What a wonderful and inspiring story, Thank you for sharing!!  Diana

--- On Mon, 12/29/08, OKreationz™ <mskitt...@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: OKreationz™ <mskitt...@yahoo.com>
Subject: [Chihuahuas] *Now this is inspiring - Disabled duck inspires
To: "addictionhelp" <addictionh...@sbcglobal.net>
Date: Monday, December 29, 2008, 1:12 PM

















 










Disabled duck inspires


PORTSMOUTH, R.I. - For more than two years, Laura Backman has cared for a 
little one with a neurological disorder - feeding her, changing her diapers, 
helping to teach her to move with a walker.

Now that baby is getting around with her own webbed feet.

Lemon, a Pekin duck, has been physically disabled since she hatched in the 
kindergarten class Backman used to teach in Portsmouth.

Backman, 39, has now turned Lemon's life story into an illustrated children's 
book, "Lemon the Duck," to teach tolerance and inspire hope in children, 
disabled or not.

After Lemon hatched, her balance problems were immediately apparent. She 
couldn't walk on her own - and she still can't, because of a neurological 
problem her veterinarian suspects could have been caused by temperature or 
humidity problems during incubation, or by viruses or other infectious agents 
getting through the shell.

The handful of other chicks hatched in the kindergarten class incubator all 
went to pre-arranged homes, but Backman agreed to take on Lemon and all the 
tender care she would require.


"That's one of the things I'm trying to give her, is a ducky life, even though 
she can't live outside with the ducks," Backman says. "I know it probably 
sounds like I'm obsessed with her. And I am. But it's a good obsession."

Backman said she's always loved children's books and thought Lemon's life was 
worthy of print. Her publisher agreed.

"We just thought it was a fantastic inspiration story, what she's done with 
this duck," says Meghan Nolan, editorial director at Lobster Press, a Canadian 
kids' book publishing company that put Lemon's story in print. "The messages 
were really nice for kids, about acceptance and embracing difference."

The book - Backman's first - describes the true story of how children come to 
understand Lemon's disability and rally around her, devising ways to help and 
taking turns feeding her.


By the end of the book, Lemon mucks around in the grass with other ducks thanks 
to a feeding harness. Backman's character - called Ms. Lake in the book - tells 
her students Lemon will always need them. 
 
"I think we need her, too," says one student as he hugs Lemon.

In real life, Lemon is cuddly, sociable and never shy. Her disability is 
obvious: When Lemon attempts a movement, her neck twists around until the 
bottom of her beak is facing skyward and the tuft of white feathers on her 
crown is pinned to her breast. Sometimes she gets herself untangled. More 
often, Backman gently pries loose her head.

But Lemon goes right back to eating or pushing herself around in a specially 
designed walker. The "Lemobile" is about a foot-and-a-half- square contraption 
made of white PVC piping, a sling and smooth-rolling wheels. Lemon kicks her 
feet, wags her tailfeathers and propels herself forward or in circles.


"She's very feisty. She has a real zest for life," Backman says in an interview 
as Lemon quacks contentedly in the family's airy, waterfront home in Portsmouth.

Because Lemon can't control her bodily functions, she has to wear diapers that 
Backman changes six times a day. Backman bathes her every morning and carts her 
almost everywhere she goes. Lemon has been with Backman to dentist appointments 
and relative's sonograms.

Backman was introduced to ducks by her father, who kept them as pets when she 
was a child. He developed multiple scleroris, and she and her family had to 
help him with every need.

"My dad couldn't do anything for himself, but we didn't let that stop him from 
having a full life," Backman said.

In her book, Backman names one of the kids Richard, after her father, who died 
about a year before Lemon hatched.

A couple veterinarians Backman consulted questioned Lemon's quality of life and 
implied she might consider euthanization. But that was never an option for 
Backman, in part because she was assured Lemon isn't in pain.

"She really does spoil and love this duck, and she's a happy little duck," said 
Kimberly Link, president of the Majestic Waterfowl Sanctuary in Connecticut. 
Link's organization is receiving some of the proceeds from Backman's book, as 
is the Rhode Island Multiple Sclerosis Society.

About 10,000 copies of the book are currently in print. It costs $19.95 and can 
be ordered online through Lemon's website, www.lemontheduck. com, or through 
traditional online booksellers.

Baker Books, in Dartmouth, Mass., recently hosted Lemon and Backman for a book 
reading.

"Lemon is to die for," said Gretchen Baker-Smith, who helps run children's 
events at the store. "She's very tolerant of kids, and lots of people having 
her, and being in the middle of pandemonium. "

Lemon only rarely quacked, which made kids jump.

"Kids are used to being at the local park here," Baker-Smith said. "You can see 
the ducks and the geese. Some of them are really, really aggressive. I think 
some of them were thinking that's how she was going to be, but she wasn't."

Since Pekin ducks can live a decade or longer, Lemon could have more years of 
book readings - a sequel is in the works - entertaining school kids and having 
her beak and feet rubbed, which she loves.

"She's very happy," Backman says. "Every morning she just wants to go, go, go."


This is a true story
huggles
Pat in OK









 








 














      

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