Caitlin’s Wish
‘CAITLIN’S WISH’ by Victoria Taylor.
Illustrations by Claire Wiles.
Caitlin’s Wish is a storybook written for children who have a disabled or sick family member, relative or friend. It is a magical fairytale with a twist. Enabling young carers to see their role from a different perspective, and enabling those not affected by disability to get an insight into what being a young carer is really like!
Victoria wrote it for her daughter, Adele-Caitlin when she found it hard to come to terms with her father’s disability. Adele-Caitlin was only 2 yrs old when her father was diagnosed with a rare neurological condition called Intracranial Hypertension (IH). She was so young that she just accepted the situation. It was only when she went to school that she started to compare her life with others and realised that her life was different. She became a very sad little girl.
“Why MY Dad? It’s not fair!” she’d say.
There is very little support for young carers under the age of 8 yrs old, so Victoria wrote this book to try and help Adele-Caitlin feel better and think more positively. Through reading the book Adele-Caitlin changed her perspective on life. She realised that disability and illness can affect anyone at anytime in their life, and it’s no-one’s fault. That’s just the way it is. She learned to think of the things that her Dad could do now, rather than dwelling on what he couldn’t do anymore. Looking for the positive elements in her life rather than focusing on the negative.
It helped Adele-Caitlin and her brother Chris so much that Victoria is publishing the book, in the hope that it might help other children.
These days Adele-Caitlin and Chris both attend the Crossroads Young Carer’s Project and the family receive an amazing amount of support from Crossroads Care. Victoria adds “Crossroads Care are a lifeline to us, and I am so grateful for the difference they have made to our lives!”
Victoria is also involved in the IH awareness campaign. She adds “IH is an invisible illness where the person looks “fine” when they are not! Old names for IH include Pseudotumor Cerebri and Benign Intracranial Hypertension. Most people have never heard of it, including many in the medical profession.





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