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Matt's recollections of attending
school
The
mainstream education I enjoyed was, in many
respects, an innovation where today it is
an expectation. My participation in the
community was borne of a natural instinct,
rather than making me worthy of distinction.
My primary school education
was at the local Catholic School, St Augustine's.
My teachers of the 1970's did not have special
training as to how to deal with children
with disabilities. They simply met my special
needs as they arose, head on. They hardly
ever baulked at the challenges and I was
able to enjoy everything my friends did.
In other words, I was damned lucky.
It was because of my parents
that I attended this school. It was their
decision that I should have a typical coeducation.
It did not occur to me until I was a young
adult as to how different things could have
been.
I can recall very clearly
heading to the Coffs Harbour Council pool
with my year two class one day when we came
across the kids from Yallberlinga School.
Yallberlinga was the special school, as
it was then known. The students had a mixture
of disabilities. Some had physical disabilities,
others were intellectually challenged, or
they had a combination of both. I guess
the majority of the students were older
then my classmates and I who were around
six years of age.
I remember how we stared at
them with our mouths gaped open, empty of
malice but full of curiosity, as they filed
past us with their teachers. My inability
to identify with these other kids was something
that stayed with me for many years. For
a long time I would try and avoid contact
with people with disabilities fearing the
association would mark me as a fellow who
faced limitations: The irony has not been
lost on me. It was of course an immaturity
that one expects in a kid, but which left
a mark on me for a long time.
My transition from primary
school to high school for years 7 to 10
was an easy one. John Paul College was opened
the year I arrived and it was the first
fully accessible school in the area. It
was a Catholic High School and a majority
of the peers with whom I had spent my earlier
primary days went to the high school.
When I left that school to
attend Coffs Harbour High for years eleven
and twelve in 1987 there were some major
difficulties as it was full of stairs and
the department of education refused to fund
any changes required for me to enroll there,
despite my desire to do so. If it were not
for the efforts of a couple of teachers
and members of the local rugby club who
gave up time to build the ramps themselves
I would never have been able to attend it.
But of course away from these
bricks and mortar issues, and indeed apart
from the books themselves, the largest challenges
I faced at school occurred as I got older
and the young boy that was me grew into
an adolescent. All those changes and challenges
we face socially around that period became
my own and I was among boys and girls who
were growing into young men and women when
they did.
It
was the time of awkward truths.
The little known worries of
the boy, despite the difficulties I had
did not consciously disturb my hazy days.
But when adolescence arrived the last vestiges
of my pyjamad innocence was lost and replaced
by a realisation that Life contained bigger
things of consequence. I became aware, as
we all do, of those things which stand outside
us, and of that which breathes inside us,
and of the forces at play that go to create
what we will be.
I became aware that we are
very much responsible for the direction
it is we take in Life and what we will make
of opportunities won and lost.
It was the time when I became
aware of the way in which my disabilities
separated me physically from my peers. Where
before it had simply meant that I could
not climb trees where the others could,
or that my ability to play handball at lunchtime
was not as skilled as the others, the real
challenges ahead of me had been hidden up
until that point in time.
My mates started to grow taller
and stronger although I did not.
My Pals began to go for their
"L" learner's permit, which for me was impossible.
The independence of travel was obvious,
even if it was in their parents' car. And
although I was and remained a popular kid
the dynamics of the social order was changing
around me.
When we attended the Blue
Light Discos the fundamentals as to what
young people find and discover in the semi
dark were not necessarily mine to find at
that time. As the eyes of boys and girls
began to focus on the differences between
the sexes as something of interest I began
to see how my situation was marked with
a significantly different brush.
These are of course common
themes shared and appreciated by all of
us. It is the chemistry of life. The experience
of adolescent longings were not unique to
me. They are at the heart of the teen flick,
the kid who wants to kiss, or better still
to be kissed. But it was a solitary journey
made all the more intense because of my
physical disabilities.
I was, put simply, a young
man who was beginning to find his way and
his place in the world without any real
plan or method by which to do it. And for
all the love of family and friends I had
it was a matter of figuring it out on my
own. It was a matter of sizing up my challenges
and dictating the terms by which I would
deal with them. It came to a situation of
having to judge my self worth.
My school life, therefore,
was interesting and varied. I had plenty
of friends, I involved myself in cultural
events, I had my sporting association and
I just lived a typical life of a kid growing
up on the Far North Coast. I did not take
to the waves on a board like some of my
friends, but nor did I sit at home wondering
why me. And the key to it was I had enjoyed
a mainstream education. It was that which
provided me with the opportunity to study
hard and to feel as if I was always a part
of society. It was that experience which
confirmed and affirmed my rights as an individual.
I had no limitations, as far as I could
see, and I felt as if I could turn my hand
at anything that took my fancy. I knew what
was happening in social groups and what
it was like to ask a girl out, and to go
to the pub, and to lead the charge to a
party and to win an argument and lose a
fight. I had been chided and mocked by friends.
I had made them proud and I had succeeded
and lost and achieved and drifted and found
a direction. I had been schooled scholastically
and socially so that when I finished my
Higher School Certificate at the end of
1988 I was like many other 18 year olds,
bursting with energy and ready to go somewhere.
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