Partners in Crime

Meriah Nichols essays

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I went through the windshield of a car when I was four, back in the day when seatbelts were charming accessories. The glass shredded my face. The head-on collision gifted me with a brain injury coupled with a quirky auditory processing disorder. My deafness came later.

Events of great magnitude seem to have a way of silencing the world and oneself. The accident silenced a four-year-old me. It made me still inside. I remember the change and recall my world shifting. I felt confused and the isolating pain of experiencing the shift within others. The world, you see, doesn’t quite know what to do with little girls with blood-red scars all over their sweet little freckled faces, with their strawberry-blonde hair shorn off their heads. It felt as if the world took one look at me and turned away, embarrassed, muttering something about my “pretty eyes.”

But my brother knew what to do. He knew me. He had always known me.

Only 15 months apart in age, he felt closer to me sometimes than my life-breath.

He knew the person that I was before the accident, the person that I still was after the accident, and didn’t see much in the way of a difference. He wanted–demanded even–that I play with him. He wanted me to be his buddy, ever-ready to hop in a puddle of messy mud on our rural sheep ranch. Roll down the mountainside in wild games of tag, twirling, round and round, the old oak trees soaring overhead.

Through the years, where we lived changed, but not much did within our relationship. Instead of roaming wild on our farm, we were combing the coral reef in front of our house in Levuka. We bicycled with wicked speed down the streets of Suva, Fiji. My vision, always incredibly poor, ceased to be so much of an issue as my coke-bottle glasses were put aside each day in favor of contact lenses. Right at the same time as my hearing was getting noticeably worse.

He’d tell me what people were saying, my automatic translator of sorts. I’d simply look at him with a question in my eyes and he would tell me what was going on. It wasn't a big deal but it happened a lot. In the meantime, I showed him what I thought to be the “cool” dance moves. We practiced together in his room with our ancient, giant FM radio. We had our separate groups of friends–sometimes we ended up all playing together and sometimes we didn’t. It wasn’t a big deal. It was just about having fun.

He made me feel better when I was sure no boys would ever like me. He brushed off my occasional tears when people teased me or when I realized that I was more like Dawn Weiner from the movie Welcome to theDollhouse than I was Veronica from The Heathers.

Without reservation, I loved my brother more than anything in the world.

Many decisions in my life were made from that love. My decision to major in Elementary Education in undergrad. He did too. At the same time. We’d stack up credits, divvy up classes, splitting focus (I paid more attention to the ones I was “responsible” for; we’d compare notes and hold tutoring cram session with one another on our respective areas). We both got out of University with a Bachelor’s degree in hand, in only about two years. It was hard. It was great. We worked well together.

My decision to have more than one child was without question from my relationship with my brother. I couldn’t imagine not giving my child, my beloved little one, a sibling to love and grow up with.

I just didn’t picture that the sibling I would gift my son with would, like me, have a disability. And perhaps even more, I didn’t picture this sibling as having Down syndrome, which my daughter Moxie was born with. I didn’t ever think that my son would be in the same position as my brother–an older sibling of one who had needs that were less common than most.

It spun me around.

Was I wrong in thinking that my brother and I were such a team? Was I imagining everything, casting a lovely golden glow on everything simply because they were memories? Was growing up with me really horribly hard for him? Was early life some unmitigated series of various burdens for him?

We’ve never really talked about it, you see. We do not talk about things like that. We're from that Swedish farming stock, you understand.

So I asked him in an email. This is what he said:

I really find the question funny! Growing up I never looked at you as deaf or scarred. You were my sister. We fought about everything but that just brought us closer in later years. 

When we were young you had a hard time understanding other people and in many cases even mom and dad which made you naturally look at me and I would say the same thing again and you would get it. You naturally taught me to speak slower than most people and clearly. 

Growing up I really never thought about it as a chore or looked at you as disabled in fact I thought you were tough and courageous. I remember teaching you how to fight and then you decked that big Fijian girl who was teasing you. You really didn't let anyone push you around! 

When we were young maybe because we moved quite a bit we weren't able to develop a lot of friendships with others so it was basically you and me-partners in crime.

I have so much to thank you for. Your “disability” taught me so much growing up. To be more patient, understanding, and protective…you are and always will be my little sister.

It's nice to know there really was a glow. We really were our own Dynamic Duo.

And it warms the cockles of my heart that I wasn't wrong after all: my brother loves me just as much as I do him.

Read more from Meriah here!

About the Author

Meriah Nichols

Meriah Nichols is a third culture kid, former missionary child. Deaf. Mama to 3. She is leaving soon to drive with her family from San Francisco to Argentina, along the Pan Am Overland. Follow their trip at .

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