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What love can build           
Could a father and his son make an important         
  dream real?         
by Meg Laughlin         
      
    Delia Carricaburu kept on looking at the pediatrician's report as she drove          
  to her home in Miami with her month-old son, Agustin. Chromosome 21 had three          
  dots instead of two. Three dots meant Down syndrome.         
       
      Focusing on the road, Delia tried not to think about what the pediatrician had          
  told her: Agustin will probably not speak so anyone can understand him, and          
  probably never read or write. He may be able to feed and dress himself, but he          
  will never be able to work or live on his own.          
        
      Delia couldn't bear to tell her husband, Carlos, the news. It was the second          
  marriage for both, and Agustin, born on June 22, 1988, was their first child          
  together.         
        
      That night she wrote a note on a scrap of paper: "Precious bundle, guardian          
  of my secret, you and I are going to show the world that a tiny chromosome will          
  not control us."        
      
      Delia never totally understood why she hid their child's condition from her          
  husband. But her need to deny the truth was so strong that she actually convinced          
  herself that the Down syndrome would go away.          
    "If I'd made myself face the truth, I would have fallen    
apart," she          
  says.         
        
      Carols realized there was something wrong when his son did not talk by 20 months.          
  He remembered that Delia had once received some test results from a        
pediatrician,          
  and he confronted her.          
        
      Delia told Carlos that their boy had a condition called Down syndrome, hoping          
  that her husband, raised in Argentina, would not be familiar with this term.          
  But Carlos knew immediately. "Our son is a Mongoloid?" he gasped.          
        
      Shortly thereafter, Carlos went into denial. He did not speak about Agustin's          
  condition, but it was clear he never thought about anything else. One night,          
  when Delia was reading aloud to him from a biography of Henry Ford, he interrupted          
  her and said, "I was slow as a child."        
      
      But more than anything, Carlos was afraid that he'd never be able to get close          
  to Agustin, that his paternal love would be blocked by an extra chromosome that          
  would keep him from ever connecting with the child.          
      
            
Reaching Out          
    By the time Agustin was almost three, he was saying only a few words. During          
  a series of evaluations at the University of Miami Mailman Center for Child          
  Development, he was asked to pick up coins from a table in order to judge his          
  fine-motor skills. He fumbled, unable to grasp the coins in his pudgy little          
  fingers, so he pushed them over the edge of the table into his other hand and          
  gleefully held them up.          
        
      Anther tester showed Agustin a picture of flowers in a vase.    
  "Find the          
  other vase of flowers," he said, pointing to another page with several          
  images. Agustin walked over to a nearby table, picked up a vase with flowers          
  in it, and put it down next to the picture. Carlos, watching with growing amazement, was exultant.    
  "Our child is thinking          
  all of the time," he told Delia excitedly. A staff member then told Carlos that        
Agustin was unusually bright for a Down          
  syndrome child and that the most important factor in how well he did would be          
  how much his parents and teachers worked with him.          
        
      Suddenly the wall between Agustin and Carlos dissolved. Now the father believed          
  he could reach his son. And he knew exactly how he would do it.          
        
            
A Father's Faith          
    Carlos's father had been incredibly resourceful. He and Carlos made a go-cart          
  together out of wood and metal scraps when Carlos was ten. Next they made a          
  boat motor out of found objects. His father's passion and skills wore off on          
  Carlos. As a teenager, he built a car. Later he became a machinist, making a          
  decent living working with his hands - just as his father had done. Just as          
  my son will, Carlos vowed.          
        
      Carlos's plan was to get Agustin to do increasingly difficult things with his          
  hands and mind. Maybe they would eventually build a boat motor together - maybe          
  something much more spectacular. Sure enough, before Agustin could say "Big    
  Bird," he could nail two boards together, take the pedals off his mother’s          
  bicycle with a wrench and fix his sister's in-line skates.          
        
      By age five, Agustin was fluent in English and Spanish. A test measured his          
  IQ in the low seventies, which meant mild retardation. Still, he could read          
  and write by the time he was six years old.          
        
      At the age of seven, however, when Agustin was enrolled in a public school class          
  for "the educable mentally handicapped," Delia and Carlos noted a          
  regression. He couldn't sleep at night. He had trouble keeping up in physical          
  education. Agustin claimed he couldn't see the blackboard, and he refused to          
  do a lot of his schoolwork. But a vision test showed that his eyesight was fine.    
  "OK, I can see," the child finally admitted, "but it's boring          
  to copy off the board."        
      
      With Agustin sliding backwards, Carlos decided to accelerate his own teaching          
  program. The boy loved to look at huge cranes in books, so after school father          
  and son would drive around town looking at and sketching cranes. Later the two          
  scraped up some jar lids, old wagon wheels and metal shelf frames and built          
  a crane of their own. "For picking up my toys," Agustin told his father.          
        
      Then Agustin spotted a picture in a book of a 1906 Case steam-traction engine.          
  It was red, green and yellow with silver studs, copper pipes and brass trim.          
  Best of all , it had a smiling farmer driving it. "I want that to be me,"        
Agustin said.          
        
      It had occurred to Carlos that his son would probably never drive, never know          
  what it was to be in charge of a big machine. Carlos thought it would help his          
  son's self-esteem to be behind the wheel - even if it meant taking on an expensive,          
  next-to-impossible task. He asked Delia how she would feel about his taking          
  time off from work so he could concentrate on building the tractor with his          
  son.         
        
      Delia was skeptical - and worried. This would mean more work for her and less          
  money for the family. Then she read the poem "Ride a Wild Horse" by          
  Hannah Kahn, whose daughter has Down syndrome.          
                       
Ride a wild horse          
                       
against the sky -         
                       
hold tight to his wings          
                       
before you die          
                       
whatever else you leave undone -         
                       
once ride a wild horse          
                       
into the sun.          
    That was it - Delia had her answer. She sold her piano and the couch to help          
  finance the project.          
          
Side by Side          
    Before Carlos and Agustin set out to build the tractor in November 1997, Carlos          
  spent weeks trying to work out how to fashion the transmission gearing, the          
  countershaft pinions, the flywheel and friction clutch. Their tractor wouldn't          
  run on steam - that would be too dangerous - but with a five-horse-power motor.          
  And it would be scaled down in size so Agustin could drive it. Otherwise, it          
  would be just like the original.          
        
      Once the planning was done, Carlos and Agustin would get up at daybreak, grab          
  their toolboxes and take off for Carlos's workshop. There the two would work          
  joyfully together until dark.          
        
      Carlos especially wanted Agustin to get into the habit of seeing something and          
  thinking what else it could be. They made the tractor's crankshaft from a print          
  roller. The wheel hubs came from the discarded rotor of a dough mixer, the motor          
  casings and fenders from barbecue-grill drip pans. The axle was cut from a wrecked          
  car. They used old brake shoes for the clutch and counter top for the platforms.          
    Agustin put in bolts and tightened them. He oiled and painted. He picked out          
  parts. He could spot something in a scrap yard and explain to his dad how they          
  would fashion it into a certain part. A couple of times Delia found Agustin          
  under her car with a torch, trying to work out how the parts connected.          
          
A Wild Horse in the Sun          
    In May 1998, after Carlos and Agustin had worked for six months, the Carricaburus          
  drove to Carlos's shop for an inaugural tractor ride. Agustin would be the first          
  driver.         
         
        
      As Carlos lifted the garage door and wheeled the tractor out into the car park,          
  Delia gasped. It was nearly standard size, and even more beautiful than the          
  tractor in the book.          
         
        
      When Carlos started the motor, kids from the surrounding neighborhood gathered          
  to watch. "Where did that tractor come from?" yelled one boy.          
         
    "My dad and I made it," Agustin shouted over the sound of the motor.    
"I'm the driver."        
       
    "Awesome!" the boy said.          
         
    Agustin then climbed aboard, into the custom-made cabin. He placed one hand          
  on the steering wheel and the  other in the window, just as his father did when          
  he drove the family car. He then put the vehicle in gear and it lurched forward,          
  chugging along the pavement with all of the power and perseverance that went          
  into its making.          
         
    "It's beautiful," whispered Delia.          
         
    "We did it!" shouted Carlos.          
         
    Agustin didn't hear his father. He was too busy being what so few people with          
  Down syndrome ever get to be - in control.          
         
    "Listen to the whistle!" Agustin shouted excitedly to his mother.          
  As he pulled chain, out came a blast like the sound of a faraway train - like          
  the sound of a hopeful journey through a dark night.          
        
         
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