Quinn's Story
by Kathy Toon
This is the story of our daughter that died five years ago. It is a
very unusual story. She was an extraordinary gift to us.
We came to know her years before we became involved in fostering. An
article appeared in a local newspaper describing a young woman (22 at
the time) who was living in a nursing home. She was languishing, had no
visits in three years, and had not even gone outdoors in that same three
years. She was a quadriplegic with cerebral palsy.
My sister-in-law, Mary, and I read the story. Mary's son, my nephew,
JJ, was also a quad with CP. We knew all too well that many people didn't
recognize that cerebral palsied people most often have normal minds. It's
just their cerebellum that doesn't work right, not their cerebral cortex
(think part of the brain). Because CP limits the victim's ability to move
and speak and express themselves in a mature way, many people overlook
their intelligence. After working with Jim for 18 years, Mary and I wondered
if this could be this young woman's plight. We pressed in through the
newspaper and her appointed attorney to get permission to visit the girl.
The first visit is emblazoned in my memory. We walked into the room to
find a wisp of a person lying in a steel baby crib with an infant mobile
hanging over her head. That was an indicator of their assessment of her
level of development! She was 22 years old! She was biracial with beautiful
facial features. Her curly hair was matted, her fingernails uncut. She
was the most emaciated person I had ever seen. She weighted only 32 pound
at this point, almost dead from starvation. Her eyes were her most striking
feature. Huge, brown, distant. She lay there with her fists clenched,
tense from hunger, blowing bubbles with her saliva, bored out of her gourd.
Mary and I looked at each other and wondered out loud if she was "In
there" or was there truly "nobody home" but Mary said, "wait, Kathy. Give
her some time." We studied her there for a few moments. It was like she
had given up, like she didn't expect anyone to notice that she understood
anything so she just tuned out. I ventured a question, "Quinn, are you
in there?"
the big brown eyes blinked and rolled toward me. She locked onto my gaze
with obvious intelligence. I asked another question. "If you understand
me, look out the window." Zoom. The eyes looked out the window. "If you
understand me, look at the flowers on your night stand." Zoom again went
the big brown eyes, staring intently at the vase of flowers on the night
stand. She was responding with great intensity and accuracy to let me
know that she was indeed "in there." Then came the smile, the biggest
YES! Her poor little body could muster. Contact! We were instant friends.
We had to get her out of this hideous place. We had to get some meat on
her bones. We had to.....we had to...
Well, it turned out to be a bigger deal than we thought to advocate for
Quinn. People were suspicious of us. Doctors had paper trails to cover
up. Staff heads made it difficult for us to see her. But we blundered
ahead, bringing all of our children with us through the halls of the nursing
home at odd hours. We wheeled Jim in his wheelchair into her room and
when she saw that we knew about people like her she began to trust us.
We smuggled food in to her and she started to gain weight. She had basically
been on a hunger strike. It was dignity or death for her. Apparently she
had weighed about 60 pounds when she came to this nursing home and had
wasted down to half her body weight within one year. The last two years
she had teetered near starvation, being admitted twice to the emergency
room for her symptoms. When asked the attending doctor what symptoms she
had during those hospital visits, it caught him off guard. "Well, her
body temperature was too low, etc...." I said, "What do you think the
cause might have been?" He launched into telling me, "You know, I've never
seen anything like it except in cases of starvation." Suddenly he realized
what he was admitting, and quickly added, "But of course, thatŐs not the
case here." He signaled to his nurse, turned on his heel, and walked briskly
down the hall where they both disappeared behind a door that slammed shut.
Mary and I figured there must have been a paper shredder in there. Quinn
probably did refuse to eat some of the time, but the truth was, nobody
was spending enough time feeding her. She was difficult to feed. We learned
alter that a judge had ordered a special feeding person for Quinn after
one of her visits to the emergency room. Quinn gained 19 pounds during
the period she had adequate attention. But she lost it again.
One time shortly after we met her I was in the room visiting Quinn. We
had just had this "Conversation" where I had asked her if she drank out
of a cup or with a straw. She let me know with pride that she could drink
out of a cup. So when the aide came in to feed her and stuffed a syringe
in her mouth I just casually mentioned that Quinn had told me she could
drink from a cup. The aide mocked me and said, "She TOLD you she can drink
from a cup?" So I rephrased my statement to, "Well, she communicated it
to me." The aide tried to give Quinn a spoonful of food and Quinn with
great effort raised her little fisted, crippled hand up and knocked the
spoon away! She was furious because the aide had not believed me. She
was starving but she refused to eat for someone who would not acknowledge
her intelligence or ability to communicate. The aide put everything very
deliberately back on the tray and left the room in an angry huff. I could
easily see why Quinn went hungry much of the time.
There was one aide that loved Quinn and made extra effort to feed her.
Her name was Janice and she will always be mentioned in my writings about
Quinn, because she probably saved Quinn's life. She recognized that Quinn
had feelings and preferences. She had heard Quinn say a couple of words
now and then. It was true. Once in a while a single word would pop out
of Quinn's mouth - like "Good" or "Juice" or "Hi." But she couldn't say
the words at will. It had to be spontaneously.
We did get Quinn moved. It was a monumental effort that only those who
have tried to wade through the legal system can appreciate. But it was
the first victory of many for this brave girl. She was a fighter and we
grew to love her more and more.
A book could be written about our experiences with Quinn, and some of
them are miracle material. But to make a long story short we became her
legal guardians. In 1986 we moved to Salinas, California and brought Quinn
along. She could not live at home. She needed skilled level care on a
daily basis. So she stayed in a local hospital just a couple of blocks
from us. We began fostering and adopting children and when we saw the
look on her face when we brought up adoption we knew she needed to be
our first adoptee. Even though she was legally an adult, she had never
stopped wanting to be, "Adopted." She had been an orphan in a children's
home until she was 19 and you know what the topic is in an orphanage!
Being adopted, getting a family, going home for "Good." Those are the
phrases you hear every day from the children.
the lawyer that helped us get our guardianship here in California mentioned
to us that it was possible to adopt an adult. Some adults with no family
will adopt "Parents." And some adults with no heirs will adopt an adult
as their child. It was a totally foreign idea to us when the lawyer presented
it, but then it became apparent that this was Quinn's lifelong wish so
not? It took some doing and some, but the lawyer donated his time because
he loved the idea of Quinn being adopted by us. And so Quinn became Julie
Anna Toon. She wanted a new name too. The whole enchilada. We gave her
options for her name, some that included her old name too, but she would
have no part of it. The new name fit her nicely, even though many hospital
staffers resented us changing it and refused to call her by it. Finally
we wrote a letter and told everybody that it had been Quinn's decision
to change her name and they honored that.
We had ten good years with our sweet Julie Anna. Her life changed a
lot. She was well fed. Her hair was braided by a loving staff. Like any
typical female, she loved clothes and got more than her share! I did her
laundry so nothing got lost or destroyed in the institutional dryers.
She was the princess of th ward. She became very friendly and happy. Her
infectious laugh resounded through the halls. We brought her home on visits
and took her on field trips, but the best was yet to come. Through our
fostering of Eddie, a worker from the regional center came to our home
to assess Eddie for services. She noticed a picture of Julie Anna on my
wall and asked about her. I had inquired about services when we moved
to California but was told Julie was not eligible for any This worker
assured me that was not true. The result of that visit was that Julie
got the chance to fulfill another life wish - attending school. She had
been sadly neglected and lost in the system over the years and had never
been able to attend school. She had never had a proper wheelchair. She
was a last fitted by experts at Stanford. Now she went to school in style
in her hot pink wheelchair on the bus! With a matching hot pink backpack!
She was thrilled beyond words and woo-woos. She would make this woo-woo
sound when she was super happy.
One day the school called and said Julie didn't look well and that maybe
I should come pick her up. I figured maybe she had the flu or at the worst
had aspiration pneumonia. Oddly enough, my husband was off work that day
and he offered to come along. As soon as we saw her we sensed she was
dying. Her color was off and she was sweating profusely. That night she
slipped away with all of us around her. while Julie had always been a
fragile little thing and we talked about her death at times, it was still
a shock to lose her. She was always thee, always smiling, always recovering
from her near misses. For ten years she had beaten all the odds. I never
thought about her having "Work" to do down here on earth. But, of course,
she had a mission like all of us do. No accidents in God's economy. Nothing
useless to Him. And when her work was done, she went home to Jesus, her
savior and friend. There was no suffering. All her tests for infection
came back negative. She even went to school on the day she died! She didn't
want to miss anything! I think her little heart just gave out.
And that's the story of our Julie Anna. She and everything taken from
her in this life - her parents, the use of her body. She suffered rejection,
abuse, starvation, and neglect. But she loved life and she gave up her
anger and bitterness. She gave her little childlike heart to Jesus when
we told her that He loved her and the changes in her were obvious over
the years. She became a beacon of hope and joy to many. I was shocked
at the number of people who attended her funeral. People I had never met!
I felt that I was her connection to people, that she needed me to make
herself understood. I had certainly overrated myself! She had managed
to acquire quite a following of friends on her own during the time she
had spent in school. Bus drivers, teachers, and acquaintances all came
to pay their respects and share with us how Julie had blessed them. They
said she was like "Sunshine" to them. Always smiling and happy. Not at
all like the little wisp we first found blowing bubbles in her own world.
One of the most important things Julie taught me was that if God could
help someone as helpless as she was, He can help any of us. He may not
make everything perfect for us here, but He doesn't leave us alone. And
I know that Julie's life is perfect now. She flew away, out of her wheelchair,
out of her useless body and into the arms of her loving Father.
I still miss her. Many people don't appreciate that the grief is the
same whether a child is handicapped or not. They think a burden has been
lifted when a crippled child dies. And in some practical sense, that's
true. The mind acknowledges that, but the heart doesn't. For the parent's
heart, a child's death is always the loss of a very special life.
Julie Ann was a very small burden and a very large gift.
If you would like to send me a note!
Kathy Toon
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