demand for interaction (with the youngest) and a potentially infinite attention span and strong desire to be left alone (for the elder).
If anyone was willing to lend their kids, I would love to watch this!!!
Well said! I actually can’t watch the Baby Borrowers show… It’s like watching a train wreck!
I was thinking that NBC should do a special needs version of the Baby Borrowers too! I’m glad I’m not alone. Those teens were horrible with the kids, and those were perfectly normal children. I can’t even imagine what it would be like if they had to take care of my extremely disabled son! I don’t think my son would last the day. He has a feeding tube and is on a special diet, etc. However, if they tried it with older adults, it might stand a chance. Maybe some people would stop making comments like, “I don’t think I could handle it if I had a child like that.” I just want to say to those people that they’d better handle it if it happens to them, because their child is their responsibility. You have no choice but to handle it, but you love your child just as much as you would a perfectly healthy child. Why don’t people understand that?
I personally have enjoyed watching the baby borrowers. We have to remember these are just kids thrown into this position. Ok, so it’s not real, because how many of us, thrown into a infant for 3 days, then 3 days with a toddler, then 3 days with a pre-teen, then teens…we all grow into these situations. so it’s not real! However I too wondered what it would be like to be a parent watching these clueless teenagers take care of my son with Cerebral Palsy. You think the one girl got horomonal of just putting on a pregnancy suit, she’d really have a melt down. Or the one that gave up on feeding the child because they wouldn’t take it. It’s not easy being a parent of a child with special needs but we do our best! We never give up on our children. Side glances and all, I wouldn’t trade my son, after all he’s made me the person I am today. I am a stronger and wiser mom because of him. These teens aren’t ready for typical children, they surely are not ready for a child with special needs and all that comes with that. So kiss your kids and hug them a little tighter!
I have been watching the show, and everytime that I’ve watched, I said the same thing. “Why don’t they have a child or any children on there that has a ’special need’? That would really be something to see, how they would handle the things we deal with every single day, for only a few hours or even a day.
It would have been interesting to see how they would handle shopping, and other day to day things.
Amen! I have an autistic child and a child with cerebral palsy. Let them take a crack at one day in my house. (I’d love the break but never leave the observation camera!)