PETRIFIED OF FUTURE lifespan would not be long. But because of advancements in medicine plus the care and love developmentally disabled chil- dren have received in their homes, they are now outliving their parents. National figures show that there are more than 200,000 developmentally disabled people over the age of 60 living in the United States. In the 1940s, Down's syndrome children had an average lifespan of 12 years. Now, they live well into their 50s. Mr. Cooper has client families where the parents are in their 70s and 80s with 50-year-old developmentally disabled children. He has precious little advice he can offer to the parents of adults over age 26. Parents often find themselves in the position of modifying work schedules to stay at home with their children if they can't afford a private in-house sitter. "It's hard to tell a parent of a develop- mentally disabled or mentally ill child that they have to face the waiting lists for services," said Miriam Iwrey, executive di- rector of Kadima. Either they have to get sophisticated in pushing the system or they have to think as a group." And this is what particularly frightens the parents of Nicole, 20, and Rachel, 10. Even though the moment of truth is years away for them, Dr. Barry and Debby Rubin are already scrambling for long- term answers. Nicole Rubin is a high-functioning young lady who scoots around her parents' comfortable Birmingham home on her knees when she's not seated in her wheelchair. She is stricken with spina bifida and is hydrocephalic. Her affliction has left her with the intelligence of an 8- year-old. She shows a sensitivity and in- tuition more appropriate for her years, though. On the walls of the family den are family pictures of Miss Rubin, her four able-bodied siblings and her parents. If one didn't know the story behind Nicole, it would be difficult to tell that the Rubin's youngest child was developmen- tally disabled. What will happen to Nicole, who is classified as a trainable mentally im- paired student at Farmington Training Center, not only when she is out of school but when her parents are too old to care for her, is something that even she ponders. She openly sobs when it is even remotely suggested that her parents won't one day be around to care for her or that she might have to enter a residential program. But her mother also cries in- side, not knowing what her daughter will be doing for daily occupation six years from now. "The older I get, the more I think about what would happen to my child if some- thing happens to me," Mrs. Rubin said. "The reality is more like,'When it happens, what will we do?' And my greatest concern is that there will be someone who really cares about Nicole to take care of her." Mrs. Rubin said that after 20 years, she is tired. She can't remember what it was like to brush only one set of teeth, her own, or to wash only one face, her own. She asks a visitor to picture what it is like to have to lift a young woman out of a wheelchair and change her diaper. The thought that her daughter in six years will be home all day seems scariest to her. "My God," she said, "when they are little you don't care about changing their diapers. But then when they are older, it becomes more and more difficult to lift another adult and do what you have to do." Rachel Kopelman, a smiling child with happy eyes that take over her face is a vic- tim of Rett's syndrome, a genetic condition that has been described as a broken X chromosome. It afflicts only females. One of Rachel's hands is constantly in motion and her mother and a visitor wonder out loud if anything they are say- ing is being heard or understood. Rachel is losing her ability to walk, to stand. Ellen Stern with teachers, who have become her friends, at Wing Lake School. What seems to make her happy is music. On this day, she listens to a tape of nurs- ery rhymes over and over again. At 10, she should be listening to the New Kids on the Block. But this child has the height and weight of a first grader. And Who' knows what is happening inside her brain. Like Ellen Stern, Rachel attends Wing Lake School, which her mother Sandy calls "our saving grace." Mrs. Kopelman is hoping that her daughter will one day be able to get into a group home. Rachel is on a waiting list, but Mrs. Kopelman skeptically feels that the waiting lists mean absolutely nothing. And because of the fear of the unknown future, Mrs. Kopelman doesn't want to think about what is ahead. "I'm petrified of the future," she said. "It's the only subject that I can't handle. I get scared that if she comes down with something, she wouldn't be able to be taken care of." Because of her daughter's condition, Mrs. Kopelman is only able to work a part-time secretarial job. And like the Rubins, Mrs. Kopelman doesn't want her younger daughter's care to be a burden for her older sister, Lisa, now 14. All of the parents made it clear that they did not want their children to feel responsible in the future for their siblings. But the burden is exactly what angers Bob Stern. He says it is difficult for him to pick up the newspaper and read how the U.S. government forgives a $4 billion debt to Egypt, but his daughter can't at- tend public school next year. And while he's glad that Jewish federations are sup- porting the resettlement of the Soviet Jews with millions of dollars, he wonders why the same fervor can't be applied to Jewish developmentally disabled. Ellen, he said, has thrived at the Wing . THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29