Ameera and Mehrnaz When her son plays in the garden, Ameera sits in her wheelchair and watches. She cannot actively participate in anything that requires moving on her own.
“I feel she is imprisoned all day,” Mehrnaz says. When she takes her daughter outside, people look at her like she is a prisoner.
But Mehrnaz doesn’t feel that Ameera’s disability is something to be ashamed of or embarrassed about.
“We shouldn’t hide our children; it’s not their fault. God made them this way and hiding doesn’t help,” she says firmly.
In 2012, when Mehrnaz rushed to the hospital with Ameera— a year and a half old at the time— she was worried, yes, but she didn't think it was anything huge. Ameera had contracted fever and was unwell, but things had just started going wrong. She had a seizure and grew worse; one thing was lead to another.
A week after she fell sick, doctors realised that their initial diagnosis was incorrect. Ameera was rushed to a different hospital, where the root of her illness was instantly detected: her brain was completely damaged.
Mehrnaz remembers being in a state of shock. “I started banging my head against the wall,” she says. “Imagine just sitting there, and suddenly your child gets fever, then she has a seizure… I lost my wits.”
What hit her most was how her normal, functioning daughter had suddenly lost everything. Only a few days before, Ameera had been walking and crawling like any other healthy child. Now, she could no longer move her foot. Mehrnaz could remember her daughter's words and laughters from the previous year, but in its place now were only sounds.
“The shock remains, of course, and it did for months,” Mehrnaz continues her story. “But slowly, as humans, we can adjust to anything.” She realised she would have to keep fighting, and she did. “I had to do whatever I could for her.”
Moving continents
While her husband stayed behind in Karachi, Mehrnaz moved to London the same month with Ameera and her son, who was four years old at the time. Life in London was by no means easy, but it was easier. Mehrnaz had sidewalks, wheelchair ramps on public vehicles, and wide open spaces where she could take her daughter openly and comfortably. At the very least, she could now take her daughter outside.
“I was content that whatever was happening was happening for a reason… for my children," she recalls. For the next year and a half, her days were dedicated only to Ameera’s well-being. She put off her career in medicine to take care of her; nothing else mattered.
Ameera, meanwhile, was getting the best treatment possible: she started intense physiotherapy and speech therapy under the care of doctors Mehrnaz trusted.