Special Guest Blogger Series!

A word from Taylor Graff…

The reason I know Max is because he’s my boyfriends brother. My boyfriend’s only brother to be precise, so to be honest I was absolutely terrified to meet his sisters. I’m usually very calm around most people but I think everyone knows how it feels to meet your significant others family for the first time. After talking to some friends, I know I’m not the only one who is intimidated by the gorgeous sisters of their boyfriend. ANYWAY, back to Max. I remember when I first was invited over to the Burnham’s. It was because we were going to see Max play in his school’s band at a football game. I (again) was very nervous and asked Ben if his family actually wanted me to be there. I think I asked him four or five times. “YES! They want you to come Taylor you can calm down!” We finally got to his house and I remember walking through the door and Mrs. Burnham was making dinner. I first saw Max out of the corner of my eye and he ran headfirst into Ben and they both fell to the ground and started wrestling. I think that’s when I first started to calm down. Max was so full of life, and incredibly happy.

I had never met anyone with down syndrome before Max. Well, I had, but I never really had a full conversation with them or formed a relationship before Max. Ben introduced me as “Taylor, my girlfriend.” But Max started to say “Tyler, my girlfriend.” His family kept correcting him saying, “No Max, it’s TAYLOR and it’s Ben’s girlfriend.” All night…back and forth…just like Grace said…Max was a ladies man. He would sit closer and closer to me and put his arm around me and try to kiss my cheek. Ben would get “mad” and push Max away and threaten to call Max’s girlfriend Emma. Max would giggle and just sit closer to me. That was the start of me loving my trips to the Burnham’s. I have never felt more welcome thanks to Max!

How can you resist his sweetness?

How can you resist his sweetness?

Things I love about Max and will always remember

-I love telling my parents the crazy stuff Max says. They’ve never met him but they want too someday because of all the good news I share about him. Like that one time Ben and I were driving home from the Pro-Life steak dinner last year, we were stopping to get gas.
Max: “Ben can we go to taco bell?”
Ben: “Max you just had a steak dinner you don’t need Taco Bell.”
Max: “Oh puh-lease, we need drinks!”
Now whenever I want to go somewhere and Ben says no, my favorite thing to do is quote Max. “Oh puh-lease, we need drinks!”

-Ben and I are long distance (10 hours by car) so we have to skype a lot over the summer. One time we were on skype and Max walks in, dressed in shoulder pads, an army jacket, and a helmet. He sits down and pushes Ben aside and lays on his side and looks at me. “I wear this for all my girlfriends.” He says. Laughter ensued.

-My absolute favorite thing is knowing Max will only come up the stairs or come to dinner or do anything if my name is mentioned.

-At the last steak dinner Ben said “Taylor won’t kiss me unless I get a haircut.” Max looks at me and winks and says “I got a haircut.”

There are so many more stories that I can’t think of, but I think the reason I love Max is because he loves like Christ loves–without judgement. I have never met anyone with so much joy in my life. I have never felt so welcomed in a home, not just by Max but his whole family. I know it’s hard accepting that one of your siblings is getting older and dating (trust me I have a little brother) but I’m really happy Max accepts me, even if it’s just because I’m a girl 😉 Max makes me feel very wanted and very appreciated, and I don’t think I would get that anywhere else. I’m really happy Ben chose me, because if he hadn’t then I wouldn’t have met Max. No matter what happens in the future, my life is forever changed by him.

The Prince of Our Hearts

As mentioned previously, last spring Therese was in her high school’s production of Les Miserables. She was fantastic, she stole the show as Madame Thenardier. Of course she fell in love with the theater…and so did Max.

Madame and her adoring fans...Max dressed up for the arts with his cape and barret.

Madame and her adoring fans…Max dressed up for the arts with his cape and barret.

Backstage after a performance of Therese's fall play, "The Hustle"

Backstage after a performance of Therese’s fall play, “The Hustle”

This past fall Max’s middle school put on Rodgers and Hammerstein’s production of Cinderella. Max was ecstatic when he was asked if he wanted to be a part of the cast. Of course he wanted to be in the play!! When they asked him what part he wanted, Max told them that he wanted to be the prince. While Max is clearly theatrical, his teacher pointed out that it was his first time in a play it wouldn’t be fair to the other kids if Max got the lead. Max agreed and his teacher came up with the perfect role for him– the brother of the prince. Max got to be a prince after all! He even got to do a waltz with the rest of the royal family!!

Prince Max! So handsome!!

Prince Max! So handsome!!

And just as we do for Therese, Max got visitors backstage after his performance.

Prince Charming with his girlfriend Emma

Prince Charming with his girlfriend Emma


Mary is so proud!

Mary is so proud!

Max can’t wait until next year when he is in high school and can be in plays with Therese!

What Max Means To Us

October is Down Syndrome Awareness Month.   We thought this would be a perfect opportunity for each of us to share what Max means to us and how he has totally changed the world as we know it!

Leigh

Max is many things, he is a son, a brother, a friend.  One thing I never expected him to be was my teacher.  But that is exactly what this little man has been in my life!   He has taught me that family is the most important thing in this world.  The joy on his face when his “whole family” is home totally melts my heart.  He has taught me that with patience and perseverance any obstacle can be conquered.  The most important lesson he has taught me is how to love.  Max loves in a no questions asked, no judgments passed, in a one hundred percent unconditional way!  I am beyond grateful to have the One-in-a- million-Max in my life!

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Kelsey

Words really can not describe the way I feel for my brother Max. It’s difficult living so far away from him. He has a smile that melts my heart. Whenever I am down I call him to cheer me up. I’m very excited to see what an awesome uncle he will make! (That’s right world, there is a baby Shields due to arrive in March!!!)

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Grace

My Max. What to say… any attempt to explain what that boy has brought into my life will fall short. Max is truly the best, most unexpected and most undeserved gift that God has given me… He is also the most needed of all the gifts that have been placed in my life. Max has taught me so much about love: about how to give it, and also how to receive it. Max gives everything that he has to the people around him… he uses his entire capability…when he can’t do something, he joyfully allows us to help him. Max has shown me how to give my all, to accept my own limits and find joy in knowing there are people in my life who will help me when I can’t get by on my own. Also… DANCING. Dancing will always bring laughter. 🙂

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Mary

I honestly can’t even imagine what my life would be like without Max. He is the glue that holds our family together… a very, VERY strong glue. I also think he has a sixth sense. He can pick up on what kind of mood I’m in, whether I’m happy, sad… well you get it. He knows how to cheer me up and make me laugh, he also knows when to just give me a hug. I can’t think of a time when I was upset about something and Max couldn’t make me feel better. He’s so smart, witty and goofy. I love my Maxxy, and I’m lucky to have a job close to home and that I get to be around him so much more than my other siblings 😉

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Ben

Max is my only brother, and he means the world to me.  I don’t know what I would do without him.  Seeing him just being who he is everyday, has taught me to find true joy in life and not worry about things I can’t control. I love the kid!

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Therese

Max is my best friend. He is always there for me and always ready to make me laugh. I love him with my whole heart and always will!

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Yard Work

I would like to welcome, my youngest sister Therese to blogging world!  Here is her first, of hopefully many posts.  As the sibling right above Max she offers a unique perspective and is his number one partner in crime!  If any of you have ever seen the children’s show Max & Ruby, that basically is the relationship that Max & Therese have!  Although our Max is always denying that he is anything like the mischievous white rabbit Max!  Another plus is that she is one of few of us that still has daily access to Max….lucky!

So without further ado, take it away Therese!

Not so long ago, I was doing yard work with the famous Max and our mom. As we were working Mom started explaining to  us about how much work we would have to do this up coming spring to get ready for Ben’s, (our older brother) high school graduation party.

Max stopped picking up the fallen sticks and looked at me and mom and said,  “Yeah I’m going to miss my brother when he is at college.”
I smiled, gave him a hug and said,” Yep kiddo it will be kinda weird with just you and me home next year.”

Max just looked at me and said very sweetly,  “Therese I’m going to miss you too when you leave for college.”
I looked and him said,” Oh Cutie! I’ll miss you too!
Then Max said,  “Um, Therese when do you leave for college?”

Mom and I started laughing and told him it would be a few years until I left for college.
Max just smiled and said,” Oh ok.”

Hearing  Max say that he would miss me too, made me realize how much I love him.  There are no other words to describe it!

~ Therese

An Unexpected Gift…

Picture it: 1998, a snowy Christmas Eve; the six Burnham children and their parents sit down to their traditional polish-themed meal. We say grace and afterwards Dad adds additional thanks, “…and Lord, we thank you for the many blessings you have given us. We thank you for our family and we thank you especially for the youngest member. Amen.” My eyes immediately fall on the cute little red-head, Therese, a chubby and angelically adorable two-year-old who was sitting next to Dad. “Why does Therese get a special prayer?” I asked with a middle-child-feeling-left-out-whine. Dad just got this smirk on his face and said, “Who says that Therese is the youngest?” Even though we were all pretty young, being part of a large family, we all knew what that meant. “WE HAVING A BABY!!!” We all screamed and got excited, jumped up and down… and who knows what else. Six kids, all under twelve, finding out they are going to have another brother or sister…on Christmas Eve—it was an extremely joyous occasion.

That is my first memory of Max.

His due date was May 15, but one cold morning on March 24, Dad woke us all up very early—too early—it was still dark outside. I went downstairs and found Mom sitting at the table trying to slow her contractions. The baby was coming, two months too soon. I was excited and scared. Dad took Mom to the local hospital, but after unsuccessfuly trying to stop her labor, it was decided that she would receive better care at a larger facility so they transferred her to Aultman hospital in Canton about a half-hour north of our little town. We waited all day for news…nothing. No baby yet. I went to bed and had a dream that the baby had been born.

I woke up the next day only to find out that I hadn’t been dreaming. Leigh had come into my room in the middle of the night to tell me that we had a little brother! Our parents had named him Maximilian John. Though he only weighed 4.1 pounds, that was pretty normal for a preemie and we weren’t too concerned. However, we soon became aware of many other problems. This is where everything runs together and my remembrance of details gets fuzzy. Max had intestinal dysfunctions, breathing problems and four holes in his heart. Within twenty-four hours, Max had been transferred to Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland and had the first surgery on his intestines. He was so little, so weak and so sick. He spent the first 2 months of his life in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. He needed an IV, which was stuck in his head because his veins were too little to support it anywhere else [sidenote to talk about the wonderful men in my life: the doctors had to shave half of Max’s head to see his veins. So what did my Dad and Ben (who was so excited to finally have a brother) do? They shaved their heads too. Solidarity!].

Max was also too weak to nurse and had to be fed by feeding tube that went up his nose, down his throat into his stomach. Mom, being the courageous and caring lady that she is, wanted to give her little suffering baby every ounce of help she could. As a preemie with many other complications, he needed every bit of strength available. Mom, knowing that breast milk is the most nutritious food any baby can get, decided to pump. Thanks to my mom, Max was able to get all the nutrients that were best for him via his feeding tube.

As I write this, I can’t believe that I don’t remember more of all the complications and difficulties from the hospital, because I know there were more. I remember hardly seeing Mom and Dad because they were at the hospital so much. And if we did see them, they were always so tired, so sad and so worried. As a little girl, I had never had a care or concern in the world, but seeing my strong parents like this… I knew it was serious. I knew something was severely wrong.

But, after all this time, it is not all that worry, hurt, heartache and fear that I remember most distinctly It’s the following:

Shortly after Max was born (I don’t remember exactly when, but I’m sure within a few days), Dad called and told us that Max had Down syndrome. He didn’t have to explain it; Family friends had a son with Down syndrome, so my siblings and I all knew what it was…

…and I was MAD at God.

That was the first time I was ever angry… no not angry- livid with God. I remember it. I didn’t understand how he could let such a bad thing happen to us because in my little nine-year-old brain, we were good people. I was so upset. I couldn’t process it, so I just get repeating it to myself… “I have a brother with Down syndrome. I have a brother with Down syndrome.” My life had changed completely and I knew it. I wondered how it would be different. I saw Max mostly-if not only- as a burden who was going to make our life so difficult.

Because Max was born during flu season and he had no immune system, us siblings were not able to go see Max for a good while after he was born. I had been so anxious and excited to see my brother until I heard he had Down syndrome… now I was just scared. A brother with Down syndrome? How was I supposed to love him? All the people I knew who had Down syndrome scared me and made me nervous. How was I going to live with one?

A few days later Dad called home again, “Pray Gracie,” he said, “Pray hard. I don’t think he’ll make it through the night.” I got off the phone and I laid on the couch, buried my head in a pillow and sobbed. “Please God, please…” I cried, “I don’t care if he has Down syndrome! He’s my brother!”

I don’t know what changed, why all of my anger was gone, and why the fear that I had had towards living with a brother with Down syndrome had transformed into a fear of living without him. All I knew was that I did not want to see my little brother for the first time lying in a casket. I told God I was sorry…and I prayed and cried myself to sleep.

The next day we got a phone call: Max had made it through the night. Not only that, but he was doing better! From that point on, though things were still difficult, Max’s health was steadily improving. He grew stronger every day.

I will never forget the first time I saw my youngest brother. Dad drove us up in the family van; somehow I had been the lucky kid who got to sit in the coveted front seat. The two-hour drive seemed to only take 15 minutes—I was so excited! We got to the hospital and saw Mom. She cried…so I cried. We couldn’t go see Max right away. So we got a tour of the hospital. I saw the room my parents stayed in and wondered how they both fit on that tiny twin bed, we found a little indoor place area for kids, we rode the elevator up and down a few times… until finally…it was time!

Six smiling kids and two tired-but-happy parents walked down the tiny hallway to a glass window that separated the NICU from the rest of the hospital. Max was still too fragile and susceptible to germs for us to go in, so Dad brought him out to the glass. He held him up so we could see him and we all pushed our noses against the glass to get a better view.

There was Max. And it was love at first sight.

Max yawned and opened his eyes. He looked at the Dad, then looked at us. He started talking to Max and pointing to us. I have no idea what he actually said to him, but I imagine it was something like, “Look Max, those are all your sisters and your brother.” Whatever it was, he looked at us, knew we were going to be a part of his life, and decided to show us his own spunky personality right away. He put his hand on his forehead, shook his head back and forth and stared blankly at us before looking back up at Dad with a face that seemed to say, “Save me.”

Little did we know that he was here to save us.

~ Grace