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The dashing, young Zach Anner |
My son, Zach, is turning thirty today and that’s a pretty significant number. One of the ones where you sit back and assess where you’ve gotten to thus far, how your accomplishments match up to the rest of the world’s and where you still need to go. No pressure, just evaluate and judge yourself and figure out how you’re going to improve on things for the next thirty or so years.
I’m the mom, not the judge, so if
all Zach had done and was going to do is sit and smile and laugh his infectious
laugh, I’d be really fine with that, as long as it met his standards for
happiness and fulfillment. But the person I gave birth to had plans and dreams
and has already accomplished quite a bit for a person his age, or any age, for
that matter, so let's go back to the beginning and retrace our steps.
It all started on a cool November
17th evening in 1984 when I was home with my 19 month old son,
Aarau, and started to feel a little back pain. I was seven months pregnant with an unknown alien in my womb who decided it would be fun to come out and get
this party started two months early. The alien would later be known as “Zach,”
and when he was unceremoniously plopped on my belly after three hours of hard
labor, (I know, only three, but it hurt!) he lifted his little head and looked
around, surveying the doors and windows, plotting his next move after realizing
his escape to this cold, light-drenched world had only landed him a few feet
from his previous surroundings. This was his first attempt to get away from me. It did
not work.
He was put in a box. I think they called it
an incubator, an especially small prison for babies planning to crawl out of
the hospital when no one’s looking and have underdeveloped lungs because of
their premature births. Weighing in at a whopping 3 pounds, 7 ounces, Zach
needed to be maintained in an artificial womb after abandoning the real one,
where he could get fat and develop like he would’ve if he’d done the right thing and been born a little
later. Now he had a heart monitor, tubes and needles sticking everywhere and
little bruises from blood oxygen tests. I wasn’t allowed to hold him or feed
him, breast milk had to be pumped and frozen, then thawed and delivered through
a feeding tube so he wouldn’t lose calories by suckling. A rough beginning by
any standards.
After five weeks in the Intensive
Care Nursery, he came home with a heart monitor just in time for Christmas,
weighing a little under five pounds. He was about the size of a very skinny
football and his brother immediately took to him, referring to his heart
monitor as “Zachy’s T.V.” and turning it off. So that was his first
accomplishment, surviving his premature birth and making it home after a long
hospital stay where he could live a normal life with his family.
Not so normal. His first year was
filled with failures to meet every developmental milestone imaginable. He also
screamed and cried inconsolably for hours on end which I later learned was an
indication of neurological damage, (no Internet in ’84) but he had such a
charming personality when he wasn’t crying and such apparent language abilities
(I think he was putting sentences together by the time he was one) that we were
able to live in comfortable denial that everything was okay and he was just
“catching up” until he was diagnosed with cerebral palsy at fourteen months.
Fast forward to 29 years later.
A lot has happened since that diagnosis.
I think Zach’s first sentence was “I want to be independent” and he’s done a
lot to make that happen. He attended college in Buffalo until he escaped to The
Disney College Program for a semester in Orlando, first time away from home,
broken wheelchairs, hurricanes, every bad and good thing imaginable. He then went
to Austin, Texas, knowing absolutely no one, and attended film school where he met friends
who produced comedy shows and webseries with him. He then posted his famous audition video and went on a reality show (Your
Own Show) and won his own show from Oprah (Rollin’ with Zach). When that show was
canceled, he immediately hosted another show (Riding Shotgun) where he traveled
across the country using suggestions and meeting people from the Reddit
community along the way. He then moved to Los Angeles for a year where he filmed
with Soul Pancake (Have a Little Faith) and his own youtube series, (Workout
Wednesdays). And along the way he made more friends, had great adventures, and
inspired people to lead better lives.
I’ve had the privilege of watching
Zach address hundreds of people in cities throughout the country where he makes
them laugh and makes them think. He doesn’t have to say much about what having
a disability is like because his advocacy is his life. He shows through his
humor that using a wheelchair and not being able to walk is not a big thing for
him. It’s just one of the many things that can be a struggle and has very
little to do with who he is as a person. But I don’t have to tell you about
that because he’s writing his own book which will be published next year (If at Birth You Don't Succeed...) and you can see it for yourself when you
watch his youtube videos.
He’s doing what we all want to do,
using his life to inspire others, changing perceptions through example, and
living his dreams by having meaningful work. And building great relationships, being
creative and doing what he loves to do most, making people laugh.
Zach is turning thirty today and I
won’t be at his birthday party because he’ll be in Austin with friends (and his
brother) at The Alamo Draft House screening the long-awaited completion of
their mockumentary webseries, "The Wingmen." His girlfriend will be baking him a
cake. There’s a lot to celebrate.
Happy Birthday, Zach! I hope I get
to stick around to see what the next 30 years hold for you. I can’t wait to see
what you do next!
Happy 30th Birthday Zach, and Happy BIRTH day, mama! So...I sit in awe of your writings (and wit). I see so clearly where your gorgeous and smart boys get their chops from. A lot of mamas out there should take a page out of your book - - you fostered the path for them with massive support, creativity and happiness. What am amazing ride it has been thus far. You must be so incredibly proud!!! And I remember so clearly, being a young girl and seeing tiny Zach in his bassinet. I actually remember, the house, the day so vividly. Cheers to you Zach!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Stephanie. And I know you're going to be supporting Octavia in whatever she wants to do, even if it isn't playing dress-up with Mom and Dad! She has got the most loving, fun, creative parents ever. So cool that you remember meeting tiny Zach! He's come a long way and I am so very proud of who all he's done with his life thus far..
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