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Amazing Animals
Amazing Animals



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Stories
I have Down syndrome. Know me before you judge me. I have Down syndrome. But I'm a normal teenager.
They're always there for me, even if we're just having fun.
My sisters support me in everything I do, especially in my dream to become a singer.
Photographs by Annie Griffiths Belt
PAGE ONE | PAGE TWO

Dream Job: Singer
I try not to let things like that upset me and just think of all the good things in my life. Like that I've published two songs. One of my favorite things to do is write poetry, And this singer my dad knows recorded some of my poems as singles.

Right now someone else is singing my songs, but someday, I want to be the one singing. I know it's going to happen, because I've seen it. One day I looked in the mirror, and I saw someone in my head, a famous person or someone who was somebody, and I just knew: I will be a singer.

It's true that I don't learn some things as fast as other people. But that won't stop me from trying. I just know that if I work really hard and be myself, I can do almost anything.

See Me
But I still have to remind myself all the time that it really is OK to just be myself. Sometimes all I see—all I think other people see—is the outside of me, not the inside. And I really want people to go in there and see what I'm all about.

Maybe that's why I write poetry—so people can find out who I really am. My poems are all about my feelings: when I hope, when I hurt. I'm not sure where the ideas come from—I just look them up in my head. It's like I have this gut feeling that comes out of me and onto the paper.

I can't change that I have Down syndrome, but one thing I would change is how people think of me. I'd tell them: Judge me as a whole person, not just the person you see. Treat me with respect, and accept me for who I am. Most important, just be my friend.

After all, I would do the same for you.

Listen to "The Ring", the song that Melissa wrote!

What is Down Syndrome?
Down syndrome is an intellectual disability that about 5,000 babies in the United States are born with each year. A person with Down syndrome has 47 chromosomes, microscopic structures that carry genetic information to determine almost everything about a person. Most people have only 46 chromosomes. It's the extra chromosome that can cause certain physical characteristics (such as short stature and an upward slant to the eyes) and speech and developmental delays. Still, people with Down syndrome are a lot like you: They are unique people with strengths and talents.

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